Date: 20110202
Docket: IMM-5074-09
Citation: 2011
FC 121
Ottawa, Ontario, February 2, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Heneghan
BETWEEN:
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LEANNE MICHELLE DOBSON
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND
IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
Ms. Leanne
Michelle Dobson (the “Applicant”) seeks judicial review of the decision made by
Mr. Erwin Nest, Member of the Immigration and Refugee Board, Immigration Appeal
Division (the “IAD”). In that decision, dated September 23, 2009, the IAD
dismissed the Applicant’s appeal from a visa officer’s decision, refusing the
permanent resident visa application of her husband, Mr. Sherif Rashidy Ali.
Background
[2]
The
Applicant is a Canadian citizen, living in Edmonton, Alberta. She is employed with the Federal Public
Service and is financially independent. Mr. Ali is a 40 year old citizen of Egypt, currently residing in that country.
[3]
Before
meeting the Applicant, Mr. Ali had been married twice and had also engaged in a
common law relationship with a third woman. During his first marriage, which
occurred in Egypt, Mr. Ali fathered one child.
His second marriage took place after he arrived in the United States,
apparently for the purpose of obtaining status in the United States. This marriage did not produce any
children, since the woman was significantly older than Mr. Ali and is now
deceased.
[4]
Mr. Ali
subsequently entered into a common law marriage with a woman with whom he had three
children. Even while this relationship was ongoing, Mr. Ali fathered another
child with his first wife, even though that marriage had ended in divorce some
years earlier.
[5]
The
Applicant and Mr. Ali first met at La Guardia airport in New York in September 2006 and soon
began a romantic relationship. She made three visits to New York between September 2006 and
January 2007. Mr. Ali attempted to visit the Applicant in Canada but his January 2007
application for a temporary resident’s visa was refused.
[6]
The
Applicant and Mr. Ali married on March 15, 2007 in New York. It was a small wedding. Subsequently, Mr.
Ali applied for permanent residence status in Canada under the family class, under the
sponsorship of the Applicant. The application was received by Citizenship and
Immigration Canada on June 27, 2007.
[7]
Mr. Ali’s
application for permanent residence was denied on January 29, 2008, on the
basis that his marriage to the Applicant was not genuine. The Applicant
submitted a Notice of Appeal – Sponsorship Appeal to the IAD on March 10, 2008.
[8]
The
Applicant visited Mr. Ali in New
York seven times
between their marriage in March 2007 and August 2008. The Applicant and Mr. Ali
also maintained regular contact by letters, emails, Skype and telephone during
that time.
[9]
The
Applicant had a child with Mr. Ali, a daughter who was born on October 1, 2008
in Edmonton, Alberta. At the time of the child’s
birth, Mr. Ali was living in Egypt.
[10]
The IAD
hearing was held over 4 days through May, July and August, 2009. The Applicant
testified in person, and Mr. Ali provided evidence via telephone from Egypt.
[11]
The
Applicant travelled to Egypt in August 2009 with her
child. During that visit, the Applicant met the members of her husband’s family
including his parents and some of his siblings. Mr. Ali testified before the
IAD that the couple also had plans to visit Mr. Ali’s children in another part
of Egypt during the Applicant’s trip.
The IAD’s Decision
[12]
On
September 23, 2009 the IAD rejected the Applicant’s appeal, on the grounds that
Mr. Ali was not a member of the family class because the marriage of the
Applicant and Mr. Ali was not genuine, pursuant to the provisions of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (the “Act”) and the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 (the “Regulations”).
[13]
In its
decision, the IAD referred to evidence of ongoing contact and visits between
the Applicant and Mr. Ali, and the details of Mr. Ali’s past relationships and
attempts to immigrate to the United
States. The IAD
also considered the couple’s decision to have a child, the Applicant’s
knowledge of Mr. Ali’s past, and their future plans. Finally, the IAD noted the
religious differences of Mr. Ali and the Applicant, and that Mr. Ali has a
great deal to gain from becoming a permanent residence of Canada by marrying the Applicant.
Discussion and Disposition
[14]
The
Applicant argues that the IAD applied the wrong legal test and erred in a
number of findings of fact. In my opinion, this application for judicial review
can be disposed of on the basis of the second issue raised by the Applicant.
[15]
I will
first address the applicable standard of review. In Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, at
para. 53, the Supreme Court of Canada held that findings of fact are reviewed
on the standard of reasonableness:
Where the question is one of fact,
discretion or policy, deference will usually apply automatically (Mossop,
at pp. 599-600; Dr. Q, at para. 29; Suresh, at paras.
29-30). We believe that the same standard must apply to the review of
questions where the legal and factual issues are intertwined with and cannot be
readily separated.
[16]
In my
opinion, the IAD made a number of factual findings in this case that are
unreasonable, as they lack justification and intelligibility.
[17]
The IAD found
that the Applicant and Mr. Ali had not addressed their religious
incompatibility, which the IAD considered to be an indication that their
marriage is one of convenience. In my opinion, based on the Record, this finding
is unreasonable.
[18]
The
Applicant attends a United Church two or three times a
year, while Mr. Ali is a non-practising Muslim. The Applicant testified to the IAD
that she is open to converting to Islam, but that Mr. Ali had not asked her to
convert. On this basis, it is not apparent that the beliefs and practices of
Mr. Ali and the Applicant are incompatible, or that they would require a plan to
mitigate their differences.
[19]
The
Applicant also testified to the IAD that she and Mr. Ali intended to expose their
child to both the Christian and Muslin faiths, and allow her to decide, in the
future, the belief system of her choice. In my opinion, this is directly
contrary to the IAD’s finding that Mr. Ali and the Applicant had not addressed
their religious differences, and is a further indication that the IAD’s finding
in that regard is unreasonable.
[20]
At
paragraph 37 of its decision, the IAD found that the Applicant made an
“admission that she has never asked [Mr. Ali] about the reasons he fathered
another child with his first wife”, and on that basis, concluded that it was
unreasonable for the Applicant not to have made more pressing inquiries into
Mr. Ali’s past.
[21]
The
Applicant stated to the IAD that she and Mr. Ali had discussed such matters,
including why Mr. Ali conceived an additional child with his first wife, and
that she remembered the conversation specifically. This evidence runs directly
contrary to the IAD’s conclusion. In drawing its conclusion without reference
to that evidence, the IAD acted unreasonably.
[22]
Finally,
the IAD found that the Applicant and Mr. Ali had not discussed their future
plans, and that the Applicant had not taken sufficient steps to integrate Mr.
Ali into her life.
[23]
The
finding that the couple had not discussed their future is contrary to the
Applicant’s testimony to the IAD that they had discussed their future together
many times. The IAD does not discuss this evidence. The IAD does not indicate
what steps the Applicant could or ought to have taken to integrate Mr. Ali into
her life in Canada.
[24]
The
Applicant named Mr. Ali as a beneficiary in her will. She invested in his
limousine business in the United
States. The
couple opened a joint bank account, and the Applicant listed Mr. Ali as an
insured on her home and automobile plans. Given their circumstances,
particularly Mr. Ali’s lack of status in Canada, it is not clear how the Applicant would
have further integrated Mr. Ali into her daily life. In my opinion, these
findings are unreasonable.
[25]
The Applicant points to a
number of other findings of fact made by the IAD that she impugns as
unreasonable. In my opinion, based on the number of unreasonable findings
discussed above, it is not necessary to address those other findings.
[26]
This
application for judicial review is allowed and the matter is remitted to a
differently constituted panel of the IAD. The Applicant proposed the following
question for certification:
Is the Immigration Appeal Division of the
Immigration and Refugee Board bound in law to apply the principle that, in a
sponsorship of a spouse, absent exceptional circumstances to prove otherwise, a
reasonable person accepts a child of the marriage as proof of a genuine spousal
relationship?
[27]
Having
regard to the test for certifying a question stated by the Federal Court of
Appeal in Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Zazai (2004), 247 F.T.R. 320, I am not
satisfied that the proposed question is one of general importance that
transcends the facts of this particular case, and no question will be
certified.
ORDER
THIS COURT ORDERS that this application for judicial
review is allowed and is remitted to a differently constituted panel of the
IAD, no question for certification arising.
“E.
Heneghan”