Docket: IMM-3152-13
Citation:
2014 FC 678
Toronto, Ontario, July 10, 2014
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice de Montigny
BETWEEN:
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NARINDER PAL KAUR
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BALJIT SINGH KULAR
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HARNOOR KAUR KULAR
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Applicants
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and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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ORDER AND REASONS
[1]
This is an application for judicial review by
Narinder Pal Kaur, Baljit Singh Kular and Harnoor Kaur Kular (the Applicants)
of a decision made by a Visa Officer of the High Commission of Canada in New
Delhi, India dated April 18, 2013, wherein the Officer determined that the
principal Applicant Narinder Pal Kaur does not meet the requirements for the
issuance of a permanent residence visa as a Skilled Worker pursuant to the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 (IRPA or the Act)
and the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR`2002-227 (IRPR
or the Regulations).
[2]
For the reasons that follow, I have found that
this application for judicial review ought to be allowed.
I.
Facts
[3]
The principal Applicant, Narinder Pal Kaur, her
husband, Baljit Singh Kular and their daughter, Harnoor Kaur Kular, are
citizens of India. In April of 2011, the principal Applicant applied for
permanent residence under the Skilled Worker Class as a Restaurant Manager. It
is alleged that the principal applicant submitted her application along with
all supporting documents and her application was approved by the Centralized
Intake Office (CIO) in Sydney, Nova Scotia prior to its transfer to the High
Commission in New Delhi for further processing.
[4]
In March of 2013 the Applicant received a letter
from New Delhi asking her to provide updated proof of settlement funds at the
current time. Although no amount was specified in the letter, she checked the CIC
website and determined that the necessary amount was currently $17,011. With
the understanding that her application was now in the final stage of
processing, the Applicant made an Account Payee’s Draft (bank draft) in the
amount of $17,050 on March 4, 2013, payable by the Bank of Nova Scotia in Toronto.
[5]
The principal Applicant received a refusal
letter dated April 18, 2013 stating that she did not meet the requirements for
permanent residence under the Skilled Worker Class.
II.
Decision under Review
[6]
The stated reason for the refusal was that the
principal Applicant did not submit satisfactory proof of settlement funds as
she only submitted a bank draft. The Officer was not satisfied that the proof
of funds submitted respects the requirements as outlined in subparagraph 76(1)(b)(i)
of the Regulations. The Officer concluded that “there
is insufficient evidence submitted with our [the principal Applicant]
application that this money is currently available to you or that these funds
are unencumbered by debts or other obligations”.
[7]
The Officer further indicated in her CAIPS/CGMS
notes that “PA has submitted a copy of the bank draft,
but there is insufficient evidence on file to demonstrate where this money has
come from or that the bank draft has not been cancelled in India”. The
Officer went on:
Therefore, I am not satisfied that these funds
are available to PA – PA has not demonstrated that these funds are
“unencumbered by debts or other obligations”. The Bank Draft was issued in India by an unknown source (the name of the person who bought the draft is not named on the
draft and no explanation has been provided by PA). With no explanation as to
the province of these funds, it is not known where these funds come from or
whether a third party has lent the money/bought the bank draft for PA. As such,
I am not satisfied that these funds do not have to be reimbursed to a third
party and/or that these funds are not encumbered by debts or other obligations.
Application Record, pp. 115-116.
III.
Issues
[8]
The parties substantially agree on the issues
raised by this application for judicial review, and they can be formulated as
follows:
•
Was it reasonable for the Officer to conclude
that the Applicants failed to provide sufficient proof of unencumbered
settlement funds?
•
Did the Officer breach the duty of fairness by
not giving the Applicants an opportunity to respond to her concerns regarding
the settlement funds?
IV.
Analysis
[9]
Both parties agree, and I concur, that the
assessment of an application for a permanent residence under the Skilled Worker
Class is a discretionary exercise involving questions of mixed law and facts
and should be given a high degree of deference. The applicable standard of
review is therefore reasonableness: Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC
9, at paras 47, 53, 66 and 62; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12, at paras 52-62. In reviewing an
officer’s decision on a standard of reasonableness, the Court should not
interfere if the officer’s decision is transparent, justifiable and falls
within the range of possible, acceptable outcomes that are defensible in
respect of the facts and law. It is not up to a reviewing court to substitute
its own view of a preferable outcome, nor is it the function of the reviewing
court to reweigh the evidence that was before the officer.
[10]
As for the question of procedural fairness and
natural justice, the standard of review is correctness: Dunsmuir, at
para 50; Khosa, at para 43. In reviewing an officer’s decision on a
standard of correctness, a reviewing court will undertake its own analysis of
the question and reach its own conclusion.
A. Was it reasonable for the Officer to conclude
that the Applicants failed to provide sufficient proof of unencumbered
settlement funds?
[11]
The principal Applicant applied for permanent
residence as a member of the economic class pursuant to s. 12(2) of the IRPA,
and more particularly as a skilled worker. Division 1 of Part 6 of the IRPR
set out the requirements that applicants must meet to become permanent
residents as skilled workers. For the purpose of determining whether a skilled
worker, as a member of the federal skilled worker class, will be able to become
economically established in Canada, an applicant must be awarded a minimum of
67 points on the basis of education, proficiency in the official languages of
Canada, age, arranged employment, and adaptability (s. 76(1)(a) of IRPR).
An applicant must also prove that his or her settlement funds are available and
transferable and unencumbered by debts or other obligations, according to s.
76(1)(b)(i), unless he or she is awarded points for arranged employment (s.
76(1)(b)(ii). Those sections read as follows:
76. (1) For the purpose of determining whether a skilled worker, as a
member of the federal skilled worker class, will be able to become
economically established in Canada, they must be assessed on the basis of the
following criteria:
[…]
(b) the skilled worker must
(i) have in the form of transferable and
available funds, unencumbered by debts or other obligations, an amount equal
to one half of the minimum necessary income applicable in respect of the
group of persons consisting of the skilled worker and their family members,
or
(ii) be awarded points under paragraph 82(2)(a), (b) or (d) for
arranged employment, as defined in subsection 82(1), in Canada.
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76. (1) Les critères ci-après indiquent que le
travailleur qualifié peut réussir son établissement économique au Canada à
titre de membre de la catégorie des travailleurs qualifiés (fédéral) :
[…]
b) le travailleur qualifié :
(i) soit dispose de fonds transférables et
disponibles — non grevés de dettes ou d’autres obligations financières — d’un
montant égal à la moitié du revenu vital minimum qui lui permettrait de
subvenir à ses propres besoins et à ceux des membres de sa famille,
(ii) soit s’est vu attribuer des points aux termes des alinéas
82(2)a), b) ou d) pour un emploi réservé, au Canada, au sens du paragraphe
82(1).
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[12]
In the case at bar, the Applicant had submitted
proof of funds at the time of the application in the form of a term deposit.
When the Officer requested an updated assessment, the Applicant was directed to
the CIC website where she was able to determine the exact amount to prove. She
then submitted a copy of a bank draft slightly exceeding the required amount of
money.
[13]
I agree with counsel for the Respondent that the
initial assessment conducted by the Centralized Intake Office in Sydney is irrelevant for the purposes of the Officer’s assessment. As is made clear in OP
6B Federal Skilled Workers – Applications received on or after June 26, 2010,
applicants must demonstrate that they have the requisite settlement funds at
the time the application is made, as well as at the time the visa is issued
(Respondent’s Book of Authorities, Tab 2, section 9.1). See also: Pasco Pla v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 560,
at para 25.
[14]
The fact that a Canada Border Services Agency
would have examined the Applicant upon her arrival in Canada is similarly irrelevant. Again, I agree with counsel for the Respondent that the implication
of the Applicant’s argument is that the Officer was not required to be
satisfied that she met the requirements of the Act and the Regulations
because a subsequent verification would take place at the Port of Entry. If
this argument were to have merit, it would render meaningless any evaluation
taking place before the Port of Entry.
[15]
That being said, I fail to understand the logic
behind the Officer’s reasoning that a bank draft is insufficient proof of
unencumbered settlement funds because it does not provide any information on
where the money came from, whether the draft has been cancelled, whether the
funds are encumbered by debts or other obligations, who bought the draft, or
whether a third party has lent the money to the Applicant. The same
deficiencies clearly affect the other acceptable proofs of settlement funds
listed in the CIC’s Document Checklist. According to that document, current
bank certification letter, evidence of savings balance and fixed or time
deposit statements are all acceptable types of evidence. Not only is this list
clearly not exhaustive, but as conceded by counsel for the Respondent, these
accepted methods of proving settlement funds would as easily as a bank draft
allow an applicant to subvert this requirement by borrowing money from a third
party and depositing the money into his or her bank account. If the Regulations
are deficient in this respect, they should be amended to allow for a more
probing examination of the source of the funds, whatever the type of evidence
chosen to establish the availability and transferability of these funds. If, on
the other hand, there are good reasons not to investigate any further into the
origin of the funds, then bank drafts should not be excluded as a possible way
of establishing unencumbered and readily transferable funds merely because they
do not provide information as to where the money comes from.
[16]
In the case at bar, there is no evidence
whatsoever that the Applicants borrowed the money from someone else to purchase
the bank draft. Indeed, the main Applicant stated in her affidavit that she
kept the money in her fixed deposit in order to meet the requirements of the IRPA
with respect to settlement funds (Application Record, p. 15, at para 3).
Accordingly, the Officer’s concerns with respect to the bank draft were based
on pure speculations, and for that reason her decision is unreasonable.
B. Did the Officer breach the duty of fairness by
not giving the Applicants an opportunity to respond to her concerns regarding
the settlement funds?
[17]
It is well established that an officer is under
no obligation to provide a running score of weaknesses in an applicant’s
application: see, for ex., Thandal v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2008 FC 489, at para 9; Nabin v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 200, at paras 7-10; Soor v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 1344, at para 4. On the
other hand, procedural fairness requires that an applicant be provided an opportunity
to address an officer’s concern when the credibility, accuracy or genuine
nature of the information submitted is at stake: Hassani v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 1283, at para 24. Such a requirement
will apply particularly when an applicant could not have anticipated the
officer’s concerns: Kuhathasan v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2008 FC 457, at paras 39-41.
[18]
Contrary to the Respondent’s submissions, I am
of the view that the principal Applicant’s credibility was on the line in the
case at bar. The Officer was clearly questioning where the money came from and
implicitly casts doubt as to whether the money guaranteed by the bank draft was
hers. The Applicant had no way to know that the bank draft submitted would
raise suspicion, especially since no concerns were raised with the term deposit
that she initially provided to meet the settlement fund requirement. In such
circumstances, the Officer clearly had a duty to give the Applicant an
opportunity to disabuse her of her concerns, just as it was done on two
previous occasions with respect to other issues.
[19]
This breach of procedural fairness is another
ground upon which this application for judicial review ought to be granted.
V.
Conclusion
[20]
For all the reasons set out above, this
application for judicial review is granted. No question is certified.