Date: 20090615
Docket: IMM-4677-08
Citation: 2009 FC 633
Ottawa, Ontario, June 15,
2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Kelen
BETWEEN:
VIKAS
RAKHEJA
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRTION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of a decision by an Immigration Officer
dated October 9, 2008, denying the applicant’s application under section 25 of
the Immigration Refugee Protection Act, 2001, c.27 (IRPA) for permanent
residence under the spouse or common-law partner in Canada class. The
Immigration Officer found that the applicant did not meet the requirements of
this class as outlined in Section 5.14 of the Operational Manual for Inland
Processing 8 (IP8) - Spouses or Common Law Partner in Canada Class. Specifically,
the Immigration Officer found that the applicant did not meet the requirement
of possessing a valid non-expired passport, and did not qualify for the
discretionary exemption available where a passport has expired during the
processing of an application.
FACTS
[2]
The
applicant is a citizen of India. He left India in 1997 and
lived in the United States until he entered Canada at an
unofficial border crossing in 2003, whereupon he made a refugee claim. His
refugee claim was denied in 2004.
[3]
The
applicant participated in a traditional Hindu wedding ceremony with Madhu Rani,
a Canadian permanent resident, on September 8, 2002. The couple failed to
obtain a marriage license at this time, and were therefore not legally married
until they obtained a license in May 2008. Their son, Ram Rakheja, was born in
Edmonton on December
18, 2003.
[4]
In
July 2005, the applicant failed to appear for a pre-removal interview and an
arrest warrant was issued. The applicant was arrested in April 2008. After
legally marrying his wife in May 2008, the applicant submitted the permanent
residence application that is the subject of this application for judicial
review.
[5]
The
applicant’s Indian passport expired in January 2008. At that time, the
applicant had not yet made his application for permanent residence.
[6]
The
applicant was interviewed by the Immigration Officer in October 2008. During
his interview, the applicant stated that he would not be able to obtain a new
passport because there is an outstanding arrest warrant against him in India.
Decision under review
[7]
The
Immigration Officer denied the application on the basis that it did not comply
with the requirement hold a valid passport. The Officer stated (Applicant’s
Application Record, p. 7):
In order to become a permanent resident
under the spouse or common-law partner in Canada class, you must comply with requirements
as specified in the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations.
Since you or your sponsor have not
provided evidence that you have or may obtain a valid passport or travel
document, you do not meet the requirements of the class. Your application for
permanent residence as a member of the spouse or common-law partner class is, therefore,
refused.
[8]
The
Immigration Officer’s Report to File states (Applicant’s Application Record, p.
12):
I have reviewed the information and the
facts of this case. Based on the evidence, I am not satisfied that the
applicant meets the requirements of the spouse or common-law partner in Canada
class as outlined in Section 5.14 of IP8. It has not been established that the
applicant has or will acquire a valid passport or travel document. As outlined
in the Public Policy under 25(1) of IPRA to Facilitate Processing in accordance
with the Regulations of the Spouse or Common-law Partner in Canada Class,
applicants under this public policy are not eligible for a passport waiver.
This application is refused.
[9]
The
applicant submits that the Immigration Officer erred in concluding that he was
ineligible for a passport waiver and that, under the guidelines, he should have
been given an opportunity to obtain a passport before his application was
refused.
RELEVANT LEGISLATION
[10]
The
applicant applied for permanent residence from within Canada under s. 25
of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, which provides:
Humanitarian and compassionate considerations
25. (1) The Minister shall, upon request of a
foreign national in Canada who is inadmissible or who does not meet the
requirements of this Act, and may, on the Minister’s own initiative or on
request of a foreign national outside Canada, 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.
|
Séjour pour motif d’ordre humanitaire
25. (1) Le ministre doit, sur demande d’un étranger se trouvant au
Canada qui est interdit de territoire ou qui ne se conforme pas à la présente
loi, et peut, de sa propre initiative ou sur demande d’un étranger se
trouvant hors du Canada, 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.
|
[11]
The
requirements to obtain permanent resident status are set out in the section 72
of the Immigration and Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 (the
Regulations). Section 72(1)(e)(ii) describes the documents that an applicant
must possess:
Obtaining
status
72. (1) A foreign national in Canada becomes a permanent
resident if, following an examination, it is established that
(a) they have applied to remain in Canada as a permanent
resident as a member of a class referred to in subsection (2);
(b) they are in Canada to establish permanent residence;
(c) they are a member of that class;
(d) they meet the selection criteria and other
requirements applicable to that class;
(e) except in the case of a foreign national who has
submitted a document accepted under subsection 178(2) or of a member of the
protected temporary residents class,
(i) they and their family members, whether accompanying
or not, are not inadmissible,
(ii) they hold a document described in any of paragraphs
50(1)(a) to (h), and
(iii) they hold a medical certificate, based on the most
recent medical examination to which they were required to submit under these
Regulations within the previous 12 months, that indicates that their health
condition is not likely to be a danger to public health or public safety and,
unless subsection 38(2) of the Act applies, is not reasonably expected to
cause excessive demand; and
(f) in the case of a member of the protected temporary
residents class, they are not inadmissible.
Classes
(2) The classes are
(a) the live-in caregiver class;
(b) the spouse or common-law partner in Canada class; and
(c) the protected temporary residents class.
|
Obtention du statut
72. (1)
L’étranger au Canada devient résident permanent si, à l’issue d’un contrôle,
les éléments suivants sont établis :
a) il en a
fait la demande au titre d’une des catégories prévues au paragraphe (2);
b) il est
au Canada pour s’y établir en permanence;
c) il fait
partie de la catégorie au titre de laquelle il a fait la demande;
d) il
satisfait aux critères de sélection et autres exigences applicables à cette
catégorie;
e) sauf
dans le cas de l’étranger ayant fourni un document qui a été accepté aux
termes du paragraphe 178(2) ou de l’étranger qui fait partie de la catégorie
des résidents temporaires protégés :
(i) ni lui ni les
membres de sa famille — qu’ils l’accompagnent ou non — ne sont interdits de
territoire,
(ii) il est
titulaire de l’un des documents visés aux alinéas 50(1)a) à h),
(iii) il est
titulaire d’un certificat médical attestant, sur le fondement de la plus
récente visite médicale à laquelle il a été requis de se soumettre aux termes
du présent règlement dans les douze mois qui précèdent, que son état de santé
ne constitue vraisemblablement pas un danger pour la santé ou la sécurité
publiques et, sauf si le paragraphe 38(2) de la Loi s’applique, ne risque pas
d’entraîner un fardeau excessif;
f) dans le
cas de l’étranger qui fait partie de la catégorie des résidents temporaires
protégés, il n’est pas interdit de territoire.
Catégories
(2) Les catégories sont les suivantes :
a) la
catégorie des aides familiaux;
b) la
catégorie des époux ou conjoints de fait au Canada;
c) la
catégorie des résidents temporaires protégés.
|
[12]
Section
72(1)(e)(ii) refers to Section 50(1), which sets out the documents that a
person seeking to become a permanent resident must hold:
Documents
— permanent residents
50. (1) In addition to the permanent resident visa
required of a foreign national who is a member of a class referred to in subsection
70(2), a foreign national seeking to become a permanent resident must hold
(a) a passport, other than a diplomatic, official
or similar passport, that was issued by the country of which the foreign
national is a citizen or national;
(b) a travel document that was issued by the
country of which the foreign national is a citizen or national;
(c) an identity or travel document that was issued
by a country to non-national residents, refugees or stateless persons who are
unable to obtain a passport or other travel document from their country of
citizenship or nationality or who have no country of citizenship or
nationality;
(d) a travel document that was issued by the
International Committee of the Red Cross in Geneva, Switzerland, to enable
and facilitate emigration;
(e) a passport or travel document that was issued
by the Palestinian Authority;
(f) an exit visa that was issued by the Government
of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics to its citizens who were compelled
to relinquish their Soviet nationality in order to emigrate from that
country;
(g) a British National (Overseas) passport that
was issued by the Government of the United Kingdom to persons born,
naturalized or registered in Hong Kong; or
(h) a passport that was issued by the Government
of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China.
|
Documents : résidents permanents
50. (1) En
plus du visa de résident permanent que doit détenir l’étranger membre d’une
catégorie prévue au paragraphe 70(2), l’étranger qui entend devenir résident
permanent doit détenir l’un des documents suivants :
a) un
passeport — autre qu’un passeport diplomatique, officiel ou de même nature —
qui lui a été délivré par le pays dont il est citoyen ou ressortissant;
b) un
titre de voyage délivré par le pays dont il est citoyen ou ressortissant;
c) un
titre de voyage ou une pièce d’identité délivré par un pays aux résidents
non-ressortissants, aux réfugiés au sens de la Convention ou aux apatrides
qui sont dans l’impossibilité d’obtenir un passeport ou autre titre de voyage
auprès de leur pays de citoyenneté ou de nationalité, ou qui n’ont pas de
pays de citoyenneté ou de nationalité;
d) un titre
de voyage délivré par le Comité international de la Croix-Rouge à Genève
(Suisse) pour permettre et faciliter l’émigration;
e) un
passeport ou un titre de voyage délivré par l’Autorité palestinienne;
f) un visa
de sortie délivré par le gouvernement de l’Union des républiques socialistes
soviétiques à ses citoyens obligés de renoncer à leur nationalité afin
d’émigrer de ce pays;
g) un
passeport intitulé « British National (Overseas) Passport »,
délivré par le gouvernement du Royaume-Uni aux personnes nées, naturalisées
ou enregistrées à Hong Kong;
h) un
passeport délivré par les autorités de la zone administrative spéciale de
Hong Kong de la République populaire de Chine.
|
[13]
Section 124
of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations sets out the
requirements of the spouse or common-law partner in Canada class:
Member
124. A foreign national
is a member of the spouse or common-law partner in Canada class if they
(a) are the spouse or common-law partner of a
sponsor and cohabit with that sponsor in Canada;
(b) have temporary resident status in Canada; and
(c) are the subject of a sponsorship application.
|
Qualité
124. Fait
partie de la catégorie des époux ou conjoints de fait au Canada l’étranger
qui remplit les conditions suivantes :
a) il est
l’époux ou le conjoint de fait d’un répondant et vit avec ce répondant au Canada;
b) il
détient le statut de résident temporaire au Canada;
c) une
demande de parrainage a été déposée à son égard.
|
Ministerial Policy Guidelines
[14]
The
Operation Manual IP8 sets out the public policy of Citizenship and Immigration
Canada (CIC) to facilitate processing of applications made under the spouse or
common-law partner in Canada class under section 25 of IRPA in
accordance with the Regulations. The policy exempts applications under this
class from the requirement under section 124 of the Regulations to be “in
status” and the requirement in section 72(1)(e)(i) of the Regulations to not be
inadmissible due to a lack of status. Section 5.14 of the Operational Manual
IP8 provides, inter alia:
A
foreign national becomes a permanent resident if they meet the requirements
of R72
...
a.
if the
foreign national has a valid passport or travel document by the time CIC
seeks to grant permanent residence. See details below.
…
Passport requirements
Clients who have entered Canada without a passport
Clients are eligible for consideration
under the public policy, and thus under the class, notwithstanding the fact
that they are under a removal order or face enforcement proceedings for
failure to enter Canada with a valid passport or required travel document as
they still meet the remaining criteria under R124.
However, clients cannot be granted
permanent residence under R72 if they do not obtain a valid passport or
travel document by the time CIC seeks to grant permanent residence.
Accordingly, clients should be given the opportunity to obtain a passport or
travel document before the application for permanent residence is refused.
However, cases considered under this public policy are not eligible for
a passport waiver. Persons seeking this waiver must apply through the
regular H&C route.
Requirement to have a valid passport in
order to become a permanent resident
As a general rule, CIC should accept
only valid and non-expired passports to grant permanent residence [R72]. This
being said, the use of a passport that has expired during the processing of
an application may be appropriate in some instances to fulfill the
requirements of R72. Therefore, while not ideal, officers should feel free
to use their judgment in accepting passports that have expired during
processing when no identity issues remain.
|
L’étranger
devient résident permanent s’il satisfait aux exigences énoncées au R72
...
b.
s’il
détient un passeport ou un titre de voyage valide au moment où CIC accorde la
résidence permanente. Voir les détails ci-dessous.
…
Exigences relatives au passeport
Clients qui sont entrés au Canada sans
passeport
Les clients peuvent faire l’objet d’un
examen en vertu de la politique d’intérêt public, et par le fait même en
vertu de la catégorie des époux ou conjoints de fait au Canada, même s’ils
sont visés par une mesure de renvoi ou doivent faire face à une procédure
d’exécution de la loi parce qu’ils ne sont pas entrés au Canada munis d’un
passeport ou d’un titre de voyage valide, car ils répondent aux autres
exigences énoncées au R124.
Ils ne peuvent toutefois pas obtenir la
résidence permanente au titre du R72 s’ils n’ont pas acquis de passeport ou
de titre de voyage valide au moment où CIC accorde la résidence permanente.
Par conséquent, on doit leur offrir la possibilité d’obtenir un passeport ou
un titre de voyage avant de refuse leur demande de résidence permanent.
Toutefois, les personnes dont le cas est examiné aux termes de cette
politique publique ne peuvent pas bénéficier d’une dispense de passeport.
Les personnes qui demandent cette dispense doivent présenter leur demande
dans le cadre du processus CH habituel.
Obligation de posséder un passeport
valide pour obtenir le statut de résident permanent
En règle générale, CIC ne devrait
accepter que les passeports valides et non périmés pour octroyer la résidence
permanente [R72]. Cela dit, l’utilisation d’un passeport qui est arrivé à
expiration au cours du traitement de la demande peut être appropriée dans
certaines circonstances pour répondre aux exigences du R72. Par conséquent,
bien que cela ne soit pas idéal, les agents ne devraient pas hésiter à se
servir de leur jugement pour accepter des passeports qui sont arrivés à
expiration au cours du traitement de la demande lorsque l’identité de l’intéressé
a été établie avec certitude.
|
ISSUES
[15]
The
issue raised by this application is whether the Immigration Officer erred in
her application of Section 5.14 of Operation Manual IP8. The applicant submits
that the Immigration Officer erred by:
1.
Finding the applicant
did not meet the requirement to possess a valid and non-expired passport in
Section 5.14 by failing to give the applicant an opportunity to obtain a
passport before refusing his application;
2.
Breaching the duty of
fairness by ignoring evidence relating to the bona fide nature of the
relationship; and
3.
Failing to find that
the applicant was entitled to a passport waiver under Section 5.14.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[16]
Decisions
of a visa officer are entitled to a substantial degree of deference. Decisions
of a visa officer relating to applications for permanent residence under the
spouse and common-law partner in Canada class are subject to a
standard of review of reasonableness: Dios v. Canada (MCI), 2008 FC
1322, 76 Imm. L.R. (3d) 195, per Russell J. at paras. 25-28; Skobodzinska v.
Canada (MCI), 2008 FC 887,
331 F.T.R. 295, per Tremblay-Lamer J. at paras. 91-3.
[17]
Recently,
the Supreme Court revisited the ambit of the reasonableness standard of review
in Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration) v. Khosa, 2009 SCC 12, confirming that a high degree of deference
is warranted where a decision is reviewed for findings of fact or mixed fact
and law. Justice Binnie stated at paragraph 17:
This
appeal provides a good illustration of why the adjustment made by Dunsmuir was
timely. By switching the standard of review from patent unreasonableness to
reasonableness simpliciter, the Federal Court of Appeal majority felt
empowered to retry the case in important respects, even though the issues to be
resolved had to do with immigration policy, not law. Clearly, the majority
felt that the IAD disposition was unjust to Khosa. However, Parliament saw fit
to confide that particular decision to the IAD, not to the judges.
[18]
In
reviewing the Board’s decision using a standard of reasonableness, the Court
will consider "the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process” and “whether the decision
falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in
respect of the facts and law.” (Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick [2008] S.C.J. No. 9,
2008 SCC 9, at paragraph 47).
[19]
The
applicant also submits that the Immigration Officer ignored relevant evidence.
This engages procedural fairness and is reviewable on a standard of
correctness: Chertyuk v. Canada (MCI), 2008 FC 870, per Frenette D.J. at
para. 19.
ANALYSIS
Issue No. 1: Did the Immigration
Officer err in finding that the applicant did not meet the requirement to have
a valid passport?
[20]
The
applicant submits that although he did not have a valid passport at the time of
his interview, he was not barred from obtaining permanent resident status under
the policy requirements of IP8. The applicant submits that the officer should
have given the applicant an opportunity to apply for a new passport before
refusing his application on these grounds.
[21]
However,
the Immigration Officer questioned the applicant during his interview about his
ability to obtain a new passport. The applicant states in his affidavit
(Applicant’s Application Record, p. 14-15):
Ms.
Galloway [the Immigration Officer] has asked me in depth about my Indian
passport and whether I have tried to renew it as well as if I anticipated any
problems with a renewal of my passport. I have answered her questions truthfully
based on the belief that I had on my experience that I have made on or about
the end of 2005 when I inquired together with my wife about the possibility of
extending our passports with the Indian High Commission in Vancouver. At that time we were advised that because we do not have
our passports in our possessions, we would not be able to obtain new passports
nor would we be able to extend our current ones.
[22]
In
the Immigration Officer’s Report to File, she stated (Applicant’s Application
Record, p. 12):
During the interview the applicant
advised that he does not have a valid passport and the he is certain he cannot
obtain one. The applicant advised that the Indian High Commission does not
entertain refugee claimants. He further advised that he was charged with a
criminal offence in India and that a warrant for his
arrest was consequently issued. The applicant stated it will not be possible
to extend his passport since there is a warrant for his arrest in India.
[23]
The
evidence before the Immigration Officer was that the applicant could not
obtain a new passport or renew his expired passport. The applicant stated in
his interview that he was certain that this was the case. The Immigration
Officer was entitled to rely on this information. The applicant states the he
has subsequently learned that he was mistaken and that he may in fact be able
to renew his passport. However, this information was not before the
Immigration Officer. The Immigration Officer acted reasonably with respect to
this issue.
Issue No. 2: Did the Officer breach the
duty of fairness by ignoring relevant evidence?
[24]
The
applicant submits that the Immigration Officer ignored evidence about the bona
fide nature of his relationship with his spouse, and that the Officer should
have made a finding about whether the relationship was genuine before
proceeding to the passport requirements for permanent residence. The applicant
submits that the Immigration Officer ignored evidence that he has purchased a
home with his wife, that they have a child together, and that the child suffers
from a medical condition.
[25]
The
requirement that an individual must have a valid passport is not contingent on
any finding as to the bona fide nature of the relationship. Had the
Immigration Officer made a finding that the applicant’s relationship was
genuine, it would not have affected her factual finding based on the evidence
before her that the applicant did not meet the requirement to have a valid
passport. It is not a breach of procedural fairness that the Immigration
Officer did not make a finding on the bona fide nature of the relationship when
the applicant was barred for failing to meet a discrete statutory requirement.
Moreover, the child’s medical condition does not go to the genuineness of the relationship
and is a matter properly considered under an application for a humanitarian and
compassionate exemption (H&C). The applicant may still apply for an
H&C exemption.
Issue No. 3: Did the Immigration
Officer err in failing to find that the applicant was entitled to a passport
waiver?
[26]
The
applicant submits that the Immigration Officer erred in not finding the
applicant was entitled to the passport waiver in Section 5.14. This waiver
provides that individuals whose passports have expired during processing may
submit their expired documents. For ease of reference this subsection is
reproduced below:
Requirement to have a valid passport in
order to become a permanent resident
As a general rule, CIC should accept
only valid and non-expired passports to grant permanent residence [R72].
This being said, the use of a passport that has expired during the processing
of an application may be appropriate in some instances to fulfill the
requirements of R72. Therefore, while not ideal, officers should feel free
to use their judgment in accepting passports that have expired during
processing when no identity issues remain.
|
Obligation de posséder un passeport
valide pour obtenir le statut de résident permanent
En
règle générale, CIC ne devrait accepter que les passeports valides et non
périmés pour octroyer la résidence permanente [R72]. Cela dit, l’utilisation
d’un passeport qui est arrivé à expiration au cours du traitement de la
demande peut être appropriée dans certaines circonstances pour répondre aux
exigences du R72. Par conséquent, bien que cela ne soit pas idéal, les
agents ne devraient pas hésiter à se servir de leur jugement pour accepter
des passeports qui sont arrivés à expiration au cours du traitement de la
demande lorsque l’identité de l’intéressé a été établie avec certitude.
|
[27]
This
subsection clearly states that passports that have expired during the
processing of an application may nonetheless be accepted by an Immigration
Officer. First, this provision does not apply to the applicant, whose passport
expired on January 26, 2008, before the applicant submitted his application in
May 2008. Second, the provision is clearly discretionary: it provides that
officers “should feel free to use their judgment” in accepting these
documents. In reviewing the officer’s decision on a standard of
reasonableness, then, it was clearly open to the officer to not apply this
waiver to the present application. The applicant was not a member of the group
contemplated by the provision, i.e. those who had valid passports when they
applied, which then expired during processing.
The Guidelines contained in IP8 are not law
[28]
The
Immigration Officer did not err in law in following the policy, or unreasonably
interpret the Ministerial guidelines in finding that the applicant did not meet
the Department’s requirements for processing under the exemption for the spouse
and common-law partner class under s. 25 of IRPA set out in the Operational
Manual IP8.
[29]
The
Operational Manuals for Inland Processing sets out the policy of the CIC on how
it interprets IRPA and the Regulations. These ministerial guidelines
are not law. See Balasingham v. Canada (MCI) (1998) 157 F.T.R. 143, 84 A.C.W.S. (3d)
744, per Teitelbaum J., as he then was, at para. 10; Agot v. Canada (MCI), 2003 FCT 436,
232 F.T.R. 101, per Layden-Stevenson J. at para. 8; Wong v. Canada (MCI), 2006
FC 1410, 304 F.T.R. 129, per myself at para. 20; Kisana v. Canada (MCI),
2008 FC 307, 167 A.C.W.S. (3d) 162, per Mosley J. at para. 10.
[30]
Section
72(1)(e)(ii) and section 50(1)(a) of the Regulations require that an
individual must provide a passport or travel document. One reason for the
passport requirement is to prove the identity of the applicant. Under the
policy, individuals whose passports expire during processing may submit their
expired passports if there is no question as to their identity. The Court
finds on the facts that the Minister accepts that the applicant is a citizen of
India and that he entered Canada in 2003. The Court
finds that the applicant entered Canada with a valid passport which expired on January 26,
2008, four months before the applicant submitted his application for permanent
residence.
[31]
The
guidelines in the Operational Manual IP8 do not provide that an Immigration
Officer may accept an expired passport where the expiry date pre-dates the
application for permanent residence. However, the intent of the public policy
is to facilitate family reunification of spouses under section 25 of IRPA, even
where the applicant is not in status as required by the Act. In my view, it may
be arbitrary to exempt individuals whose passports expire during processing,
but not those whose valid passports expired after entry into Canada, where identity is not
at issue.
[32]
Counsel
for the respondent advised the Court that the applicant, while disqualified
under the “spouse in Canada class” under section 25
of IRPA, may still apply under section 25 for exemption from the passport
requirement with another H&C application. This is confusing. If the
applicant is already considered for exemption on the H&C grounds under
section 25 of IRPA as a member of the “spouse in Canada class”, it is logical
that an exemption for the valid passport requirement under the Regulations,
also be considered at the same time by the immigration officer, or at least be
referred to another H&C officer if the immigration officer is satisfied
that the reason for the valid passport requirement is to establish the true
identity of the applicant, and in this case, the applicant’s identity is not in
doubt. However, there may be other policy reasons why the respondent requires
the applicant have a valid passport such as security concerns. The Court must
be deferential to the respondent’s policy.
[33]
Accordingly,
the Immigration Officer’s decision in this matter was reasonably open to her
and this application for judicial review must be dismissed. An application for
permanent residence under the spouse or common-law partner in Canada class is a
discretionary exemption by the respondent under section 25 of IRPA. The
respondent has set out a policy for situations granting that exemption which
include that the applicant have a valid passport at the time the application is
made. According to the respondent the applicant can now make another
application under section 25 of IRPA for an exemption from the requirement that
he have a valid passport, and then the applicant can make another application
for permanent residence under the spouse or common-law partner in Canada class.
While this two-step process seems illogical, the Court acknowledges that it was
reasonably open to the respondent to require that the applicant have a valid
passport before bringing his current application.
[34]
The
parties have advised the Court that they do not consider that this application
for judicial review raises a serious question of general importance which
should be certified for an appeal. The Court agrees so that no question will be
certified.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
This
application for judicial review is dismissed.
“Michael
A. Kelen”