Date: 20090721
Docket: T-1542-08
Citation: 2009 FC 736
Ottawa, Ontario,
July 21, 2009
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice de Montigny
BETWEEN:
HASSANE
EL FALAH
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
The
applicant is appealing under subsection 14(5) of the Citizenship Act (R.S.
1985, c. C‑29) from
the decision of Citizenship Judge George Springate, dated September 9, 2008,
denying his application for citizenship. In support of his appeal, the
applicant argues essentially that the Citizenship Judge erred by incorrectly
computing his days of absence from Canada during the reference period
prescribed by law and not taking into account the corrections made by the
applicant to his citizenship application form.
[2]
Having carefully
examined the record that was before the Citizenship Judge and the written and
oral submissions of the two parties, I have come to the conclusion that this
application for judicial review must be dismissed. My reasons are set out in
the paragraphs that follow.
FACTS
[3]
The applicant is a
citizen of Morocco. He arrived in Canada with his wife and three daughters on July 23, 1999. He
obtained permanent resident status on July 1, 2000. His wife and his three
daughters were granted Canadian citizenship in December 2005.
[4]
On August 20, 2004, the
applicant filed an application for citizenship in which he reported that he had
been outside Canada for 391 days during the four years preceding the
application, namely from August 20, 2000 to August 20, 2004.
[5]
On February 27, 2006,
the applicant met with a citizenship officer. He stated that he had been
working abroad since the end of 2003 and was asked to fill out a questionnaire
on residence. Mr. El Falah filled out the questionnaire and sent it to the
Department of Citizenship and Immigration on March 2, 2006.
[6]
A number of documents
were attached to the questionnaire: an explanatory letter in which the
applicant stated that he had been absent from Canada for 351 days during the
period in question; various documents concerning the applicant’s wife and
children; and other documents more directly connected with his situation (copy
of his passport, termination of employment documents from 2000 in Dubai,
documents describing his attempts to find work in Canada), the couple’s assets
and liabilities (mortgage deed, wills, municipal and school tax accounts, automobile
insurance, electricity and telephone bills) and financial transactions (bank
account, credit card statements, investments).
[7]
On July 18, 2006, a
Department officer referred the applicant’s file to a Citizenship Judge because
the officer was not satisfied that the documents submitted showed a significant
presence in Canada during the reference period. On July 10,
2008, the applicant was summoned to an interview with the Citizenship Judge,
which was held on July 30, 2008. On August 1, 2008, the Citizenship Judge denied the
applicant’s citizenship application.
IMPUGNED
DECISION
[8]
In the letter he sent
Mr. El Falah on September 9, 2009, the Citizenship Judge informed him that he
was not satisfied with the evidence submitted to establish the applicant’s
residence in Canada and concluded that he therefore did not meet the
requirements of paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Citizenship Act.
[9]
However, the reasons
for his decision are set out more explicitly in the notice of the decision that
the Citizenship Judge sent the Minister on July 30, 2009 (Court Record, pp.
9-11).
[10]
After identifying the
relevant period as running from August 20, 2000 to August 20, 2004, the Judge
notes that the applicant discloses that he was outside Canada for 391 days during that period. It is therefore clear that the applicant
does not meet the strict criterion of mandatory physical presence for 1095 days
during the period in issue, as the applicant himself admits.
[11]
Moreover, the Judge indicates
that after examining the documents provided by the applicant, he is not
satisfied on a balance of probabilities that the applicant was actually physically
present in Canada during the number of days alleged. He
then lists several reasons leading him to doubt the presence of Mr. El Falah in
Canada:
-
The information
provided by the applicant regarding his absences from Canada was not clear: in the initial application he reported 357
days of absence, and following an amendment, he reported a total of 364 days of
absence in the residence questionnaire. Then, after combining the two lists of
absences from Canada, the absences admitted
totalled 391 days;
-
Although the
applicant claimed to have returned to Canada 10 times, the Judge was able to count
only 5 Canadian stamps in his passport;
-
In his residence
questionnaire, the applicant gave “H. E. Falah Corporation” as his occupation
for the period of May 2002; yet he provided no incorporation document, annual
report or bank statement in connection with that corporation;
-
The
applicant’s only community involvement was his position as a soccer coach in
the summer of 2002, which was not substantiated by any document;
-
The applicant
submitted TD Canada Trust bank statements that covered only seven months out of
the four-year period;
-
The credit card
transaction statements covered very short time periods: December 29, 2001 to
January 4, 2002 for American Express; December 26, 2002 to January 13, 2003 for
TD Visa; November 19, 2001 to January13, 2002, December 18, 2002 to January 4,
2003 and August 19, 2003 to September 26, 2003 for MBNA Canada;
-
Although the
applicant alleges that he began his job in Kuwait
in November 2003, it appears from the documents submitted that he left Canada on September 21, 2003 for that job, which he still held at
the time of the decision.
[12]
Given the evidence
and the onus on the applicant to show that he met the residence requirements set
out in paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Citizenship Act, the Judge
therefore concluded, on a balance of probabilities, that Mr. El Falah was not
physically present in Canada even during the 1069 days when he claimed to have
been. It should be noted that the Judge says that he gave the applicant the
opportunity to complete his file with new evidence during the hearing, an offer
which the applicant declined.
ISSUE
[13]
The only issue in
this application for judicial review is whether the Citizenship Judge erred in denying
Mr. El Falah’s application for citizenship on the ground that he failed to meet
the requirements of paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Citizenship Act.
ANALYSIS
[14]
It is now settled law
that the standard of review applicable to the decisions of Citizenship Judges
is that of reasonableness: see, for example, Zhang v. Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2008 FC 483; Chen v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 1140. Whether dealing with questions
of mixed fact and law, as when applying one of the jurisprudential tests of the
concept of residency to the particular facts of the case, or purely factual
questions, as when computing days of absence, Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick (2008 SCC 9) instructs us that the
reviewing court should show deference and resist substituting its own view for
that of the Citizenship Judge. To the extent that the impugned decision is
intelligible and justified and can be considered a defensible outcome in
respect of the facts and the law, it should not be set aside on judicial review:
Paez v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 204.
[15]
The applicant
essentially faults the Citizenship Judge for not taking into account his
residence questionnaire, in which he reported 351 days of absence, and for
instead relying solely on his citizenship application form, in which he
incorrectly reported 391 days of absence. The applicant argues that this total
of 391 days was clearly the result of a calculation error, which his
application makes plain on its very face. Thus, he reported 160 days of absence for
the period from February 20, 2004 to July 9, 2004, whereas that period actually
corresponds to 140 days.
[16]
There is indeed a
great deal of confusion in the applicant’s record having regard to his absences
from Canada. In his initial citizenship application,
it appears that the applicant did in fact make an error in computing his days
of absence. Nevertheless, it is difficult to conclude that this was solely a
calculation error, since the periods of absence entered in his residence
questionnaire do not match those he had reported in his citizenship application.
In the latter, for instance, he had reported that he had been out of the
country from October 7, 2003 to January 23, 2004, and from February 20, 2004 to
July 9, 2004, whereas the periods indicated in his residence questionnaire were
from November 7, 2003 to February 20, 2004, and from March 4, 2004 to July 9,
2004. Clearly,
these are more than mere calculation errors.
[17]
The Citizenship Judge
himself seems to have had difficulty determining with precision the number of
days of absence reported by the applicant. In his notice to the Minister, the Judge
counted a total of 10 absences for a total of 391 days, without really
explaining how he arrived at that result. Yet even by combining the absences
reported in the citizenship application with those in the residence
questionnaire, I was unable to arrive at that result or anything close to it. The Citizenship Judge also
refers to the number of days of absence reported by the applicant in his citizenship
application and in his residence questionnaire; but there again, the figures do
not match those found in the forms as filled out by the applicant.
[18]
These discrepancies
do not strike me as fatal, however, and probably reflect the confusion caused by
the different versions provided by the applicant as to his absences from the
country. The Judge ultimately denied the application for citizenship by relying
not so much on the fact that the applicant had not accumulated the number of
days required under paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Citizenship Act, but
by stressing the fact that the applicant had not succeeded in demonstrating
that he was actually in Canada during the periods when he had not reported
being absent. Consequently, the exact number of days on which the applicant
reported being outside the country is relatively unimportant; he also had to show
that he was actually in Canada during the periods he claimed.
[19]
Paragraph 5(1)(c)
of the Citizenship Act reads as follows:
Grant of citizenship
5. (1) The
Minister shall grant citizenship to any person who
(a) …
(b) …
(c) is a permanent resident within the meaning of
subsection 2(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, and
has, within the four years immediately preceding the date of his or her
application, accumulated at least three years of residence in Canada
calculated in the following manner:
(i) for every
day during which the person was resident in Canada before his lawful
admission to Canada for permanent residence the person shall be deemed to
have accumulated one-half of a day of residence, and
(ii) for every
day during which the person was resident in Canada after his lawful admission
to Canada for permanent residence the person shall be deemed to have
accumulated one day of residence;
…
|
Attribution de la citoyenneté
5. (1)
Le ministre attribue la citoyenneté à toute personne qui, à la fois :
a)
…
b)
…
c) est un
résident permanent au sens du paragraphe 2(1) de la Loi sur l’immigration
et la protection des réfugiés et a, dans les quatre ans qui ont précédé
la date de sa demande, résidé au Canada pendant au moins trois ans en tout,
la durée de sa résidence étant calculée de la manière suivante :
(i) un demi-jour pour chaque jour de résidence au Canada avant son
admission à titre de résident permanent,
(ii) un jour
pour chaque jour de résidence au Canada après son admission à titre de
résident permanent;
…
|
[20]
However, this Court
has consistently held that the Citizenship Judge can apply any of three tests
to interpret the concept of residence: see, for example, Mizani v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 698. One of those tests
consists in determining whether an applicant has been actually, physically
present in Canada for a total of three years, calculated on the basis of a
strict counting of days: Re Pourghasemi, [1993] F.C.J. No. 232. That is
the approach taken by the Citizenship Judge in this case.
[21]
In applying this
test, the Judge cannot rely on the applicant’s claims alone. He must also
verify the applicant’s actual presence in Canada during the periods when the applicant
claims that he was not outside the country. Accepting the applicant’s argument
that the Judge erred by failing to accept the statements made by the applicant
in his residence questionnaire would amount to saying that the Judge must
blindly accept the submissions made to him as to the number of days of absence
from or presence in Canada. That is not my understanding of the approach taken
in Re Pourghasemi. If one relies on a strict counting of days during
which the applicant must be present in Canada, it follows that the Judge can and must
ensure that the applicant was actually on Canadian soil during the period when
he claims to have been. One need only point out that it is the applicant who bears
the burden of proving that he meets the conditions set out in the Act, and in
particular the residence requirements: El Fihri v. Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2005 FC 1106; Saqer v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2005 FC 1392. In this case, the different versions given by the applicant could
only lead the Judge to show prudence and to require proof of his physical
presence in Canada.
[22]
In his analysis, the Judge
examined the documents submitted by the applicant, which however did not satisfy
him that the applicant had actually been physically present in Canada during the various periods as alleged. I have not been convinced that
the Judge committed an error in assessing the evidence.
[23]
Thus, the documents
concerning the applicant’s wife and children proved nothing with regard to the
applicant’s presence in Canada. As for the documents concerning bank
transactions, they covered only extremely short periods of time. Lastly, the Judge
had reason to be astonished at the applicant’s claim that he had set up a
corporation, when he adduced no document in support of that claim, not even an
income tax document.
[24]
In the absence of
convincing evidence, the Judge could legitimately doubt the applicant’s
physical presence in Canada during the period in issue. All the more
so since the Judge says that he gave the applicant the opportunity to submit new
documents during the interview, an offer which the applicant turned down.
[25]
Given the evidence in
the record, I therefore find that the Citizenship Judge did not err and could
reasonably conclude that the applicant did not meet the residence requirements
under paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Citizenship Act. I understand the
applicant’s disappointment, but he has not satisfied me that the decision of
Judge Springate did not fall within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which
are defensible in respect of the facts and the law in this case. The appeal
must therefore be dismissed.
ORDER
THE
COURT ORDERS that the
appeal from the decision of the Citizenship Judge be dismissed, without costs.
“Yves de
Montigny”
Certified
true translation
Brian
McCordick, Translator