Dockets: IMM-673-14
IMM-674-14
Citation:
2014 FC 856
Ottawa, Ontario, September 10, 2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Gagné
Docket: IMM-673-14
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BETWEEN:
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PRITESHKUMAR PR PATEL
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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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Docket: IMM-674-14
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AND
BETWEEN:
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JAYSHREE HETALKUMAR BHATTY
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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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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
Overview
[1]
These applications for judicial review raise the
question as to which of the sender or the recipient, in the context of email
communications between an applicant and a visa officer, must bear the
consequences of an email that was allegedly sent but allegedly not received.
[2]
At the request of counsel for the parties, these
cases were heard concurrently, as they raise the same issue. The facts of both
cases are identical but for the fact that in Bhatty v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), IMM-674-14 [Bhatty], when
the applicant learned that his application was refused for having failed to
reply to an email from the visa officer, he asked that visa officer to
reconsider his decision, taking into consideration the missing information. The
applicant, in Patel v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
IMM‑673-14 [Patel]), did not ask for a reconsideration of his
permanent residence application.
[3]
The applicants therefore challenge, under
subsection 72(1) of Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c
27 [Act], the decisions by two different visa officers [Officer or Officers] at
the Immigration Section of the Canadian Consulate General in New Delhi, India,
whereby their respective application for a permanent resident visa pursuant to
the Federal Skilled Worker program were refused. The Officers found that the
applicants simply failed to provide the requested documents. The applicants
contend that their common immigration consultant did not receive the
correspondence requesting further information. The immigration consultant
claims that in addition to these two files, the same factual outcome has
occurred to a third case he was handling, from that visa office, during that
time frame.
[4]
For the reasons discussed below, these
applications for judicial review will be dismissed.
Background of Mr. Patel’s file
[5]
Mr. Patel is an Indian citizen who hired Mr.
Pranay Shah, member of the Immigration Consultants of Canada Regulatory Counsel
with 13 years experience in the industry, for his application for permanent
residence.
[6]
On March 8, 2013, the Officer allegedly emailed
the consultant requesting certain medical documents, passports, and right of permanent
residence fees within 45 days in order to assess the application. There is a
notation in the Global Case Management System [GCMS] notes from that day
indicating that the Officer received confirmation that the email was sent. (Mr.
Patel draws our attention to Operational Bulletin 327-July 18, 2011, which
instructs, at page 5, that email that is “sent” (without necessitating proof of
receipt) is to be automatically registered in the GCMS as “sent.”)
[7]
On January 18, 2014, the Officer reviewed Mr.
Patel’s file and noted in the GCMS that the requested information had not been
provided by the applicant or his consultant.
[8]
That same day, Mr. Patel was sent a letter
denying his application based on the information that was available to the
Officer at that time. It is clear from reading the letter that the missing
documentation was determinative to the Officer’s decision. This is the impugned
decision.
Background of Mr. Bhatty’s file
[9]
Mr. Bhatty is an Indian citizen who also hired
Mr. Pranay Shah as his immigration consultant for his application for permanent
residence.
[10]
On March 9, 2013 (the day after the email was
sent in Mr. Patel’s file), the Officer allegedly emailed the consultant
requesting certain documents including passports and medical examinations
within 45 days in order to assess the application. The letter was sent by an
assistant and a copy of the email is in the sent folder of the Immigration
Section Unit (it is attached to the Visa Officer’s affidavit). There is a
notation in the GCMS notes from that day indicating that the Officer received
confirmation that the email was sent. (Mr. Bhatty also draws our attention to
Operational Bulletin 327-July 18, 2011).
[11]
On December 9, 2013 the Officer reviewed Mr.
Bhatty’s file and noted in the GCMS that the requested information had not been
provided by the applicant or his consultant.
[12]
On February 13, 2014, the applicant was sent a
letter denying his application based on the information that was available to
the officer at that time. It is clear from reading the letter that the missing
documentation was determinative to the Officer’s decision. This is the impugned
decision in Mr. Bhatty’s file.
Common evidence
[13]
In his affidavit, Mr. Pranay Shah contends that
neither his clients nor his office received the emails of March 8 and 9, 2013
allegedly sent by the visa office, nor any other follow-up communication other
than the refusal letters. It is his policy to respond to information requests
from visa officials within one day of reception. He has never previously had
email problems with respect to his immigration cases, nor has anyone reported
sending him an email that was not received. He submits that he conducted a full
investigation into whether there could have been an error in his email
reception system (spam folders and the like), but found nothing to suggest that
this was the case. All the more, he contends that he had three cases, including
the present matters, during the same period, from the same office, refused
because the applicants in question failed to provide updated information and
documentation required by the Officer’s alleged emailed requests.
Issue and standard of review
[14]
These applications for judicial review raise the
following issue:
−
Did the Officer breach the duty of procedural
fairness requirement by failing to provide the applicant with proper notice and
a meaningful opportunity to respond to his request for updated information?
[15]
The appropriate standard of review for issues of
procedural fairness is correctness (Caglayan v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 485 [Caglayan]; Yazdani v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 885 at paras
23-25 [Yazdani]; Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at para 50;
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at
para 43).
Analysis
[16]
The Court’s case law on the conduct of foreign
visa offices in handling email communication makes clear that the “risk”
involved in a failure of communication is to be borne by the Minister if it
cannot be proved that the communication in question was sent by the Minister’s
officials. However, once the Minister proves that the communication was sent, the
applicant bears the risk involved in a failure to receive the communication (Alavi
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 969 [Alavi]
at para 5). In Ghaloghlyan v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2011 FC 1252, Justice Campbell commented on the requirements
for proving on a balance of probabilities that a document was correctly sent:
[8] […] I find that the principle to be applied
in communication cases is as follows: upon proof on a balance of probabilities
that a document was sent, a rebuttable presumption arises that the applicant
concerned received it, and the applicant's statement that it was not received,
on its own, does not rebut the presumption.
[9] Thus, the question becomes: what does it
take to prove on a balance of probabilities that a document was sent? In my
opinion, to find that a document was “correctly sent”, as that term is used in Kaur,
it must have been sent to the address supplied by an applicant by a means
capable of verifying that the document actually went on its way to the
applicant.
[10] […] Proving that an email went on its way
is verified by producing a printout of the sender’s e-mail sent box showing the
message concerned was addressed to the e-mail address supplied for sending, and
as no indication of non-delivery, the e-mail did not “bounce back”. [...]
[17]
The respondent has done all of this here. He has
established on a balance of probabilities that the email was sent to the
applicant, in that the GCMS notes contain a copy of the sent email (to the
correct address of the applicants’ representative), and that there is no
evidence that the email was not delivered (it did not bounce back) or otherwise
not properly sent. Both affidavits filed by the respondent reveal that the sent
email is in the sender’s email sent box, with the date on which it was sent, as
well as its content.
[18]
However, the applicants in the present cases
rely on four decisions of this Court involving nine different applicants, all
rendered in September and October 2010, where the applications for judicial
review were all granted and the risk of lost emails put on the visa office (Abboud
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 876, Alavi,
Yazdani – six applications for judicial review were consolidated by Justice
Mandamin - and Zare v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2010 FC 1024). In all these cases, errant emails were being sent from the visa
office in Warsaw which were not received by the applicants or applicants’
representatives.
[19]
All four of these decisions (nine applications)
involve similar underlying facts, which are easily distinguishable from the
cases at bar:
−
All applications for permanent residence were
originally filed at the Canadian Embassy at Damacus and subsequently
transferred to the Canadian Embassy in Warsaw for processing;
−
The lost emails were the first email
communications between the Warsaw office and the applicants, whereby the
applicants were informed of the transfer and asked for additional documents; in
the cases at bar, there is a history of previous successful email
communications between the visa office and Mr. Pranay Shah; and
−
The applicants were either unrepresented or
represented by different consultants/counsels, therefore reducing the
probabilities that the communication failure resulted from problems with the
recipients’ computers. In the present cases (and the third case referred to
above), the applicants were represented by the same consultant.
[20]
The unique circumstances of these cases
triggered the following comments from Justice Mandamin in Yazdani, above
at paras 51 and 52:
[51] […] However, I do not see this as a
completely no-fault case.
[52] The fact is that the Respondent chose to
unilaterally transfer the Applicant’s files from the Damacus visa office to the
Warsaw visa office. There is of course no question the Respondent is entitled
to do so especially considering it was doing so to address a backlog in
processing of visa applications. However, the visa section in Warsaw did not
separately notify the Applicant of the transfer nor did it otherwise verify
that email communications was open between itself and the Applicant’s
Consultant.
[21]
Here, no fault has been put on the respondent
and as indicated above, he did present sufficient evidence to convince the Court,
on the balance of probabilities, that the emails were sent to the applicants’
consultant.
[22]
Again, Mr. Patel did not ask the Officer to
reconsider his decision once he found out that his application for permanent
residence was denied due to his failure to comply with an information request
contained in an email he did not receive. Mr. Bhatty did so but the Officer’s
decision not to reconsider was not challenged before this Court.
[23]
Therefore, I can only reiterate Justice
Martineau’s conclusion in Caglayan. Though he denied the application, he
did so with the following caveat:
[23] In other words, while the visa officer may
have acted in the strict legality in rendering the impugned decision at the
time it did so, the requirement that justice must not only be done but also
appear to be done is such that the immigration system can function only with
the collaboration of eminently reasonable beings. The maintenance of an
appropriate equilibrium in the immigration system goes beyond formal justice
and this is where equity comes into play. Visa applications are not court
proceedings and visa officers are not tribunals tasked with the mandate to
finally decide opposing claims. The functus officio principle
should not be applied strictly in this case. Accepting that the applicant is
not at fault, it would be highly unfair and unjust today that his visa
application file be simply closed, that he be required to pay another
processing fee, and that he has to suffer unnecessary delays in the treatment
of a fresh application. Accordingly, it would only be fair and just in the
circumstances that the visa officer reconsider its earlier decision in light of
the new documentation tendered with the reconsideration request. In dismissing
the present application on the basis that, technically speaking, there has been
no breach of the duty to act fairly, I can only urge the Minister to be
sensitive to this reality. [Emphasis added.]
Conclusion
[24]
For the reasons discussed above, both these
applications for judicial review will be dismissed. The parties have not
proposed a question of general importance for certification and none will be
certified.