Date: 20090831
Docket: IMM-5058-08
Citation: 2009 FC 863
OTTAWA, Ontario, August 31, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Louis S. Tannenbaum
BETWEEN:
THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY
AND
EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS
Applicant
and
JOTHIRAVI
SITTAMPALAM
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (IRPA) of a decision of the
Immigration and Refugee Board dated November 13, 2008, whereby the tribunal
ordered changes in the terms and conditions of the respondent’s release from
custody.
[2]
The
applicant submits that Member Harnum’s Order compromises the ability of Canada
Border Services Agency (CBSA) to properly monitor the respondent and thus
brings this application for judicial review of her Order.
[3]
The
respondent, Mr. Jothiravi Sittampalam, born in 1970, is a Tamil citizen of Sri Lanka. He arrived
in Canada in 1990 and
made a successful claim to be a Convention refugee. He was landed in Canada as a
permanent resident in 1992.
[4]
Mr. Sittampalam is the son of one of the leaders
of a political group in Sri Lanka. It is this connection which the police speculate has carried old
hostilities to Canada.
[5]
While residing in Canada he was convicted of the following offences: January 24,
1992, failure to comply with the recognizance; July 8, 1996, trafficking
heroin; and February 18, 1998, obstructing a police officer. In consequence of
his conviction for drug trafficking, Mr. Sittampalam conceded at an
admissibility hearing that he is inadmissible to Canada on grounds of serious
criminality under what is now paragraph 36(1)(a) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 ("Act"). At a second
admissibility hearing he was found to be inadmissible on grounds of organized
criminality under paragraph 37(1)(a) of the Act. A panel of the Immigration and
Refugee Board, Immigration Division ("the Board") found him to be a
member of the AK Kannon gang, believed to be an organization engaged in activities
that are part of a pattern of criminal activity as more particularly described
in paragraph 37(1)(a) of the Act.
[6]
Mr. Sittampalam was arrested and detained on October 18, 2001,
the same day on which many others were detained as result of a joint project
between immigration officials and the Toronto Police Service. Those detained
were alleged to be involved with, or associated with, Tamil gangs in Toronto.
The two principal gangs are said to be the AK Kannon and the VVT, the latter
being an acronym for the village of Valvettithurai where many members of that
gang were born.
[7]
On October 4, 2004, the respondent was ordered deported on the basis
of serious criminality and organized criminality. The decision was challenged,
but both the Federal Court and the Court of Appeal upheld the findings. A
Minister’s Delegate then issued a Danger Opinion against the respondent under
paragraphs 115(2)(a) and (b) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act
(IRPA). Removal was then scheduled for the summer of 2007, but the respondent
obtained a stay pending his challenge of the section 115 Danger Opinion. The
Federal Court upheld the danger assessment, but required the redetermination of
the risk assessment portion of the Danger Opinion.
[8]
From the date of his original arrest and
detention in 2001, the respondent continued to have regular detention reviews.
The respondent was detained on the basis that he was found to be both a danger
to the public and unlikely to appear for removal. He was twice ordered to be
released in 2004, but both of these decisions were overturned by the Federal
Court. On two other occasions, decisions to continue the respondent’s detention
were overturned by the Court. The decision to release the respondent from
detention was challenged unsuccessfully in this Court.
[9]
On January 11, 2008, the re-assessment of risk
was completed and the respondent was found not to be at risk if returned to Sri Lanka.
[10]
The applicant again took steps to remove the
respondent. The respondent again brought an application challenging the new
risk assessment. He also brought a motion for a stay of removal and, on March
5, 2008, the Court, per Justice Campbell, granted a stay of removal until
disposition of the application challenging the new risk assessment. The judicial
review of that decision was heard on June 5, 2008 and remains outstanding.
[11]
The respondent was ordered released by Member
Gratton of the Immigration Division on April 19, 2007 and was released on May
22, 2007.
[12]
On January 30, 2008, Member Willoughby amended
the original release order to allow the respondent one outing per week.
[13]
In
August 2008, the respondent requested a variance to the conditions of his
release to the Immigration Division. An agreement was made between counsel for
the parties that:
a. Mr.
Sittampalam be allowed to remain alone in the residence;
b. Mr.
Sittampalam could be in the yard alone provided there was a surety in the
residence;
c. Mr.
Sittampalam be allowed two outings per week (maximum of 4 hours each) as long
as prior approval (72 hours) was obtained and he was in the presence of a
surety;
d. Mr.
Sittampalam be allowed to walk his children to school in the morning and pick
them up from school in the afternoon; and
e. Mr.
Sittampalam must consult a psychiatrist/psychologist with respect to his mental
state and submit a report within 6 months.
[14]
The respondent requested an oral hearing to
amend the conditions of release, specifically amendments to conditions 2, 4,
15, 16, 17, 18, 24, 26 and 28 of the original release order.
[15]
An oral hearing was held before Member J. Harnum
on October 8, 2008. At the hearing, the parties made submissions on the
amendments requested in the respondent’s motion.
[16]
On November 13, 2008, Member Harnum released her
order. She granted the respondent’s motion and made additional amendments to
the respondent’s term and conditions.
[17]
The applicant is judicially reviewing the
Member’s decision to make additional amendments to the respondent’s terms and
conditions which were not requested by Mr. Sittampalam in his motion before the
Immigration Division.
[18]
The parties raise several issues, however, I
believe the determining issue to be:
Did the
Member err in her duty of procedural fairness by failing to provide the parties
with an opportunity to present submissions regarding the terms of release at
issue?
[19]
With regard to issues of procedural fairness and
natural justice, the reviewing court accords no deference to the
decision-maker.
[20]
The applicant submits that the Member violated
the principle of natural justice in altering and deleting conditions that were
not requested to be changed by the respondent and were either not addressed, or
clearly not at issue, in the detention review of October 8, 2008. The
respondent only requested changes to conditions 2, 4, 15, 16, 17, 18, 24, 26
and 28 of the original release order and the applicant only responded to
changes to those conditions.
[21]
The applicant notes that despite clear
statements, the Member made significant changes to conditions which were not
argued and which were not raised as being at issue in the hearing. This, he
argues, deprived him of any opportunity to address these conditions and submit
evidence to support his position.
[22]
On December 12, 2008, Mr. Justice Russel Zinn
ordered a stay of the decision of the tribunal dated November 13, 2008, which
changed the conditions of the respondent’s release.
[23]
The present application before the undersigned
deals with the judicial review of the decision of November 13, 2008.
[24]
Essentially the position of the respondent is
that all of the conditions of the original release order were on the table when
the parties were before the tribunal, whether or not specific changes had been
requested by the respondent.
[25]
The respondent therefore argues that the
applicant should have brought evidence and argued before the tribunal
respecting conditions that he now complains were changed without changes having
been requested, and he cannot now complain at this stage.
[26]
The Supreme Court concluded that extended
detention or release on strict conditions was constitutionally valid only if
there were regular reviews, which the Court indicated meant every six months.
The Court recognized a growing onus on the Minister to justify restrictions as
more time passes. It concluded that: “… alternatives to lengthy detention
pursuant to a certificate, such as stringent release conditions, must not be a
disproportionate response to the nature of the threat”. The Court further
noted:
117. In other words, there must be
detention reviews on a regular basis, at which times the reviewing judge should
be able to look at all factors relevant to the justice of continued detention,
including the possibility of the IRPA’s detention provisions being misused or
abused. Analogous principles apply to extended periods of release subject to
onerous or restrictive conditions: these conditions must be subject to ongoing,
regular review under a review process that takes into account all the above
factors, including the existence of alternatives to the conditions.
[27]
It
is clear from the reasoning of the Supreme Court that there must be regular
reviews during which restrictive conditions of release must be assessed to
determine if they remain necessary. This review is not dependant on what the
subject of the conditions seeks. Rather it is a constitutional requirement that
the reviewing authority ensure that conditions are not disproportionate to the
risk.
[28]
Recognizing that the threshold for the finding
of serious issue in a stay motion is lower than that in a judicial review and
although the fate of this judicial review is not tied to Justice Zinn’s stay of
the order, we cannot ignore his finding that:
[15] [...] In this case, the
Member relaxed these conditions on her own, without being asked and without the
benefit of submissions by either party. In my view the absolute legal
right of each party to make submissions on the particular terms of release that
she was considering, was lost.
[29]
The parties did not receive an opportunity to make submissions as
to the appropriateness of the Member’s new terms of release. The scope of the
Member’s decision overstretched Mr. Sittampalam’s original request to
review certain specific conditions. The respondent only requested changes to
conditions 2, 4, 15, 16, 17, 18, 24, 26 and 28 of the original release order.
Despite these clear statements, the Member made significant changes to
conditions which were not argued and which were not raised as being at issue in
the hearing. In failing to provide the parties with an opporunity to make
submissions and in altering and deleting conditions that were not requested by
the respondent, the Member breached the principles of procedural fairness,
specifically the right to be heard and to know the case to be met. This error
warrants this Court’s intervention.
[30]
Accordingly,
this application for judicial review will be allowed.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that the
application for judicial review is granted and the decision of November 13,
2008 is set aside for all purposes. The matter is referred back for
redetermination by a different officer. In that redetermination, the officer
should take into consideration the reasons set forth in paragraph 29 of the
present judgment.
The following
question is certified:
Do the
principles set forth by the Supreme Court of Canada in Charkaoui v. M.C.I.,
[2007] S.C.J. No. 9, respecting a review of the conditions of release from
detention, where the detention is based on a “Security Certificate”, apply as
well to detention reviews under subsection 58(3) of IRPA?
“Louis
S. Tannenbaum”
AUTHORITIES
CONSULTED BY THE COURT
- M.P.S.E.P. v.
Sittampalam, 2008 FC 1394
- A.G. of Canada v.
Sketchley, 2005 FCA 404
- Cepeda-Gutierrez v.
Canada (M.C.I.), (1998), 157 F.T.R. 35
- Charkaoui v. M.C.I., 2007
SCC 9
- Mahjoub v. M.C.I. and M.P.S.E.P., 2007 FC 1366
- Mahjoub v. M.C.I. and M.P.S.E.P., 2007 FC 171
- M.C.I. v. Thanabalasingham, 2004 FCA 4
- M.C.I. v.
Sittampalam, 2004 FC 1756
- Harkat v. M.C.I., 2007 FC 416
- Bains v. M.E.I. (1990), 109 N.R.
239 (F.C.A.)
- M.P.S.E.P. v. Sittampalam, [2004] F.C.J. No.
2152
- M.C.I. v. Thanabalasingham, [2003] F.C.J. No.
1548
- M.C.I. v. Thanabalasingham, [2004] F.C.J. No.
15 (CA)
- A.G. of Manitoba v. Metropolitan
Stores,
[1978] 1 S.C.R. 110
- M.C.I. v. Sittampalam, [2004] F.C.J. No.
2152
- Sittampalam v. Solicitor General, [2005] F.C.J. No.
1734
- Harkat v. M.C.I., [2006] F.C.J. No.
934
- Harkat v. M.C.I., [2006] F.C.J.No.
770
- M.C.I. v. Harkat, [2006] F.C.J. No.
1091
- Mahjoub v. M.C.I., [2007] F.C.J. No.
206
- Jaballah v. M.C.I., [2007] F.C.J. No.
518
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-5058-08
STYLE OF CAUSE: MPSEP
v. JOTHIRAVI SITTAMPALAM
PLACE OF
HEARING: Toronto, Ontario
DATE OF
HEARING: June
8, 2009
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT: TANNENBAUM D.J.
DATED: August
31, 2009
APPEARANCES:
Ms. Judy
Michaely
Mr. Manuel
Mendelson
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
Ms. Barbara
Jackman
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
John H. Sims,
Q.C.,
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
Jackman &
Associates
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|