Date: 20080626
Docket: IMM-3154-07
IMM-3156-07
Citation: 2008 FC 806
Ottawa, Ontario,
June 26, 2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mosley
BETWEEN:
INGEBORG
ANNA RICHTER
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND
IMMIGRATION
AND
THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY
AND
EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
These applications for judicial
review are brought from the decision of an Enforcement Officer to prepare a
report on the facts surrounding the applicant’s potential loss of status for
serious criminality and the decision of a Minister’s delegate to refer the
report to the Immigration Division for an admissibility hearing.
[2]
The
applicant immigrated to Canada with her
then husband in 1970 at the age of 33. She has been married twice since, with
her last marriage to Charles Yanover in 1995. She has two children, born 1970
and 1974, and one grandchild, all residing in Canada.
[3]
In April 2003, Ms. Richter and Mr.
Yanover were arrested in Toronto and charged with trafficking in firearms and related
offences. Mr. Yanover pled guilty and was sentenced to 10 years incarceration.
Ms. Richter was indicted on 46 charges. At trial, her defence was that she had
been unwittingly drawn into the illegal dealings of her husband, that she had
believed the weapons were deactivated and that she was not familiar with
firearm mechanics.
[4]
The trial judge, Madam Justice Andromache
Karakatsanis of the Superior Court of Ontario, found that Ms Richter had been
aware at the time of sale of the firearms that the weapons had been reactivated
and were operational. She noted that Ms. Richter would not have embarked upon
the sale of guns without the contacts and expertise of her husband, whom she
described as a ‘notorious con man’. However, Justice Karakatsanis did find that
Ms. Richter was actively involved in the bargaining for and sale of weapons and
the delivery of the guns and ammunition. Several times in the course of her
judgment she mentioned that Ms. Richter sold semi-automatic machine guns to an
undercover officer posing as a biker in the belief that he intended to resell
them to a native crime syndicate in the west of Canada. Karakatsanis J. sentenced
Ms Richter to 37 months imprisonment after taking into account her pre-trial
custody, age, diabetic condition and other factors.
[5]
Ms. Richter was imprisoned at
Grand Valley Institution for Women and was there interviewed by at least two officers
with respect to her immigration status. She states in her affidavit to have
been unclear on the precise details of those interviews or their exact purpose.
At some point, she was informed of her right to contact counsel and says she tried
without success to contact her counsel from the criminal trial. After June 25,
2007, when she states that she was informed she was being arrested on an
immigration hold, she took steps to retain a lawyer specializing in immigration
matters.
[6]
A
report on the factual grounds for proceeding with an admissibility hearing was
written on May 29, 2007. The Immigration Officer reviewing the case interviewed
the applicant and recommended she seek legal advice on June 4. She provided her
telephone number should the applicant wish to contact her. The applicant made
no contact with the officer over the next two weeks. The Manager, acting as a
Ministerial delegate, referred the case for an admissibility hearing on the
basis of the Officer’s report on June 18. These steps were taken pursuant to
section 44 of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, 2001, c. 27,
which reads as follows:
44. (1) An officer who
is of the opinion that a permanent resident or a foreign national who is in Canada
is inadmissible may prepare a report setting out the relevant facts, which
report shall be transmitted to the Minister.
(2) If the Minister is of the
opinion that the report is well-founded, the Minister may refer the report to
the Immigration Division for an admissibility hearing, except in the case of
a permanent resident who is inadmissible solely on the grounds that they have
failed to comply with the residency obligation under section 28 and except,
in the circumstances prescribed by the regulations, in the case of a foreign
national. In those cases, the Minister may make a removal order.
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44. (1) S’il estime que le
résident permanent ou l’étranger qui se trouve au Canada est interdit de territoire, l’agent peut établir un rapport
circonstancié, qu’il transmet au ministre.
(2) S’il estime le rapport bien fondé, le
ministre peut déférer l’affaire à la Section de l’immigration pour enquête, sauf
s’il s’agit d’un résident permanent interdit de territoire pour le seul motif
qu’il n’a pas respecté l’obligation de résidence ou, dans les circonstances
visées par les règlements, d’un étranger; il peut alors prendre une mesure de
renvoi.
|
[7]
On July 4, 2007, the applicant’s
counsel wrote to the Manager requesting the opportunity to provide further
information before the section 44 report was written. On July 11, the
Enforcement Officer replied, noting that Ms Richter had already been referred
for an admissibility hearing and had been arrested and detained for that
purpose. The officer also noted that she had been contacted by Ms Richter’s criminal
law firm and that she had offered to forward any submissions they wished to
make to the Enforcement Office which would be scheduling the admissibility hearing.
Issues
[8]
The
applicant attacks the decision of the Enforcement Officer to prepare the report
in file IMM-3154-07 and the decision of the Manager to refer the report for an admissibility
hearing in file IMM-3156-07. The issues raised were essentially the same in
both files:
a.
Was there an error in the exercise of discretion?
b.
Was the duty of fairness breached (including the alleged failure to
provide the applicant with an explanation of the process, an adequate
opportunity to provide further information and an opportunity to see the
report)?
c.
Was the decision based on erroneous findings of fact?
d.
Did the Officer/Manager fail to provide adequate reasons?
Standard
of Review
[9]
The
decisions of the Officer to write the report and the Manager to refer it to the
Immigration Division are reviewable on a reasonableness standard, with due
deference being shown. In both
subsections of the IRPA, the relevant decision maker is empowered to act
where he or she is ‘of the opinion’, which language was held to support a
deferential stance at paragraph 30 of Suresh v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2002 SCC 1, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 3. Issues of procedural fairness, however, are
subject to an assessment of whether the procedure was fair; if that duty is
found to have been breached, the decision will be vacated.
Error of exercise of
discretion
[10]
The
applicant submits that the Officer and
Manager each had the discretion to consider factors set out in the relevant
Ministerial Policy Manuals, including humanitarian and compassionate (H&C)
considerations: Hernandez v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2005 FC 429, [2006] 1 F.C.R. 3. She asserts that the Officer’s
failure to consider Justice Karakatsanis’ Reasons for Sentence made her
assessment of the relevant factors incomplete and she thereby erred in making
her report. The Manager erred in relying on the report without determining that
it had been improperly prepared. The Manager had a duty to ensure that a
broader range of relevant factors had been considered.
[11]
The respondent counters that the
Officer did consider a wide range of factors in deciding whether to write a
subsection 44(1) report on the relevant facts supporting an inadmissibility
hearing in this case. Her decision was not in error and was reasonable. The
discretion not to report is extremely limited: Correia v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC 782, 253 F.T.R. 153. The Manager did not err by relying on the
reasonable report of the Officer.
[12]
As I
noted in Awed v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 469, 46 Admin. L.R. (4th) 233, the purpose of an interview
under subsection 44(1) of the IRPA is “simply to confirm the facts that
may support the formation of an opinion by the officer that a permanent
resident or foreign national present in Canada is inadmissible.” Where such facts are found to
exist, the officer has a responsibility to prepare a report and is not
empowered by the statute to exercise discretion.
[13]
It is clear that the Officer was
aware of and considered the personal factors of Ms. Richter, including
humanitarian and compassionate considerations, in coming to her decision. Given
my view that the language of the Act does not empower officers considering
a subsection 44(1) report to assess personal factors, I believe that such
consideration was exercised in excess of her authority. However, it did not
change the outcome and should not be the basis for setting the decision aside.
The Officer encouraged the applicant to seek legal advice and provided her
business card for the applicant to contact her. The applicant did not take
advantage of that opportunity.
[14]
In respect of the Manager’s
decision to refer the report pursuant to subsection 44(2), the Federal Court of
Appeal held in Cha v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2006 FCA 126, [2007] 1 F.C.R. 409, that the scope of discretion available to
the Minister’s delegate was heavily dependant on the circumstances, including
whether the person subject to referral was a permanent resident or foreign
national. While a Minister’s delegate was found in Cha to have no
discretion in the case of a foreign national convicted of a serious offence in
Canada, the question was left open whether some minimal amount of discretion
was available to the Manager in deciding whether to refer the report to the
Immigration Division with respect to a permanent resident, as in this case.
[15]
The H&C factors, detailed on
the report written pursuant to subsection 44(1), were clearly before the
Minister’s delegate for his consideration of whether to refer the case for an
admissibility hearing. In his comments on referring the report for an admissibility
hearing, the Manager wrote that such a hearing was appropriate despite Ms.
Richter’s long residence in Canada and the presence of her children here. I cannot find
that decision unreasonable and it will stand.
[16]
As for the Officer carrying out an
incomplete assessment because she did not have the Reasons for Sentence before
her, I cannot agree. While they do acknowledge that the applicant was not the
driving force behind the illegal behaviour for which she was convicted, the
Reasons for Sentence hardly diminish her role in the criminal enterprise. Justice
Karakatsanis held that “Ms. Richter was more than just a supporting player. …
She became enthusiastic, sometimes aggressive about receiving her … commission
from any sales…. She was eager to profit from Yanover’s activity and to engage
in her own sales.” Justice Karakatsanis also noted that she continued to
minimize her own culpability. I do not see how the Reasons for Sentence would
have changed the Officer’s report or the Manager’s referral based thereon.
Procedural fairness
[17]
The applicant next claims that she
was denied procedural fairness in not being adequately informed of the criteria
against which her case was being assessed, in not being provided an adequate
opportunity to make submissions and in not being provided with a copy of the
report.
[18]
The duty of fairness owed for the
proceedings under section 44 are relaxed and consist of the right to make
submissions and to obtain a copy of the report: Hernanadez. In the case
at bar, the applicant had the purpose of the interview explained to her during
the June 4 interview and was encouraged to obtain counsel and provide
submissions within two weeks. In sum, the applicant was informed of her right
and provided with every opportunity to make submissions but failed to do so.
The Officer and Manager cannot be faulted for Ms. Richter’s failure to take
advantage of the procedure outlined to her.
[19]
At the hearing, the applicant
spoke of a heightened duty on immigration officials when dealing with a person
in custody, given the restrictions on their liberty, and suggested that the Officer
should have contacted the criminal lawyer herself or gone back to the applicant
after the two weeks to inquire whether the applicant had done anything about
her situation. The respondent’s position is that the duty of fairness is not
variable with respect to the individual’s location.
[20]
While it is true that persons in
the custody of the state are subject to limits on their freedom, they are not
barred from seeking and obtaining legal services. Immigration officers cannot be
required to act as the bridge between incarcerated persons who are the subject
of a section 44 report and whatever counsel they have or may wish to have. In
this case, the Officer met with the applicant on June 4, 2007, at which time
she explained the purpose of the interview, encouraged Ms. Richter to retain
counsel and provide submissions and set a clear deadline for those submissions.
At that point, she fulfilled her duty and the onus was on the applicant to
follow through, which she did not do. Had she required additional time to
contact a lawyer, for example, she could have contacted the officer to request
it.
Erroneous finding of
fact
[21]
Next,
the applicant asserts that the decision of the Officer was based on an
erroneous finding of fact. Both it and the Manager’s decision relying on it
should therefore be vacated, she submits. The Officer wrote in her conclusion
that the applicant did not show remorse. Ms. Richter points to the Reasons for
Sentence, which were not before the Officer, to illustrate otherwise. Justice Karakatsanis held that Ms. Richter had
expressed real remorse on the day that her sentence was imposed, but noted that
she continued to minimize her own culpability.
[22]
I
fail to see what relevance there is to expressions of remorse or the lack
thereof with the exercise of the Officer’s duty under section 44(1). There is
nothing in the plain language of the enactment to suggest that Parliament
intended that officers be given the discretion to consider whether convicted
offenders regretted their crimes and should thereby be exempted from the
inadmissibility provisions of the Act in determining whether to issue a report.
[23]
Even if I were to accept that
subjective factors of this nature were to govern the decision, given that the
Officer’s notes indicate that Ms. Richter continued to place the blame on
Charles Yanover, I cannot see that the actual sentence from the report, which
reads “Subject did not show any remourse [sic] for her actions but
rather transferred the blame to her spouse” is an error justifying the Court’s
intervention.
Adequacy of reasons
[24]
Finally,
the applicant submitted that the reasons of both the Officer and the Manager
were inadequate and she was thus denied procedural fairness. I disagree. The test for the adequacy of reasons is that it
permits the person about whom the decision was made to understand the basis for
that decision. The
reasons are adequate and sufficient for Ms. Richter to know on what basis the
referral was made and to argue her case
at her admissibility hearing.
[25]
For
these reasons, I dismiss both applications for judicial review.
[26]
The
applicant proposed that I certify questions on the following issues:
1. Is there a greater
duty of fairness required of immigration officers with respect to a section 44
report or referral for those in custody?
2. Should significant
weight be given to the statements of the Minister and senior officials before
the Standing Committee and sections of the Manual assuring that an inquiry into
the personal circumstances of a permanent resident for whom a section 44 report
is being considered would be undertaken ‘at the front end’ of the process, as
described in paragraph 41 of Cha?
3. What is the scope of
discretion available to the Officer in preparing a subsection 44(1) report
regarding a permanent resident or to the Manager in considering whether to
refer such a report for an admissibility hearing?
4. What is the duty of
fairness owed by the Officer in preparing a subsection 44(1) report regarding a
permanent resident or by the Manager in considering whether to refer such a
report for an admissibility hearing?
[27]
The
second and third questions would not be dispositive of an appeal in this matter
as I have found that the officer did in fact conduct an inquiry at the front
end of the process and exercised a discretion, which in my view, is not within
the scope of her authority on a plain language reading of the statutory
provision. I have considerable difficulty with the proposition that such a
discretion can be read into the statute because of assurances given the
Standing Committee prior to enactment by a Minister and officials. The fourth
question is not sufficiently specific to the facts of this case to have an
impact on its outcome.
[28]
I
note that the third and fourth questions are similar to those certified in Hernandez,
in which the appeal was abandoned. These questions are of general importance
and an authoritative answer would be of assistance to both Immigration Officers
and this Court, especially with respect to the question left open in Cha
as to a distinction being drawn between permanent residents and foreign
nationals.
[29]
The
first question, somewhat modified for precision, will be certified as being a
serious question of general importance which would be dispositive of the
appeal.
JUDGMENT
IT IS THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT that the
applications are dismissed. The following question is certified as a serious
question of general importance:
1. Is there a greater
duty of fairness required of immigration officers preparing a section 44(1)
report and the Minister in referring the report when dealing with persons in
custody?
“Richard G.
Mosley”
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-3154-07
STYLE OF CAUSE: INGEBORG
ANNA RICHTER
AND
THE
MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND
IMMIGRATION
AND
THE
MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY
AND
EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
PLACE OF
HEARING: Toronto, Ontario
DATE OF
HEARING: June
17, 2008
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT
BY: MOSLEY J.
DATED: June
26, 2008
APPEARANCES:
Timothy
Wichert
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FOR THE APPLICANT
|
Gordon Lee
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
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SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
TIMOTHY
WICHERT
Jackman &
Associates
Toronto,
Ontario
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
John H. Sims,
Q.C.
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
Toronto, Ontario
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
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