Docket:
IMM-12541-12
Citation: 2014 FC 97
Ottawa, Ontario, January 28, 2014
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Boivin
Docket:
IMM-12541-12
|
BETWEEN:
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KARL GÜNTER WURM
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an application for judicial review pursuant
to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC
2001, c 27 (the Act) of the respondent’s failure to process and render a
decision with respect to the applicant’s application for permanent residence in
the investor category. The applicant seeks an order of mandamus
requiring the respondent to process and render a final decision on his
application for permanent residence.
Factual
Background
[2]
This application is part of a group of seven (7)
applications for judicial review pertaining to applications for permanent
residence in the investor category that were filed between June 2009 and June
2010 at four (4) different foreign offices: the Consulate General of Canada
(CGC) in Hong Kong, the Visa Office in Beijing, the Canadian High Commission
(CHC) in London and the Visa Office in Berlin.
[3]
Since the filing of the applications,
Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) global network was restructured and
many foreign offices were consolidated. In late 2012, the CGC in Hong Kong
became responsible for all business immigration cases previously submitted to
the Beijing office (Affidavit of Stephen Hum at para 2). In April and May 2012,
the Berlin and Belgrade offices were closed and their inventories were
transferred to the Vienna Visa Office (Affidavit of Donald Gautier at para 5).
Finally, because of security concerns in Pakistan, all the business immigration
files were transferred from the Islamabad office to the CHC in London (Affidavit of Gaynor Rent at para 9).
Legislative
changes to the federal Immigrant Investor Program
[4]
All seven (7) applications for permanent
residence were received by the respondent before important changes were made to
the federal Immigrant Investor Program (IIP).
[5]
In the Ministerial Instructions (MI-2),
published on June 26, 2010, the respondent stated that the processing of
investor permanent residence applications received after the coming into force
of upcoming changes to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations,
SOR/2002-227 (the Regulations) would be done concurrently with the old
inventory. It also set an “administrative pause”, specifying that the
respondent would stop accepting immigrant investor applications until the
changes to the Regulations were made (Ministerial Instructions (MI-2), June 26,
2010, vol 144, no 26, online:
<http://gazette.gc.ca/rp-pr/p1/2010/2010-06-26/html/notice-avis-eng.html#archived>).
[6]
On December 1, 2010, subsection 88(1) of the Regulations
was amended to modify the definition of the “investment” an investor candidate
needs to make in order to become a business migrant, raising it from $400,000
to $800,000.
[7]
In the Operational Bulletin 252, published on
December 2, 2010, the respondent provided that, as “a general rule, visa
offices should process applications under the federal IIP in a 2:1 case
processing ratio of old inventory applications to new applications received on
or after December 1, 2010. The concurrent case processing ratio of 2:1 …”
(Operational Bulletin 252, December 2, 2010, online:
<http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/manuals/bulletins/2010/ob252.asp>).
In other words, for each two (2) “old” $400,000 applications received before
December 1, 2010, the respondent must process one (1) “new” $800,000 investor
application received on or after December 1, 2010.
[8]
In the Ministerial Instructions MI-3, published
on July 1, 2011, the respondent introduced a cap on the number of applications
to be processed and provided that a maximum of “700 new federal Immigrant
Investor applications will be considered for processing each year” (Ministerial
Instructions (MI-3), July 1, 2011, vol 145, no 26, online:
<http://gazette.gc.ca/rp-pr/p1/2011/2011-06-25/html/notice-avis-eng.html>).
[9]
Finally, in the Ministerial Instructions (MI-5),
published on July 2, 2012, the respondent put into place a second
administrative pause in the acceptance of new immigrant investor applications,
a pause that remains in effect to this date (Ministerial Instructions (MI-5),
July 2, 2012, vol 146, no 26, online: <
http://gazette.gc.ca/rp-pr/p1/2012/2012-06-30/html/notice-avis-eng.html#d118>).
The current application – IMM-12541-12 (Vienna)
[10]
Karl Günter Wurm, the applicant, is a citizen of
Germany. On May 17, 2010, Mr. Wurm applied for permanent residence in the IIP
to the Berlin Visa Office. His wife was included in his application. Mr. Wurm
claims to have been told by the respondent upon filing that processing of his
file would commence in 12 to 18 months, i.e. by November 17, 2011. On February
2, 2012, Mr. Wurm was asked to update his application and submit medical
documents within four (4) months, suggesting that a decision would be made in
his file by June 2012. Despite complying with the document request, he was told
on September 28, 2012 that no processing would occur in his file for
approximately 36 to 48 months.
Issues
[11]
This case raises the following issues:
(a)
Should the respondent be compelled, by an order
of mandamus or based on the legitimate expectations of the applicant, to
assess on the basis of the current selection criteria and to finalize the
application within a specified time-frame?
(b)
Should the respondent be barred, by a writ of
prohibition, from assessing the application with more stringent selection
criteria than those in place when the file was lodged?
(c)
Should the respondent, if he elects not to
finalize this application on the merits, pay $5.0 million to both the applicant
and, if applicable, his dependent?
(d)
Should the respondent pay significant litigation
costs to the applicant?
Relevant
Provisions
[12]
Section 87.3 of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act provides the Minister with the power to give instructions to
set the order of files to be processed and the amount of files to be processed
in a given year:
PART 1
IMMIGRATION TO CANADA
…
Division 10
General
Provisions
Instructions on Processing
Applications and Requests
Application
87.3 (1) This section applies to
applications for visas or other documents made under subsections 11(1) and (1.01),
other than those made by persons referred to in subsection 99(2), to
sponsorship applications made under subsection 13(1), to applications for
permanent resident status under subsection 21(1) or temporary resident status
under subsection 22(1) made by foreign nationals in Canada, to applications
for work or study permits and to requests under subsection 25(1) made by
foreign nationals outside Canada.
Attainment
of immigration goals
(2)
The processing of applications and requests is to be conducted in a manner
that, in the opinion of the Minister, will best support the attainment of the
immigration goals established by the Government of Canada.
Instructions
(3)
For the purposes of subsection (2), the Minister may give instructions with
respect to the processing of applications and requests, including
instructions
(a)
establishing categories of applications or requests to which the instructions
apply;
(a.1)
establishing conditions, by category or otherwise, that must be met before or
during the processing of an application or request;
(b)
establishing an order, by category or otherwise, for the processing of
applications or requests;
(c)
setting the number of applications or requests, by category or otherwise, to
be processed in any year; and
(d)
providing for the disposition of applications and requests, including those
made subsequent to the first application or request.
….
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PARTIE
1
IMMIGRATION
AU CANADA
[…]
Section 10
Dispositions générales
Instructions
sur le traitement des demandes
Application
87.3 (1) Le
présent article s’applique aux demandes de visa et autres documents visées
aux paragraphes 11(1) et (1.01) – sauf à celle faite par la personne visée au
paragraphe 99(2) – , aux demandes de parrainage faites au titre du paragraphe
13(1), aux demandes de statut de résident permanent visées au paragraphe
21(1) ou de résident temporaire visées au paragraphe 22(1) faites par un
étranger se trouvant au Canada, aux demandes de permis de travail ou d’études
ainsi qu’aux demandes prévues au paragraphe 25(1) faites par un étranger se
trouvant hors du Canada.
Atteinte des objectifs d’immigration
(2) Le traitement des demandes se fait de la
manière qui, selon le ministre, est la plus susceptible d’aider l’atteinte
des objectifs fixés pour l’immigration par le gouvernement fédéral.
Instructions
(3) Pour l’application du paragraphe (2), le
ministre peut donner des instructions sur le traitement des demandes,
notamment des instructions :
a) prévoyant les
groupes de demandes à l’égard desquels s’appliquent les instructions;
a.1) prévoyant
des conditions, notamment par groupe, à remplir en vue du traitement des
demandes ou lors de celui-ci;
b) prévoyant
l’ordre de traitement des demandes, notamment par groupe;
c) précisant le
nombre de demandes à traiter par an, notamment par groupe;
d) régissant la
disposition des demandes dont celles faites de nouveau.
[…]
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[13]
Subsection 88(1) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Regulations provides the following definitions that are relevant to
the case at bar:
PART 6
ECONOMIC CLASSES
…
Division 2
Business
Immigrants
Interpretation
Definitions
88. (1) The definitions in this
subsection apply in this Division.
…
“investment”
« placement
»
“investment”
means, in respect of an investor, a sum of $800,000 that
(a)
in the case of an investor other than an investor selected by a province, is
paid by the investor to the agent for allocation to all approved funds in
existence as of the date the allocation period begins and that is not
refundable during the period beginning on the day a permanent resident visa
is issued to the investor and ending at the end of the allocation period; and
(b)
in the case of an investor selected by a province, is invested by the
investor in accordance with an investment proposal within the meaning of the
laws of the province and is not refundable for a period of at least five
years, as calculated in accordance with the laws of the province.
“investor”
« investisseur
»
“investor”
means a foreign national who
(a)
has business experience;
(b)
has a legally obtained net worth of at least $1,600,000; and
(c)
indicates in writing to an officer that they intend to make or have made an
investment.
|
PARTIE
6
IMMIGRATION
ÉCONOMIQUE
[…]
Section 2
Gens d’affaires
Définitions
et champ d’application
Définitions
88. (1) Les
définitions qui suivent s’appliquent à la présente section.
[…]
« placement »
“investment”
« placement » Somme de 800 000 $ :
a) qu’un
investisseur autre qu’un investisseur sélectionné par une province verse au
mandataire pour répartition entre les fonds agréés existant au début de la
période de placement et qui n’est pas remboursable pendant la période
commençant le jour où un visa de résident permanent est délivré à
l’investisseur et se terminant à la fin de la période de placement;
b) qu’un
investisseur sélectionné par une province investit aux termes d’un projet de
placement au sens du droit provincial et qui n’est pas remboursable pendant
une période minimale de cinq ans calculée en conformité avec ce droit
provincial.
[…]
« investisseur »
“investor”
« investisseur » Étranger qui, à la fois :
a) a de
l’expérience dans l’exploitation d’une entreprise;
b) a un avoir
net d’au moins 1 600 000 $, qu’il a obtenu licitement;
c) a indiqué par
écrit à l’agent qu’il a l’intention de faire ou a fait un placement.
|
Analysis
[14]
The Court is of the view that the applicant failed
to demonstrate that he is entitled to an order of mandamus.
Applicant’s Affidavits
[15]
The affidavit of Pantea Jafari is admissible but
can only be afforded very little weight. Indeed, the affidavit provides general
background regarding the broad issues (Assn of Universities and Colleges of Canada v Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency, 2012 FCA 22 at para 20, [2012] FCJ No 93
[AUCC]). More particularly, the affidavit of Pantea Jafari deals mostly
with the context of Canada’s immigration system and with the record of the
former Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, but does not provide new
evidence relevant to the processing of the applicant’s application.
[16]
At hearing, the applicant also submitted
succinct CAIPS notes that allegedly were not included in the Tribunal Record.
The reason, as explained by the respondent, is that the CAIPS system is being
decommissioned and the file notes are being transferred to the the new “Global
Case Management System” (GCMS). The CAIPS notes will thus be copied into the
new GCMS. Once the CAIPS file is transferred in the GCMS, the CAIPS file is
closed and no new information is entered. The GCMS notes will therefore contain
the latest information (Respondent’s letter requested by the Court, December
18, 2013). Upon nonetheless considering the content of the CAIPS notes, the
Court is of the view that their content may confirm the “bring forward date”
which was communicated to the applicant but they cannot be used to support the
applicant’s central argument with respect to the alleged processing “pledges”
or processing estimates. Further, since no decision was made in the applicant’s
case, no reasons could be provided. Again, this document can be considered by
the Court but remains of little assistance.
The “Québec argument”
[17]
The applicant informed the Court at hearing that
he would not be pursuing the “Québec argument”.
[18]
The Court will now turn to the specific issues
of this case.
(a) Should the respondent be compelled, by an order
of mandamus or based on the legitimate expectations of the applicant, to assess
on the basis of the current selection criteria and to finalize the application
within a specified time-frame?
[19]
The applicant submits that the Court should compel
the respondent to finalize the processing of the applicant’s file within a set
timeline, as the applicant fulfills the requirements for the issuance of an order
of mandamus or the application of the doctrine of legitimate
expectations.
[20]
The applicant is essentially asking the Court to
order the respondent to process his IIP application according to the timelines
that were allegedly communicated upon filing and pursuant to the selection
criteria that were in place when filed.
[21]
A mandamus is a discretionary, equitable
remedy. The requirements to obtain a mandamus, as set out in Apotex
Inc v Canada (Attorney General) (CA), [1994] 1 FC 742, [1993] FCJ No 1098,
aff’d [1994] 3 S.C.R. 1100 [Apotex]:
a)
There must be a public legal duty to act;
b)
The duty must be owed to the applicant;
c)
There is a clear right to the performance of
that duty;
d)
Where the duty sought to be enforced is
discretionary;
e)
No other adequate remedy is available to the
applicant;
f)
The order sought will be of some practical value
or effect;
g)
No equitable bar to the relief sought;
h)
On a balance of convenience, an order in the
nature of mandamus should (or should not) issue.
[22]
Pursuant to Conille v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (T.D.), [1999] 2 FC 33, [1998] FCJ No
1553 (QL) [Conille]. In Conille, this Court stated that a delay
in the performance of a statutory obligation can be deemed unreasonable if the
following requirements are met:
(a) the delay in question has been longer than the nature of
the process required, prima facie;
(b) the applicant and his counsel are not responsible for the
delay; and
(c) the authority responsible for the delay has not provided
satisfactory justification.
The issue before
the Court is whether the delay alleged by the applicant is longer than the
nature of the process requires and, in the affirmative, whether there is a
justification for the delay. It should be noted that both parties confirmed at
hearing before this Court that the applicant has been asked to provided medical
information and that the file is thus being assessed.
The applicant is
of the view that the respondent failed to honour his “processing pledge” and
commence the processing within the timelines that were provided to the applicant
upon filing. The applicant adds that the respondent, in his responses to the
applicant’s requests made under Rule 9 of the Federal Courts Immigration and
Refugee Protection Rules, SOR/93-22, failed to provide a reason for its
decision not to commence processing at the date the file was supposed to be
brought up.
[23]
The applicant relies on Liang v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 758, [2012] FCJ No 683 (QL) [Liang],
a case that bears similarities with the current application but a case that is
distinguishable on key aspects.
[24]
In Liang, Mr. Liang and Ms. Gurung, who
were selected as representatives for two (2) groups applying for permanent
residence under the federal skilled worker (FSW) class, - as opposed to
investors category - were seeking orders of mandamus compelling the
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration to process their applications for
permanent residence. Ministerial instructions modifying selection criteria and
creating caps and priority processing, adopted pursuant to section 87.1 of the
Act, applied to new applications filed after February 27, 2008. In the case at
bar, the instructions apply to existing applications with concurrent
processing.
[25]
It is also worthy of note that, contrary to the
facts in Liang, on which the applicant relies, the guidelines and
regulations affecting the current application do not set a processing estimate.
In Liang, the applications were divided into two (2) groups: the first
group included applications that were filed before major legislative changes
and the time elapsed since filing ranged from 4 ½ to 9 years; the second group
comprised of applications that were filed after the guidelines were published and
that had been outstanding for 2 to 4 years. The guidelines provided that the
applications of the second group “should receive a decision within six to 12
months” (Liang, above at para 29). In the present application, there is
no evidence of such outstanding delays or that estimates provided have elapsed.
Therefore, on the basis of the lack of corroborating evidence of any processing
estimates, the absence of formal governmental estimates and the relatively
short time periods since the end of the alleged processing timelines, the Liang
case must be distinguished from the case at bar.
[26]
The applicant suggests that the underlying
reasons for the processing delays are the new selection criteria, the quotas
and the processing priorities that were set out by the Ministerial Instructions
MI-2 and MI-3 and Operational Bulletin 252. The Court can understand that the
applicant might be discontent with the current IIP scheme because of its place
in the queue, but it was legally set out and implemented in full contemplation
of the law, more particularly of the powers adopted by Parliament pursuant to
the new section 87.3 of the Act. Also, the applicant’s argument regarding the
abolishment of pending application remains speculative and there is no evidence
to persuade the Court otherwise.
[27]
This conclusion is consistent with this Court’s
prior determinations on priority processing. In Vaziri v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 1159 at paras 36-37, 53-54,
[2006] FCJ No 1458 (QL) [Vaziri], the minister had established a ratio
between economic and non-economic applications and prioritized spouse and
dependent children sponsorships, thus severely delaying the processing of the
applicant’s sponsorship file. The Court concluded that it is important to take
a broad view when determining if the processing of an application took longer
than the nature of the process required, more specifically when there are more
applications than Canada can accept. Where the authority in Vaziri was
only implied, section 87.3 of the Act now provides explicit authority.
Legitimate expectations
[28]
The applicant also failed to convince this Court
it that the doctrine of legitimate expectations applies in the case at bar.
[29]
The doctrine of legitimate expectation applies
when representations have been given to an applicant concerning the procedure
that will be followed. As the Supreme Court of Canada recently observed in Canada (Attorney General) v Mavi, 2011 SCC 30 at para 68, [2011] 2 S.C.R. 504,:
[68] Where a
government official makes representations within the scope of his or her
authority to an individual about an administrative process that the government
will follow, and the representations said to give rise to the legitimate
expectations are clear, unambiguous and unqualified, the government may be held
to its word, provided the representations are procedural in nature and do not
conflict with the decision maker’s statutory duty. Proof of reliance is not a
requisite.
[Citations
omitted.]
[30]
The Court finds that the evidence on record does
not support the claim that the respondent made “clear, unambiguous and
unqualified” representations of a procedural nature to the applicant. As
mentioned above, the applicant failed to satisfactorily establish that the
alleged processing estimates were in fact communicated to the applicant. No
other evidence was adduced before this Court.
(b) Should the respondent be barred, by a writ of
prohibition, from assessing the application with more stringent selection
criteria than those in place when the file was lodged?
[31]
The Court finds that the applicant does not meet
the conditions for the issuance of a writ of prohibition.
[32]
The applicant is urging this Court to issue a
writ of prohibition pursuant to section 18(1)(a) of the Federal Courts
Act, RSC 1985, c F-7. The Court recalls that the objective of a writ of
prohibition is to prevent administrative bodies from exceeding the powers they
have been granted and performing acts that are outside of their jurisdiction (Nagalingam
v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, 2012 FC 362
at para 18, [2012] FCJ No 390 (QL) [Nagalingam]; see also Canadian
Red Cross Society v Canada (Commission of Inquiry on the Blood System in
Canada- Krever Commission), [1997] 2 FC 36 at para 25, [1997] FCJ No 17
(QL)).
[33]
There is no evidence on the record that the
respondent has any intention of using different criteria than those in effect
at the time of filing. The applicant’s argument on this point remains
speculative.
(c) Should the respondent, if he elects not to
finalize this application on the merits, pay $5 million to both the applicant
and, if applicable, his dependent?
[34]
The Court is of the view that the current
application for judicial review should be dismissed, and hence, there is no
need to determine if such a remedy should be issued.
(d) Should the respondent pay significant litigation costs to the
applicant?
[35]
The circumstances of the present case do not
warrant the payment of significant costs and the Court thus declines to
consider this issue.
[36]
For all of these reasons, the Court’s
intervention is not warranted and this application for judicial review will be
dismissed.
Proposed questions for certification
[37]
At the end of the hearing on December 17, 2013,
the Court provided counsel for the applicant with time in order to submit
questions for certification. Counsel for the applicant on December 23, 2013,
provided no less than twenty-one (21) questions for certification.
[38]
The Court recalls that proposed questions for
certification must transcend the interests of the immediate parties to the
litigation, contemplate issues of broad significance of general application and
be determinative of the appeal.
[39]
The questions for certification submitted by
counsel for the applicant amount to a re-argumentation of the hearing held
before this Court on December 17, 2013. In a nutshell, the issue is not whether
the Minister can set or not priorities. Section 87(3) of the Act is clear and
Parliament has granted the Minister with that authority.
[40]
The applicant’s proposed questions for certification
are speculative, they fall outside the scope of this case and they are grounded
in policy, not in the legal issues of this application.
[41]
However, counsel for the respondent on January 2, 2014, proposed two (2)
questions for certification. Upon consideration, the following question is
certified:
Are individuals
who will be subject to a lengthy waiting period, prior to the assessment of
their immigration applications under the Investor class, due to the effect of
annual targets and Ministerial Instructions made under s. 87.3 of the IRPA,
entitled to an order of mandamus to compel immediate processing?