Date: 20091015
Docket: IMM-2002-09
Citation: 2009 FC 1042
Ottawa, Ontario, October 15,
2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Barnes
BETWEEN:
FUSHENG
MA
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY
AND
EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review by Fusheng Ma challenging a decision by a
Visa Officer (Officer) to refuse his application (and those of his wife and
accompanying child) for permanent residency.
I. Background
[2]
In
2004, Mr. Ma and his wife, Chun-e Wu, applied to emigrate to Canada under the business
skills category of the British Columbia Provincial Nominee Program, and on July
30th of that year their application was approved. That approval was subject to
the issuance of temporary work visas through the Canadian Embassy in Beijing, along with
a visitor’s visa for their accompanying dependent child, Jun Ma. Those visas
were issued on May 19, 2005 and have since been renewed.
[3]
When
the family arrived in Vancouver in May 2005, they
enrolled Jun in a public elementary school. In April 2006, Mr. Ma and Ms. Wu were authorized
to apply for permanent resident visas and shortly thereafter they did so. In July
2006, the Canadian Consulate in Seattle requested that the
family proceed with the required medical examinations. In the course of completing
those assessments, it was determined that Jun had a moderate intellectual
disability that would necessitate special education. On February 15, 2007, the
Department’s Medical Services Branch requested information about the
anticipated cost of additional educational and life skills support for Jun for
the following five years. The record indicates that Mr. Ma had difficulty
obtaining the required information from the Vancouver School Board prompting
the Officer to write to Mr. Ma on December 6, 2007, imposing a response
deadline of two months. The requested information was obtained shortly
thereafter and it led the Officer to believe that Jun’s health condition might
be expected to cause excessive demand on health or social services in Canada. Such a
finding would render the family inadmissible to Canada by virtue of
ss. 38 and 42 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001,
c. 27 (IRPA). Under letter of May 2, 2008, the Officer apprised Mr. Ma of his
concern and requested additional information including the completion of Declarations
of Ability and Intent. The Declarations were in a form provided by the Officer
and included the following statement:
I hereby declare that I have fully informed
myself of the availability and cost of some alternative methods of service
delivery to offset the excessive demand on social services. I am providing with
this declaration the details of the alternative methods I intend to use in Canada.
I hereby declare that I will assume
responsibility for arranging the provision of these services, delivered by a
private service provider, community group, family member, or other service
provider (organization/individual), and will defray the costs for these services.
I am providing with this declaration evidence showing these
individuals/organizations are willing and able to deliver the required services
privately. I am also providing with this declaration evidence showing I have or
will have the ability to defray the related costs.
I hereby declare that I will not hold the
federal or a provincial/territorial authority responsible for any cost
associated with this alternative provision of services.
I am signing this declaration of my own
volition, not due to force or the influence of any other person, and I make
this declaration conscientiously believing it to be true.
[4]
On
June 11, 2008, Mr. Ma wrote to the Officer enclosing Declarations of Ability
and Intent executed by himself, his wife and his brother. He also advised that
arrangements were underway to enroll Jun in a private school at a tuition cost
of $28,800 per year. Mr. Ma concluded by stating that he hoped the submissions
were in order, but if questions remained the Officer should so advise.
[5]
The
Officer did follow up some six months later with a letter indicating a
continuing concern about the bona fides of the family’s commitment to
meeting Jun’s future private school expenses. That matter was expressed as
follows:
You also state that you intend to enroll
June in Glen Eden Multimodal Centre, a private school whose tuition fees are
$28,800 per year. The letter from Glen Eden states that Jun will be enrolled
at the school “upon his entry to Canada.”
Jun entered Canada in May 2005. Your
submission contains no explanation regarding the reason why Jun has, to this
point, been enrolled in a public rather than a private educational institution,
or evidence to show when you initiated your search for a private institution.
I note that you have stated that the cost
of the special education and other services Jun will require will be borne
privately by you and, if necessary, by your brother. Whilst I do not have any
particular doubts regarding your family’s ability to pay these costs privately,
in my judgment the fact that Jun has only been enrolled in a public school in
Canada to this date significantly undermines the assertion that, in future, his
educational and social services expenses will be paid for privately.
The Officer
allowed a further 60 days for Mr. Ma to address this concern.
[6]
On
January 19, 2009, Mr. Ma wrote to the Officer and provided evidence that Jun
was enrolled in a private school and that the initial tuition fee of $15,000
had been paid. Mr. Ma again invited the Officer to contact him if any questions
remained or if more evidence was needed. Notwithstanding Mr. Ma’s invitation,
the Officer proceeded to render a final decision on February 25, 2009. He
rejected the family’s application for the following reasons:
You have stated that Jun Ma will attend a
private school, Glen Eden Multimodal Centre, at a five-year cost in today’s
dollars of $144,000. Your 2007 T-4 showed an income of $40,183. To assist you,
however, your brother, Yuan Chun MA who is President and CEO of Canadian
Phytopharmaceuticals Corporation, has declared his willingness to defray the
cost of your son’s special education. Consequently, you appear to have the
financial ability to offset the cost of Jun’s special education privately. I am
aware also that Jun is currently attending Glen Eden School.
However, I am not satisfied that you will
continue to bear these costs. In particular, I note that Jun has been enrolled
in a public school, Gladstone Secondary, since shortly after his arrival in Canada in May 2005.
Furthermore, you have provided no evidence or information to indicate that you
have ever borne the financial costs of social services received by your son.
Only as recently as January 2009 was your son enrolled in Glen Eden
School, a fact which raises the question of whether this was done primarily for
the purpose of securing immigrant visas for yourself and your dependents rather
than as part of a genuine plan to assume responsibility for the cost of your
son’s special education services which are otherwise publicly available.
Since I am not satisfied that you have
both the ability and intent to offset the excessive demand on social services
that will be required for your son, Jun Ma, the medical assessment notified to
you in my letter of 02 May 2008 is final.
II. Issue
[7]
In
the circumstances of this case did the Officer breach the duty of fairness?
III. Analysis
[8]
The
determinative issue in this application is one of procedural fairness which
must be assessed on the basis of correctness: see Canadian Union of Public
Employees (C.U.P.E.) v. Ontario (Minister of Labour), 2003 SCC 29,
[2003] 1 S.C.R. 539.
[9]
There
is no question on this record that the Officer appropriately informed Mr. Ma
about his initial concerns that the family had not established that they had
the means and the intention to meet Jun’s future private school expenses. Mr.
Ma was later able to satisfy the first of these concerns by providing a Declaration
from his brother which confirmed the brother’s financial capacity.
Nevertheless, that Declaration and those put forward by Mr. Ma and his wife
were implicitly rejected by the Officer with respect to the issue of their
future intentions. That aspect of the decision was based solely on the
Officer’s stated belief that the family’s past conduct in accessing public educational
services for Jun carried more probative value than their sworn Declarations
confirming their intention to meet private school costs into the future. The
Officer found that Jun’s placement in a private school only occurred after the
issue of Jun’s medical inadmissibility was raised and, as he put it in the
decision letter, this was done for the purpose of securing immigrant visas.
[10]
I
agree with counsel for the Applicant that the Officer does seem to have been
unduly concerned about the fact that Jun had been initially enrolled in public
school. The family was under no legal obligation to proceed differently until
the issue of inadmissibility was raised, and it was only then that their
actions could be fairly scrutinized. The Officer’s pejorative characterization
of the motive for enrolling Jun in private school is troubling because, as I
said in Lee v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) (2007), 2007 FC 814, 63 Imm. L.R. (3d) 222
at paragraph 14, “[t]here is nothing inherently objectionable about taking … a
step with a view to improving an application for landing provided that the
process is carried out openly…”.
[11]
What
is of greater concern, however, is the Officer’s failure to inform Mr. Ma that,
notwithstanding the family’s sworn Declarations of Intent and the actual placement
of Jun in a private school, the Officer was still not satisfied that their
future intentions were honourable.
[12]
It
is clear that the Officer did not accept these Declarations at face value and,
without saying so directly, he found them to be untrue and sworn only for the
purpose of obtaining visas. This was an inference that was based on a negative credibility
determination which itself rested upon a tenuous factual underpinning. It was
also made without an interview and in the absence of an explicit warning that the
credibility of Mr. Ma, his wife and his brother was in issue.
[13]
While
I accept the Respondent’s argument that there is always a point when a visa
officer is entitled to call an end to a dialogue like this one, here that
endpoint had not been reached. This was a point of such significance that it
was a breach of the duty of fairness for the Officer to fail to explicitly put
it to Mr. Ma and to give him a meaningful opportunity to address it either
through an interview or by other acceptable means. This was a problem that
should have been amenable to a fairly simple practical solution and this
refusal was, accordingly, premature. On this point of fairness, I accept the
analysis of my colleague Justice Richard Mosley in Hassani v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 1283, [2007] 3 F.C.R. 501 which
includes the following summary of the authorities:
[24] Having reviewed the factual
context of the cases cited above, it is clear that where a concern arises
directly from the requirements of the legislation or related regulations, a
visa officer will not be under a duty to provide an opportunity for the
applicant to address his or her concerns. Where however the issue is not one
that arises in this context, such a duty may arise. This is often the case
where the credibility, accuracy or genuine nature of information submitted by
the applicant in support of their application is the basis of the visa
officer’s concern, as was the case in Rukmangathan, and in John [John
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (2003), 2003 FCT 257, 26 Imm.
L.R. (3d) 221 (F.C.T.D.)] and Cornea [Cornea v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration)
(2003), 2003 FC 972, 30 Imm. L.R. (3d) 38] cited by the Court in Rukmangathan,
above.
[14]
I
would add that it is well within the Respondent’s capacity to devise a
regulatory solution for the problem presented by this case. The Department has
created a form of declaration for visa applicants and, in doing so, it leaves
an impression that this will suffice. The fact that these declarations
apparently cannot be enforced, and that there are presently no other methods to
legally bind someone in the situation of Mr. Ma, is an issue for the Department
to solve. Until it does, it needs to show more patience and greater guidance to
applicants than was afforded to Mr. Ma.
[15]
The
Respondent has not proposed a certified question and no issue of general
importance arises on this record.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that this application is
allowed with the matter to be remitted to a different decision-maker for
redetermination on the merits, including the assessment of any additional
relevant evidence that the Applicant tenders.
“ R. L. Barnes ”