Date: 20110902
Docket: IMM-5841-10
Citation: 2011 FC 1043
Ottawa, Ontario, September 2,
2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice O'Reilly
BETWEEN:
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KITTS WHITE
BY HIS LITIGATION GUARDIAN,
JULINE WHITE
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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
I. Overview
[1]
In
1984, Mr. Kitts White arrived in Canada from Jamaica. He was 10
years old. He became a permanent resident in 1985. When he was 18, in 1991, he
suffered a serious, permanent brain injury in a traffic accident. His injury
reduced his mental capacity, caused behaviour changes, and provoked delusions
and depression. Over the ensuing years, Mr. White committed a number of crimes,
including kidnapping and aggravated sexual assault.
[2]
Mr.
White requires ongoing care and constant supervision to protect him and the
public. He resides at the Royal Ottawa Hospital. A financial
settlement arising from the accident provides Mr. White with an allowance of
$6,000.00 a month.
[3]
In
1997, Mr. White was found to be inadmissible to Canada on the basis
of serious criminality. In 2006, he applied for a pre-removal risk assessment
[PRRA] and for relief on humanitarian and compassionate grounds [H&C]. An
immigration officer dismissed his PRRA. His H&C was turned down, but this
Court ordered a re-determination on judicial review. His second H&C was
also denied and, again, this Court quashed the decision and ordered a
re-determination.
[4]
On
a third H&C, an immigration officer referred Mr. White’s file to the
Director of Case Determination. The Director concluded that the humanitarian
and compassionate grounds in Mr. White’s favour did not warrant waiving his
inadmissibility to Canada.
[5]
Mr.
White argues that the Director failed to treat him fairly, rendered an
unreasonable decision, breached his rights under the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms, and failed to consider whether his removal to Jamaica would
violate Canada’s
international obligations.
[6]
I
agree with Mr. White that the Director rendered an unreasonable decision and I
must, therefore, allow this application for judicial review. It is unnecessary
to consider the other grounds for relief put forward by Mr. White.
[7]
The
main issue, therefore, is whether the Director’s decision was unreasonable. A
related question is the proper remedy.
II. The Director’s Decision
[8]
The
Director divided her analysis into three sections: (a) Analysis of the Nature
of Mr. White’s Criminality and his Prospects for Rehabilitation; (b)
Humanitarian and Compassionate Factors; and (c) Balancing.
(a) Analysis
of the Nature of Mr. White’s Criminality and his Prospects for Rehabilitation
[9]
The
Director reviewed the events leading to Mr. White’s 1996 convictions for
kidnapping, including the comments of the sentencing judge that incarceration
was “out of the question” and that “he won’t gain anything and won’t be
rehabilitated there.” The judge concluded that a conditional sentence was
appropriate, and that Mr. White was not a danger to the public if properly
supervised. However, the judge concluded that Mr. White’s problems, including a
low attention span, poor memory, and problems with anger, did not substantiate
a defence of not criminally responsible due to mental disorder.
[10]
The
Director then reviewed in detail the circumstances surrounding Mr. White’s next
conviction for aggravated sexual assault. In 1997, Mr. White broke into the
apartment of a woman who was a stranger to him. He confronted her in the
bathroom. When she refused his sexual advances, he beat her, stabbed her with a
knife, and then sexually assaulted her. Police interviewed Mr. White’s
girlfriend at the time, who stated that Mr. White had not been taking his
medication for about a week prior to the attack.
[11]
The
Director considered Mr. White’s counsel’s submissions with respect to the
police report documenting Mr. White’s most serious offence. Counsel pointed out
that the purpose of deportation is not to punish, but conceded that Mr. White
presented a danger to the public, both in Canada and Jamaica, and to
himself.
[12]
The
Director found “raw police data” to be of particular interest because it
demonstrated both Mr. White’s abilities and the danger he poses. The Director
noted that in 1997 he was sufficiently lucid, coherent and emotionally aware to
have a girlfriend and live in the community in an unsupervised fashion. The
fact that Mr. White could appear to behave within a normal range but, at the same
time, be a danger to the public heightened his dangerousness. The Director
noted that Mr. White’s current pharmaceutical regimen amounted to “chemical
castration”, but he was nonetheless dangerous to women, even women who were
strangers to him.
[13]
The
Director reviewed Mr. White’s prospects for rehabilitation. The Director noted
that Mr. White’s brain injury resulted both in a loss in cognitive functioning
and behavioural impairments. These problems were described by one of his former
doctors, Dr. Newwell, as including impulsivity, difficulty in appreciating the
extent of his actions (while knowing the difference between right and wrong),
and trouble with anger control. Dr. Newwell emphasized that these were
impairments of brain function, and were not wilful. She also noted that Mr.
White had developed post-traumatic psychosis (hearing voices) which required
psychiatric care and medication. Dr. Newwell observed that the prospect for
further rehabilitation was “very guarded”, and that Mr. White required a controlled
environment, structured activity, abstinence from the use of illicit
substances, and cessation of inappropriate social interactions in order to
become productive. In her opinion, an integrated lifelong program was needed,
which would be financially demanding, or a corresponding commitment by family
members. Dr. Newwell also noted that Mr. White’s total cooperation was
required. As such, she concluded that the prospect for implementation of such a
program was bleak, and that without it, Mr. White would be likely to engage in
activities that would put him in conflict with the law.
[14]
The
Director concluded that Mr. White’s prospects for rehabilitation were limited
to behavioural improvements from therapy and medication. However, there was no
chance he would regain his formal social functioning or ever be free of the
need to take medication to control his behaviour. The Director then reviewed a
number of reports that provided insight into Mr. White’s post-accident
character and abilities, including:
• A
1995 pre-sentence report;
• A
1997 medical-legal assessment by a Dr. Van Reekum; and
• A
2007 report from a forensic psychologist.
[15]
The
following are the key points raised in these reports:
• Persons
living with brain injuries have extreme difficulties with interpersonal
relationships;
• Mr.
White’s prognosis is for permanent suffering and disability; he is unlikely to
regain further neurological function;
• Any
further improvements would be due to treatment, and to and his and his family’s
efforts;
• Mr.
White presents an increased risk of further psychotic episodes and major
depression, and is also at risk of suicide and behavioural problems leading to
adverse social consequences; and
• Mr.
White’s profile includes key predictors of future violence: a history of
assaults, and a history of being physically abused as a child.
[16]
The
Director also considered the most recent report on file, a 2010 report from Dr.
Colin Cameron of the Royal Ottawa Hospital’s Secure
Treatment Unit [STU], where Mr. White is currently held. Dr. Cameron noted
that:
• Since
February 2010, Mr. White has shown a very significant improvement in his mood
and behaviour;
• Mr.
White has shown an increased ability to manage conflicts without resorting to
aggression;
• There
have been no recent reports of inappropriate sexual comments or advances;
• Given
his progress, it would be quite realistic to expect Mr. White to be safely
discharged to the community, so long as proper supports were in place; but
• Given
his history, finding an appropriate placement remains a challenge.
[17]
The
Director contacted counsel in July 2010 to find out what plan was in place in
the event Mr. White was released from the STU. Counsel submitted that:
• If
he were released, it would likely be pursuant to a diversionary Community
Treatment Order [CTO];
• Given
that his condition is only manageable, not treatable, the CTO could continue in
effect for the rest of his life;
• While
family members could be incorporated into the release plan, STU envisaged that
Mr. White would be cared for in a secure residential setting, and that he
required ongoing expert supervision to manage his medication;
• A
CTO requires the person’s consent, but Mr. White had been compliant with the
management of his condition and deferential to authority figures;
• A
CTO could be a necessary condition to continue to hold a Temporary Resident
Permit [TRP].
[18]
The
Director observed that the medical-legal options for patients such as Mr. White
were beyond her expertise. Consequently, she consulted articles on the Mental
Health Act, which were disclosed to counsel, and reviewed them in her
decision.
[19]
The
Director noted that counsel’s understanding was that Mr. White was seeking a
placement in a “secure residential facility”, yet the most recent report from
the STU does not use this language. Instead, Dr. Cameron discussed release to a
“supported housing residence” or “group home.” The Director considered that
restraints on Mr. White’s mobility in such a setting had not been explained or
discussed, but observed that the purpose of a CTO was to be “less restrictive”
than life in a psychiatric facility. The Director also noted that while CTOs
can be renewed indefinitely, in most cases they are of short duration.
[20]
Based
on this evidence, the Director found three “shortcomings” with respect to the
use of a CTO to protect the public from Mr. White: (1) CTOs require patient
consent; (2) there is nothing to indicate that a CTO would limit Mr. White’s
daytime mobility; and (3) CTOs do not appear to be renewed indefinitely even
for permanently impaired patients. Moreover, ensuring that a psychiatric patent
takes his or her medication is likely to be a perennial problem. Mr. White’s
failure to take his medication appeared to be a factor in the sexual assault.
[21]
The
Director also observed that Mr. White appeared to have had problems with
structured programming in the community in the past, and referred to a
Correctional Services report on file containing the following:
• Between
July 1993 and March 1994, Mr. White’s probation officer noted that he was
struggling with life in the community, not responding well, and resisting the
rules imposed on him;
• In
April 1994, Mr. White entered a head injury program but had problems with
alcohol and cannabis use, was rejected from a detoxification program after one
day, and was charged with assaulting another resident, resulting in a 30-day
jail term.
[22]
The
Director concluded that Mr. White remains a danger to the public, and that this
risk was unlikely to diminish over his lifetime. The Director was not satisfied
that counsel’s proposed plan for treatment pursuant to a CTO would adequately
safeguard the community in either the short or long term.
[23]
The
Director acknowledged counsel’s submission that protection of the public must
include people in Jamaica. However, she concluded that her mandate comes
from the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC. 2001, c
27, [IRPA] (see
Annex “A” for statutory references) whose objectives include protecting the
health and safety of Canadians. There is no parallel commitment to protect the
health and safety of persons outside of Canada.
(b) Humanitarian
and Compassionate Factors
[24]
The
Director considered four distinct factors:
(i) Establishment
[25]
The
Director noted that Mr. White had been living continuously in Canada for about 26
years. She noted that prior to his accident he had been attending high school,
had been doing well academically, and had excelled at athletics.
[26]
However,
since 1991, there was very little to indicate any positive involvement by Mr.
White in the community. He had finished grade 11, and had worked part-time as a
shelf-stocker, cleaner and labourer, but he had not lived in the community
since 1998. There were no particular social workers or doctors consistently
involved in his care over the years. Most of the letters in support of Mr.
White described his pre-accident character, and were dated no later than 2002.
[27]
Nonetheless,
the Director concluded that, given the length of time spent in Canada, Mr.
White’s connection to Canada was greater than to anywhere else.
(ii) Family
in Canada and Jamaica
[28]
The
Director noted that two family members in Canada were
“engaged” in Mr. White’s care: his father and sister, with whom he is in nearly
daily contact via telephone. Counsel asserted that Mr. White had “no one” in Jamaica.
[29]
The
Director acknowledged that Mr. White’s father had suffered a great deal since
his son’s accident and, being 65 and retired, it would be difficult for him to
return to Jamaica to care for
his son. However, the Director disputed counsel’s assertion that Mr. White’s
father was “entitled” to assist his son in Canada. The
Director noted that Mr. White was no longer a permanent resident of Canada, and his
father must be aware that a deportation order has been outstanding against his
son since 1999.
[30]
The
Director noted that the separation of family members would be an unfortunate
consequence of removal. However, due to Mr. White’s incarceration and
detention, he has not been part of his father’s or sister’s everyday life,
other than by telephone. The Director observed that this hardship could be
alleviated by visits to Jamaica on a temporary or
indeterminate basis. Still, the Director concluded that this was the most
compelling humanitarian factor in Mr. White’s favour.
(iii) Victim
of a Car Accident
[31]
The
Director noted that Mr. White’s case was particularly sad given that his
circumstances were irrevocably affected by being a passenger in a car accident.
She observed that Mr. White’s life before the accident was full of promise: he
excelled both in academic and athletic activities.
[32]
The
Director noted that Mr. White’s criminality stemmed from changes in his
behaviour due to his brain injury and arose through no fault of his own.
However, at the same time, Mr. White had not been found unfit to stand trial
for the offences with which he was charged. Psychiatric reports indicated that
he knows the difference between right and wrong, although his ability to
control and foresee the consequences of his actions was limited.
[33]
The
Director acknowledged the tragedy of the situation for Mr. White and his
family, but noted that his life was unlikely to be easy or pleasant regardless
of where he resides. She agreed with counsel’s submission that “the purpose of
deportation is not to punish”, but observed that the deportation order was
issued, not for punishment, but because Mr. White had been found to be a danger
to the public. The Director concluded that the fact that his criminality was
due to an accident was a factor that weighed in his favour, and made the
balancing of all the relevant factors difficult.
(iv) Hardship
of returning to Jamaica
[34]
The
Director acknowledged the voluminous country condition documentation adduced by
counsel. She considered three hardship factors: (1) lack of medical facilities
for persons requiring the same care as Mr. White; (2) stigma and violence
against the mentally ill; and (3) lack of family support in Jamaica.
[35]
The
Director considered letters submitted by Dr. Morgan, Director – Mental Health
and Substance Abuse Unit, Ministry Health and Environment, Jamaica. Dr. Morgan
wrote, among other things, that:
• Admissions
to the single mental hospital are restricted to short-term admissions for the
acutely mentally ill;
• Most
persons with chronic mental illnesses are treated in the community under family
supervision, and receive voluntary treatment in community clinics;
• There
are no high security wards suitable for long-term placement of criminal
offenders;
• Mr.
White is likely to end up homeless, and could become a victim of abuse and
stigmatization;
• There
are no specific public sector facilities available for persons with brain
injuries who pose a risk to society; and
• There
are no specific private sector facilities either, although there are several
residential nursing homes that are limited in their capacity to handle a person
with a brain injury requiring constant supervision and who pose a security
risk.
[36]
The
Director noted that while Dr. Morgan believed that private nursing homes would be
unlikely to have a high security ward, the most recent letter from Dr. Cameron
of the STU indicated that Mr. White would require a “group home” rather than a
higher security facility. The Director also noted that Dr. Morgan was a
representative of the Jamaican government, and that her knowledge of
private-sector facilities might not be extensive.
[37]
The
Director concluded that, given Dr. Morgan’s comments and Mr. White’s financial
resources, there was no evidence before her explaining why he could not arrange
for specialized care, either within a nursing home or within his own residence.
The Director stated that this could include the hiring of a full-time
psychiatric nurse.
[38]
The
Director then reviewed an extensive package of documentary evidence concerning
the situation of the chronically mentally ill in Jamaica. From this,
the Director concluded that community-based treatment is available for the
chronically mentally ill in Jamaica. She noted that
programming available in Canada was likely to be better-suited to Mr. White’s
needs and that any solution in Jamaica was likely to fall
short of what he could receive in Canada. However, she was
satisfied that the differential in treatment would not be so detrimental to Mr.
White’s well-being as to be the determinative factor in this case.
[39]
Regarding
the stigma and violence inflicted on the mentally ill in Jamaica, the
Director reviewed a number of articles submitted by counsel. She noted that one
study observed that views of the mentally ill in Jamaica were comparable
to those in highly developed countries. She then noted that a PRRA officer had
addressed these same alleged risks to Mr. White in a 2006 decision and
concluded that they were not well-founded. The Federal Court denied him leave
to seek judicial review of that decision. The Director found that the risks to
Mr. White would arise only if he left a situation of supervised care, and so
were speculative. Accordingly, the Director concluded that the problems of
stigma and violence were unlikely to affect Mr. White personally if he were
removed to Jamaica.
[40]
The
Director then considered Mr. White’s lack of family support in Jamaica. She noted
that the main concern was that he had no contact with his extended family, so
there was no one in that country to supervise his care. The Director concluded
that the financial resources available to Mr. White should be adequate to hire
a full-time nurse, with an additional night-time assistant, either within a
private residence or a nursing home. She noted that any potential problems with
such an arrangement – Mr. White wandering off, or having a caregiver quit –
were speculative. The same problems could occur in Canada. She
concluded that while Jamaica may not have the same resources as Canada, it does
offer community-based psychiatric care and the possibility of hospitalization
for acute problems.
[41]
The
Director concluded that if Mr. White returned to Jamaica he would
face a period of adjustment. He was fortunate to have family members interested
in his health and welfare who appeared willing to assist him if he returned to Jamaica.
(c) Balancing
[42]
The
Director acknowledged that Mr. White’s injury led him to display a pattern of
behaviour which would endanger the Canadian public. This was an important
consideration linked directly to his inadmissibility to Canada for serious
criminality.
[43]
The
Director concluded that suitable care arrangements could be made for Mr. White
in Jamaica. She noted
that the differential availability of care and programming in Jamaica was a factor
weighing in his favour. However, she concluded that any hardship to Mr. White
would not be so significant as to overcome the danger he represents to the
Canadian public.
[44]
Regarding
establishment, while this was a consideration in Mr. White’s favour, the Director
also noted that there was little recent evidence of the support he received
prior to the accident. Further, he had not experienced consistency in terms of
his professional care providers.
[45]
The
Director noted that the most significant factor in his favour was the further
physical distance that would be created between him and his family. If he
returned to Jamaica, he could
still contact his family by phone, but it would be complicated and expensive to
arrange visits. Mr. White’s father could relocate to Jamaica, but this
was not a certainty. Even if Mr. White were to remain in Canada, he would
probably never live with his family members again anyway.
[46]
The
Director concluded that the danger that Mr. White posed to the public was real
and frightening. After giving due consideration to his special needs, the
Director stated that the interests of protecting the Canadian public took
precedence over whatever hardship Mr. White might face in relocating to
Jamaica.
[47]
The
Director noted that, as opposed to the two earlier decisions made by PRRA
officers that had been overturned on judicial review, she was charged with
answering a slightly different question. Rather than determining if the
requirement to obtain a permanent resident visa from outside of Canada would cause
“an unusual, underserved or disproportionate hardship”, the Director had to
determine if there were sufficient H&C grounds to warrant the granting of
an exemption to Mr. White’s inadmissibility based on serious criminality. This
determination required a balancing of the nature of the criminality and the
prospects for Mr. White’s rehabilitation against H&C factors.
[48]
The
Director also made clear that she had taken into consideration the guidance
provided by Justice Elizabeth Heneghan and Justice Michael Kelen in the two
prior judicial reviews (White (Litigation Guardian of) v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 896; White (Litigation Guardian
of) v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC
206).
[49]
Finally,
the Director considered Mr. White’s request for a TRP as an alternative to an
exemption on H&C grounds. She concluded that a TRP was inappropriate in
this case. She characterized it as a “wait and see” approach, in which the
parties could wait to see if Mr. White re-offended or not. She found this would
be at the expense of others. The Director concluded that, even if Mr. White
were to remain crime-free for five years (the lifespan of a TRP), given that
his problems are permanent with no significant potential for rehabilitation, a
relapse was likely to occur beyond the five-year mark.
[50]
For
these reasons, the Director concluded that she was satisfied that a waiver of
criminal inadmissibility was not warranted.
III. Was the Director’s Decision
Unreasonable?
[51]
Mr.
White contends that the Director applied the wrong test in assessing his
application. He acknowledges that he bears the onus of establishing that the
discretion set out in s 25 of IRPA should be exercised in his favour. However,
he submits that he presented sufficient evidence to support the exercise of
discretion in his favour, and the Director erred by failing to consider all
relevant evidence and factors.
[52]
Mr.
White also maintains that the Director assessed the evidence unreasonably. He
claims that the Director ignored evidence and drew unreasonable inferences
based on speculation in reaching her decision, as follows:
• When
she concluded that Mr. White could be treated in a private nursing home in Jamaica, the
Director ignored Mr. White’s real need for a secure and controlled health care
placement. The Director misinterpreted Dr. Cameron’s evidence as amounting to a
conclusion that Mr. White did not need a high security placement, and could
live in a “group home”;
• The
Director’s conclusion that a privately constructed plan would work for Mr.
White in Jamaica ignores the evidence that such a plan would not work even in
Canada, as well as Dr. Morgan’s letter indicating that care of this type is
unavailable in Jamaica;
• The
Director’s conclusion that a community health care scheme is available to the
mentally disabled in Jamaica was based on a
misunderstanding of Dr. Morgan’s evidence. In fact, such a scheme would put Mr.
White in danger;
• The
Director misunderstood Mr. White’s needs when she concluded that he could
simply hire nursing staff in Jamaica and keep in touch with his family by
telephone;
• By
relying on the 2006 PRRA decision, the Director ignored the fact that she was
required to consider hardship and the broader risks faced by Mr. White; and
• In
concluding that a TRP would not allow for sufficient control over Mr. White,
the Director ignored evidence that he would be in a specialized secure
placement.
[53]
Mr.
White also alleges that the Director erred by drawing unreasonable inferences
as follows:
• That
there are private, experienced, affordable caregivers available in Jamaica that could
provide him with 24/7 supervision and care;
• That
Mr. White’s father and sister might join him in Jamaica; and
• That
it was merely speculative to suggest that Mr. White would experience
stigmatization and abuse in Jamaica despite evidence of the
special risk faced by the mentally disabled there. This conclusion was based
on the Director’s belief that this would only happen if Mr. White left
supervised care, noting that this could happen in Canada, but
ignoring the institutional controls in place in Canada.
[54]
In
response, the Minister submits that the onus was on Mr. White to show that an
exemption was warranted. He did not provide sufficient evidence that his proposed
plan of care would satisfactorily overcome the danger posed to the Canadian
public, notwithstanding the role his father and sister would play in the
execution of that plan. Protecting the Canadian public takes precedence over
the hardship Mr. White would suffer if he returned to Jamaica.
[55]
The
Minister also submits that it was open to the Director to conclude that the
information on Mr. White’s plan of care in Canada failed to
address the needs of the Canadian public to be protected from random, violent
criminal acts. Mr. White actually conceded that he was dangerous and that
rehabilitation was unlikely. The standard to be met to obtain an exemption from
the requirement to apply for permanent residence from outside of Canada is high
(Katwaru v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 1277, at para 64) [Katwaru].
[56]
Moreover,
the Minister notes that there was insufficient evidence to show that Mr. White
could not be cared for privately in Jamaica. The Director
considered the evidence and concluded, with reference to Mr. White’s financial
resources, that there was no reason why it would not be possible to arrange for
specialized care for Mr. White. The Minister submits that the Director acted
reasonably in refusing Mr. White’s request given that he had not established
sufficient H&C grounds to overcome the danger he posed to the public (Katwaru,
above, at para 69).
[57]
The
Minister also says that the Director’s reasons make clear that she turned her
mind to all of the material before her in concluding there were insufficient
H&C factors to warrant an exemption. Mr. White simply failed to demonstrate
sufficient rehabilitation for her to have any confidence that allowing him to
obtain permanent residence would be an acceptable risk for the Canadian public
to bear.
[58]
In
sum, the Minister submits that the Director applied the right test and
considered all the relevant evidence relating to risk and hardship.
[59]
Clearly,
the onus fell on Mr. White to show that the factors supporting a decision in
his favour outweighed the seriousness of the offence that led to the
deportation order. There are cases where an applicant can show that the
positive factors in his or her favour outweigh the seriousness of the offence.
And, conversely, there may be situations where the seriousness of the offence,
in itself, will outweigh the positive factors on which the applicant relies (Katwaru,
above, at para 61). Ultimately, a decision on an H&C application depends
on the weighing of the positive and negative factors. The security of Canadians
is paramount (IRPA, s 3(2)(f)). The Supreme Court of Canada has found
that this objective is served by the removal of applicants with criminal
records (Medovarski v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 SCC 51, at para 10; Cha v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FCA 126, at para 24).
[60]
Here,
there were obviously significant factors that weighed strongly in favour of a
positive determination. The Director’s lengthy reasons disclose that she
struggled with the fact that the positive factors raised in this case were of a
type “materially different from the types of factors routinely identified in
H&C cases” (Katwaru, above, at para 63).
[61]
The
Director was obliged to consider and balance those positive factors against the
fact that Mr. White was otherwise inadmissible to Canada for serious
criminality, and represented a continuing, permanent danger to Canada.
[62]
I
agree with Mr. White that the Director made a number of errors that justify
overturning her decision.
[63]
First,
the Director accepted that Mr. White’s brain injury is permanent, and that he
has reduced cognitive faculties, behavioural and mood problems, and recurrent
bouts of psychosis. Moreover, he has no immediate family in Jamaica, and has not
lived there since he was a child. It was unclear whether any of his family in Canada would be
able or willing to accompany him to Jamaica to arrange for his
care. Yet, despite these obvious obstacles, the Director concluded that, given
Mr. White’s financial resources, “it therefore appears reasonable to me that
Mr. White’s family should be able to make suitable care arrangements for him in
Jamaica.”
[64]
This
conclusion was unsupported by the evidence. Dr. Morgan explained that most
persons with chronic mental illnesses in Jamaica are treated
in the community under family supervision, and receive voluntary treatment in
community clinics. Essentially, family members look after their relatives with
mental illnesses. There was no evidence that private nurses were available in Jamaica to take the
place of family members, or indicating how much a nurse would cost. There are
private facilities, but none with the kind of security arrangements that Mr.
White would require. Again, there was no evidence relating to the cost of these
facilities.
[65]
Second,
the Director’s conclusion that the type of care Mr. White required was
available in Jamaica appears to
have been based on a misunderstanding of Dr. Cameron’s evidence. Dr. Cameron’s
belief that Mr. White could be safely discharged into the community was not
unqualified. He pointed out that Mr. White is currently “housed in a four-room
maximum secure diamond area with access if accompanied by staff to a common
room shared with up to 24 other residents.” He noted that Mr. White’s condition
had improved over recent months and, on that basis, it would be “quite
realistic for Mr. White to be safely discharged to the community so long as
there are proper supports in place.” He had in mind a “supported housing
residence (group home)” for “psychiatrically ill or brain injured patients” and
made clear that finding that kind of facility was a “challenge.”
[66]
I
agree with Mr. White that the Director’s conclusion that he could simply go to
a “group home” was inconsistent with reports about his need for a secure and
controlled placement, and with counsel’s submissions about recent efforts to
house him in a specialized type of setting. Clearly, Dr. Cameron had in mind a
very special kind of community facility, difficult to find even in Canada.
[67]
Third,
the fact that Mr. White’s subsequent criminality was caused entirely by the
accident he was involved in, through no fault of his own and at a young age,
was recognized by the Director as a tragedy, and his blameworthiness for his
subsequent criminality was low. The Director concluded that “the fact that Mr.
White’s criminality is due to an accident and not because he has a bad
character is a factor in his favour; it is the element of his case which makes
the balancing of factors very difficult.”
[68]
Yet,
despite identifying this consideration as “the factor” which complicated the
balancing of all other factors, the Director did not mention this factor at all
in the “Balancing” section of the analysis. While the Director demonstrated she
was alive to this consideration, the reasons do not show how this consideration
was actually weighed with and against the other relevant factors.
[69]
I
find that the errors in the treatment of this evidence led the Director to
render an unreasonable decision. It did not fall within the range of defensible
outcomes, based on the facts and the law.
IV. What is the Proper Remedy?
[70]
This
Court quashed two previous decisions in which Mr. White had been found not to
suffer unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship in being removed from Canada. His
application has now been refused again.
[71]
Mr.
White submits that s 18.1(3) of the Federal Courts Act, RSC 1985, c
F-7,
[Act]
empowers me to order a decision-maker to “do any act or thing it has unlawfully
failed or refused to do or has unreasonably delayed in doing.” Mr. White
requests a “directed verdict” in the form of an order allowing him to remain in
Canada as a
permanent resident.
[72]
The
Minister says that the kind of declaration Mr. White seeks is inappropriate.
First, the Minister notes that this remedy was not sought in Mr. White’s
application for leave and judicial review. Second, the Minister submits that
the Federal Court of Appeal has confirmed that the power to issue directions in
the nature of a directed verdict is an exceptional one to be used only in the
clearest of circumstances. The Minister maintains this is especially so if the
effect of the directions were to confer permanent or temporary resident status,
or to fetter the Minister’s discretion to determine if there are sufficient
H&C grounds to warrant a waiver of inadmissibility for serious criminality
(s 18.1(3)(a) and (b) of IRPA; Rafuse v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration) (2002), NR 385 (FCA); Xie v Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1994] FCJ No 286 (TD); Turanskaya
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1997] FCJ No 254 (CA);
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Kurukkal, 2010
FCA 230, at para 5).
[73]
I
agree with the Minister that there are difficulties with Mr. White’s requested
remedy. First, it was not properly pleaded in his Notice of Application.
Second, it would appear to be contrary to the nature of decisions under s 25 of
IRPA, which are discretionary, fact-based determinations, requiring a
significant degree of deference.
[74]
On
the other hand, however, Mr. White is quite right to point out that this is the
third H&C decision which has come before the Federal Court and that these
ongoing proceedings are likely hindering his ability to make permanent
arrangements for his care, whether in Canada or in Jamaica. Some further
direction from the Court is required.
[75]
There
is already an extensive evidentiary record in this case. Moreover, there are no
disputes relating to Mr. White’s criminality, the risk he poses, or his
prospects for rehabilitation. The areas where there are serious disputes are
those where the Director fell into error – Mr. White’s treatment needs, the
availability in Jamaica of facilities where those needs can be met, and
the significance of the fact that Mr. White’s condition is a product not of
wilful criminality, but of a brain injury caused by a motor vehicle accident.
The key areas that need to be re-evaluated, therefore, are the hardship to Mr.
White if he returned to Jamaica, and the final balancing
of the relevant factors.
V. Conclusion and Disposition
[76]
While
the Director embarked on the appropriate mode of analysis and identified the
relevant factors, some of her conclusions were unsupported on the evidence. In
addition, she did not appear to give any weight to what she herself considered
to be the most complicating factor, Mr. White’s accident, in her analysis.
Accordingly, I find that the Director’s decision was unreasonable, in that it
did not represent a defensible outcome based on the facts and the law.
[77]
Therefore,
I would allow this application for judicial review and order a reconsideration
of Mr. White’s application by a different decision-maker, with the following
directions:
[78]
On
the reconsideration of Mr. White’s application, the decision-maker must take
account of the following important factors, in respect of the hardship he would
experience if he returned to Jamaica and the overall
balancing of factors:
(i) Mr.
White is unlikely to have significant, ongoing family support in Jamaica;
(ii) The
type of intensive, supervised and secure care Mr. White requires appears not to
be available in Jamaica, either in public or private facilities (unless there
is fresh evidence to the contrary); and
(iii) Mr.
White’s condition and criminal history is the consequence of a tragic accident,
for which he is entirely blameless, which took place on Canadian soil while he
was a permanent resident of Canada, and which transpired at a time when his
future seemed especially bright.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT
is that
1. The application for judicial
review is allowed and is sent back for reconsideration by a new hearing officer,
taking into account the following important factors in respect of the hardship
that Mr. White would experience if he is returned to Jamaica, and the
overall balancing of factors:
(i) Mr.
White is unlikely to have significant, ongoing family support in Jamaica;
(ii) The
type of intensive, supervised and secure care Mr. White requires appears not to
be available in Jamaica, either in public or private facilities (unless there
is fresh evidence to the contrary); and
(iii) Mr.
White’s condition and criminal history is the consequence of a tragic accident,
for which he is entirely blameless, which took place on Canadian soil while he
was a permanent resident of Canada, and which transpired at a time when his
future seemed especially bright.
“James
W. O’Reilly”
Annex “A”
Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27
Humanitarian
and compassionate considerations — request of foreign national
25. (1) The Minister must, on request of a
foreign national in Canada who is inadmissible or who does not meet the
requirements of this Act, and may, on request of a foreign national outside
Canada, examine the circumstances concerning the foreign national and may
grant the foreign national permanent resident status or an exemption from any
applicable criteria or obligations of this Act if the Minister is of the
opinion that it is justified by humanitarian and compassionate considerations
relating to the foreign national, taking into account the best interests of a
child directly affected.
Federal
Courts Act, RSC,
1985, c F-7
Application
for judicial review
Powers
of Federal Court
18.1
(3) On an application for judicial review, the Federal Court may
(a) order a federal board, commission or other
tribunal to do any act or thing it has unlawfully failed or refused to do or
has unreasonably delayed in doing; or
(b) declare invalid or unlawful, or quash, set
aside or set aside and refer back for determination in accordance with such
directions as it considers to be appropriate, prohibit or restrain, a
decision, order, act or proceeding of a federal board, commission or other
tribunal.
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Loi
sur l’immigration et la protection des réfugiés, LC 2001, ch 27
Séjour
pour motif d’ordre humanitaire à la demande de l’étranger
25. (1) Le
ministre doit, sur demande d’un étranger se trouvant au Canada qui est
interdit de territoire ou qui ne se conforme pas à la présente loi, et peut,
sur demande d’un étranger se trouvant hors du Canada, étudier le cas de cet
étranger; il peut lui octroyer le statut de résident permanent ou lever tout
ou partie des critères et obligations applicables, s’il estime que des
considérations d’ordre humanitaire relatives à l’étranger le justifient,
compte tenu de l’intérêt supérieur de l’enfant directement touché.
Loi
sur les Cours fédérales,
LRC (1985), ch F-7
Demande
de contrôle judiciaire
Pouvoirs
de la Cour fédérale
18.1
(3) Sur présentation d’une demande de contrôle judiciaire, la Cour fédérale
peut :
a) ordonner à l’office fédéral en cause
d’accomplir tout acte qu’il a illégalement omis ou refusé d’accomplir ou dont
il a retardé l’exécution de manière déraisonnable;
b) déclarer nul ou illégal, ou annuler,
ou infirmer et renvoyer pour jugement conformément aux instructions qu’elle
estime appropriées, ou prohiber ou encore restreindre toute décision,
ordonnance, procédure ou tout autre acte de l’office fédéral.
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