Date: 20080624
Docket: IMM-3845-07
Citation: 2008 FC 783
Ottawa, Ontario, June 24, 2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mosley
BETWEEN:
YUAN
CHANG WONG
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY
AND
EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
Background
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of a refusal to defer removal dated
September 19, 2007. The deferral had been requested on the basis of the
applicant’s outstanding pre-removal risk assessment (PRRA) application and the
best interests of his two Canadian-born children.
[2]
Mr.
Wong, a citizen of China, has a substantial history with Canadian
authorities. He first arrived and made a claim for refugee status in 1988. That
claim was dismissed in 1992 and an exclusion order was issued. He remained in Canada, was convicted of possession of a narcotic for the
purpose of trafficking in 1997 and was sentenced to four years’ imprisonment. He
was also convicted of possessing prohibited weapons. He was deported to China under
escort in 1998.
[3]
In or around March 2001, Mr. Wong
reentered Canada using an alias. His presence in the country came to
the attention of immigration officials when he was arrested and charged with
the possession of a narcotic in May 2003. He made another claim for refugee
protection and was found ineligible for criminality under paragraph 101(1)(f)
of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (IRPA)
on May 7, 2003. Another deportation order was issued to him.
[4]
In November, 2003, Mr. Wong was
convicted of possession for the purpose of trafficking and conspiracy to export
narcotics and sentenced to 4 years’ imprisonment, less 14 months for
pre-sentence custody. In April, 2004, a Pre-removal Risk Assessment was
initiated, but the applicant failed to submit his application. He now claims
that he does not recall receiving it and does not know what he did with it.
[5]
On June 1, 2007, Mr. Wong was
released from the immigration hold to which he had been transferred following
completion of his criminal sentence. He filed a PRRA application on August 9,
2007, which remains outstanding. On September 17, 2007, Mr. Wong was directed
to report for removal on September 24, 2007. On September 18, 2007, Mr. Wong
applied to have that removal deferred.
Decision
under review
[6]
The
Enforcement Officer assessed the PRRA submissions of Mr. Wong and letters from
his children. She found that Mr. Wong had
been presented with fair access to a risk assessment in 2004 but had not
applied. She then found that the PRRA application filed on August 10, 2007 was
a subsequent application and that there were no stay provisions in the IRPA for
subsequent applications. Finally, she decided that the interests of his
children in his remaining in Canada did not warrant a deferral of removal.
Issues
[7]
This case raises two issues. First,
it must be determined whether there remains a live issue between the parties. In
the event that there is a live issue, or alternatively if the Court exercises
its discretion to hear the matter despite its being moot, the question to be
answered would be whether the Officer erred in her decision.
Mootness
[8]
Both parties submit that this
case is not moot on the basis of Mr. Wong’s outstanding PRRA application. At
the hearing, counsel for the applicant acknowledged that similar cases have
been found moot because the date of removal from which deferral was sought had
passed prior to the hearing of the application for judicial review. Questions
on this point have been certified in Palka v. Canada (Minister of Public
Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2008 FC 342, [2008] F.C.J. No. 435, Baron
v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2008 FC 341, [2008]
F.C.J. No. 434 and Lewis v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2008 FC 719. Both Palka and Baron
were appealed, but the appeal in Palka has been discontinued. The appeal
in Baron, docket A-165-08, has yet to be set down for hearing.
[9]
Counsel
for the applicant submitted that the application should be either stayed
pending the appeal decision in Baron; dismissed without hearing the
merits with a certified question and a stay of removal for 30 days to permit
Mr. Wong to seek a stay from the Federal Court of Appeal pending the Baron
appeal decision; or, heard on the basis that it was distinguishable from those
cases. The respondent objected to the first two of these options and thus I
elected to hear arguments.
[10]
The
applicant contends that the Court misapprehended the status of the underlying
application in Maruthalingam v. Canada (Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2007 FC 823, 63 Imm.
L.R. (3d) 242. He submits that, as a result, subsequent rulings have been based
on a faulty premise. The authorities to which he points commonly emphasize that
there remains a live, albeit possibly intermittent, controversy as the person
or persons affected remained in jeopardy from a reoccurrence of the challenged
action. In the instant case, this is found in the potential, emphasized by the
respondent, for a practically never-ending cycle of removal orders which are
not enforced because of applications to have the refusal to defer judicially
reviewed, which are themselves moot by the time scheduled for hearing. The
reasonableness of the refusal itself would never be reviewed.
[11]
While I agree that this cycle is a
possible negative side effect of the system as it currently exists, I note that
it is the place of Parliament, not this Court, to find a means to resolve the
problem. I stand by my reasoning in Lewis and find that this
application is moot.
Did the
Enforcement Officer err in coming to her decision?
[12]
However, a useful
purpose would be served by deciding this case on its merits and I will,
therefore, exercise my discretion to hear it despite its mootness. In coming to
this conclusion, the purpose of the PRRA was central to my thinking as it is
the means by which Canada fulfills its international obligations not
to return failed refugee claimants to face a risk of persecution or torture.
[13]
The question which was
raised by the applicant is whether the Enforcement Officer erred in refusing
his application for a deferral of his removal. He submitted that she erred both
in failing to assess the risk he would face if returned to China and in coming
to an unreasonable decision on humanitarian and compassionate (H&C)
considerations, notably the best interests of the children.
[14]
At
the hearing, he pursued only the claim that the Enforcement Officer failed to
assess the risk to him on return to China as she was obliged to do.
There was no merit in my view to the issue raised with respect to the H&C
considerations.
[15]
The
respondent countered that the discretion of the Officer to defer removal does
not extend to an assessment of risk, which task falls to the PRRA officers: Kaur
v. Canada Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2001 FCT 741, [2001] F.C.J. No. 1082. Paragraph 15
of Kaur reads as follows: “I am also of the view that discretion to be
exercised by the removal officer does not consist of assessing risk, but rather
one of assessing whether there are special circumstances that would justify her
deferring the removal.”
[16]
While Kaur does stand for
the proposition that removal officers are not tasked directly with an
assessment of risk, I would note that, when read in the context of Wang v. Canada Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2001 FCT 148, [2001] 3 F.C. 682, which was
extensively cited therein, it is clear that what my colleague Justice Edmond P.
Blanchard intended was that removal officers are not meant to focus solely
on an assessment of risk. However, allegations of risk are to be given some
consideration by Enforcement officers, especially where, as in the current
context, no reasonably timely assessment of the risks faced by the person to be
removed has taken place: Ragupathy v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC
1370, [2006] F.C.J. No. 1717.
[17]
It has been stated
repeatedly by this Court and those above that Canada is obliged not to return
failed refugee claimants to face severe persecution, torture or death: see,
among others, Suresh v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2002
SCC 1, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 3. In the case at bar, there is no evidence to show that
Mr. Wong has had an official turn his or her mind to this question. His
allegations of risk were made prior to the request for deferral and the
Enforcement Officer indicated that she had his submissions before her when she
came to her decision.
[18]
It was an error for the
Officer to base her refusal to defer entirely on the point that this was
technically a second PRRA application without giving some consideration to
whether there was a real risk of severe persecution, torture or death in the
return of Mr. Wong to China. It was not necessary to undertake a full
PRRA-like assessment but some thought should have been given to the risk he
might face as a returned criminal. There is no indication in the officer’s
notes that she gave this any consideration.
[19]
On the basis of this error and in
spite of the application being technically moot, I will return this matter for
reconsideration solely on the question of what risk, if any, Mr. Wong would
face upon being returned to China.
[20]
Counsel proposed that I certify a
question regarding the mootness issue similar to those certified in Baron,
Pawlka and Lewis. I see no reason to do so in light of my
decision to consider the matter on the merits.
JUDGMENT
IT IS THE JUDGMENT OF
THIS COURT that the application is
allowed in part and that the matter is returned to the Enforcement Officer for
reconsideration solely on the question of risk. No question is certified.
“Richard
G. Mosley”