Date: 20091005
Docket: IMM-1930-09
Citation: 2009
FC 987
Ottawa, Ontario, October 5, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice de Montigny
BETWEEN:
THE
MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
Applicant
and
TIMOTHY
ROSHAUN FOX
Respondent
AMENDED REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration (“the Minister”) seeks to set aside the
March 26, 2009 decision of Immigration Division member Tessler (“the
Tribunal”) granting Timothy Roshaun Fox (“the respondent”) a 13 month
adjournment of his admissibility hearing concerning inadmissibility under
section 36(1)(a) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (“IRPA”).
The Tribunal apparently granted the adjournment to avoid the application of
section 128(5) of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act (“CCRA”),
according to which the respondent would lose the benefit of the day parole he
received and would be re-incarcerated if a removal order was made against him.
[2]
For the
reasons that follow, I am of the view that the Tribunal’s decision is
fundamentally flawed and should be set aside because it took into account
irrelevant considerations in granting the adjournment. Therefore the Tribunal exceeded
its jurisdiction, or, at the very least, exercised its jurisdiction
unreasonably.
I. FACTS
[3]
The
respondent is an American citizen who became a permanent resident of Canada in 2002. He is married to a
Canadian citizen, has a Canadian son and has lived in Vancouver since 2001. He served in the U.S. Navy
for nine years and then held various jobs in the financial sector in Canada.
[4]
On
September 4, 2007, the respondent was convicted of importing 90 kilos of
cocaine and was sentenced to 7 years and 10 months of imprisonment, after
taking into account the 26 months of pre-sentence jail time served while
awaiting trial. It was a non-violent first offence.
[5]
On July
10, 2008, an Enforcement Officer with the Canada Border Services Agency (“the
CBSA”) prepared a report in accordance with section 44(1) of the IRPA that,
in his opinion, the respondent is inadmissible pursuant to section 36(1)(a)
of the IRPA and transmitted the report to a Minister’s delegate.
[6]
On October
17, 2008, the National Parole Board (“the NPB”) directed that the respondent be
released on day parole on December 23, 2008 pursuant to sections 125 to 126.1
of the CCRA (accelerated parole review for first time non-violent
offender). The NPB found that there was no information indicating violent
history or behaviour on the part of the respondent although a loaded handgun
was seized on him at the time of his arrest. The weapon charges were stayed,
and it was held that there were no reasonable grounds to believe that, if
released, the respondent would commit a violent offence.
[7]
On
November 7, 2008, the Minister’s delegate referred the matter to the
Immigration Division for an admissibility hearing, pursuant to section 44(2) of
the IRPA. The Minister did not provide reasons for his decision.
[8]
On
November 13, 2008, an Enforcement Officer with the CBSA attended at Matsqui
Institution and issued an arrest warrant for the respondent and a Direction to
the Warden, in accordance with sections 55(1) and 59 of the IRPA, instructing
that the respondent be delivered to a CBSA officer at the end of his period of
detention in order for the admissibility hearing to be held.
[9]
In
November 2008, the respondent applied to Legal Aid for the admissibility hearing,
but the legal services society sent him two letters of refusal dated November
17 and December 5, 2008.
[10]
On
December 15, 2008, the admissibility hearing began but was postponed to
February 3, 2009
in order to
allow the respondent to obtain counsel.
[11]
On
December 23, 2008, the respondent was released from Matsqui Institution for day
parole and was delivered to the custody of a CBSA officer. The same day, a 48-hour
detention review was conducted before the Immigration Division. During the
review, the respondent was represented by legal counsel. The next day, Immigration
Division member King ordered the respondent be released from immigration
detention to begin his day parole. The member found that the respondent was not
a danger to the public and was not unlikely to appear for an admissibility
hearing. In fact, it was held that his good behaviour in prison and his family
situation, support, and goals would clearly dissuade him from committing new
offences or from fleeing.
[12]
The respondent
continuously abided by his day parole conditions and spent most of his leisure
time with his family. He used his recovered liberty to help his wife take care
of his son, to accompany his son in sporting activities, to himself engage in
physical activities, and to find a suitable church for his family.
[13]
On
February 3, 2009, the respondent asked and obtained another postponement of the
admissibility hearing to March 17, 2009 in order to obtain legal counsel.
[14]
On March
17, 2009, the respondent appeared with his wife before Immigration Division member
Tessler. Mrs. Fox, who is not a lawyer, acted as his assistant. Mrs. Fox asked
for a further adjournment of the admissibility hearing until April 14, 2010
(the respondent’s full parole eligibility date) to avoid having her husband re-incarcerated
until this date. Mrs. Fox explained the hardship of a removal order and of re-incarceration
on the respondent and his family. Member Tessler listened to the submissions and
then reminded Mrs. Fox that an admissibility hearing is distinct from a
humanitarian and compassionate (H&C) procedure. Nevertheless, he greatly emphasized
the humanitarian aspect of the file and decided to reserve his decision to
March 26, 2009. Finally, on March 26, 2009, member Tessler, in an oral decision,
granted the adjournment of the admissibility hearing until April 1, 2010.
[15]
On March
26, 2009, the Tribunal granted the 13-month adjournment request, postponing the
admissibility hearing to April 1, 2010.
II. THE IMPUGNED
DECISION
[16]
The impact
of an inadmissibility hearing was very much on the Immigration Division member’s mind. Indeed, he started off his discussion by
pointing out that Mr. Fox would be immediately re-incarcerated if he was to be
found inadmissible, even if he could not be removed from Canada until he could be released in
April 2010. Here is what the Member stated by way of introduction to his
discussion of Mr. Fox’s request for an adjournment:
All parties understand and
acknowledge that if the admissibility hearing proceeds today and Mr. Fox is
found inadmissible and ordered deported from Canada he would lose the privilege
of accelerated day parole and be returned to prison where he would remain until
his statutory release date on the 14th of April 2010 and this is by
operation of subsection 128(5) of the Corrections and Conditional Release
Act.
All parties also understand
and acknowledge that if the admissibility hearing proceeds today and Mr. Fox is
found admissible – inadmissible the Minister would not be in the position to
remove him from Canada until at least the 14th
of April 2010 by operation of section 59(b) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act.
Therefore, the solitary,
practical effect of proceeding with the admissibility hearing at this time
which is likely to result in a Deportation Order is that Mr. Fox will
immediately be required to go back to prison where he will remain until April
2010.
[17]
The Member
then quoted relevant parts of the decision of this Court in Capra v. Canada (Attorney General), 2008 FC 1212, which was
brought to his attention by counsel for the applicant. In that decision, the
Court confirmed the constitutionality of section 128 of the CCRA. Mr.
Justice Russell came to that conclusion on the grounds that this section serves
legitimate legislative intentions such as preventing foreign offenders on day
parole from accessing Canadian society more easily than non-criminal foreign
nationals under removal orders, as well as preventing offenders subject to
removal from serving sentences that are significantly shorter than the
sentences of Canadians because of more favourable systems abroad.
[18]
The
Tribunal, however, distinguished the Capra decision from the case at bar
on three grounds: first, Mr. Capra was serving a sentence for additional
convictions after a removal order had been made and an IAD appeal had been
dismissed; second, the respondent here is still a permanent resident and is not
yet subject to a removal order; and third, the respondent has already been at
liberty for three months.
[19]
The
Tribunal also reviewed the legislation governing immigration procedures and
stressed that the general emphasis in the IRPA is on balancing informality
and efficiency with natural justice and fairness. The Tribunal noted that
subsection 162(2) of the IRPA provides that each division shall deal
with all proceedings before it as informally and quickly as the circumstances
and considerations of fairness and natural justice permit. Rule 43 of the Immigration
Division Rules was also considered, which deals similarly with
natural justice concerns such as the right to counsel, the degree of notice and
the opportunity to prepare in the context of adjournment hearings; among the
various factors to be taken into consideration, the Tribunal observed that
subparagraph 43(2)(i) includes the more amorphous considerations of
unreasonable delay and injustice, which reflects once more the IRPA’s
emphasis on fairness.
[20]
The
Tribunal then went on to characterize the adjournment request as a balancing
act between the public interest and the liberty interest of the respondent. It acknowledged
that, in general, this balance weighs in favour of a prompt resolution, but was
of the view that there was no pressing need to proceed in this case. There was no
prejudice to the Minister as a removal cannot be enforced immediately, and the
only effect of proceeding would be to send Mr. Fox back to prison. “Doing so”, Tessler
wrote, “seems only to serve administrative convenience as if process trumps
people in every case”.
[21]
The
Tribunal also rejected the argument presented by the Minister that an immediate
decision would make it possible to offer a Pre Removal Risk Assessment to the
respondent since the the risk to be returned to the United States is unlikely
to be assessed as a bar to his removal. Furthermore, the Tribunal opined that
there was a significant savings to the Canadian taxpayer in keeping the
respondent out of prison when he was determined by two different
decision-makers not to be a danger to society or a flight risk.
[22]
In light
of the respondent’s significant interest in staying at liberty and unified with
his family, and of the absence of prejudice to the applicant in delaying the
proceeding, the Tribunal therefore concluded that it was not unreasonable to
delay the proceeding.
III. ISSUES
[23]
In light
of the oral and written submissions made by counsel on behalf of both parties,
it appears that three questions have to be resolved to determine this
application for judicial review:
a. The decision challenged being
interlocutory in nature, are there special circumstances justifying a judicial
review of that decision?
b. If the decision of the
Tribunal is properly the subject of judicial review, what is the appropriate
standard of review?
c. Did the decision of the
Tribunal satisfy that standard of review?
IV. ANALYSIS
A. The relevant
legislative framework
[24]
This case
involves section 50(b) of the IRPA and sections 128(3) to (7) of
the CCRA, the legislative scheme relating to permanent residents and
foreign nationals convicted of offences in Canada and sentenced to a term of imprisonment
in Canada who become the subject of
removal orders. For ease of reference, these sections are reproduced here:
Section 50 (b) of the IRPA:
50. A removal order is
stayed
[…]
(b) in
the case of a foreign national sentenced to a term of imprisonment in Canada,
until the sentence is completed;
|
50. Il y a sursis de la mesure de renvoi dans les cas suivants :
[…]
b) tant que n’est pas purgée la
peine d’emprisonnement infligée au Canada à l’étranger;
|
Sections
128 (3) to (7) of the CCRA :
128. (3) Despite subsection (1), for the purposes of
paragraph 50(b) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act and section 40 of the Extradition Act, the sentence
of an offender who has been released on parole, statutory release or an
unescorted temporary absence is deemed to be completed unless the parole or
statutory release has been suspended, terminated or revoked or the unescorted
temporary absence is suspended or cancelled or the offender has returned to
Canada before the expiration of the sentence according to law.
(4)
Despite this Act or the Prisons and Reformatories Act, an offender
against whom a removal order has been made under the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act is ineligible for day parole or an unescorted
temporary absence until the offender is eligible for full parole.
(5)
If, before the full parole eligibility date, a removal order is made under
the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act against an offender who has
received day parole or an unescorted temporary absence, on the day that the
removal order is made, the day parole or unescorted temporary absence becomes
inoperative and the offender shall be reincarcerated.
(6)
An offender referred to in subsection (4) is eligible for day parole or an
unescorted temporary absence if the removal order is stayed under paragraph
50(a), 66(b) or 114(1)(b) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.
(7)
Where the removal order of an offender referred to in subsection (5) is
stayed under paragraph 50(a), 66(b) or 114(1)(b) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act on a day prior to the full parole eligibility
of the offender, the unescorted temporary absence or day parole of that
offender is resumed as of the day of the stay.
|
128. (3) Pour l’application de l’alinéa 50b) de
la Loi sur l’immigration et la protection des réfugiés et de l’article
40 de la Loi sur l’extradition, la peine d’emprisonnement du
délinquant qui bénéficie d’une libération conditionnelle d’office ou d’une
permission de sortir sans escorte est, par dérogation au paragraphe (1),
réputée être purgée sauf s’il y a eu révocation, suspension ou cessation de
la libération ou de la permission de sortir sans escorte ou si le délinquant
est revenu au Canada avant son expiration légale.
(4)
Malgré la présente loi ou la Loi sur les prisons et les maisons de
correction, l’admissibilité à la libération conditionnelle totale de
quiconque est visé par une mesure de renvoi au titre de la Loi sur
l’immigration et la protection des réfugiés est préalable à
l’admissibilité à la semi-liberté ou à l’absence temporaire sans escorte.
(5) La
libération conditionnelle du délinquant en semi-liberté ou en absence
temporaire sans escorte devient ineffective s’il est visé, avant
l’admissibilité à la libération conditionnelle totale, par une mesure de
renvoi au titre de la Loi sur l’immigration et la protection des réfugiés;
il doit alors être réincarcéré.
(6)
Toutefois, le paragraphe (4) ne s’applique pas si l’intéressé est visé par un
sursis au titre des alinéas 50a) ou 66b) ou du paragraphe 114(1) de la Loi sur
l’immigration et la protection des réfugiés.
(7) La
semi-liberté ou la permission de sortir sans escorte redevient effective à la
date du sursis de la mesure de renvoi visant le délinquant pris, avant son
admissibilité à la libération conditionnelle totale, au titre des alinéas 50a) ou 66b) ou du paragraphe
114(1) de la Loi sur l’immigration et la protection des réfugiés.
|
[25]
As already mentioned,
these provisions were recently held to be constitutionally valid in Capra,
supra. In that case, the Court explained that unlike the Canadian
citizen who is subject to imprisonment and supervision in the community
pursuant to the Warrant of Committal for Conviction until the Warrant Expiry
Date, this scheme provides that a sentence of a non-Canadian subject to a
removal order is deemed completed for the purposes of a removal from Canada
when the offender is released from the penitentiary on day parole, full parole
or statutory release.
[26]
In order to ensure
that the offender serves the denunciatory portion of the sentence incarcerated
prior to removal, the offender subject to a removal order is not eligible for
day parole until the offender’s full parole eligibility date. If the offender
is released on day parole prior to a removal order being issued, then when a
removal order is issued, the offender is returned to incarceration and is not
eligible to be released until the offender reaches the offender’s full parole
eligibility date.
[27]
In that case, the
Court found that it was perfectly legitimate for Parliament to postpone eligibility for day parole and unescorted
release for foreign offenders to achieve specific policy objectives such as
ensuring that such persons do not serve sentences shorter than the sentences
served by Canadians for the same crime (which would occur if they were removed
at an earlier time), and that the offender should not be placed in a better
position than a non-offending foreigner subject to removal by giving the
offender access to Canadian society and Canadian territory through day parole
and unescorted temporary absence. Subsection 128(4) of the CCRA was
therefore determined compliant with sections 7, 9 and 15 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
[28]
It is
true that in Capra, the focus was on s. 128(4) as opposed to s. 128(5)
of the CCRA, as the deportation order had been made before the applicant
had become eligible for an Unescorted Temporary Absence, and not after, as is
the case here. But this distinction is not material to the constitutionality of
the whole scheme put in place by Parliament, as s. 128(5) of the CCRA is
really the corollary to s. 128(4) and is the expression of the same logic that
underpins s. 128(4). In both cases, the variation in the way an offender
subject to a removal order served the sentence of imprisonment imposed is
triggered by the existence of the removal order, and the differential treatment
embodied in sections 128(3) to (7) of the CCRA is a necessary
consequence of a valid deportation order.
[29]
This case
also involves sections 162(2) and 173(b) of the IRPA and Rule 43
of the Immigration Division Rules (SOR/2002-229), relating to how an admissibility
hearing before the Immigration Division shall proceed as well as to the factors
to be taken into consideration when dealing with an application for an
adjournment. These provisions read as follows:
Provisions of the IRPA:
162. (2)
Each Division shall deal with all proceedings before it as informally and
quickly as the circumstances and the considerations of fairness and natural
justice permit.
|
162. (2)
Chacune des sections fonctionne, dans la mesure où les circonstances et les considérations
d’équité et de justice naturelle le permettent, sans formalisme et avec
célérité.
|
173. The Immigration
Division, in any proceeding before it,
[…]
(b) must
give notice of the proceeding to the Minister and to the person who is the
subject of the proceeding and hear the matter without delay;
|
173. Dans toute affaire dont elle est saisie, la Section de
l’immigration :
[…]
b) convoque la personne en cause et
le ministre à une audience et la tient dans les meilleurs délais;
|
Rule 43 of the Immigration
Division Rules:
43. (1) A party may make an application to the Division to change the date
or time of a hearing.
(2) In deciding the application, the Division must
consider any relevant factors, including
(a) in the case of a date and time that was fixed
after the Division consulted or tried to consult the party, the existence of
exceptional circumstances for allowing the application;
(b) when the party made the application;
(c) the time the party has had to prepare for the
hearing;
(d) the efforts made by the party to be ready to
start or continue the hearing;
(e) the nature and complexity of the matter to be
heard;
(f) whether the party has counsel;
(g) any previous delays and the reasons for them;
(h) whether the time and date fixed for the
hearing was peremptory; and
(i) whether allowing the application would
unreasonably delay the proceedings or likely cause an injustice.
|
43. (1) Toute partie peut demander à la Section de changer
la date ou l’heure d’une audience.
(2) Pour statuer sur la demande, la Section prend en
considération tout élément pertinent. Elle examine notamment :
a) dans le
cas où elle a fixé la date et l’heure de la procédure après avoir consulté ou
tenté de consulter la partie, toute circonstance exceptionnelle qui justifie
le changement;
b) le
moment auquel la demande a été faite;
c) le
temps dont la partie a disposé pour se préparer;
d) les
efforts qu’elle a faits pour être prête à commencer ou à poursuivre
l’audience;
e) la
nature et la complexité de l’affaire;
f) si la
partie est représentée;
g) tout
report antérieur et sa justification;
h) si la
date et l’heure qui avaient été fixées étaient péremptoires;
i) si le
fait d’accueillir la demande ralentirait l’affaire de manière déraisonnable
ou causerait vraisemblablement une injustice.
|
B. The interlocutory
nature of the decision
[30]
It is well
established that an adjournment decision cannot be reviewed in the absence of
special circumstances. The Federal Court of Appeal and this Court have
frequently reiterated that scarce judicial resources should not be spent on
applications to judicially review preliminary or interlocutory decisions,
especially where an adequate remedy would be available later so as to cure any
potential defect of the interlocutory decision. As the Court of Appeal stated
in Szczecka v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1993), 116 D.L.R.(4th) 333,
at para. 4:
This is why unless there are special
circumstances where there should not be any appeal or immediate judicial review
of an interlocutory judgment. Similarly, there will not be any basis for
judicial review, specially immediate review, when at the end of the proceedings
some other appropriate remedy exists. These rules have been applied in several
Court decisions specifically in order to avoid breaking up cases and the
resulting delays and expenses, which interfere with the sound administration of
justice and ultimately bring it into disrepute.
See also: Ali v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2004 FC
1174, at para. 34.
[31]
The applicant
referred the Court to a number of decisions where this Court and the Court of
Appeal have accepted to rule on interlocutory adjournment decisions, therefore
implicitly accepting that adjournment decisions do sometimes satisfy the
“special circumstances” test: see Hassanzadeh v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 902; Canada (Attorney
General) v. Subhaschandran, 2005 FCA 27; Canada (Minister
of Employment and Immigration) v. Lundgren, [1993] 1 F.C.
187; Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) v. Han,
[1984] 1 F.C. 976. On the other hand, counsel for the applicant made no
submission on this issue.
[32]
In the
case at bar, I am satisfied that the nature of the error is, in and of itself,
sufficient to justify the review by this Court of the interlocutory decision. It
is a well established principle that special circumstances are deemed
automatically to exist when the alleged error is one of jurisdiction: Pfeiffer
v. Canada (Superintendent of
Bankruptcy),
[1996] 3 F.C. 584 (T.D.). For reasons that I will elaborate upon shortly, I
have come to the conclusion that the tribunal acted beyond its jurisdiction or
refused to exercise its jurisdiction in granting the 13-month adjournment
sought by the respondent. Had the decision been made within the confines of the
discretion conferred to the tribunal by the legislation, the
jurisdiction of this Court to review would have been more problematic. But this
is not the case here.
[33]
I also agree with the
applicant that the Minister will have no adequate alternative remedy if the
adjournment is allowed to stand. The respondent will have reached his full
parole eligibility date by the resumption of the admissibility hearing, and the
effects of this adjournment decision will have become moot. It is true that the
adjournment of the hearing does not affect an eventual removal order, since
such an order, even if issued, cannot be operative before the date on which the
hearing should resume. But what the Minister is seeking is not so much the
execution of the removal order as compliance with the law, which sets out that
a foreign offender who is subject to a removal shall serve the denunciatory
portion of his sentence before being eligible for day parole or unescorted
temporary absence. In other words, the re-incarceration of the applicant is as
much a potential consequence of the admissibility hearing as the removal order
itself; from that angle, it can surely be said that the adjournment of the
admissibility hearing to the date of the applicant’s full parole eligibility leaves
no adequate alternative remedy to the Minister, and cannot be remedied by the
final decision once that hearing resumes.
[34]
For the above
reasons, I am therefore of the view that it is appropriate to entertain the
Minister’s application for judicial review in the special circumstances of this
case.
C. The appropriate standard of
review
[35]
Had the Tribunal
acted within its jurisdiction in granting the adjournment, there is no doubt
that the applicable standard of review would have been reasonableness. In Prassad
v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1989] 1
S.C.R. 560, the Supreme Court made it clear that administrative tribunals must
be able to control their own procedures; accordingly, adjournment of their
proceedings was found to be very much in their discretion (subject, of course,
to the rules of fairness).
[36]
In the present case,
however, the issue is not so much whether the Tribunal properly considered the
factors found in s. 43(2) of the Immigration Division Rules in granting
the adjournment, but whether the Tribunal had the jurisdiction or acted beyond
its jurisdiction in granting the adjournment by taking into account irrelevant
considerations. This is clearly a question of jurisdiction reviewable on the
standard of correctness.
[37]
Even if the issue
could plausibly be cast as one going to the proper interpretation of paragraph 128(5)
of the CCRA, it would still call for the application of the correctness
standard. It is clearly not a question relating to the Tribunal’s home statute
and it falls outside its area of specialized expertise.
[38]
As a result, this
Court owes no deference to the Tribunal’s decision, and must proceed according to
its own analysis of the question that is debated between the parties. As the
Supreme Court stated in Dunsmuir
v. New-Brunswick, 2008 SCC
9, at para. 50:
When applying the correctness standard, a
reviewing court will not show deference to the decision maker’s reasoning
process; it will rather undertake its own analysis of the question. The
analysis will bring the court to decide whether it agrees with the
determination of the decision maker; if not, the court will substitute its own
view and provide the correct answer. From the outset, the court must ask
whether the tribunal’s decision was correct.
Was the decision to adjourn for 13 months
correct?
[39]
Once a section 44
Report is referred to the Immigration Division for an admissibility hearing,
pursuant to sections 162(2) and 173(3)(b) of the IRPA, the admissibility
hearing must be heard as quickly as the circumstances and the considerations of
procedural fairness and natural justice permit and without delay. The
Tribunal’s function at the admissibility hearing is exclusively to find facts. If
the member finds the person described in section 36(1)(a) of the IRPA,
then pursuant to section 45(d) of the IRPA and section 229(1)(c)
of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, the
Tribunal must issue a Deportation Order against the person.
[40]
The Tribunal found as
much in the case at bar and acknowledged that once the admissibility hearing commenced
to determine if the respondent is inadmissible pursuant to paragraph 36(1)(a)
of the IRPA for serious criminality, the matter would be straightforward
as the documents before the Tribunal provided by the respondent established
that he was serving a sentence of seven years and ten months for a conviction
in Canada for importing cocaine.
[41]
Yet the Tribunal made
it very clear that its decision to grant the adjournment was essentially driven
by its desire to allow the respondent to remain with his family and to benefit
from his day parole until he became removable. This is made abundantly clear
from the following two paragraphs of the decision:
In the majority of immigration matters
where the Minister is seeking a removal order I agree that a swift resolution
of the matter is the reasonable course but here there is no pressing need to
process. Where there is no prejudice to the Minister as a removal cannot be
enforced at this time, when the only effect of proceeding will be to send Mr.
Fox back to prison, there seems to be a certain unnecessary punitive quality to
requiring that the matter proceed. Doing so seems only to serve administrative
convenience as if process trumps people in every case.
In this case the adjournment request
becomes a matter of balancing the public interest with the liberty interest of
the person. If the Minister is insisting that the objectives of the Act be
served, I note that while at liberty Mr. Fox is able to remain united with his
wife and son which not only serves the best interests of the child but
maintains family unification.
[42]
These are obviously
valid humanitarian and compassionate considerations. But the Tribunal does not
have any discretion to consider these factors at the admissibility hearing. It
is rather at the stage of making an admissibility report under s. 44(1) or in
the making of a referral to the Immigration Division under s. 44(2) of the IRPA
that these considerations should be taken into account. This point was
reiterated most recently by Mr. Justice Barnes in the following terms:
The caselaw indicates that to the extent
that any discretion exists to consider mitigating, aggravating or humanitarian
factors in the process of determining the inadmissibility of a permanent
resident, it does so at the point of the preparation of an admissibility report
under ss. 44(1) or in the making of a referral to the Immigration Division
under ss. 44(2) of the IRPA: see Hernandez v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 429, 271 F.T.R.
257. (…) once the matter comes before the Immigration Division, the question
for determination is only whether the person is inadmissible on the ground of
serious criminality. The Immigration Division’s admissibility hearing is not
the place to embark upon a humanitarian review or to consider the fairness or
proportionality of the consequences that flow from a resulting deportation
order. Those are consequences that flow inevitably by operation of law and they
impart no mitigatory discretion upon the Immigration Division.
Wajaras v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2009 FC
200, at para. 11
[43]
Now, the applicant is
right to point out that s. 43(2)(i) of the Immigration Division Rules
allows the Tribunal to consider whether allowing the application for an
adjournment would “likely cause an injustice”. The applicant states that on that
basis, the Tribunal was justified to consider the exceptional circumstances that
were brought to its attention, including the fact that the respondent was
already at liberty, had been found not to be a danger to the public and not
unlikely to appear for immigration proceedings, and that he was married to a
Canadian citizen and had a nine-year-old child with attention deficit
hyperactive disorder.
[44]
This subsection,
however, cannot be read in a vacuum and must be interpreted in context. All the
subparagraphs of paragraph 43(2) of the Immigration Division Rules, as
well as paragraph 162(2) of the IRPA relate to the procedural
requirements to ensure that the hearing itself is conducted fairly. The
“injustice” to which subparagraph 43(2)(i) relates cannot extend to the
effect of the consequences of the final substantive decision made at the
conclusion of a hearing (i.e. the issuance of a removal order).
[45]
Indeed, the facts of
this case are not substantially different from the situation considered by the
Court of Appeal in Han, supra. In that case, the respondent had been
admitted to Canada as a permanent resident
conditional upon his marrying within 90 days. The marriage did not take place,
and a report that he had contravened the terms and conditions of his landing
was made to the Minister. When the inquiry resumed after several adjournments
on June 7, 1983, the respondent sought an adjournment so his application for
citizenship could be processed; according to the Immigration Act, 1976
then in force, he met the requirements of the Citizenship Act and was
entitled as of right to a grant of citizenship, since he had remained a
permanent resident notwithstanding his failure to fulfil the condition. At the
time, section 35(1) of the Immigration Regulations, 1978 SOR/78-172 provided that the Adjudicator “…may
adjourn the inquiry at any time for the purpose of ensuring a full and proper
inquiry”. The adjournment was refused, but the Trial Judge quashed the
refusal on the ground that the decision to grant or deny an adjournment was always
a matter of discretion and that discretion is to be exercised fairly or in
accordance with the principles of natural justice. He concluded that the
refusal of the adjournment was unfair because it would quite likely result in
the making of a deportation order which would prejudice the respondent's right
to become a Canadian citizen.
[46]
The Court of Appeal
reversed that decision on the ground that the Trial Judge had misinterpreted
section 35(1) of the Immigration Regulations. All three judges, in
separate reasons, came to the conclusion that the Adjudicator did not have the
jurisdiction to grant the adjournment for the purpose of allowing his
citizenship application to be processed, and that the Trial Judge had erred in
assuming that he had that jurisdiction. They also agreed that the decision to
grant or deny an adjournment is not always a matter of unconstrained
discretion. The Court found that the purpose for which the adjournment was
sought in that case had nothing to do with a better conduct of the inquiry, but
to ensure that the inquiry could never be held. This was clearly not within the
jurisdiction of the Adjudicator. As for the notion of fairness on which the
reasoning of the Trial Judge hinged, the Court had this to say:
It does not appear to me that the legal
notion of fairness on which the reasoning hinges is taken in its proper sense. This
notion of fairness as developed and applied by supervisory bodies in reviewing
purely administrative decisions pertains to procedural requirements, as does
the broader notion of natural justice in which it is embedded; it refers to the
manner in which the tribunal has reached its conclusion, not to the substance
of the conclusion itself. The tribunal has, of course, a strict duty to act in
good faith, within the purview of the law from which it draws its authority and
for relevant motives, its discretion, as it is usually said, must be exercised
“judicially”, but the suitability and the fairness of the decision are matters
left to its sole appreciation. It is apparent from the reasons of the learned
Trial Judge that the “taint of unfairness” he was seeing was directed to the
decision itself because of its possible prejudicial effects to the respondent;
it had nothing to do with the manner in which the decision had been reached. (Han,
supra, at p. 987)
[47]
The same reasoning
must govern the case at bar. As previously stated, the question for
determination at the admissibility hearing is whether the respondent is
inadmissible for serious criminality. The consequences that flow from a finding
of inadmissibility are not relevant to such a determination. They have been set
out by Parliament which has seen fit to postpone eligibility
for day parole and unescorted release for foreign offenders until they have
purged the denunciatory portion of their sentence. One may disagree with that policy,
but it is not for the Tribunal (nor, indeed, for this Court) to do away with
the will of Parliament by circumventing it with an adjournment order which, for
all intent and purposes, would render s. 128(5) nugatory and of no effect. In
doing so, I am therefore of the view that the Tribunal acted without
jurisdiction or beyond its jurisdiction.
[48]
In his
written submissions, the respondent also hinted at a possible abuse of power to
the extent that the applicant was improperly insisting to see the respondent
re-incarcerated even though he was not a danger to the public or a flight risk.
His counsel did not press the issue at the hearing, and properly so. This
question has already been addressed by the Court in Wajaras, supra,
and found to be of no merit. It is certainly not contrary to the interests of
justice that the Minister insists, even repeatedly, that an Act of Parliament
be complied with.
[49]
For all
of the above reasons, this application for judicial review will therefore be
granted. At the hearing, counsel
for the respondent asked for permission to propose a certified question after
having had the opportunity to be appraised of my reasons. I granted him that
permission, and I will therefore allow him seven days from the release of these
reasons to draft any question which he believes should be certified. In the
event that he elects to do so, the applicant will be given a further seven days
to reply.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that
this application for judicial review is granted. There shall be a
separate order as to whether one or more questions will be certified.
"Yves
de Montigny"