Date: 20090423
Docket: IMM-4172-08
Citation: 2009 FC 406
Ottawa,
Ontario, April 23, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
PUNEET
KAUR DEOL
Applicant
and
MINSTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application pursuant to s. 72 (1) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (Act) for judicial review of a decision of
an Officer of Citizenship and Immigration Canada (Officer) in Edmonton,
Alberta, dated September 2, 2008 (Decision), refusing the Applicant’s
humanitarian and compassionate (H&C) grounds application made under section
25 of the Act.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The
Applicant was born in the United States on March 31, 1994 at
Redmond, King
County,
Washington. She is a
United States citizen and holds a United States passport.
[3]
The
Applicant has allegedly been cared for by her adoptive parents, who are
Canadian citizens, since she was three month’s old. She says she has
continuously lived in Canada since that time. She says that, as a baby,
she did not need any permits to move back and forth between the United States
and Canada. She also
says there was no financial assistance from her biological parents after she
came to live with her adoptive parents in Canada. However, the Applicant was
kept on her biological parent’s health care in the U.S. as her
adoptive mother allegedly was refused coverage for the Applicant by Alberta
Health. The Applicant’s biological mother is her adoptive mother’s sister. The
Applicant and her adoptive parents have visited the biological parents in the United
States
from time to time since the Applicant was a baby. They usually visit once a
year from two to three days; sometimes the visit can be up to two weeks.
[4]
The
Applicant’s adoptive parents had two previously adopted children at the time
the Applicant was adopted. There was an adopted daughter who was born on
November 18, 1977 and an adopted son who was born on March 9, 1978. The
Applicant’s adoptive parents tried to have children for 15 years, but the
adoptive mother was infertile and treatments were unsuccessful.
[5]
The
Applicant says that her biological and adoptive mothers had an agreement in
which her biological mother would have a child which her adoptive mother could
raise. She says that the adoptive parents have paid for all of her food and
clothing and have given her gifts. The Applicant says she has also received all
of her education in Canada.
[6]
After
the agreement had been made between the two sisters, the Applicant’s adoptive
mother conceived a daughter who was born on March 15, 1995. The Applicant
considers this child to be her sister. The adoptive mother also conceived and
gave birth to another child, a son, in 2007.
[7]
The
Applicant calls her biological mother “mom,” as does her adoptive mother’s biological
daughter. It was the Applicant’s adoptive mother’s biological daughter who
allegedly began calling the Applicant’s biological mother “mom.”
[8]
The
Applicant was adopted in 2006. She says the legal adoption was not completed
earlier because they “never perceived any need for it.” The Applicant’s
adoptive mother says that she considered the Applicant her daughter and that there
“never seemed to be any necessity to obtain legal papers to prove that fact.”
However, shortly after 2006, the Applicant’s adoptive parents began to
encounter difficulties regarding the Applicant’s status at schools and sports
activities and at border crossings because they did not have official adoption papers.
[9]
The
Applicant’s adoptive parents sponsored the Applicant from within Canada. The
Applicant has applied for a Permanent Residence Visa.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
[10]
The
Officer in his notes to file noted the following immigration information for
the Applicant:
Date
|
Event
|
27
SEP 2000
|
Study
permit issued. First record of applicant entering Canada at Douglas
POE with Biological father to start grade 1 at private school. Father stated
only in Canada for this school year as is on a waiting list for private
school in Seattle.
Biological father stated he provides all financial assistance and that she is
covered under US medical plan. Aunt and Uncle are declared as
guardian of applicant.
|
30
JUL 2001
|
Study
permit issued. Enters Canada again from Douglas POE
under same terms as previous study permit remarks.
|
05
AUG 2002
|
Study
permit issued. Enters Canada again from Douglas
POE under same terms as previous study permit remarks.
|
14
AUG 2003
|
Visitor
record issued. Enters Canada again from Pacific
HWY POE under same terms as previous visitor record remarks.
|
16
JUL 2004
|
Visitor
record issued. Enters Canada again from Pacific
HWY POE under same terms as previous visitor record remarks.
|
26
AUG 2005
|
Visitor
record issued. Enters Canada at LBPIA in Toronto
returning from a trip to India.
|
09
JAN 2006
|
Decree
of adoption issued for aunt and uncle.
|
04
DEC 2006
|
Humanitarian
& Compassionate grounds application for permanent residence with
sponsorship by adoptive parents is submitted to CPC V.
|
01
FEB 2007
|
Visitor
record issued. Extension granted from Edmonton CIC.
|
04
Jul 2007
|
Application
for permanent residence (H&C) received at Edmonton CIC.
|
15
MAR 2008
|
Visitor
record issued by CPC V.
|
02
JULY 2008
|
Interview
of applicant and adoptive parents at Edmonton CIC.
|
[11]
The
Officer noted that the Applicant was seeking an exemption from the in-Canada selection
criteria based on H&C grounds or public policy considerations to facilitate
processing of her permanent residence application from within Canada. The Officer
noted that the Applicant bears the onus of establishing that having to obtain a
permanent resident visa from outside Canada in the normal manner would result
in hardship that is: i) unusual and undeserved; or ii) disproportionate.
Application
Based on Best Interests of the Child and Establishment
[12]
The
Officer points out that the first record of the Applicant having entered Canada
is September 27, 2000, at the age of 6, with her biological father at Douglas BC port of
entry. Her father said at that time that she was starting grade one at Tempo
private school and would be staying with her aunt and uncle. Her biological
father also stated that he was providing all financial assistance for the
Applicant’s schooling and that the Applicant was covered in the U.S. for medical
insurance. She was also on a waiting list for a private school in the U.S.
[13]
The
Officer noted that: the Applicant was issued a study permit every summer from
2001 to 2005; she visits her biological parents every year in the U.S.; and her
biological parents visit her regularly in Canada. The
Applicant also says that she talks to her biological parents regularly and
calls them mom and dad. She told the Officer that she was lucky to have two
sets of parents.
[14]
The
Officer noted that, during the interview, the adoptive parents stated that the
reason why the Applicant stayed with them was because they did not have children
of their own. But the Officer noted that the adoptive parents have other
children not listed on the application, including a 30-year-old son, who is
married and lives in Edmonton and was adopted in 1988,
and a 31-year-old daughter who lives in B.C. and who is married and was adopted
in 1988. They also have two other biological children: a daughter born in 1995
and a 6-month-old boy (at the time of the interview). This information was not
declared on the application and was provided by the Applicant during the
interview. The Applicant also stated that she had a 26-year-old brother who
lives in Seattle and is a
real estate agent; she sees him regularly.
Best
Interests of the Children Directly Affected and Establishment
[15]
The
Officer noted that the best interests of any child directly affected are a key
factor in an H&C determination. He states that the Applicant is now 14
years old and claims to have lived in Canada since she was a baby, although no
evidence was provided to support this claim. Immigration’s records indicate she
entered Canada at age 6.
[16]
The
Officer notes that the Applicant has been in private school since grade 1 and
was recently adopted by her aunt and uncle, although she sees her biological
parents regularly and calls them mom and dad. The Officer acknowledged that the
Applicant has a close relationship with her family members in Canada and he acknowledges
that she has been studying in Canada since grade 1 and that she plans on
attending University in Canada in the near future to become a pharmacist
or a marine biologist.
[17]
The
adoptive parents claim that they pay the international student fees for the
private school attended by the Applicant, but no proof was provided. The
Officer also notes that the application states that the Applicant has no other
family other than her adoptive parents and no one in the U.S.. This was,
however, a misrepresentation since the Applicant declared she had a
parent/child relationship with her biological parents, as well as a relationship
with her brother in Seattle. The Officer also found the allegation that the
adoptive parents had no other children, and that was why the Applicant was a
child in their care, to be unsubstantiated.
[18]
The
adoptive parents said that Alberta Health Care would not provide coverage for
the Applicant when they had previously inquired. However, the Officer contacted
Alberta Health Care and was advised that they fully cover all children under a
guardianship agreement, as well as adopted children. The Applicant has been and
is currently covered for health care under her biological parents in the United
States.
[19]
The
Officer concluded that, based on these factors, there was insufficient evidence
to satisfy him that the best interests of any children would be compromised
should the Applicant be required to present her application from outside of
Canada while maintaining her visitor status and continuing her education in
Canada. The Officer was of the opinion that the Applicant’s adoption was one of
convenience and the facts show that a parent/child relationship continues with
the biological parents. As well, the Applicant is covered under U.S. health care
through her biological parents. The reasons given by the adoptive parents for
adopting the Applicant were not credible, as the adoptive parents have other
children.
Conclusion
[20]
The
Officer cites section 3(2) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Regulations, SOR/2002-227 (Regulations):
(2)
For the purposes of these Regulations, “adoption”, for greater certainty,
means an adoption that creates a legal parent-child relationship and severs
the pre-existing parent-child relationship.
|
(2) Pour l’application du présent règlement, il est entendu
que le terme «adoption»
s’entend
du lien de droit qui unit l’enfant à ses parents et qui rompt tout lien de
filiation préexistant.
|
[21]
The
Officer notes that full adoptions are recognized for the purposes of
Immigration to Canada and that ties with biological parents must be completely
severed for a full adoption to exist.
[22]
After
considering all of the factors, the Officer concluded that there were
insufficient H&C grounds to warrant an exemption from the legislative
requirements.
ISSUES
[23]
The
issues raised by the Applicant are not entirely clear but appear to boil down
to the following:
1)
The
Officer failed to question the Applicant’s adoptive mother;
2)
The
Decision is patently unreasonable.
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[24]
The
following provisions of the Act are applicable to these proceedings:
11. (1) A foreign national must, before
entering Canada, apply to an officer for a visa or for any other document
required by the regulations. The visa or document may be issued if, following
an examination, the officer is satisfied that the foreign national is not
inadmissible and meets the requirements of this Act.
Humanitarian
and compassionate considerations
25. (1) The Minister shall, upon request of a
foreign national who is inadmissible or who does not meet the requirements of
this Act, and may, on the Minister’s own initiative, examine the
circumstances concerning the foreign national and may grant the foreign
national permanent resident status or an exemption from any applicable
criteria or obligation of this Act if the Minister is of the opinion that it
is justified by humanitarian and compassionate considerations relating to
them, taking into account the best interests of a child directly affected, or
by public policy considerations.
|
11. (1) L’étranger doit, préalablement à
son entrée au Canada, demander à l’agent les visa et autres documents requis
par règlement. L’agent peut les délivrer sur preuve, à la suite d’un
contrôle, que l’étranger n’est pas interdit de territoire et se conforme à la
présente loi.
Séjour
pour motif d’ordre humanitaire
25.
(1) Le
ministre doit, sur demande d’un étranger interdit de territoire ou qui ne se
conforme pas à la présente loi, et peut, de sa propre initiative, étudier le
cas de cet étranger et peut lui octroyer le statut de résident permanent ou
lever tout ou partie des critères et obligations applicables, s’il estime que
des circonstances d’ordre humanitaire relatives à l’étranger — compte tenu de
l’intérêt supérieur de l’enfant directement touché — ou l’intérêt public le
justifient.
|
[25]
The
following provision of the Regulations is applicable to this proceeding:
3(2)
For the purposes of
these Regulations, “adoption”, for greater certainty, means an
adoption that creates a legal parent-child relationship and severs the
pre-existing legal parent-child relationship.
|
3(2) Pour l’application du présent règlement, il est entendu
que le terme «adoption»
s’entend
du lien de droit qui unit l’enfant à ses parents et qui rompt tout lien de
filiation préexistant.
|
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[26]
The
Applicant has not made written submissions on the standard of review but
submitted at the hearing that the standard should be reasonableness.
[27]
The
Respondent submits that the Officer in this case was an expert charged by
Parliament with determining the matters before him. The Respondent cites Dunsmuir
v. New Brunswick 2008 SCC 9 for authority that a less intrusive judicial
review process is warranted in this case. The standard of “reasonableness” does
not equate to the old standard of “reasonableness simpliciter.” Therefore,
the standard of deference should be greater when dealing with issues within the
expertise of the tribunal: Dunsmuir at paragraphs 48-49.
[28]
The
Respondent says that the Officer’s Decision is within the range of reasonably
acceptable outcomes. The Officer’s conclusions were supported by clear and
detailed reasons that were based on the evidence before him. The Court,
therefore, should decline to intervene where the Applicant merely disagrees
with those conclusions.
[29]
The Respondent points out that the standard of reasonableness espoused
by the Supreme Court in Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v. Khosa 2009 SCC 12 calls for significant deference to a
tribunal’s findings of fact and applications of discretion.
[30]
The Respondent says that Khosa is applicable to this case not
only because it applies to all judicial review cases in the Federal Court but
because the Decision in this matter is the same type of discretionary, policy
based H&C decision which was at issue in Khosa.
[31]
The Respondent relies on paragraph 61 of Khosa:
61 My colleague Fish J.
agrees that the standard of review is reasonableness, but he would allow the
appeal. He writes:
While Mr. Khosa’s denial of
street racing may well evidence some “lack of insight” into his own conduct, it
cannot reasonably be said to contradict-still less to outweigh, on a balance of
probabilities-all of the evidence in his favour on the issues of remorse,
rehabilitation and likelihood of reoffence. [para. 149]
I do not believe that it is a
function of the reviewing court to reweigh the evidence.
[32]
In Dunsmuir, the Supreme Court
of Canada recognized that, although the reasonableness simpliciter and
patent unreasonableness standards are theoretically different, “the analytical
problems that arise in trying to apply the different standards undercut any
conceptual usefulness created by the inherently greater flexibility of having
multiple standards of review”: Dunsmuir at paragraph 44.
Consequently, the Supreme Court of Canada held that the two reasonableness
standards should be collapsed into a single form of “reasonableness” review.
[33]
The Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir also held that the
standard of review analysis need not be conducted in every instance. Instead,
where the standard of review applicable to the particular question before the
court is well-settled by past jurisprudence, the reviewing court may adopt that
standard of review. Only where this search proves fruitless must the reviewing
court undertake a consideration of the four factors comprising the standard of
review analysis.
[34]
In Baker v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration),
[1999] 2
S.C.R. 817 at paragraph 61 (Baker),
the Supreme Court held that the standard of review applicable to an officer’s
decision of whether or not to grant an exemption based on humanitarian and
compassionate considerations was reasonableness simpliciter. Thus, in
light of the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Dunsmuir and
the previous jurisprudence of this Court, I find the standard of review
applicable to this H&C Decision is reasonableness. When reviewing a
decision on the standard of reasonableness, the analysis will be concerned with
“the existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility within the
decision-making process [and also with] whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law”: Dunsmuir at paragraph 47. Put another way,
the Court should only intervene if the Decision was unreasonable in the sense that it falls
outside the “range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in
respect of the facts and law.”
[35]
In
relation to issue number 1, and the failure of the Officer to question the
adoptive mother of the Applicant, a procedural fairness issue is raised for
which the standard of review is correctness: Bouaroudj v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2006 FC 1530 at
paragraph 9; Canada (Attorney General) v. Sketchley 2005 FCA
404; and Canadian Union of Public Employees (C.U.P.E.)
v. Ontario (Minister of Labour), [2003] 1
S.C.R. 539.
ARGUMENTS
The Applicant
[36]
The
Applicant says that the Officer breached his obligations under section 25 of
the Act by not questioning her adoptive mother. The Applicant alleges that an officer
must make inquiries when there is a child involved in the matter. The failure
of the Officer to question the adoptive mother is sufficient grounds to
overturn the Decision. The Applicant also says that the Decision is patently
unreasonable based on the facts sworn by the adoptive mother in her affidavit.
[37]
The
Applicant submits that she has been raised since she was a baby of three months
by her adoptive parents in Canada. They have raised her as their own child and have provided
her with the necessities of life. The Applicant alleges that her explanation as
to why the adoption papers were not completed until 2006 is both credible and
understandable. The suggestion by the Officer that the adoption is an adoption
of convenience is unsupported by the facts and is without foundation. The
Applicant also submits that the finding that the adoption was one of
convenience is an affront to the Superior Court of the State of Washington.
[38]
The
Applicant further submits that the Officer’s finding of an adoption of
convenience may cause undue hardship to her in any further dealings that she
has with the Immigration Department if it is allowed to stand. This is because:
1)
It
is undisputed that she has lived in Canada with her adoptive parents since she
was three month’s old;
2)
She
has been educated in Canada, and;
3)
She
has always been treated as though she was the natural daughter of her adoptive
parents.
[39]
The
Applicant states that it would be totally unreasonable to suggest that she
should have to leave Canada, which has been her home since she was three
month’s old. It would also be unreasonable for her to go to the U.S. to make an application
to be allowed to live in the country she has been raised to consider as her
homeland.
[40]
The
Applicant concludes that this matter should be resubmitted to another Officer
with the direction that a Permanent Residence Visa be granted. The Visa should
be granted on the basis that to refuse the Applicant Permanent Residence would
offend against public policy considerations and would not be in the best
interests of the child directly affected by the Decision on H&C grounds.
The Respondent
[41]
The
Respondent submits that the Applicant has not pointed to any unreasonable
finding of fact on the evidence. Instead, the Applicant merely disagrees with
the interpretation of the evidence and the outcome of the case. There is no
evidence produced by the Applicant as to what was actually placed before the
tribunal.
Failure to Interview
Adoptive Mother
[42]
The Respondent submits that, subsequent to Khosa, this Court
considered a similar H&C application in Abdirisaq v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2009 FC 300 and held that the binding
precedent of Owusu v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2004 FCA 38 held
that there was no requirement for an interview and that the burden is on the
Applicant to present evidence supporting her H&C application.
[43]
The Respondent concludes that the evidence before the Officer supported
the Officer’s findings. An interview was held with the Applicant and her
adoptive mother. The Officer considered the several important contradictions and
inconsistencies in the evidence and made a Decision which was reasonably
available on the facts of the case. There was no reviewable error in the
Decision or the process.
Evidence Not Before the
Tribunal
[44]
The
affidavit and exhibits provided in this application by the adoptive mother are
intended to counter the findings of the Officer and there is nothing in the
affidavit to show that any of the evidence was before the Officer on the
H&C application. The Respondent notes that judicial review is conducted on
the evidence before the Officer.
[45]
The
Respondent notes that much of the adoptive mother’s affidavit argues that the
Officer’s findings were wrong; however, there is no substantive evidence which
shows that the Officer made an error based on the evidence presented on the
H&C application. In the absence of an allegation of jurisdiction or
procedural unfairness, only the evidence before the Officer when the Decision
was made is admissible. The Respondent requests that the affidavit and exhibits
be disregarded by the Court to the extent that they relate to arguments about
evidence which was not before the Officer.
[46]
The
Respondent submits that an H&C application is not an alternative
immigration route for applicants who are unable, or who prefer not, to meet the
criteria set out in the Act. It is an exceptional remedy based on special
circumstances which justify setting aside the normal standards prescribed by
law. See: Serda v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2006
FC 356 at paragraph 20 and Legault v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2002 FCA 125 at paragraphs 15-20 (Legault).
No Reviewable Findings
of Fact, Re-weighing Evidence
[47]
The
Respondent submits that the Applicant’s adoptive mother was present at the
interview and was questioned by the Officer as needed. The adoptive mother was
not the Applicant and the Applicant, at 14 years old, was old enough to be able
to answer most of the questions herself. Regardless, the Respondent submits
that there is no right or legitimate expectation of an interview on an H&C
application; nor is there any duty on the Officer to question the Applicant’s
adoptive mother or to seek out considerations which were not raised by the
application.
[48]
The
Respondent submits that the Applicant has the burden of establishing the facts
which the decision-maker should consider. The Respondent cites and relies upon Owusu
at paragraph 8:
8 H
& C applicants have no right or legitimate expectation that they will be
interviewed. And, since applicants have the onus of establishing the facts on
which their claim rests, they omit pertinent information from their written
submissions at their peril. In our view, Mr. Owusu's H & C application did
not adequately raise the impact of his potential deportation on the best interests
of his children so as to require the officer to consider them.
[49]
The
Respondent submits that the Officer’s assessment of the best interests of the
child in the present case was based on the Applicant’s own submissions. The
Federal Court of Appeal in Owusu at paragraph 5 has provided the
following guidance:
5 An immigration
officer considering an H & C application must be "alert, alive and
sensitive" to, and must not "minimize", the best interests of
children who may be adversely affected by a parent's deportation: Baker v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration ), [1999] 2
S.C.R. 817 at para. 75. However, this duty only arises when it is
sufficiently clear from the material submitted to the decision-maker that an
application relies on this factor, at least in part. Moreover, an applicant has
the burden of adducing proof of any claim on which the H & C application
relies. Hence, if an applicant provides no evidence to support the claim, the
officer may conclude that it is baseless.
[50]
The Respondent
submits that the Officer considered the documentary evidence and the
submissions presented by the Applicant. The evidence supported all of the
Officer’s conclusions. The evidence contradicted the Applicant’s assertion that
she had been living in Canada since she was 3 months old: border documents revealed
that she entered Canada for the first time at
the age of 6 in order to go to school.
[51]
The
Respondent also notes that the evidence showed an ongoing relationship between
the Applicant and her biological parents throughout her life, even after the
adoption. This included visits every summer and at other times, ongoing health
care funding (even to the present day) and previous financial support. The
Respondent alleges that the suspicion of an adoption of convenience is not
unreasonable on the evidence that was before the Officer. Even on this
application, the Applicant’s adoptive mother stated that the adoption was
carried out in 2006 because they were having trouble at border crossings and with
other legalistic situations.
[52]
The
Officer noted that the Applicant resided in the U.S.A. until she was 6 years
old and moved to Canada. There is no evidence
that the Applicant experienced undue hardship moving from the U.S. to Canada.
[53]
The
Respondent cites and relies upon Legault at paragraph 12:
12
In short, the immigration officer must be
"alert, alive and sensitive" (Baker, para. 75) to the interests of
the children, but once she has well identified and defined this factor, it is
up to her to determine what weight, in her view, it must be given in the
circumstances. The presence of children, contrary to the conclusion of Justice
Nadon, does not call for a certain result. It is not because the interests of
the children favour the fact that a parent residing illegally in Canada should
remain in Canada (which, as justly stated by Justice Nadon, will generally be
the case), that the Minister must exercise his discretion in favour of said
parent. Parliament has not decided, as of yet, that the presence of children in
Canada constitutes in itself an impediment to any "refoulement" of a
parent illegally residing in Canada (see Langner v. Minister of Employment and
Immigration (1995),
184 N.R. 230 (F.C.A.), leave to appeal refused, [1995]
S.C.C.A. No. 241, SCC 24740, August 17, 1995).
[54]
The Respondent concludes
that the task of the Officer in this application was to determine whether there
would be undue hardship for the Applicant if she were forced to apply for
permanent residence from outside of Canada. In this case, the Applicant’s
submissions on her H&C application stated that she had no place to stay
outside of Canada and nobody in the U.S. to look after her.
These statements were contradicted by the evidence before the Officer, which revealed
that her biological parents still played an active role in her life and that
she had not lived with her adoptive parents since she was 3 months old; in fact
her first entry to Canada was at the age of 6. Therefore, it was not
unreasonable to accept those records over the unsupported statements made by
the Applicant on her application.
[55]
The
Respondent submits that the Decision is not unreasonable. It adequately
addresses the issues and makes findings based on the evidence before the
Officer.
ANALYSIS
[56]
The
affidavit of Balbir Jaur Deol dated October 22, 2008 was prepared for purposes
of this application and was not before the Officer when the Decision was made.
Consequently, it will not be taken into account for the purposes of the
decision I have to make. See Sidhu v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2008
FC 260 at paragraph 22; Gallardo v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration)
2003 FCT
45 at para.7; Samsonov v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration)
2006 FC
1158 at para. 7; and Asafov v. Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1994]
F.C.J. No. 713 (F.C.T.D.).
[57]
The
Applicant’s allegation that the “failure of the Officer to question the
adoptive mother of the Applicant is clearly in breach of the obligations of the
Minister under section 25” is not supported by authority. The jurisprudence of
this Court is quite clear that the onus is upon an applicant to provide all
information necessary to satisfy an officer that an exemption is justified
under section 25. See Tran v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2006 FC 1377 at paragraph 4. As Justice Mosley pointed out in Abdirisaq
at paragraph 6, there is no legal requirement to conduct an interview: Owusu;
Glushanytsya v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 725.
[58]
In
the present case, the Applicant was interviewed by the Officer in the presence
of her adoptive mother and both of them were given every opportunity to place
whatever facts and materials they wanted to place before the Officer.
[59]
There
has been no breach of procedural fairness on these facts, and no unreasonable
approach to assessing the best interests of the Applicant as a child.
[60]
In Del
Cid v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2006 FC 326 at
paragraph 30, Justice O’Keefe held as follows:
30 I am
of the opinion that the immigration officer was under a duty to obtain further
information concerning the best interests of the Canadian born children if the
officer believed the information presented by the applicant to be insufficient
to assess the best interests of the children.
[61]
The
Applicant seeks to rely upon these words as authority for a duty on the present
facts for the Officer to make further inquiries (particularly of the adoptive
mother) to clear up discrepancies between the written application and the
Applicant’s testimony at the interview.
[62]
I
believe that the present facts reveal a very different situation to the one that
confronted Justice O’Keefe in Del Cid. In the present case, the Officer
interviewed the Applicant in the presence of her adoptive mother and obtained
the facts he needed to assess the Applicant’s best interests as a child in so
far as they were relevant to her section 25 application. The Officer
ascertained the truth of the Applicant’s situation and made his Decision based
upon the evidence put forward by the Applicant and the evidence solicited at
the interview.
[63]
The
Applicant disagrees with some of the conclusions reached by the Officer, but I
do not think it can be said on the facts of this case that the Officer did not
make the inquiries necessary to assess the Applicant’s best interests.
[64]
The
Applicant and her adoptive mother were always in a position to provide evidence
to support their case. As the Federal Court of Appeal decision in Owusu
makes clear at paragraph 5, “an applicant has the burden of adducing proof of
any claim on which the H&C application relies.”
[65]
The
present case was not a situation where the Officer did not have sufficient
information to assess the Applicant’s best interests. He conducted an interview
and supplemented and corrected the facts and evidence put forward in the
written application. He then made the Decision that Parliament says he has a
right and an obligation to make.
[66]
The
Applicant now says that the Officer should have identified the problems and
discrepancies in her application and given her adoptive mother an opportunity
to address those problems and discrepancies. She says that the Officer’s
failure to do this means that her best interests were not addressed and that
this renders the Decision unreasonable.
[67]
In
my view, this is nothing more than an argument that an H&C Officer is under
an obligation to identify weaknesses and inconsistencies in an application and
allow the Applicant an opportunity to correct them.
[68]
An
H&C Officer is not under any such obligation, even when the best interests
of a child are being considered. As Owusu makes clear, the Applicant had
the burden of adducing proof of “any claim” on which her H&C application
relied. What is more, in the present case, the Officer conducted an interview
and gave the Applicant an opportunity to elaborate further on the basis of her
claim and to clarify matters that were not correctly set out in her written
application.
[69]
The
Applicant also says that it was unreasonable for the Officer to conclude that
there had been “an adoption of convenience.” However, there were many facts
before the Officer to support such a conclusion, notwithstanding the U.S.
adoption certificate: the Applicant swore statements to be truthful that were
not; reasons were given for her not wanting to go back to the U.S. and for the
adoption that were revealed as untrue at the interview; the Applicant’s
evidence that her status caused problems at border crossings and on other
occasions; and significant inconsistencies between the Applicant’s account of
her history in Canada and the information recorded on the Respondent’s system.
[70]
It
is possible to disagree with the Officer’s conclusions on this issue, but I
cannot say it falls outside the range of possible, acceptable outcomes that are
defensible in respect of the facts and the law. It was the Applicant who
controlled the facts that were placed before the Officer, as well as the
answers she gave concerning her history and continuing relationship with her biological
parents. It was the Applicant’s adoptive mother who gave reasons for the
adoption that did not stand up to scrutiny.
[71]
After
carefully reviewing the Decision, I am satisfied that, given the evidence
before the Officer, it is reasonable within the meaning of Dunsmuir and Khosa.
The Applicant disagrees with the Decision but has not raised a reviewable
error.
[72]
Counsel
are requested to serve and file any submissions with respect to certification
of a question of general importance within seven days of receipt of these
Reasons for Judgment. Each party will have a further period of three days to
serve and file any reply to the submission of the opposite party Following
that, a Judgment will be issued.
“James Russell”
Judge