Docket:
T-108-11
Citation:
2012 FC 536
[UNREVISED
ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Ottawa,
Ontario, May 4, 2012
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Simon Noël
BETWEEN:
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BASSAM AL KHOURY
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Applicant
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and
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MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an appeal filed under subsection 14(5) of the Citizenship Act, RSC
1985, c C-29 [the Act], from a decision by a citizenship judge to not grant
Canadian citizenship to the applicant.
I. Facts
and decision under appeal
[2]
The
applicant, a Syrian citizen, became a permanent resident of Canada on
December 15, 2001.
[3]
He
applied for citizenship on October 17, 2007. The relevant period for examining
whether he met the criteria in the Act is from October 3, 2003, to
October 3, 2007.
[4]
In
his application for citizenship, the applicant declared 1,460 days of basic
residence and 365 days of absence from Canada during this period, for a total
of 1,095 days of physical presence, i.e. the minimum number required by
paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Act (Respondent’s record, Exhibit P‑14).
However, the residence questionnaire that the applicant subsequently filled out
indicated that he was present in Canada for 1,081 days at most (Respondent’s
record, Exhibit P‑12, paragraph 598).
[5]
After
reviewing the documents submitted by the applicant in support of his
application, an officer sent a memorandum to the citizenship judge in order to
submit the application to a hearing prior to the decision. In the memorandum,
the officer expressed her concerns about the application, namely the fact that
the applicant had not indicated ten days of absence in his initial application,
that there was an inconsistency regarding the date on which the applicant arrived
in Canada to live and that the officer had doubts about whether the applicant
had indicated all his absences from Canada (Certified tribunal record at pp 591-592).
[6]
In
a letter dated July 14, 2010, the applicant was invited to attend an
interview with the citizenship judge for July 28, 2010. Following the
hearing, the judge gave the applicant a new residence questionnaire with a list
of documents required to support his application, including a statement from
the Régie de l’assurance maladie du Québec [RAMQ].
[7]
A
week later, the applicant hand‑delivered to the judge’s office the new
residence questionnaire partially completed with an explanatory letter dated
August 4, 2010, referring to his previous residence questionnaire. The
applicant did not include the statement from the RAMQ, which he had been
requested to do (Applicant’s affidavit, Exhibits P‑31 to P‑33).
[8]
According
to the judge’s notes, most of the evidence that the applicant submitted to him
was copies of documents submitted earlier to the officer, which he had already
determined to be unsatisfactory; the applicant’s physical presence was 1,081 days,
but it [translation] “still had to
be confirmed”; the scant supplementary evidence submitted by the applicant raised
doubts instead of operating in his favour; the applicant did not seem to have
been very active in Canada and he had difficulty responding correctly to
questions about his knowledge of Canada and even his place of residence in Montréal
(Certified tribunal record at pp 13-14).
[9]
Accordingly,
in his reasons dated December 3, 2010, the citizenship judge refused the
citizenship application because the applicant did not meet the requirements of
paragraphs 5(1)(c) and 5(1)(e) of the Act:
Citizenship
Act,
RSC 1985,
c
C-29
Grant
of citizenship
5.
(1) The Minister shall grant citizenship to any person who
. . .
(c)
is a permanent resident within the meaning of subsection 2(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, and has, within the four years immediately
preceding the date of his or her application, accumulated at least three
years of residence in Canada calculated in the following manner:
. . .
(e)
has an adequate knowledge of Canada and of the responsibilities and
privileges of citizenship; . . .
[Emphasis
added.]
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Loi
sur la citoyenneté,
LRC 1985, ch C-29
Attribution
de la citoyenneté
5.
(1) Le ministre attribue la citoyenneté à toute personne qui, à la fois:
[…]
c) est un résident
permanent au sens du paragraphe 2(1) of the Act sur l’immigration et la
protection des réfugiés et a, dans les quatre ans qui ont précédé la date
de sa demande, résidé au Canada pendant au moins trois ans en tout, la
durée de sa résidence étant calculée de la manière suivante:
[…]
e) a une connaissance
suffisante du Canada et des responsabilités et avantages conférés par la
citoyenneté; […]
[Nous
soulignons.]
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[10]
With
respect to paragraph 5(1)(c), the judge again reviewed all the
documents submitted by the applicant and determined that they were not
satisfactory evidence of his residence in the country, as required by the physical
test established in Pourghasemi (Re) (1993), 62 FTR 122, [1993] FCJ 232
[Pourghasemi]. Regarding paragraph 5(1)(e), the answers
provided by the applicant at the interview on July 28, 2010, did not
demonstrate that he had adequate knowledge of Canada. Finally, with respect to
the possibility of recommending the exercise of discretion under
subsection 5(4) of the Act, although he tried to find out at the interview
whether there were special circumstances that could justify such a
recommendation, according to the citizenship judge, the applicant did not
submit any evidence in this regard.
II. Positions
of the parties
[11]
First,
the applicant disputes the delay between the communication of the citizenship
judge’s preliminary decision to the Minister on August 13, 2010, and the
official decision issued on December 3, 2010, because section 14 of
the Act states that the citizenship judge shall determine whether the applicant
meets the statutory requirements “within sixty days of the day the application
was referred to the judge”.
[12]
Second,
the applicant disputes the fact that the citizenship judge applied the physical
test of residence established in Pourghasemi, above, and not the
“centralized mode of living in Canada” test, which does not require a physical
presence of 1,095 days if the applicant can adequately satisfy the six factors
set out in Koo (Re), [1992] FCJ 1107 at para 10, [1993] 1 FC 286 [Koo].
The applicant is of the opinion that, on those six factors, he has clearly
established his residence in Canada but that the citizenship judge did not
examine and consider all the documentary evidence provided.
[13]
Third,
regarding the determination under paragraph 5(1)(e) of the Act, the
applicant states that he had a legitimate expectation that he would take a
written test on his knowledge of Canada and that the citizenship judge did not adhere
to procedural fairness by having him instead take an oral test at the
interview.
[14]
For
his part, the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration [the Minister] states
that, having regard to the evidence before him, the citizenship judge’s
decision was reasonable, that the extended period to decide the application did
not invalidate the decision and that assessing the applicant’s knowledge of
Canada orally did not result in a breach of the rules of procedural fairness.
III. Issues
1. What
are the consequences of the citizenship judge’s failure to issue his decision within
the 60-day time period prescribed by the Act?
2. Did the
citizenship judge err in applying the physical test when assessing the
application for citizenship?
3. Did
the citizenship judge breach the rules of procedural fairness by assessing the
applicant’s knowledge of Canada orally?
IV. Applicable
standard of review
[15]
After
carefully reviewing the jurisprudence concerning this type of appeal, I support
Justice Donald Rennie’s reasoning as stated in Martinez-Caro v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 640 at paras
36-52, [2011] FCJ 881 [Martinez-Caro], where he recommended applying the
correctness standard to the interpretation of paragraph 5(1)(c) of
the Act. Justice Rennie recognized in his reasons the exception to the
correctness standard where a specialized tribunal is interpreting its home
statute (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at para 54, [2008] SCJ 9 and
Smith v Alliance Pipeline Ltd, 2011 SCC 7 at para 37, [2011] SCJ 7) but
concluded convincingly that this exception applies only to the question of
interpreting the definition of residence, given its general importance for the
legal system and the fact that Parliament’s intention is clear and “cannot be
circumvented by the choice of a deferential standard of review” (Martinez-Caro
at para 51). The application of the appropriate standard to the facts remains
subject to the reasonableness standard (Yan v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 1153 at para 15, [2009] FCJ 1438 [Yan]).
[16]
With
regard to the procedural fairness issues, this Court must apply the correctness
standard (Sadykbaeva v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2008 FC 1018 at para 12, [2008] FCJ 1261 [Sadykbaeva]).
V. Analysis
A. What are the consequences of the citizenship
judge’s failure to issue his decision within the 60‑day time period
prescribed by the Act?
[17]
The
applicant says that he did not receive an explanation for the more than three‑month
delay between his interview and the citizenship judge’s decision on
December 3, 2010, despite the fact that the citizenship judge communicated
his preliminary decision to the Minister on August 13, 2010. The applicant
states that a [translation]
“decision by the citizenship judge within the time limit would have implicitly
given the applicant the opportunity to bridge the gap to obtain the missing
days of residence by remaining in Canada or to gain more time to file an immediate
appeal of the decision rejecting citizenship” (Applicant’s memorandum at para 36).
[18]
In
Yan, above, a judgment that the applicant relies on in his written
submissions, Justice Leonard Mandamin examined this same issue. He
noted, inter alia, that the Act is silent on the consequences of a
decision rendered outside the time limit and concluded that “the 60 day
requirement in section 14(5) of the Act is directory. The
Citizenship Judge did not lose jurisdiction because the delay exceeded the
prescribed 60 days” (Yan, above, at para 25).
[19]
In
this case, the applicant would not have been able, as he argues, to [translation] “bridge the gap to obtain
the missing days of residence by [subsequently] remaining in Canada” because the
specific assessment period was from October 3, 2003, to October 3,
2007. As such, the applicant is, however, still free to file a new application
at any time when he believes that he satisfies the requirements of the Act for
the four‑year period immediately preceding the date of his application. With
respect to the statement that he would have had more time to file an appeal of
the decision if he had received the decision earlier, paragraph 14(5)(b)
of the Act states that the applicant may appeal to the Court from the decision
by filing a notice of appeal in the Registry of the Court within sixty days
after the day on which notice was given with respect to the application.
Accordingly, the citizenship judge’s delay in issuing a final decision did not
in any way interfere with the opportunity to appeal the decision, and the
applicant still had 60 days to file an appeal from the date the decision was provided
to him. In these circumstances, I share Justice Mandamin’s opinion that
the citizenship judge did not lose jurisdiction because of the delay in issuing
the decision.
B. Did the citizenship judge err in
applying the physical test when assessing the application for citizenship?
[20]
The
applicant does not dispute that he had 1,081 days of physical presence in
Canada, that is, 14 days less than the physical residence test established in Pourghasemi,
above, requires. However, the applicant explains his absence of 14 days as
being justified by his mother’s illness, vacation and business trips. The
applicant alleges that, in these circumstances, the citizenship judge should
have applied the “centralized mode of living in Canada” test established in Koo,
above. To support this, the applicant relies on three decisions of this Court (Bah
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 69, [2010] FCJ
44 [Bah]; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Takla,
2009 FC 1120, [2009] FCJ 1371 [Takla]; Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) v Elzubair, 2010 FC 298, [2010] FCJ 330 [Elzubair]).
[21]
First,
Justice Michel Shore stated in Bah, at para 14, that the
citizenship judge could adopt one of the three tests established by this Court.
Thus, this decision is not favourable to the applicant, and the Minister also
points to the decisions in Mizani v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2007 FC 698 at paras 10-13, [2007] FCJ 947 and Debai v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 146 at para 13,
[2011] FCJ 202 where Justices Danièle Tremblay‑Lamer and Michel Beaudry both
agree with Justice Shore.
[22]
We
will now examine the Elzubair decision cited by the applicant, where
Justice Russel Zinn stated that when a citizenship judge finds that
an applicant was physically present in Canada for at least 1,095 days, residence
is proven. Otherwise, the judge must resort to the contextual Koo test.
However, I note that this finding of Justice Zinn is based on the
following comment: “At paras. 46-49 of Takla, Justice Mainville
convincingly supported his finding that there should only be one test for
residence, despite this Court’s jurisprudence that suggests otherwise. I concur
with his view.” (Elzubair, above, at para 13). Justice Zinn’s
conclusion is therefore not the result of a comparative analysis between the
two tests or the result of his own interpretation of the Act, but instead was
made to support Justice Robert Mainville’s finding “that there should
only be one test for residence”.
[23]
Indeed,
after reading paragraphs 46 to 49 of the Takla decision that
Justice Zinn refers to, I too can only agree with the following statements
of Justice Mainville (Takla, above, at para 47):
[I]t appears to me
preferable to promote a uniform approach to the interpretation and application
of the statutory provision in question. I arrive at this conclusion in an
attempt to standardize the applicable law. It is incongruous that the outcome
of a citizenship application is determined based on analyses and tests that
differ from one judge to the next. To the extent possible, coherence in
administrative decision making must be fostered . . .
However,
like Justice Zinn, Justice Mainville did not rule against the
physical test in Pourghasemi. On the contrary, he recognized even being
“of the view that the test of physical presence for three years
maintained by the first jurisprudential school is consistent with the wording
of the Act” (Takla,
above, at para 47). In fact, Justice Mainville did not adopt the contextual
Koo test after a comparative analysis of the two tests or because of his
own interpretation of the Act, but because this test “was adopted in
this Court’s jurisprudence to the point that it is now, by far, the dominant
test” (Takla,
above, at para 43). On this point, Justice Mainville relied on Justice Luc Martineau’s
comments in Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Zhou,
2008 FC 939 at para 9, [2008] FCJ 1170, where he speculated that this dominance
can be explained “perhaps
in part because the six questions were specifically set out on a form used by
citizenship judges”.
[24]
Bearing
in mind the fact that the Takla and Elzubair decisions were not
the result of a statutory interpretation but of an entirely laudable desire to
standardize the law, I would like to point out the Martinez-Caro decision
again. Although it was not raised by the parties, Justice Rennie addressed
the reasoning in Takla by stating that “comity, while highly desirable,
does not provide a basis for departing from a conclusion as to the intention of
Parliament as expressed in a statute” (Martinez-Caro, above, at
para 25). Justice Rennie then began, in a methodical, detailed and
persuasive manner, a literal, purposive and contextual interpretation of the
Act.
[25]
He
relied in particular on the following remarks of Justice Francis Muldoon
in Pourghasemi, above, at paras 2-3 (incorrectly attributed to
Justice Marc Nadon in Chen v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2001 FCT 1229, [2001] FCJ 1693):
2 . . . Parliament introduces
an element of emphasis into the statutory text by enacting “at least three
years of residence in Canada”. Those emphasized words are unnecessary, except
for emphasis. The appellant accumulated less than one year, before the date of
his application for citizenship. In drawing a purposive interpretation of the
statutory language it should be asked: Why did Parliament prescribe at least 3
years of Canadian residence in the 4 years immediately before applying for
citizenship?.
3 It is clear that the
purpose of paragraph 5(1)(c) is to insure that everyone who is granted precious
Canadian citizenship has become, or at least has been compulsorily presented
with the everyday opportunity to become, “Canadianized”. . . .
[26]
In
his analysis, Justice Rennie considered not only paragraph 5(1)(c)
but also subsections 5(1.1) and 5(4) of the Act, which are very relevant to the
interpretation exercise:
Citizenship Act, RSC 1985,
c C-29
Residence
5. (1.1) Any day during which
an applicant for citizenship resided with the applicant’s spouse who at the
time was a Canadian citizen and was employed outside of Canada in or with the
Canadian armed forces or the federal public administration or the public
service of a province, otherwise than as a locally engaged person, shall be
treated as equivalent to one day of residence in Canada for the purposes of
paragraph (1)(c) and subsection 11(1).
. . .
Special cases
(4) In order to alleviate cases
of special and unusual hardship or to reward services of an exceptional value
to Canada, and notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the Governor
in Council may, in his discretion, direct the Minister to grant citizenship
to any person and, where such a direction is made, the Minister shall
forthwith grant citizenship to the person named in the direction.
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Loi sur la citoyenneté, LRC 1985, ch C-29
Période de résidence
5. (1.1) Est assimilé à un jour
de résidence au Canada pour l’application de paragraph (1)c) et du
paragraphe 11(1) tout jour pendant lequel l’auteur d’une demande de
citoyenneté a résidé avec son époux ou conjoint de fait alors que celui-ci
était citoyen et était, sans avoir été engagé sur place, au service, à
l’étranger, des forces armées canadiennes ou de l’administration publique
fédérale ou de celle d’une province.
[…]
Cas particuliers
(4) Afin de remédier à une
situation particulière et inhabituelle de détresse ou de récompenser des
services exceptionnels rendus au Canada, le gouverneur en conseil a le
pouvoir discrétionnaire, malgré les autres dispositions de la présente loi,
d’ordonner au ministre d’attribuer la citoyenneté à toute personne qu’il
désigne; le ministre procède alors sans délai à l’attribution.
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We need only repeat the following statements of Justice Rennie regarding
these provisions (Martinez-Caro, above, at paras 31 and 34):
31 . . .
The plain reading of
subsection 5 (1.1) reinforces the conclusion arising from a reading of the
statute as a whole, namely that periods spent outside of Canada, by
non-citizens, would not, save in the limited circumstances described,
count. Parliament thus expressly contemplated the period of time
during which putative citizens could be out of the country and in what
circumstances. In my opinion, based on the plain reading of the text
the requirement of three-year residence within a four-year period has been
expressly designed to allow for one year’s physical absence during the
four-year period.
. . .
34
To
conclude on the question of statutory interpretation, I note that Parliament
conferred on the Citizenship Court judge the discretion to make recommendations
to the Minister of Citizenship that citizenship be granted in cases of
exceptional circumstances. The discretion to relieve from any undue
hardship or unfairness, such as when an individual was kept out of Canada for
reasons beyond their control were thus contemplated and addressed in subsection
5(4), and to read the same discretion into the very definition of residency, is
to import, indirectly, that which Parliament has already addressed directly in
subsection 5(4). It also, in effect, renders that discretionary power
nugatory. Why else would it be necessary to make a recommendation to the
Minister if, by the selection of a more lenient standard, citizenship can
be conferred?
[Emphasis
added].
[27]
I
agree as did my colleages before me, Justices Judith Snider (Sinanan v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1347, [2011] FCJ
1646 and Ye v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC
1337, [2011] FCJ 1639) and Yvon Pinard (Hysa v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1416, [2011] FCJ 1759), with Justice Rennie’s
legal interpretation of paragraph 5(1)(c) and with his conclusion that
residence means physical presence in Canada. For this reason, I am of the
opinion that the citizenship judge did not err in applying the physical test when
assessing the application for citizenship.
C. Did the citizenship judge breach the
rules of procedural fiarness by assessing the applicant’s knowledge of Canada
orally?
[28]
The
applicant states that he had a legitimate expectation that he would take a
written test on his knowledge of Canada, that he was [translation] “deprived of the advantage of a written test
. . . and if the opportunity had been fairly provided to him, he
would have passed” (Applicant’s memorandum at para 52). To support his argument
that the citizenship judge did not adhere to procedural fairness by having him
take an oral test, the applicant cites a long passage from the Sadykbaeva decision,
where Justice Yves de Montigny allowed the appeal of an
applicant who had been required to take an oral examinatioin.
[29]
However,
as the Minister points out, the applicant had received a letter in that case
stating that the written test would take about 30 minutes. Justice de Montigny
found that, since the written test was the only form of evaluation mentioned in
the letter, “it clearly gave rise to the expectation that the applicant would
be tested in that way. Such
an expectation was clearly legitimate, especially in light of the publicly
available CIC “Policy and Program Manuals” . . .” (Sadykbaeva,
at paras 17-18). Indeed, these manuals specify that all applicants 18 to 54
years of age applying for citizenship must write the citizenship test but that applicants who
fail the written test must pass an oral interview with a citizenship judge to
assess their language skills and knowledge. The applicant in Sadykbaeva
had not yet taken the written test. It is also important to note that Justice de Montigny
recognized that it would be possible to remedy this situation in the future by
changing the policy in the Policy Manuals or by being more explicit in the call‑in
letter about the type of test that would be administered (Sadykbaeva, above,
at paras 23 and 27).
[30]
Indeed,
the applicant’s situation in Sadykbaeva is clearly distinguishable from
the applicant’s case. In this case, the letter sent to the applicant on
July 14, 2010, inviting him to attend the interview stated the following (Applicant’s
affidavit, Exhibit P-29):
[translation]
The
citizenship judge requires more information to make a decision about your citizenship
application. You are therefore invited to attend an interview so that the judge
can determine if your application meets all the prescribed conditions. Also,
the judge will ask you questions in order to determine whether you have adequate
knowledge of French or English and adequate knowledge of Canada.
[Emphasis
in the original.]
The
applicant had therefore been notified that he would be asked questions orally
about his knowledge of Canada. In addition, the current operational guide “CP 4
Grants” specifies at section 7.3 that the requirements concerning knowledge of
Canada can be assessed by a written test or by an interview with a citizenship
judge. Accordingly, the applicant cannot state that he had a legitimate
expectation of taking a written test because the operational guide mentions the
possibility of an oral test and the letter he received advised him that he
would be questioned by the citizenship judge.
[31]
For
all these reasons, the citizenship judge did not err in applying the physical
presence test as set out in Pourghasemi, above, or in ruling that the
applicant had not met the requirement in paragraph 5(1)(c) of the
Act to reside for at least 1,095 days in Canada during the four years
immediately preceding the application, or in concluding that the applicant had
not satisfied the requirement of adequate knowledge of Canada in paragraph 5(1)(e)
of the Act.
[32]
The
respondent is seeking costs. Taking into account the evidentiary arguments and
the history of the case, no costs are awarded.