Date: 20070706
Docket: IMM-204-07
Citation: 2007 FC 712
BETWEEN:
CHRISTOPHER
JOEL SMITH
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR
ORDER
GIBSON J.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
These
reasons follow the hearing at Toronto on Monday, the 28th of May,
2007 of a motion pursuant to Rules 399(2) and (3) of the Federal Courts
Rules
(the “Rule”) seeking the setting aside or variation of two (2) Orders of
this Court.
[2]
The
Orders at issue are the following: an Order granted by the Honourable Maurice
E. Lagacé, Deputy Judge, on the 4th of April, 2007 denying a motion
on behalf of the Applicant for a stay of the execution of a removal order
issued against him; and my Order, dated the 16th of April, 2007, in
the following terms:
Extension of time to
file is denied. If an extension of time to file were granted, leave would be
denied. This application for leave and for judicial review is dismissed.
The underlying application for leave and
for judicial review referred to in my Order sought judicial review of a
decision of a member of the Immigration and Refugee Board, Immigration Appeal
Division, dated the 20th of September, 2006 and apparently received
by the Applicant on or about the 15th of October, 2006. The
application for leave and for judicial review was filed the 15th of
January, 2007.
[3]
In
written representations filed on behalf of the Applicant on the motion here at
issue, the following relief is sought:
1. That the stay of
deportation that was dismissed on April 4, 2007 be varied to grant the stay.
2. That the Minister
undertake all costs and efforts to return Mr. Smith to Canada forthwith.
3. That the decision
dated April 18 [sic], 2007 dismissing the leave application be varied to allow
the leave application to proceed.
4. That costs be
awarded on a solicitor-client basis in the amount of $25,000 inclusive of GST
and disbursements.
[4]
Rule 399(2) and
(3) reads as follows:
(2) On motion, the Court
may set aside or vary an order
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(2)
La Cour peut, sur requête, annuler ou modifier une ordonnance dans l’un ou l’autre
des cas suivants :
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(a) by
reason of a matter that arose or was discovered subsequent to the making of
the order; or
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a) des faits nouveaux sont survenus ou ont été découverts après que
l’ordonnance a été rendue;
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(b) where
the order was obtained by fraud.
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b) l’ordonnance a été obtenue par fraude.
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(3) Unless the Court orders
otherwise, the setting aside or variance of an order under
subsection (1) or (2) does
not affect the validity or character of anything done or not done before the
order was set aside or varied.
[emphasis
added]
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(3)
Sauf ordonnance contraire de la Cour, l’annulation ou la modification d’une ordonnance
en vertu des paragraphes (1) ou (2) ne porte pas atteinte à la validité ou à
la
nature
des actes ou omissions antérieurs à cette annulation ou modification.
[je souligne]
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It was not argued before the Court that Rule
399(2)(b) has any application to the facts of this matter.
BACKGROUND
[5]
The
Applicant is a citizen of Jamaica. He entered Canada as a permanent
resident some nineteen (19) years ago. He has extensive family connections in Canada. He has
very limited family connections in Jamaica. He is diagnosed as
suffering from hvtg schizophrenia. During his time in Canada, and
apparently by relation to his illness, he acquired an extensive criminal
record. He was found to be criminally inadmissible under subsection 36(1) of
the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (the “Act”)
and a removal Order was issued against him.
[6]
The
Applicant appealed the removal Order issued against him to the Immigration
Appeal Division earlier referred to. The Immigration Appeal Division granted
the Applicant a stay of his removal. The Applicant was subsequently convicted
of another offence that fell within the ambit of subsection 36(1) of the Act
and, in the result, pursuant to subsection 68(4) of the Act, the stay of
his removal was vacated by operation of law.
[7]
The
Respondent moved to have the Applicant’s stay and his appeal to the Immigration
Appeal Division recognized as vacated. In response, the Applicant filed a
Notice of Constitutional Question before the Immigration Appeal Division
asserting that subsection 68(4) of the Act infringed his Charter
rights and urged that he should be given a constitutional exemption from that
subsection. The Immigration Appeal Division found that it lacked the
jurisdiction to decide the Charter challenge.
[8]
The
Respondent began the process for removal of the Applicant from Canada. The
Applicant filed a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment Application (“PRRA”). He was
advised on the 20th of December, 2006 that his PRRA application was
refused. He was again advised of this refusal on the 29th of March,
2007.
[9]
On
the 15th of January, 2007, the Applicant filed the application for
leave and for judicial review of the decision of the Immigration Appeal
Division that underlies the motion here at issue. To date, no judicial review
has been sought of the negative PRRA decision in respect of the Applicant. The
Applicant’s removal from Canada was scheduled for the 5th of
April, 2007. On the 30th of March, the Applicant requested a
deferral of his removal. His deferral request was denied. The Applicant filed
a motion before this Court to stay his removal from Canada pending the
decision on his application for leave and for judicial review underlying this
motion. Deputy Justice Lagacé’s Order denying a stay followed.
[10]
Shortly
thereafter, and following the removal of the Applicant on the 5th of
April, my Order denying an extension of time to file the underlying application
for leave and for judicial review and, in the result, dismissing the
application for leave and for judicial review, followed.
THE GROUND FOR THE
MOTION BEFORE THE COURT
[11]
On
the motion before the Court leading to the Order of Deputy Justice Lagacé, the
Respondent filed the affidavit of a paralegal in the Ontario Regional Office of
the Department of Justice, Immigration Law Section, wherein she attested:
23. On April 3, 2007, I
personally spoke with Amit Soin, the Enforcement Officer with carriage of this
matter. Mr. Soin has advised me and I verily believe that the following
arrangements have been made. Once the Applicant arrives in Kingston, Jamaica, [he, Mr.
Smith] will be transported from the airport to the Emergency Department
at the Kingston Public Hospital on North Street, where he
will be seen by Dr. Reed.
[emphasis
added]
The hearing before Deputy Justice Lagacé
took place on the day following the discussion between the paralegal and Mr.
Soin and one day before the removal of the Applicant to Jamaica.
[12]
The
circumstances of the Applicant’s removal and the events immediately following
his arrival, under escort, in Jamaica, proved to be at
variance with the arrangements attested to by the paralegal. In fact, the
Applicant arrived in Jamaica with four (4) days
supply of prescription medication for the treatment of his schizophrenic
illness. He was advised of his medical appointment at the Kingston Public Hospital, was
provided with sufficient funds to cover taxi fare to that hospital and was
advised to attend at the hospital. He apparently advised his escorting
officers that he was a Jamaican citizen, that they were now in Jamaica and that the
officers had no jurisdiction over him. The escorting officers advised Jamaican
authorities at the airport of the Applicant’s condition and of his appointment
at the Kingston Public Hospital and were
requested to assist the Applicant in fulfilling that appointment.
[13]
The
Applicant’s escorting officers returned to Canada in very
short order. The Applicant did not attend his appointment and did not attend
at the Kingston Public Hospital for several days after his arrival in Jamaica and after
his supply of prescription medication would have run out, if he had been
consuming it as prescribed.
[14]
In
an affidavit filed on this motion, Amit Soin, the enforcement officer to whom
the paralegal attests that she spoke, confirms that he and the paralegal spoke
but denies that, at the time of that conversation, arrangements regarding the
Applicant’s removal to Jamaica had been finalized and, in particular, that he
indicated to the paralegal that the Applicant “[would] be “transported” from
the airport to the Emergency Department at the Kingston Public Hospital…” with
the implication, which I draw from those words, that the transportation would
be in the company and under the supervision of others.
[15]
The
totality of the evidence before the Court on this motion leads me to conclude
that it was known to the officers escorting the Applicant to Kingston, Jamaica,
that the Applicant’s conduct, under the influence of his condition, and
particularly when he was not medicated in accordance with his prescription, could
be erratic, unreliable and dangerous to himself and to others.
THE ISSUES
[16]
I
am satisfied that the issues before the Court can be briefly summarized as
follows:
1. If
the motion to set aside or vary my Order dismissing the application for leave
and for judicial review is not granted, does the Court have jurisdiction to set
aside or vary Deputy Justice Lagacé’s Order denying a stay of removal?
2. What
is the test for the exercise of jurisdiction under Rule 399(2) and, in
particular, Rule 399(2)(a)?
3. Is
there here before the Court a matter that arose or was discovered subsequent to
the making of each of the Orders at issue that would justify the setting aside
or variation of either or both of those Orders?
4. If
either or both of the Orders at issue is or are set aside or varied, should
that setting aside or variation affect the “validity or character” of the
removal of the Applicant on the 5th of April, 2007? and
5. What
relief, if any, including relief in the nature of costs, is justified?
ANALYSIS
1)
Jurisdiction
[17]
Section
18.2 of the Federal Courts Act reads as follows:
18.2 On
an application for judicial review, the Federal Court may make any interim
orders that it considers appropriate pending the final disposition of the
application.
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18.2
La Cour fédérale peut, lorsqu’elle est saisie d’une
demande de contrôle judiciaire, prendre les
mesures provisoires qu’elle estime indiquées avant de
rendre sa décision définitive.
|
[18]
Counsel
for the Respondent urged that, under the foregoing section, interim relief can
only be given if and while an application for judicial review, in this case an
application for leave and for judicial review, is pending. On the
facts of this matter, if the judicial review application that underlay the
motion for a stay of removal that resulted in Deputy Justice Lagacé’s Order
here at issue stands dismissed by my Order of the 16th of April, no
purpose whatsoever could be served by setting aside or varying an Order in the
context of a proceeding that is no longer before the Court.
[19]
I
accept without reservation the submissions of counsel for the Respondent to the
effect that, on this motion, if my Order dismissing the underlying application
for leave and for judicial review is not itself set aside or varied, I lack
jurisdiction under Rule 399 to set aside or vary Deputy Justice Lagacé’s
Order of the 4th of April, 2007.
2) The test for
the exercise of jurisdiction under Rule 399(2) and, in particular, Rule
399(2)(a)
[20]
In
Ayangma v. Her Majesty the Queen,
Justice Pelletier, for the Court, wrote at paragraphs [2] and [3]:
Rule 399(2)(a)
authorizes the Court to vary or set aside an order: “by reason of a matter
that arose or was discovered subsequent to the making of the order”.
The jurisprudence
establishes three conditions which must be satisfied before the Court will
intervene:
1-the newly discovered
information must be a “matter” with[in] the meaning of the Rule;
2-the “matter” must not
be one which was discoverable prior to the making of the order by the exercise
of due diligence; and
3-the “matter” must be
something which would have a determining influence on the decision in question.
In the foregoing quotation, and in
particular in the third condition, Justice Pelletier provides that the “matter”
at issue must be something which “…would have a determining influence…” on the
decision in question. Given that the Order sought to be set aside or varied
may, as here in respect of one order, have been made by a different judge from
the one considering the motion, I do not read the words “would have a
determining influence” as conclusive but rather as conditional as in “might
have a determining influence”.
[21]
In
Proctor & Gamble Pharmaceuticals Canada Inc. v. Canada (Minister of
Health), my
colleague Justice Snider wrote:
In satisfying the first
part of the test, P & G must convince me that this is a new matter. The
term “matter” is a word of broad import and may encompass something broader
than fresh evidence… . “Matter” refers to an element of the relief sought as
opposed to an argument raised before the court… . The new matter must be
relevant to the facts giving rise to the original Order… .
[citations
omitted]
3) Matter
that arose or was discovered subsequent to the making of the Order at issue
a) My Order
dismissing the underlying application for leave and for judicial
review
[22]
The
alleged “matter” arising or discovered subsequent to the making of my Order
dismissing the underlying application for leave and for judicial review, as
with Deputy Justice Lagacé’s Order denying a stay of removal, was the failure
of the escorting officers, on their arrival with the Applicant in Kingston,
Jamaica to ensure that he was “…transported from the airport to the
Emergency Department at the Kingston Public Hospital on North Street, where he
will be seen by Dr. Reed”. That he was not so “transported” and that he did
not, at the urging of his escorts from Canada, make his
own way to the Kingston Public Hospital to meet with
Dr. Reed, was not in issue before the Court. I am satisfied this constitutes a
“matter” within the contemplation of Rule 399(2)(a). The question then arises,
was it likely, or even conceivable, that Deputy Justice Lagacé relied on the
undertaking by way of affidavit on this issue that was before him. In relation
to my own Order, the question must be whether, if I had known about the issue
regarding the evidence before Deputy Justice Lagacé, would I nonetheless have
reached the decision that I did.
[23]
I
conclude that the answer in relation to my Order must be that I would not, at
least at the time that I made my Order, have made the Order that I did.
Rather, since there was no compulsion in law for me to determine the question
of leave on the application for leave and for judicial review when I did, it
would have been the better course of action for me to have set aside the
question before me until the issue surrounding Deputy Justice Lagacé’s Order
was resolved. In so doing, I would have preserved the jurisdiction of this
Court to deal with that controversy, if necessary, and in no way would I have
prejudiced either the Applicant or the Respondent.
[24]
I
have no concern but that the Applicant’s known relative in Jamaica, his
relatives in Canada and his counsel here in Canada acted diligently to discover
and to pursue the issue of “transport” of the Applicant to hospital in Kingston
when it first came to their attention. Equally, I have no difficulty
concluding that Applicant’s counsel drew the issue to the attention of the
Court in a timely manner, albeit that the Court’s attention was drawn to the
matter after my Order of the 16th of April, 2007 first came to her
attention.
[25]
In
Guzman v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), Justice
Teitelbaum considered a motion to set aside an Order dismissing an application
for leave and for judicial review where the Order was granted solely due to
counsel’s failure to understand and comply with procedural requirements.
Justice Teitelbaum concluded that:
…subsection 399(2) of
the Rules was not meant to apply to vary or set aside a final judgment
of the Court because one of the parties to the final judgment had
retained the services of a lawyer who, it is subsequently found out, was not
properly versed in the law or the rules of a Court.
[emphasis
added]
Absent jurisdiction under Rule 399,
Justice Teitelbaum went on to consider whether he had inherent jurisdiction to
nonetheless set aside the final Order in question. He wrote at paragraph [44]
of his reasons:
Notwithstanding my
finding of having inherent jurisdiction to deal with a matter involving the law
of immigration because of the Federal Court’s exclusive jurisdiction in
immigration matters, I am not convinced that I have the jurisdiction to set
aside or vary a final judgment of the Federal Court – Trial Division.
[26]
I
am satisfied that the Guzman decision is distinguishable. Justice
Teitelbaum found that the motion before him did not fit within the bounds of Rule
399(2). Absent jurisdiction under the Rule,
he concluded that he had no relevant
inherent jurisdiction supplementary to that provided by Rule
399(2). As noted above, on the facts of
this matter, I am satisfied that the motion before me with
regard to my Order of the 16th
of April, 2007, falls four-square within the ambit of Rule 399(2).
[27]
In
the circumstances, I conclude that I should set aside my Order of the 16th
of April, 2007 by reason of a matter that was discovered and diligently brought
to the attention of the Court only after my Order was made.
[28]
In
light of my foregoing conclusion, I am satisfied that I retain jurisdiction to
consider whether Deputy Justice Lagacé’s Order denying a stay of removal should
be set aside or varied since the underlying application for leave and for
judicial review will be reinstated before the Court.
b) Matter
that arose or was discovered subsequent to the Order of Deputy Justice Lagacé
[29]
Deputy
Justice Lagacé gave no reasons for dismissing the motion before him for a stay
of removal of the Applicant to Jamaica. In the normal course
of such a motion the issues for consideration are whether or not the underlying
application for leave and for judicial review raises a serious issue to be
tried, with the existence of a serious issue being determined on a low
threshold, whether or not the Applicant would suffer irreparable harm through
the proposed removal, bearing in mind all of the circumstances of the matter,
and whether the balance of convenience as between the Respondent and the
Applicant favours the Applicant. The three considerations are conjunctive;
that is to say, in order for an Applicant to succeed on a motion for a stay of
removal, all three considerations must weigh in favour of the Applicant.
[30]
As
noted above, the first consideration before Deputy Justice Lagacé was whether
or not the underlying application for leave and for judicial review raised a
serious issue to be tried with that question to be answered against a low
threshold. I subsequently dismissed the application for leave and for judicial
review flowing from a denial of an extension of time to file. That being said,
I did conclude that if an extension of time to file were granted, leave would
nonetheless have been denied where the issue before me on the application for
leave was very similar to, but not identical to, the concept of “serious issue
to be tried” on a stay of removal motion. In the absence of reasons for Deputy
Justice Lagacé’s Order, I will assume that Deputy Justice Lagacé might have
found a serious issue to be tried, against a low threshold, and nonetheless
would have rejected the motion for a stay on the critical issue of “irreparable
harm” and in the light of the evidence that was before him.
[31]
The
Applicant’s schizophrenia, his reliance on prescribed medication to control his
mood swings and the interrelationship between those mood swings and the danger
that he poses, not only to the public, but to himself, all impact the issue of
irreparable harm.
[32]
Deputy
Justice Lagacé had before him the recognition of the foregoing reality and the
response to that reality that the Applicant would, on arrival in Kingston,
Jamaica, be transported to see a Dr. Reed who would be in a position to
prescribe appropriate medication to control the Applicant’s mood swings and
violent impulses in the absence of such medication.
[33]
While
I can only surmise as to the impact that such a response might have had on
Deputy Justice Lagacé’s analysis on the issue of irreparable harm, I feel
compelled to conclude that it would not have been ignored and would have
weighed in favour of a finding that the Applicant would not suffer irreparable
harm from his removal to Jamaica and thus would have augured in favour of a
determination against the Applicant on one of the three factors for
consideration, when a decision on that factor against the Applicant, would in
itself have been conclusive on a determination not to stay removal.
[34]
For
the foregoing brief reasons, once again, I conclude that I should set aside
Deputy Justice Lagacé’s Order on the ground that a matter that arose or was
discovered subsequent to the making of his Order might well have resulted in a
different Order.
[35]
Concerns
regarding appropriate diligence in discovering that the Applicant was not
“transported” to the hospital when he reached Kingston, Jamaica are
responded to in the same manner as they were in respect of my own Order.
4) Effect
on the “validity or character” of the Removal
[36]
Rule 399(3)
provides that unless the Court orders otherwise, the setting aside of an Order,
as I have here determined should follow, does not affect the validity or
character of anything done or not done before the Order was set aside, unless
the Court orders otherwise.
[37]
I
cannot conclude that there is any impact that would flow from the setting aside
of my own Order, dismissing the underlying application for leave and for
judicial review, that is relevant. By contrast, the impact flowing from the
removal of the Applicant to Jamaica following Deputy
Justice Lagacé’s Order dismissing the motion for a stay of removal might well
prove to have been profound for the Applicant, his family members and for
community members in Jamaica. That effect, I have
concluded, might well have been attributable to a failure to effect what I take
to be an undertaking included within the affidavit of a paralegal filed on the
motion that was before Deputy Justice Lagacé. In the circumstances,
notwithstanding that any misunderstanding that occurred between the paralegal
and the Enforcement Officer with carriage of removal arrangements for the
Applicant was, I am satisfied, simply an innocent misunderstanding, and
certainly not fraud within the meaning in Rule 399(2)(b), I feel
compelled to determine that the setting aside of the Order dismissing the
motion for a stay of removal must have the effect of invalidating the removal
of the Applicant from Canada to Jamaica.
[38]
The
only authority to which counsel referred me on the exercise by the Court of
jurisdiction under Rule 399(3), in the immigration context, was Cassells
v. The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration where Justice Sharlow, then of the
Trial Division of the Federal Court of Canada, quoted from Justice Brockenshire
of the Ontario Court, General Division who dealt with an earlier aspect of the
same matter, which involved a deportation from Canada of an individual who,
like the Applicant here, was in Canada without status. Justice Brockenshire is
quoted, in part, to the following effect:
I have no doubt that
immigration matters are best dealt with by the Federal Court system. But this,
in my view, is not a case about immigration. It is about preserving the
authority of the Courts – all of the Courts – against usurpation by
well-meaning persons in the civil service.
[39]
While
the factual background in Cassells is very different from the factual
background before me, I am satisfied that the foregoing quotation is, in part,
apt. Deputy Justice Lagacé had before him a motion seeking a deferral of
execution of a removal order. While he denied that motion, I have here
determined that he might well not have denied the motion but for affidavit
evidence before him from a “well-meaning” person, based on information provided
by another “well-meaning” person. By my Order that will follow from these
reasons, I will reinstate the motion that was before Deputy Justice Lagacé. In
effect, that motion which sought and could have resulted in a stay of execution
of the removal of the Applicant from Canada will be brought back to life and
the removal of the Applicant on the 5th of April, 2007 could have
amounted to a “usurpation” of the authority of this Court if the Court had had
before it accurate and complete information regarding what would transpire, and
what actually transpired, when the Applicant was removed to Jamaica.
[40]
For
the foregoing reasons, subject to terms and conditions hereinafter described, I
will declare the removal of the Applicant to Jamaica on the 5th of
April, 2007 to be invalid and direct the return of the Applicant to Canada at the
Respondent’s expense.
5) Relief
[41]
Based
on the foregoing analysis, the two Orders of this Court that are before me,
that is to say, my Order of the 16th of April, 2007 denying an
extension of time to file the Applicant’s application for leave and for
judicial review, filed the 15th of January, 2007 and dismissing that
application, and Deputy Justice Lagacé’s Order of the 4th of April,
2007 denying the Applicant’s motion for a stay of the execution of the removal
Order issued against him, will be set aside. The impact of the setting aside
of my own Order is to revive the Applicant’s application for leave and for
judicial review underlying this motion. Similarly, the impact of the setting
aside of Deputy Justice Lagacé’s Order is to revive the motion that was before
him. The revival of the latter motion will be of little effect, if any, given
the removal of the Applicant on the 5th of April, 2007, unless that
removal is rendered invalid in accordance with Rule 399(3).
[42]
At
the close of the hearing of this motion, I advised counsel that I would set
aside the Orders at issue and that, if the Applicant signified in writing, to
the satisfaction of the Court, that he wished to return to Canada from Jamaica,
that he understood the implications of return, and that he would abide by terms
and conditions regarding his return and supervision throughout his return, I
would declare his removal on the 5th of April, 2007 invalid and
order his return to Canada at the Respondent’s expense. I invited counsel to
determine whether the Applicant wished to return to Canada in all of
the circumstances and, if so, to provide the Court with an agreed draft order
in this regard, if agreement could be reached.
[43]
By
fax received at the offices of the Federal Court in Toronto on the 11th
of June, 2007, counsel for the Applicant provided the Court with a copy of a
very informal letter dated the 28th of May, 2007, from the
Applicant, in which he expresses a wish to return to Canada. He makes
no reference whatsoever to agreeing to supervision during the return or to an
understanding of the implications of return. Counsel’s fax implies that
agreement on the terms of an order could not be reached. She suggests that an
order requiring return should address the following issues:
1. that a
copy of Mr. Smith’s emergency travel document used by the Minister to deport
Mr. Smith be provided forthwith to applicant’s counsel so that Mr. Smith can
commence a request for a valid passport…;
2. that the
Minister…provide in writing a request to add any other parties to these
proceedings deemed necessary;
3. that
given Mr. Smith has provided his written intent to return to Canada via letter
dated May 28, 2007, that the Minister commence arrangements to book a ticket
for Mr. Smith to return to Canada within 7 days of receipt of a valid travel
document;
4. the
Minister to co-operate fully and issue a TRP (Temporary Resident Permit) or any
other document which would facilitate Mr. Smith’s re-entry into Canada and
waive any necessary processing fees associated with the same;
5. the
Minister to provide an escort and nurse to accompany Mr. Smith on his flight
back to Canada if deemed necessary and be responsible for all costs associated
with the same;
6. the
Minister to pay for all expenses related to Mr. Smith’s flight back to Canada;
7. that the
return date to Canada for Mr. Smith be scheduled no later than 30 days after
the receipt of a valid travel document;
Counsel also addressed the issue of costs
in her fax communication.
[44]
Counsel
for the Respondent promptly responded to the communication to the Court from
counsel for the Applicant indicating a continuing concern regarding the
Applicant’s understanding of the implications of his return to Canada and
regarding appropriate arrangements to ensure the safety of the travelling
public, of the Applicant himself and of any escorts provided by the Respondent,
if the Applicant is required to be returned to Canada.
[45]
A
teleconference involving the Court and counsel was scheduled for the 27th
of June. In the interim between the scheduling of the teleconference and the
27th of June, negotiations continued between counsel and, in the
view of the Court, resulted in a substantial narrowing of the areas of
disagreement and concern. The teleconference itself would appear to have
further narrowed the areas of concern.
[46]
In
the result, an Order pursuant to Rule 399(3) will go, subject to the
Court receiving satisfactory notice in writing of the Applicant’s continuing
wish to return, of his understanding of the implications of return and of his
willingness to comply with supervision throughout his return, declaring the
removal of the Applicant from Canada to Jamaica on the 5th of
April, 2007 to be invalid and requiring the Respondent to return the Applicant
to Canada on terms and conditions generally to the following effect:
-
first,
the Applicant and his counsel shall provide reasonable assurances to the
Respondent that the Applicant continues to wish to return to Canada and
understands all of the implications of any such return, including that he will
have no status in Canada other than what might be provided for the sole purpose
of facilitating his return, that, on his arrival in Canada, he might be
detained at the discretion of the Respondent and that the deportation Order
that underlay his removal on the 5th of April, 2007 remains in
effect unless and until otherwise ordered;
-
secondly,
reasonable advice and assurances to the satisfaction of the Respondent shall be
provided by the Applicant and his counsel to ensure the safety of the
travelling public as well as of the Applicant and any escorts provided by the
Respondent for the duration of the Applicant’s travel to Canada; and
-
finally,
all reasonable costs and expenses, including any fees and disbursements related
to the issuance of a Temporary Resident Permit to facilitate the re-entry of
the Applicant to Canada, reasonably associated with the return of the Applicant
to Canada, shall be
borne by the Respondent.
[47]
Counsel
for the Respondent has requested that the Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness be added as a Respondent to this motion. Counsel for
the Applicant does not object to the request. Certainly, particularly in light
of the Order requiring return of the Applicant subject to terms and conditions,
and of the fact that removal of the Applicant on the 5th of April,
2007 was implemented on behalf of the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness, the Court is satisfied that the request of counsel for the
Respondent is appropriate. The Court’s Order will so provide.
[48]
Finally,
as noted earlier in these reasons, counsel for the Applicant has requested
costs on a solicitor-client basis, not simply related to this motion but for
“…all services rendered from April 5, 2007 to until [the Applicant] is returned
to Canada.”
[49]
Solicitor-client
costs are generally awarded only where there has been reprehensible, scandalous
or outrageous conduct on the part of one of the parties. No
such conduct on the part of the Respondent is established on the evidence
before the Court in this matter. As earlier noted, while the Court was misled
as to the arrangements in place for removal of the Applicant to Jamaica when a
motion for the stay of that removal was before the Court, the evidence before
the Court establishes that the misleading of the Court was inadvertent or based
upon a misunderstanding arising from a telephone conversation relied on by the
Respondent’s affiant on the stay motion by reason of the very short interval
provided to the Respondent to prepare for the stay motion. While it was open
to the Respondent to provide a brief administrative deferral of removal to
allow for a more thoughtful response to the stay motion, the Respondent’s
failure to provide such a delay certainly does not reach the level of
reprehensible, scandalous or outrageous conduct. It does, however, justify
some recognition on the issue of costs of this motion.
[50]
In
the result, the Court’s Order will provide for costs of the motion to the
Applicant calculated on the basis of the mid-range of Column V in Tariff B to
the Federal Courts Rules.
“Frederick E. Gibson”
Ottawa, Ontario
July 6, 2007