Date:
20121109
Docket:
IMM-2309-12
Citation:
2012 FC 1282
Ottawa, Ontario, November
9, 2012
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Gagné
BETWEEN:
|
B306
|
|
|
Applicant
|
and
|
|
THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY
AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
|
|
|
Respondent
|
|
|
|
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The
applicant
(identified as B306 in the proceedings before this Court) seeks judicial review
of a decision of Member Adamidis of the Immigration
Division, Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada [panel], dated February 14,
2012, wherein the panel issued a deportation order against the applicant after
determining that he was inadmissible to Canada for engaging in people smuggling,
in the context of transnational crime, as set out in paragraph 37(1)(b)
of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA]. For
the application of paragraph 37(1)(b) of the IRPA, the panel relied on
the definition of people (or human) smuggling found in section 117(1) of the same
act.
[2]
As
a result of this decision the applicant is now ineligible to make a refugee
claim under sections 96 and 97 of the IRPA.
Facts
[3]
The
facts which gave rise to this application are distinguishable from those of a
recent case decided by my colleague Justice Simon Noël on May 15, 2012 in B010
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 569, [2012] FCJ
594 [B010].
[4]
Like
in that case, the case before me involves one of the 492 migrants, including
refugee seekers, who were smuggled into Canada aboard the “MV Sun Sea” on August
13, 2010. At the time, the incident received significant media coverage, reporting
the unspeakably difficult conditions of the journey that put the lives of all
passengers in serious jeopardy.
[5]
The
applicant is a 26 year old Tamil of Sri Lankan nationality. Like many other passengers
travelling on the MV Sun Sea, he was kept in detention for several months upon
arrival in Canada and immediately claimed refugee status.
[6]
In
a series of interviews conducted by the Canada Boarder Services Agency [CBSA]
the applicant stated that he was an ordinary passenger who had to pay for his
travel on the ship. The applicant had paid $3,500 and his father had promised
to sell a land to pay the balance of $20,000 to the smugglers. The applicant
also stated that while onboard, he cooked for the crew and collected rain water
with other passengers in exchange for extra food. Like many other passengers of
the MV Sun Sea, the applicant was sick and hungry. He testified that, once at
sea, he personally approached the crew members and asked to cook for them in
exchange for additional food. He further stated that later during the journey,
he held a watchkeeping post six hours per day which consisted of surveying the
sea from the bridge wing and watching for other ships or trawlers.
[7]
It
is important to note that during the interviews, the applicant confirmed that he
did not receive compensation – such as a reduction of his travel fees – in exchange
for his tasks onboard.
[8]
On
January 4, 2011, a section 44 report was made and referred to the Immigration
Division for an admissibility hearing in order to determine whether there were
reasonable grounds to believe that the applicant was inadmissible for having
engaged in a transnational crime, namely, that of people smuggling. Accordingly,
the applicant’s refugee claim was suspended pending the outcome of
his admissibility hearing.
[9]
In
a subsequent detention review hearing held on January 31, 2011, Member Mackie of the
Immigration Division found that the fact that the applicant had admitted
performing regular cooking and watchkeeping tasks on the ship in order to
obtain extra food was insufficient to find that he was “associated with a
criminal organization within the meaning of subsection 121(2) of the Act” or “in
any meaningful way engaged in people smuggling or trafficking in persons, both
of which are extremely serious criminal offences.” The applicant was accordingly
released from detention under the standard terms and conditions.
Decision under Review
[10]
The
applicant was found inadmissible to Canada on grounds of organized criminality in
the context of a transnational crime of people smuggling pursuant to paragraph
37(1)(b) of the IRPA, and as defined in subsection 117(1) of the IRPA
under the heading “human smuggling and trafficking”. In B010 at paras 38-48, the
Court held that the definition of “human smuggling” in subsection 117(1) can be
relied on for guidance as to what activities are within the scope of “people
smuggling” in paragraph 37(1)(b). These provisions read as follows:
37. (1) A permanent resident or a foreign national is
inadmissible on grounds of organized criminality for
[...]
(b) engaging, in the context of transnational crime, in
activities such as people smuggling, trafficking in persons or money
laundering.
|
37. (1)
Emportent interdiction de territoire pour criminalité organisée les faits
suivants :
[...]
b) se
livrer, dans le cadre de la criminalité transnationale, à des activités
telles
le passage
de clandestins, le trafic de personnes ou le recyclage des
produits de la criminalité.
|
117. (1) No person shall knowingly organize, induce, aid
or abet the coming into
Canada of one or more persons who are not in possession of a
visa, passport or other document required by this Act.
|
117. (1)
Commet une infraction quiconque sciemment organise l’entrée au Canada d’une
ou plusieurs personnes non munies des documents -- passeport, visa ou autre
-- requis par la présente loi ou incite, aide ou encourage une telle personne
à entrer au Canada.
|
[11]
At
the outset, the panel noted that the transnational nature of the offence was
established based on the fact that “much of the preparation, planning, and the
direction of such a large scale people smuggling operation took place
overseas.”
[12]
The
panel stated that under subsection 117(1) of the IRPA the offence of people (or
human) smuggling requires one to (i) knowingly (ii) organize,
induce, aid or abet the coming into Canada (iii) for people who do not
have the required visa, passport or other document required by the IRPA. Applying
these factors to the matter before it, the panel found
that (i) the applicant understood that he and other passengers of the
ship were travelling illegally and that he was aiding the crew in violation of
immigration laws even if the applicant had an unsophisticated knowledge of the
relevant legal issues. The applicant’s inability to articulate precisely what
laws were being violated does not prevent him from being found to have acted
knowingly because mens rea can reasonably be inferred from the nature of
his conduct.
[13]
In
addition, the panel found that (ii) the applicant had “meaningfully
supported the people smuggling operation” by performing watchkeeping and
cooking duties for the benefit of the crew. The applicant testified that after
the ship had sailed he approached a crew member of the MV Sun Sea and asked to
cook for the crew in exchange for extra food and he did so for the rest of the
journey. In the course of working as the crew cook, the applicant was also
assigned a daily duty of watchkeeping and as such, he “helped to prevent the
potential interception of the ship as it proceeded to Canada.” The applicant was therefore engaged in human smuggling because he aided and
abetted the smugglers by offering his services to the crew.
[14]
Lastly,
the panel noted that (iii) it was not disputed that the people who
arrived in Canada aboard the MV Sun Sea did not have an entry visa, passport or other documents required by law.
[15]
The
panel relied entirely on the applicant’s testimony at his inadmissibility
hearing, accepting that he “testified in a straightforward manner” and that his
testimony was “credible and trustworthy”. The panel then stated that its
findings of fact were based on the uncontradicted and credible evidence of the
applicant, and therefore met the required standard of “reasonable grounds to
believe” as set out in section 33 of the IRPA.
[16]
In considering the applicant’s defence of necessity, the
panel found that:
•
the applicant’s flight to safety in Canada as a refugee claimant did not depend on the work he did for the smugglers;
•
the difficult circumstances in which the applicant found
himself when he decided to cook for the smugglers did “not rise to the level of
“imminent peril and danger” as is required to establish a defence of necessity
[…] Being sick and hungry is difficult to endure, but there is no evidence that
[the applicant] faced any sort of impending harm or injury”;
•
the applicant’s vulnerability as an illegal immigrant
vis-à-vis the crew also failed to establish necessity because the applicant
“was not recruited to perform this task. He voluntarily cooked during the
journey because he wanted more food.”
[17]
Finally, in rejecting the applicant’s Charter challenge to
paragraph
37(1)(b), the panel stated that this provision “and by extension,
117(1) of the IRPA has not been applied to a refugee claimant who merely
co-operated with smugglers en route to Canada [but] to someone who proactively
approached the smugglers and asked to work for them.” Therefore, the
applicant’s argument that he was being penalized for merely having co-operated
with the smugglers as a passenger was rejected. The panel further noted that
the inadmissibility finding did not hinder the applicant’s statutory right to
apply for a PRRA or ask for discretionary relief under paragraph 37(2)(a)
of the IRPA.
Issues
[18]
The
applicant has submitted the following issues:
(1) whether the panel
arrived at an unreasonable conclusion or based its conclusion on errors of law
when it found that the applicant engaged in people smuggling by cooperating
with the people who were smuggling him;
(2) whether the panel
erred in law or reached an unreasonable conclusion by failing to acknowledge or
discuss another panel’s conclusions analyzing the same evidence and allegations
for purposes of detention review;
(3) whether the panel
erred in law by interpreting paragraph 37(1)(b) of the IPRA in a manner
inconsistent with the Act’s refugee protection component, Canada’s
international law obligations to refugees and section 7 of the Charter of
Rights and Freedoms, being Part
I of the Constitution Act, 1982 [Charter];
(4) whether paragraph
37(1)(b) of the IRPA, if interpreted correctly by the panel, violates
section 7 of the Charter when it is applied to refugee claimants.
Standard of
Review
[19]
The
applicant submits that while the panel’s factual findings should be reviewed on
a standard of reasonableness, its conclusions which are predicated on a
particular interpretation of the law, including its interpretation of paragraph
37(1)(b), are to be reviewed on a standard of correctness. The applicant
contends that the panel is owed no deference on issues 2, 3 and 4, which are
pure questions of law: Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1
SCR 190 [Dunsmuir].
[20]
The
respondent relies on Smith
v Alliance Pipeline Ltd, 2011 SCC 7 at para 26, [2011] 1 S.C.R. 160, where,
Justice Fish, writing for the majority of the Supreme Court, stated:
[…]
reasonableness is normally the governing standard where the question: (1)
relates to the interpretation of the tribunal’s enabling (or “home”) statute or
“statutes closely connected to its function, with which it will have particular
familiarity” (para. 54); (2) raises issues of fact, discretion or policy; or
(3) involves inextricably intertwined legal and factual issues (paras. 51 and 53-54).
[21]
The
respondent also relies on the decision of this Court in B010, above,
where the same issue arose in the case of a MV Sun Sea passenger who was
accused of people smuggling under paragraph 37(1)(b) of the IRPA for
having “served as the ship’s crew during the voyage” by working “twice a day in
three-four shifts in the engine room, monitoring the temperature, water and oil
level of the equipment.” In that case, Noël J. held that the standard of
reasonableness applies to the panel’s application and interpretation of
paragraph 37(1)(b) of the IRPA, stating that:
[I]n
applying the reasonableness standard of review, this Court’s task is not to
assess the applicant’s proposed definition, but only to determine whether the
ID’s chosen interpretation falls within a range of possible, acceptable
outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law (Dunsmuir,
above, at paras 47 and 54).
[22]
Having
considered the case law submitted by the parties and their representations on
this issue, I believe that this Court’s decision in B010,
above, at paras 32-33 (endorsed
by Hughes J.’s decision B072 v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2012 FC 899, [2012] FCJ 977) is dispositive of the issue. I
agree with the respondent that the panel’s reading and application of the
relevant provisions of the IRPA raise questions of mixed fact and law, reviewable
against the standard of reasonableness.
[23]
At
issues 3 and 4, the applicant has raised broader questions of law, taking issue
with the panel’s interpretation of paragraph 37(1)(b) of the IRPA as
being inconsistent with Canada’s constitutional guaranties (section 7 of the
Charter) and international law obligations (article 31 of the Convention
relating to the status of refugees, 1951, Can TS 1969 No 6 [Refugee
Convention]).
[24]
However,
having found that the panel erred in its application of the law to the facts at
hand and reached an unreasonable conclusion with respect to the applicant, I need not dwell on the question of whether the panel’s reliance on the
ministerial relief available under subsection 37(2) of the IRPA or on the PRRA alternative
as an adequate substitute to a proper refugee hearing when a refugee claimant
is found inadmissible, violates refugee claimants’ rights to security of the
person under section 7 of the Charter (Singh v Canada (Minister of Employment
and Immigration),
[1985] 1 S.C.R. 177); or whether the interpretation given to paragraph
37(1)(b) of the IRPA – read jointly with subsection 117(1) – penalizes
refugee claimants for illegal mode of entry contrary to the principle set out
in article 31 of the Refugee Convention.
[25]
For
the reasons that follow, I find that even if the rather large interpretation
that is being given to paragraph 37(1)(b) of the IRPA is owed deference
from the Court (Sittampalam v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FCA 326 at paras 34-41, [2006] FCJ 1512) ,
the panel reached an unreasonable conclusion, in the specific circumstances of
this case, when it found that the applicant’s acts constitute “aiding and
abetting” the coming into Canada of unauthorized people, pursuant to subsection 117(1) of the IRPA.
Analysis
[26]
As
a preliminary remark, I note that the facts relied on by this Court and by the
panel were established by uncontradicted evidence and were found to be entirely
credible. Therefore,
the “reasonable grounds to believe” standard mandated by section 33 of the IRPA
- which has been held to require more than mere suspicion but less than the
civil standard of proof on a balance of probabilities when deciding factual
matters under the inadmissibility provisions of IRPA (Mugesera v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2005] 2 SCR
100) - does not come into play insofar as there is no dispute as to what the
facts are.
Application of
subsection 117(1) of the IRPA
[27]
The
applicant takes issue with the panel’s assessment of the constitutive elements
of subsection 117(1). For ease of reference, the provision, along with section
131 of the IRPA, are reproduced below:
117. (1) No person shall knowingly organize,
induce, aid or abet the coming into
Canada of one or more persons who are not in possession of a
visa, passport or other document required by this Act.
|
117. (1)
Commet une infraction quiconque sciemment organise l’entrée au
Canada d’une ou plusieurs personnes non munies des documents --
passeport, visa ou autre -- requis par la présente loi ou incite, aide ou
encourage une telle personne à entrer au Canada.
|
[emphasis added]
131. Every person who knowingly induces, aids or abets or
attempts to induce, aid or abet any person to contravene section 117, 118,
119, 122, 124 or 129, or who counsels a person to do so, commits an offence
and is liable to the same penalty as that person.
|
131. Commet
une infraction quiconque, sciemment, incite, aide ou encourage ou tente
d’inciter, d’aider ou d’encourager une personne à commettre l’infraction
visée aux articles 117, 118, 119, 122, 124 ou 129 ou conseille de la
commettre ou complote à cette fin ou est un complice après le fait; l’auteur est
passible, sur déclaration de culpabilité de la peine prévue à la disposition
en cause.
|
[28]
The
applicant submits that the panel erred by ignoring his vulnerability and the relationship
of dependence between him and the smugglers, while accepting that the applicant
was sick and hungry and that he volunteered to do tasks in order to get more
food. He asserts that it is unreasonable to treat a refugee’s cooperation with
his smuggler, in a situation of complete dependency, as converting the refugee
into a person who engaged in smuggling because his cooperation somehow aided
the smugglers.
[29]
Moreover,
the finding that the applicant’s awareness of the fact that the fellow passengers
did not have the required legal documents to enter Canada is sufficient to give
him the mens rea of a human smuggler completely disregards the
uncontradicted fact that the applicant had no authority or organizing role in
the ship in relation to the coming into Canada of any passengers other than himself. The applicant submits that
he intended to travel to Canada illegally but had no intention to smuggle other
people. It is worth noting that the panel did not reach a finding that the
applicant intended to smuggle other people or otherwise facilitate the
operation.
[30]
The applicant submits that his watchkeeping duties were
nothing more than acts of obedience towards people who had control over his
life. He argues that the fact that his self-interest benefited to the smugglers
or coincided with the interest of other passengers is insufficient to establish
his mens rea as a smuggler.
[31]
In addition, the panel’s conclusion that the services
performed by the applicant were such that he was part of the smuggling
operation is inconsistent with the uncontradicted evidence that the applicant’s
family in Sri Lanka had to pay the balance of his debt to the smugglers.
[32]
I have considered the respondent’s arguments that the role
of this Court is not to develop a definition of people smuggling but to assess
whether the panel’s definition falls within a range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and the law, having
in mind that the jurisprudence is in favour of an “unrestricted and broad”
interpretation of section 37 of the IRPA (Sittampalam v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FCA 326 at para 36, [2006] FCJ 1512 [Sittampalam]; Poshteh
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FCA 85 at para 29,
[2005] FCJ 381; and B010, above, at paras 51-55). However, the respondent has failed to satisfy me that the decision
must stand in this case.
[33]
In
its assessment under subsection 117(1) of the IRPA, the panel applied the
constitutive elements described in R v Alzehrani, [2008] OJ 4422 at para
10, 75 Imm LR (3d) 304:
In order to establish a breach of this section, the Crown
must prove that: (i) the person being smuggled did not have the required documents
to enter Canada; (ii) the person was coming into Canada; (iii) the accused was
organizing, inducing, aiding or abetting the person to enter Canada; and
(iv) the accused had knowledge of the lack of required documents.
[emphasis added]
[34]
In
my view, it is an unreasonably large reading of subsection 117(1) to suggest
that any services performed in favour of smugglers can be viewed as aiding and
abetting the coming into Canada of illegal aliens. In this sense, I agree with
the applicant that the panel’s analysis was not informed by the
context of complete dependency, vulnerability and power imbalance in which the
applicant found himself during the three-month journey to Canada.
[35]
It
is also unreasonable to disregard the lack of role and authority of the
applicant in the organization or in the process of the smuggling operation. As
I said earlier, the facts of this case should be distinguished from those that
were established in B010, above, where the panel found that the
applicant “had boarded the ship knowing that he would be a crew
member”. In that case the Minister had submitted three photographs that showed
the applicant posing with
three members of the crew (including the captain) while they
were still in Bangkok. That applicant was part of the team who voluntary
replaced the crew who had resigned prior to departure. In the matter at bar,
there is no evidence of the applicant’s involvement with crew members prior to departure.
The evidence established that the applicant approached the crew during the
journey and asked to work for them in exchange for additional food.
[36]
Mere
knowledge of the fact that the fellow passengers were not in possession of the
required visa or other legal documents to enter Canada cannot reasonably
justify a conclusion that the applicant engaged in the activity of people smuggling, as prescribed in paragraph 37(1)(b)
of the IRPA. Such a conclusion is even less reasonable in a case where the
applicant was found to have acted with a view to protecting himself against
hunger, illness and other dangers and difficulties of the journey.
[37]
The
respondent acknowledges that intent is a requirement of paragraph 37(1)(b) of the IRPA but insists that the evidence
required to establish intent is minimal. However, the only fact upon which the
panel inferred mens rea of people smuggling on the part of the applicant
was that “he chose to help the smugglers, who he knew where [sic]
illegally transporting people into Canada.” However, in order to establish mens
rea the panel had to turn its mind to the reasons for which the applicant sought
to help the smugglers, and it erred in law by failing to do so. In other words,
the applicant aided the smugglers in exchange for food; he did not aid the
coming into Canada of “one or more persons who are not in possession of a visa,
passport or other document required by [the] Act.” Nor did he induce or abet such actions. A
distinction should be made between the offence of people smuggling contemplated
in section 117 of the IRPA and the offence of conspiring with, being accomplice
to, or being an accessory after the fact of the smugglers as contemplated in
section 131 of the IRPA (reference is made to its French version). Section
37(1)(b) refers to people smuggling, it does not refer to complicity or
conspiracy.
[38]
I
find that the panel’s approach to paragraph 37(1)(b)
and section 117 of
the IRPA was erroneous. In particular, the panel erred in law by failing to
establish the required mens rea; it also erred in its analysis of the
applicant’s level of engagement and the nature of his dependence vis-à-vis the
smugglers. I conclude that the outcome of the decision, in that regard, does
not fall within the range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible
in respect of the facts before me and the applicable law.
[39]
For
these reasons, the decision under review is set
aside.
[40]
Counsel for the applicant proposed the following five questions
for certification:
a. For the
purposes of para 37(1)(b) of the IRPA, is it appropriate to define the term
“people smuggling” by relying on section 117 of the same statute rather than on
a definition contained in an international instrument to which Canada is a
signatory? (cited from B010, above)
b. In determining
whether a refugee claimant who has assisted the smuggler bringing him (or
himself and other refugee claimants) to Canada has aided and abetted the
smuggler, is the defence of necessity available to the refugee claimant –
pending the determination of his refugee claim?
c. Does the
defence of necessity apply to a refugee claimant who was smuggled to Canada in
a ship and who having no control over his own food rations, assisted the crew
of the ship in exchange for food he considered necessary to restore and
maintain his health, if he believed based on reasonable grounds that his health
was in imminent peril?
d. Is an
interpretation of para. 37(1)(b) of the IRPA which permits a refugee
claimant who assisted his smugglers to be defined as specially inadmissible and
therefore barred from having his claim to Convention refugee status determined
inconsistent with: the Act’s refugee protection component; Canada’s
international law obligations to refugees; Article 31 of the Convention
relating to the status of refugees, or section 7 of the Charter?
e. For a person
to be found to have aided and abetted in “organizing entry into Canada” as prescribed in section 117 of the IRPA, is it necessary for that person to have aided and
abetted in organizing entry into Canada? In there a distinction between aiding
and abetting in organizing entry as opposed to aiding and abetting while within
a vessel and in the course of travel?
[41]
The
test for certification is set out in paragraph 74(d) of the IRPA and subsection
18(1) of the Federal Courts Immigration and Refugee Protection Rules,
SOR/93-22. The threshold required for certifying a question is whether “there is
a serious question of general importance which would be dispositive of an
appeal” (Canada (Minister of Citizenship and immigration) v
Zazai [2004] FCA 89, at para 11 [Zazai],
citing Bath v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] FCJ 1207). Since
the Court did not need to answer the second, third and fourth questions raised
by the applicant, they will not be certified (see Zazai, above).
[42]
A
“serious question of general importance” is a question that transcends the
particular factual context in which it arose, lending itself to a generic
approach leading to an answer of general application (Boni v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FCA 68 at paras
4-6, [2006] FCJ 275). The first and fifth questions both meet this
requirement.
[43]
As
this Court did in B010 and B072 v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2012 FC 899, I will certify the first question raised by
the applicant.
[44]
As
to the fifth question, it will be reformulated as follows:
For the application of paragraph 37(1)(b) and section
117 of the IRPA, is there a distinction to be made between aiding and abetting the
coming into Canada of one or more persons who are not in possession of a visa,
passport or other document required by this Act, as opposed to aiding and
abetting the smugglers while within a vessel and in the course of being
smuggled? In other words, in what circumstances would the definition of people
smuggling in section 37(1)(b) of the IRPA extend to the offences
referred to in section 131 of the IRPA?
JUDGMENT
THE
COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1.
The
application for judicial review is allowed;
2.
The
impugned decision is set aside and the matter is referred back to the
Immigration Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board for redetermination by
a differently constituted panel according to the law and in light of these
reasons.
3.
The
following questions are certified:
a)
For the purposes of paragraph 37(1)(b) of the IRPA,
is it appropriate to define the term “people smuggling” by relying on section 117 of the same statute rather than on a definition contained in an international instrument to
which Canada is a signatory?
b)
For the application of paragraph 37(1)(b) and
section 117 of the IRPA, is there a distinction to be made between aiding and
abetting the coming into Canada of one or more persons who are not in
possession of a visa, passport or other document required by the IRPA, as
opposed to aiding and abetting the smugglers while within a vessel and in the
course of being smuggled? In other words, in what circumstances would the
definition of people smuggling in section 37(1)(b) of the IRPA extend to
the offences referred to in section 131 of the IRPA?
“Jocelyne
Gagné”