Date: 20110623
Docket: IMM-2706-10
Citation: 2011 FC 754
Ottawa, Ontario, June 23, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Near
BETWEEN:
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GOWRISHANGAR THANGARAJAH
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION AND
THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND
EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
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Respondents
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of a decision of Immigration Counsellor Brian Hudson,
(the Officer) of the Canadian High Commission (CHC) in Colombo, Sri Lanka, dated March 15, 2010,
wherein the Officer refused Mr. C. Thangarajah’s application for
permanent residence in Canada because he was not
satisfied that Mr. C. Thangarajah and his family were admissible to Canada.
[2]
Based
on the reasons that follow, this application is allowed.
I. Background
A. Factual
Background
[3]
The
Applicant, Gowrishangar Thangarajah, is a Tamil from Northern Sri Lanka who
claimed refugee status in Canada in 2001. He applied to sponsor his parents and sister in
2005. The Principal Applicant (PA) for the purpose of this judicial
review is the Applicant’s father, Mr. C. Thangarajah, a citizen of Sri Lanka. As part of the
application process he submitted an application for permanent residence in Canada in December 2007. The
PA included his wife and 21 year old daughter as family members (collectively,
the Applicants).
[4]
The
PA also had a younger son, Umashangar, who was 20 years old at the time the application
was submitted. The PA, however, did not include Umashangar on the application
because he claimed that Umashangar had not lived with the family since the age
of eight when he was adopted by the PA’s childless brother. Additionally, in
2004 Umashangar allegedly eloped with a woman that neither his adoptive nor
biological parents approved of, and left the Jaffna region for Wanni. Since that time the Applicants
claim to have had no contact with him, and assume, if he is still alive, that
he is living as a spouse in either a common law relationship or marriage.
[5]
By
letters dated March 4, 2009 and April 20, 2009 the CHC informed the PA that
Umashangar was required to be examined and included on the application as a
non-accompanying dependent as he was under 22 years old, was not married and
was not adopted.
[6]
The
PA responded to the letters, advising the CHC that the Applicant had decided not
to include Umashangar because he had been adopted by his uncle, had run off to
Wanni with a girl and had severed all contact with his family. For these
reasons, the Applicants sought to exclude him from their application. The CHC
responded, advising the PA that Umashangar would nonetheless need to be
examined and could not be excluded from the application.
[7]
The Computer
Assisted Immigration Processing System (CAIPS) notes recording the issuance of
the April 20, 2009 letter also notes that the officer, “[had] concerns as to
the truthfulness of PA’s version of events and the actual whereabouts of son
Umashangar…” (Certified Tribunal Record pg 8).
[8]
The
PA responded by letter dated May 7, 2009 informing the CHC that he did not know
the whereabouts of Umashangar, but assumed that he was still living with the
girl in Wanni. The PA also noted that at this time, Umashangar was over the
age of 22, living in a common law relationship, not pursuing studies and
therefore not a dependent child. The CAIPS notes capturing this letter note:
[…]
must take a common sense approach on this case. If Umashangar is either common
law relationship or marriage, he certainly is no longer a dep. Will proceed
with case without examinating Umashangar as he is no longer a dep child (CTR pg
8 and 9).
[9]
In
the meantime, the PA claims to have become increasingly concerned with
Umashangar’s well-being as the government began an all-out bombing campaign in Wanni,
where he was last known to be living. The PA claims to have read in a
newspaper article that someone with the same first name as Umashangar had been
brought to a detention camp. In an attempt to locate Umashangar, the PA wrote
to the International Commission of the Red Cross (ICRC) for assistance. The ICRC
replied that they were unable to help locate individuals in the camps. The PA
submitted this letter, dated July 14, 2009 to the CHC.
[10]
On
February 17, 2010 Case Analyst, Sharon Mark, interviewed the Applicants at the
CHC. She made notes during the course of the interview, concluding at the end,
“PA was forthcoming with answers. He answered the majority of the questions,
even ones directed to his spouse. He clarified the dates in his personal
history…” (CTR pg 21). She referred the application to an officer for
decision.
B. Impugned
Decision
[11]
On
March 8, 2010 the Officer drafted the refusal letter determining that
Umashangar was a dependent child and that the Applicants and Umashangar were
not admissible. The letter stated in part:
Having
reviewed all of the facts of this case I remain concerned on your
admissibility. There were major discrepancies between the application, the
interview and the letters submitted by you with regard to your detention and
the whereabouts of your son Umashangar. Considering the history of your family
I cannot readily conclude that your son Umashangar is not inadmissible, or that
the family is inadmissible. As such, I conclude that I do not have a complete
picture of you and your families [sic] background and I am not satisfied you
are not inadmissible to Canada.
[12]
The
letter was sent to the Applicants on March 17, 2010.
II. Issues
[13]
This
application raises the following issues:
(a) Does the Applicant have standing to
bring this application?
(b) Did the Officer err in finding that
Umashangar was a dependent child?
(c) Did the Officer violate the duty of
procedural fairness owed to the PA?
(d) What is the appropriate remedy?
III. Standard of Review
[14]
The
appropriate standard of review to apply to the Officer’s decision is
reasonableness. Judicial deference to the decision is appropriate when the
decision demonstrates justification, transparency and intelligibility within
the decision-making process and falls within a range of possible, acceptable
outcomes defensible in respect of the facts and law (Dunsmuir v New
Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 at para 47). The determination of
whether or not Umashangar was a dependent child within the meaning of the
statute is also a question of mixed fact and law and ought to be reviewed on a
standard of reasonableness (Skobodzinska v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2008 FC 887, 331 FTR 295 at para 8).
[15]
The
applicable standard of review to apply to issues of procedural fairness is
correctness (Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) v Ontario, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 539, 2003
SCC 29 at para 100).
IV. Argument
and Analysis
A. Does
the Applicant Have Standing?
[16]
The
Applicant submits that as the sponsor he has an evident interest in the
litigation and that in many cases before the Immigration Appeal Division (IAD)
the sponsor is the appellant.
[17]
The
Respondent argues that this is not an application for judicial review of a
decision made by the IAD, in which situation the sponsor would have had the
right to appeal the decision before the IAD and then come to the Court for a
review of that decision. Rather, in the present situation the Applicants had
no appeal right before the IAD and the Applicant has no standing to challenge
the refusal of the application since he is not “directly affected” by the
decision. The jurisprudence of this Court supports this position. The
Respondent cites Carson v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (1995), 95 FTR 137, 55
ACWS (3d) 389 at para 4:
[4] While
Mrs. Carson has an interest in this proceeding, in that she is Mr. Carson's
sponsor for landing in Canada and she was interviewed as part of the
marriage interview involving the H&C determination, these facts are
insufficient to give her standing in this judicial review. Mrs. Carson is a
Canadian citizen and does not require any exemption whatsoever from the
Immigration Act or regulations. Moreover, whether she has standing or not has
no impact whatsoever on the ultimate issue in this matter. Accordingly, with
respect to this proceeding, the applicant, Tonya Carson, is struck as a party.
(see also Wu
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration)(2000),183
FTR 309, 4 Imm LR (3d) 145 at para 15).
[18]
Accordingly,
the Applicant is struck as a party. However, further to the request of both
parties, the Court will add the Applicant’s sponsored dependents as named Applicants.
B. Did
the Officer Err in Finding that Umashangar Was a Dependent?
[19]
The PA
submits that the Officer erred in finding that Umashangar could be treated as a
dependent child. Section 2 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Regulations, SOR/2002-227 defines the term “dependent child” as:
“dependent
child”, in respect of a parent, means a child who
(a) has one of
the following relationships with the parent, namely,
(i)
is the biological child of the parent, if the child has not been adopted by a
person other than the spouse or common-law partner of the parent, or
(ii)
is the adopted child of the parent; and
(b) is in one
of the following situations of dependency, namely,
(i)
is less than 22 years of age and not a spouse or common-law partner,
(ii)
has depended substantially on the financial support of the parent since before
the age of 22 — or if the child became a spouse or common-law partner before
the age of 22, since becoming a spouse or common-law partner — and, since
before the age of 22 or since becoming a spouse or common-law partner, as the
case may be, has been a student
(A)
continuously enrolled in and attending a post-secondary institution that is
accredited by the relevant government authority, and
(B)
actively pursuing a course of academic, professional or vocational training
on a full-time basis, or
(iii)
is 22 years of age or older and has depended substantially on the financial
support of the parent since before the age of 22 and is unable to be
financially self-supporting due to a physical or mental condition.
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«
enfant à charge » L’enfant qui:
a)
d’une part, par rapport à l’un ou l’autre de ses parents :
(i) soit en est l’enfant biologique et
n’a pas été adopté par une personne autre que son époux ou conjoint de fait,
(ii) soit en est l’enfant adoptif;
b)
d’autre part, remplit l’une des conditions suivantes :
(i) il est âgé de moins de vingt-deux
ans et n’est pas un époux ou conjoint de fait,
(ii) il est un étudiant âgé qui n’a pas
cessé de dépendre, pour l’essentiel, du soutien financier de l’un ou l’autre
de ses parents à compter du moment où il a atteint l’âge de vingt-deux ans ou
est devenu, avant cet âge, un époux ou conjoint de fait et qui, à la fois :
(A) n’a pas cessé d’être inscrit à un
établissement d’enseignement postsecondaire accrédité par les autorités
gouvernementales compétentes et de fréquenter celui-ci,
(B) y suit activement à temps plein des
cours de formation générale, théorique ou professionnelle,
(iii) il est âgé de vingt-deux ans ou
plus, n’a pas cessé de dépendre, pour l’essentiel, du soutien financier de
l’un ou l’autre de ses parents à compter du moment où il a atteint l’âge de
vingt-deux ans et ne peut subvenir à ses besoins du fait de son état physique
ou mental.
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[20]
The PA
argues that there is no way the Officer could have reasonably come to the
conclusion that Umashangar was a dependent since:
- He was given
up for adoption at the age of 8,
- He
was not financially dependent on his parents before he turned 22, and did not
remain financially dependent on them after turning 22,
- He
was either married or in a common-law relationship before turning 22, and he
entered into that relationship one year before the application was even
submitted,
- He
was not a dependent child studying full-time in school before he turned 22, and
was not a dependent child attending a post-secondary school after turning 22.
[21]
Further,
the PA submits that the Officer’s reasons do not reveal a reasonable basis for
his decision to consider Umashangar as a dependent.
[22]
The
Respondent submits that the Officer reasonably found that Umashangar was a dependent
child since he was 20 years old when the application was submitted, he had not
been formally adopted, and he was not married.
[23]
If
the PA’s submissions are credible, it is clear that Umashangar would not considered
a dependent child, by any criteria. In fact, as the PA submits, an officer at
the CHC made a preliminary determination that Umashangar was not a dependent
child. So the question I must answer is, was there a reasonable basis for the
Officer to disbelieve the PA’s submissions?
[24]
The
Respondent argues that discrepancies arose between the information in the
application, the letters previously submitted, and the answers given at the
interview. As examples, the Respondent cites the Officer’s observations that
there were differing stories as to who filled out the application and why
Umashangar was not included therein. Furthermore, while the PA submitted that
his son was living in a common-law relationship and is not in school, he also
submitted that he had not had contact with him for an unspecified period of
time. As such the Officer had credibility concerns.
[25]
This
Court is to take a deferential view of the credibility findings of officers.
However, having reviewed the record and the submissions, I am unable to agree
with the Respondent that the “story didn’t add up”. In the Officer’s reasons,
he noted two concerns with the file, the first regarding the PA’s detentions
and the second regarding Umashangar.
[26]
On
the application form the PA listed no detentions. However, in the interview
the PA revealed that had been detained many times by the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE) when he refused to let his children work for the LTTE. This
accords with the Personal Information Form (PIF) submitted by Applicant (the
sponsor) as part of his refugee claim in Canada. The PA claimed that he did not list these
detentions on the application form because he thought that that question
referred to government detentions. The Officer found, “that answer
questionable as the question on our application is very clear and makes no
mention of “government detention”. Detention is detention,” (CTR pg 22).
[27]
With
respect, I do not think it is reasonable to allow a reasonable misunderstanding
to completely impeach the PA’s credibility. As the PA points out, the PA
submitted his son’s PIF to the CHC. He was not attempting to hide or omit this
information. Moreover, the Officer’s description, that the PA described his
detentions “when pressed over the course of an interview” does not concur with
the notes of the interviewer who described the PA’s answers as “forthcoming”
(CTR pgs 22 and 21). In my view, the Officer’s credibility assessment which largely
hinged on the PA’s “inconsistent” statements regarding his detentions is
unreasonable.
[28]
Regarding
Umashangar, the Officer noted the following credibility concerns:
In particular, the PA tells us that the
85 born son was not included as a dependent on the application because the
(other) son of the PA decided not to. Later, the PA tells us that the
application was not filled out by his son but rather a justice of the peace in
SL.
The
PA originally tells us that the 85 son is living with a young girl in Wanni
(his letter of May 7, 2009) but when later pressed tells us he has searched 11
detainment camps for his son and produces a letter he has written to the Red
Cross dated July of 2009. The letter has little credibility and appears to be
little more than something written after we pressed to know the whereabouts of
this son.
There
is no evidence presented regarding the camp search, and if the son is with a
girl in Wanni, I cannot understand the search in the first place.
I
note as well that the PA concludes that the son is no longer a dependent
because he is living common-law and not in school. How he would know this is
beyond me. And in any event, I not see how we can draw the same conclusion
never having heard directly from this son.
[29]
I
have some concerns with the logical consistency of some of the Officer’s
adverse credibility findings. For example, the PA first wrote to the CHC to
explain that Umashangar had not been included because the Applicant decided not
to include him. The exact meaning of this phrase is ambiguous at best, and
when compared to the second letter sent to the CHC, could just as well mean that
the Applicant decided not to include him because he was under the impression
that he was not a dependent, as per the Regulations.
[30]
The PA
argues that the Officer displayed a complete misunderstanding of the
application process by raising as suspicious the fact that the justice of the
peace in Sri
Lanka
allegedly helped the PA fill out the application form. As the PA submits, it
is illogical to consider this to be an inconsistency. The Applicant filled out
the sponsorship application, and later the PA filled out the application form
he was sent by the CHC with the assistance of a justice of the peace.
[31]
The
concerns expressed regarding Umashangar’s whereabouts are similarly feebly
founded. Umashangar allegedly cut-off contact with his family to go off to
Wanni with a girl no one approved of. This was the last the family allegedly
heard of Umashangar. Subsequent to the PA’s letters to the CHC explaining the
situation with Umashangar, the PA explains that the government of Sri Lanka began a heavy bombing
campaign in Wanni. It is not outside the realm of belief that the PA would
still be interested in the well-being of his son, perhaps even more so because
the CHC indicated that in spite of the adoption Umashangar would need to be
examined. The other conclusions drawn by the Officer are equally speculative.
[32]
The
person who was best positioned to judge the candour of the PA in the interview,
was the interviewer. The interviewer came to a seemingly positive conclusion
regarding the PA’s credibility. Without contradictions and inconsistencies, it
was not reasonable for the Officer to come to a contrary opinion. Speculation
will not suffice. The conclusions drawn by the Officer do not stand up to a
somewhat probing examination, and as such I am unable to say that his
conclusion that the PA is not credible and that therefore Umashangar is a
dependent is reasonable. The judicial review can be disposed of on the basis of
this ground alone.
C. Did
the Officer Violate Any Duty of Fairness Owed to the PA?
[33]
The PA
submits that the Officer violated natural justice by relying on concerns not
put to the PA in the interview, and by overruling the preliminary decision not
to consider Umashangar as a dependent. The PA argues that the PA had a
legitimate expectation that once the interview was convened on the basis of the
decision that Umashangar would not be considered a dependent and once the PA
was found credible, a decision to revoke either preliminary decision could not
be made without warning.
[34]
The
Respondent emphasizes that the CAIPS notes entry made on July 2, 2009 reading,
“will proceed with case without examinating Umashangar as he is no longer a
dep. child” (CTR pg 9) was an initial or preliminary finding and that the visa
officer has the jurisdiction to change or reverse such a decision (Vimalenthirakumar
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 1181). The
Applicant, on the other hand, submits that that decision was akin to an interim
ruling which could not have been revoked without violating natural justice (Velauthar
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), (FCA) May 8, 1992, Court
no A-350-90).
[35]
Justice
Michel Shore determined that the
case law of this Court supports the position that a second visa officer can
over-rule a preliminary determination in Vimalenthirakumar, above, at
paras 20, and 21:
[20] The caselaw provides that the
visa officer has the jurisdiction to change or reverse an initial or preliminary
finding that the Applicant appeared admissible. In fact, even if the Officer
had made a decision that the Applicant was admissible, which is strongly
denied, he (and/or another Officer) would have the jurisdiction to change that
decision, prior to the issuance of the visa.
[21] For
instance, in the case of Brysenko v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (2000), 193 F.T.R. 129, 99 A.C.W.S. (3d) 1035, a visa
officer interviewed the applicant for permanent residence and made a positive
selection decision. The application was complete, with the only remaining
step being the issuance of a visa. Approximately two months later, a second
visa officer reviewed the file and found that she was not comfortable with the
first visa officer's decision. The second visa officer asked the applicant to
provide her with further information. The applicant did not do so. Instead, she
filed an application for judicial review arguing that the second visa officer
could not reopen the decision, because the first visa officer was functus.
The Federal Court, per Justice Barbara Reed, found that the second visa
officer (who was charged with issuing the visa) had the jurisdiction to reverse
the earlier assessment and refuse the application. Justice Reed concluded that
the doctrine of functus did not apply to the first decision and held
that the principle of functus only applies to final decisions, and the
final decision is the issuance of a visa.
[Emphasis
in original]
[36]
In
the present matter, the Officer noted in his decision that the earlier finding
that Umashangar was not a dependent was only a preliminary finding and that
detailed examination and interview revealed further inconsistencies. I have to
agree with the Respondent, that the Officer had the jurisdiction to over-turn
this preliminary finding (although the Respondent disputes that it could even
be considered as such). However, as described above, I do not agree that the
interview revealed major discrepancies that justified an adverse credibility
finding. However, there has been no denial of natural justice.
[37]
The PA
also argues additionally that the Officer’s concerns should have been put to
the PA in the interview, but once again, I share the view of the Respondent. A
decision was made based on all of the information available at the time. Any
concerns that the interviewer had were put to the PA at the time of the
interview.
D. What
is the Appropriate Remedy?
[38]
The PA’s
further memorandum dealt solely with the remedy sought. The PA requests an
order setting aside the decision of the Officer and requiring the admissibility
of the applicants to be redetermined by Citizenship and Immigration Canada‘s (CIC)
National Headquarters within 30 days of the Court’s order. The PA also
asks that the processing of the Applicants’ permanent residence application be
completed within a further 60 days in the event that they are determined
admissible. In the alternative, the PA requests that the decision of the
Officer be set aside and that a new decision be made by another officer within
30 days of the Court’s order.
[39]
The PA
bases this request on a belief that it would be impossible to refer the matter
back to the CHC and ensure fair and impartial treatment of the file since the
Officer who made the decision is the official in charge of the immigration
section. The Applicant relies on the decisions in Sivapatham v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 314, Bageerathan v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 513, and Gnanaguru v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) FC Order dated July 12, 2010, IMM-4267-08 and
IMM-987-09.
[40]
In
support of the allegation of reasonable apprehension of bias, the Applicant
submitted a supplementary affidavit attached to which were two newspaper
articles. The articles referenced allegedly discriminatory comments that the Officer,
Brian Hudson, made to a Canadian Delegation while serving as an Immigration Counsellor
in Punjab in India.
[41]
As
the Respondent submits, the allegations of bias are completely
unsubstantiated. The Respondent claims that the newspaper articles submitted
are completely inappropriate and have no purpose other than making veiled
allegations of bias. As I see it, the newspaper articles are completely
irrelevant to the present claim.
[42]
The
Respondent submits that all the cases cited by the Applicant can be
distinguished on the facts. I agree. Furthermore, as Justice Yves de Montigny
wrote in Gnanaguru, above, in which the applicant’s counsel asked for
the same remedy:
Despite counsel for the applicant’s
valiant efforts to the contrary, there is no substance to the allegation that
another officer would be under the spell of his superiors or would feel
compelled to reach the same decision, nor is there any basis for assuming that
the whole office is prejudiced against Tamils.
Although Justice Judith
Snider ordered that the reconsideration of the applicants’ file take place at
National Headquarters in the re-litigation of the same matter in Gnanaguru v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 536, she was
careful emphasize at para 39 that:
[39] […]
my decision that this matter should be considered at NHQ should, in no way, be
interpreted as a criticism of the Officer. In my view, the attacks by the
Applicants on this Officer, as set out in their submissions, were unwarranted
and not founded on any evidence beyond the fact that the application was, for a
second time, refused. The administration of justice is not well-served by such
attacks on the reputation and integrity of one of Canada's public servants.
The PA’s other
requests as to how the redetermination be ordered are similarly inappropriate.
V. Conclusion
[43]
Given
the above conclusions, this application for judicial review is allowed and the
matter will be remitted to another officer at the CHC in Colombo for re-determination.
[44]
At
the conclusion of the hearing there was some discussion as to a possible
question for certification. I issued an oral direction granting the parties
two weeks to file submissions with respect to such a possible question. After
reviewing the various letters submitted by both the Applicants and the
Respondent and given the outcome, it is clear that no question for
certification arises in this matter.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is
that this application for judicial review is allowed.
“ D. G. Near ”