Docket: IMM-6701-13
Citation: 2015 FC 311
Ottawa, Ontario,
March 13, 2015
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn
BETWEEN:
|
DENNIS VILLANUEVA
BESSY ALFARO
JAMIE VILLANUEVA
|
Applicants
|
and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
CANADA BORDER SERVICES AGENCY
|
Respondents
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This application for judicial review of a
decision of a Senior Immigration Officer refusing the applicants’ humanitarian
and compassionate [H&C] application for permanent residence in Canada must be
dismissed, notwithstanding the court’s considerable concern for the health of Denssy,
the Canadian born child of the applicant family.
Background
[2]
Dennis Villanueva and his spouse Bessy Alfaro
are citizens of Honduras. Their daughter Jamie Lizeth Alfaro was born in
September 2009 while they were sojourning in the United States. The couple
also have a son, Denssy Joseph Villanueva Alfaro, born in Canada in August
2012.
[3]
The adult applicants fled Honduras to the United
States of America on May 1, 2008, fearing the Mara Salvatrucha street gang.
Two years later, they entered Canada on May 21, 2010, and applied for refugee
protection on the basis of this alleged fear. Their claim for protection was
denied by the Immigration and Refugee Board on November 24, 2011. Their
application for leave and judicial review of that decision was denied by this
court on April 12, 2012.
[4]
On March 26, 2012, they applied for a
Pre-Removal Risk Assessment and also made their H&C application. Their
application for a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment was rejected on June 18, 2013.
The H&C application was decided on March 26, 2013, and is the subject of
this application.
[5]
In August 2012, after the H&C application
but before the decision was rendered, Denssy was born by C-section. At birth
there were no issues noted; however, he was subsequently noted to have cyanosis
(blue discolouration of the skin) and his heart was beating faster than normal.
He received treatment for these symptoms in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
[NICU] of the Windsor General Hospital for three days. He was monitored with
periods of persistent irregular heartbeat and cyanosis to his legs and arms.
Several tests and heart tracings revealed persistent abnormalities. The
doctors told the applicants that there was likely something wrong with his
heart and Denssy was seen by a paediatric specialist at the Children’s Hospital of Western Ontario before being released.
[6]
Following Denssy’s birth and in light of his
medical issues, the applicants updated their H&C application submitting
that he required continued medical care and monitoring in Canada and that the
level of care required was not available in Honduras.
[7]
Denssy continues to have times when he exhibits
blue discolouration of the skin and the applicants were recently informed that
he required a further test on his heart which is to be done at Sick Kids
Hospital in Toronto. This information was not before the officer deciding the
H&C but was put before the enforcement officer with a request to defer the
applicants’ removal from Canada.
[8]
In support of their H&C application the applicants
submitted subjective and objective evidence regarding Denssy’s health,
including:
•
Health records from the Windsor NICU with
frequent notations of irregular heartbeat, sinus tachycardia, premature atrial
contractions [PACs] and premature ventricular contractions [PVCs] and a
notation by the treating physician stating that the cyanosis had resolved but
irregular heartbeat persisted;
•
The NICU records included a notation from the
treating physician advising the applicants to “come to
Emergency in case of poor feeding, lethargy, tachypnea, sweating or to call 911
if the child is tachypneic, shortness of breath or looking dusky;”
•
Letter from Sr. Connie Harrington of the Diocese
of London, Ministry to Refugee Claimants stating that she had researched the
possible medical services costs that the applicants would face to care for
Denssy in Honduras;
•
Letter from Dr. Jorge Alberto Valle Reconco of
Honduras attesting that the costs in Sr. Harrington’s letter were correct;
•
Letter from a nurse practitioner in Honduras
attesting to the cost and availability of certain medical services in Honduras;
•
A Wikipedia article on “Intraventricular
Conduction;”
•
Peer-reviewed medical articles; and
• Country condition evidence regarding quality, access, and cost of
healthcare in Honduras.
[9]
The challenge to the officer’s decision rests on
the analysis of the best interests of the child. The officer acknowledged that
the “socio-economic conditions in Honduras may not be
favourable relative to those in Canada for raising children” and that
the children might “find greater comfort in Canada than
Honduras and potentially enjoy greater futures,” but noted that this was
not determinative.
[10]
The officer reviewed the submissions and medical
documentation indicating that Denssy was born with cyanosis, which has since
resolved and that he was diagnosed at birth with an irregular heart beat. The officer
also noted that Denssy’s records indicated the presence of PACs and PVCs, but
held that the evidence indicated that PACs are commonly seen in infants,
disappear with age, and are usually benign and need no treatment and that PVCs
are usually benign.
[11]
The officer dismissed the letters from
the Honduran nurse practitioner and Sr. Harrington because there was no
explanation for how the required medical services were determined. The officer
acknowledged the objective documentary evidence about healthcare in Honduras,
but found that “general statistical and narrative data
relating to the provision of health care in a specific country does not
overcome the requirement of specifying the nature of the care required.”
[12]
The officer found that there was no
documentation with respect to Denssy’s prognosis. The officer concluded that,
while Denssy may require periodic medical care and monitoring, there was no
objective evidence confirming the appropriate treatment or the unavailability
of that treatment in Honduras. As such, the officer was not satisfied that
Denssy suffered from a medical condition for which treatment would be
unavailable in Honduras.
[13]
On the basis of the foregoing, the officer
concluded that there was insufficient objective evidence to establish that
their removal from Canada would adversely affect their children.
Issue
[14]
The applicants submit that the officer’s
decision was unreasonable because it was made without regard to all of the evidence.
Analysis
[15]
The applicants submit that the officer gave more
weight to the Wikipedia information filed with the application than to the “scholarly, peer-reviewed article by Peadiatric Cardiologist,
Dr. Michael J. Kantoch, provided to her to assist in her determination.”
That article, it is said was not considered or weighed.
[16]
They further submit that the officer erred by
failing to consider the particularized information on care for Denssy provided
by the treating physician at the NICU; namely that the applicants return to the
emergency room or to call 911 if a series of conditions arose. This, they
assert is relevant given the documentary evidence that showed that Honduras
lacked effective ambulance and 911 services.
[17]
The respondent submits that the applicants are
asking the court to reweigh the evidence. It is also submitted that the
officer is presumed to have considered all of the evidence unless the contrary
is shown.
[18]
The applicants can hardly complain if the
officer gave weight to the Wikipedia documents, which they themselves
provided. While it is true that the doctor’s article is most likely a better
source of information on which to assess Denssy’s medical condition, it is
written for those who are trained in medicine, and the officer is not.
[19]
The officer’s weighing of the evidence and the
conclusion reached was not unreasonable, given those facts. Regrettably the
H&C application provided only a brief narrative regarding Denssy’s medical
condition, its risks, treatment, and explanation as to why it was not available
in Honduras. More ought to have been put before the officer if in fact
Denssy’s condition is as serious as was made out by counsel at the hearing. At
a minimum, a letter from a physician explaining in common language the reality
of his health and possible prognosis would have assisted the officer greatly.
By the time this decision issues, it may be that there is a clearer picture of
his health, which may warrant an administrative deferral of removal or a
renewed H&C application. However, the court is unable to find on the facts
presented that this officer’s decision was unreasonable. I agree with the
respondent that the real basis of the applicants’ issue with the decision rests
in the weight the officer gave to the evidence before her. This is not a basis
to interfere with the decision unless it was perverse or capricious and I am
not persuaded that it was either.
[20]
Neither party proposed a question for
certification.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that this
application is denied and no question is certified.
“Russel W. Zinn”