Docket: IMM-2163-14
Citation:
2015 FC 641
Ottawa, Ontario, May 15, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Mosley
BETWEEN:
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HOSSEIN AL KHALIL
SOUMAYYA AZZAM
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Applicants
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and
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THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Nature of the Matter
[1]
This is an application for judicial review
pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA]. Hossein Al Khalil and Soumayya Azzam challenge
four separate but related decisions rendered by the Chief of Operations at the
Canada Border Services Agency [CBSA], which declared a total of $170,000 in
cash and performance bonds forfeited.
[2]
As a preliminary matter, the parties are agreed and
I accept that the style of cause should be amended, so that the Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness is substituted for the Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration. The amendment will be included in this judgment.
II.
Background
[3]
The applicants are the parents of Nabil Al
Khalil. He and three of their other sons have been implicated in gang and drug
related violence. Two have been killed. A third, Rabih, has been charged with
two murders committed in 2012. He fled to Greece and has since been extradited
to Canada to face trial.
[4]
Nabil was convicted of cocaine trafficking. As a
result, a removal order was issued against him but the CBSA could not give it
effect because he lacked travel documents. Nabil was released from immigration
detention in November 2010, after his parents had posted a total of $170,000 in
cash and performance bonds. He was ordered to abide by strict conditions.
[5]
In a statutory declaration sworn in January
2014, Nabil’s wife Louisa states that he carefully respected his conditions of
release. She says he wished to cooperate with the CBSA and leave Canada because
he was afraid that rival gangs wanted to target him and his family. He once
visited the Lebanese Embassy to obtain a passport but was instructed to follow
a longer immigration process.
[6]
Louisa further states that the Ottawa police
warned Nabil that there were people who wished to have him killed. Nabil then
noticed that a private investigator was watching their home. He was afraid that
rival gangs were behind this and were planning to kill him due to their grievances
against Rabih. Nabil complained to the police, Louisa states, but they refused
to act because there was no evidence that anyone had broken the law.
[7]
Nabil left his home on November 4, 2013. He
called Louisa three days later and told her that he had left Canada with the
aid of a smuggler and false documentation. He claimed to be somewhere in the
Middle East. He said that he had fled because he felt that his life was in
danger. According to Louisa, he is willing to meet Canadian officials abroad to
confirm that he has left the country.
[8]
It is unclear when Louisa or the applicants
first notified the CBSA of Nabil’s disappearance. In her declaration, Louisa
states: “As soon as I realized that Nabil was missing I
contacted my lawyer and he advised me to contact CBSA. I immediately contacted
CBSA and told them that Nabil was missing.” The earliest date she
mentions specifically is November 7 (the date of the telephone call from Nabil).
The respondent suggests that Louisa first contacted the CBSA on that date.
Indeed, the Certified Tribunal Record contains a statement given by Louisa to
the CBSA dated November 7.
[9]
On December 2, 2013, the CBSA sent four letters
to the applicants advising that Nabil had breached the conditions of the performance
and cash bonds.
[10]
The CBSA requested that the applicants send
cheques for the amounts of the performance bonds and explained that the cash
bonds were forfeited. The applicants were advised that they could make
submissions with respect to all four letters.
[11]
The applicants retained counsel. On January 9,
2014, they submitted a reply package containing extensive written submissions,
statutory declarations sworn by Louisa and Hossein, and an affidavit sworn by
Nabil’s brother Hisham in the context of Rabih’s extradition proceedings.
[12]
Through four letters dated January 20, 2014, the
Chief of Operations at the CBSA upheld the decisions communicated in the
previous letters.
III.
Issues
[13]
The respondent’s argument that the application
was not timely was abandoned at the hearing.
[14]
The only remaining issue is whether the officer
erred in estreating the bonds.
IV.
Standard of Review
[15]
The assessment of whether a bond should be
forfeited is highly discretionary. The law is settled that these decisions are
reviewable on reasonableness: Domitlia v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2011 FC 419 at paras 22-27; Khalife v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 221 at para 19.
[16]
The four letters dated January 20, 2014
constitute the final decision under review. A first letter is addressed to
Hossein. It states that Nabil failed to comply with the conditions of the
performance bond for $100,000 signed by Hossein on December 2, 2010. The letter
states that the CBSA received Hossein’s submissions and decided to maintain the
decision to estreat the bond. It contains the following explanation.
Nabil Al Khalil failed to report as per his
conditions to CBSA on November 4, 2013. He also failed to always be in the
company of the bonds person and reside with Louisa Al Khalil, respect curfew of
9 am to 6 am while at the residence of Louisa Al Khalil. To only use the
telephone in presence of the bonds person and must report in person to any
change of address prior to the change being made.
[17]
A second letter is addressed to Soumayya for a
performance bond for $10,000. It contains identical wording.
[18]
A third letter is addressed to Hossein with
respect to a cash bond of $50,000. It explains that Nabil committed the
following violations of his conditions of release.
As per the order for release and conditions
imposed on November 3, 2010, Nabil Al Khalil was ordered:
- Sign in at CBSA office once per month.
- Always be in the company of the bond person and reside with Louisa
Anne Al Khalil.
- Curfew of 9:00 PM to 6:00 AM while at residence of Louisa Al
Khalil.
- To only use telephone in presence of bond
person.
- Must report in writing of any change in address prior to the
change being made.
Mr. Al Khalil
failed to notify CBSA that he was departing Canada.
Mr. Al Khalil has
not provided CBSA with a forwarding address.
[19]
The letter states that the CBSA received
Hossein’s submissions and decided to maintain the decision to declare the cash
bond forfeited. A fourth letter is addressed to Soumayya with respect to a cash
bond of $10,000. It contains identical wording.
V.
Relevant Legislation
[20]
The authority to require deposits or guarantees
in the context of release from immigration detention is found in the IRPA
at subsection 58(3).
58(3) If the
Immigration Division orders the release of a permanent resident or a foreign
national, it may impose any conditions that it considers necessary, including
the payment of a deposit or the posting of a guarantee for compliance with
the conditions.
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58(3) Lorsqu’elle
ordonne la mise en liberté d’un résident permanent ou d’un étranger, la
section peut imposer les conditions qu’elle estime nécessaires, notamment la
remise d’une garantie d’exécution.
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[21]
Section 49 of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 [the Regulations], governs the
consequences of a failure to comply with conditions with respect to deposits
and guarantees.
49. (1) A person
who pays a deposit or posts a guarantee must acknowledge in writing
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49. (1) La personne qui fournit une garantie d’exécution confirme
par écrit :
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(a) that
they have been informed of the conditions imposed; and
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a) qu’elle a été informée des conditions imposées;
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(b) that they have been informed that non-compliance with any
conditions imposed will result in the forfeiture of the deposit or
enforcement of the guarantee
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b)
qu’elle a été informée que le non-respect de l’une des conditions imposées
entraînera la confiscation de la somme donnée en garantie ou la réalisation
de la garantie.
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(2) An officer
shall issue a receipt for the deposit or a copy of the guarantee, and a copy
of the conditions imposed.
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(2) L’agent délivre un reçu pour la somme d’argent donnée en
garantie ou une copie de la garantie ainsi qu’une copie des conditions
imposées.
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(3) The Department shall return the deposit paid on being informed
by an officer that the person or group of persons in respect of whom the
deposit was required has complied with the conditions imposed.
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(3) Si l’agent
informe le ministère que la personne ou le groupe de personnes visé par la
garantie s’est conformé aux conditions imposées, le ministère restitue la
somme d’argent donnée en garantie.
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(4) A sum of
money deposited is forfeited, or a guarantee posted becomes enforceable, on
the failure of the person or any member of the group of persons in respect of
whom the deposit or guarantee was required to comply with a condition imposed
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(4) En cas de
non-respect, par la personne ou tout membre du groupe de personnes visé par
la garantie, d’une condition imposée à son égard, la somme d’argent donnée en
garantie est confisquée ou la garantie d’exécution devient exécutoire.
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[22]
Although operational manuals are not sources of
law, I reproduce section 7.8 of manual ENF 8: Deposits and Guarantees,
last updated on February 1, 2007.
The rules of
procedural fairness require that a CIC or CBSA officer not recommend
forfeiture of a deposit or realize a guarantee executed by a third party
until that person is given an opportunity to make a written representation
concerning the decision to be made.
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Les règles d’équité en matière de procédure veulent qu’un agent de
CIC ou de l’ASFC ne recommande pas la confiscation d’un dépôt de garantie ou
l’exécution d’une garantie d’exécution souscrite par un tiers avant que cette
personne ne puisse faire une observation par écrit à propos de la décision en
instance.
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CIC and CBSA
managers and officers have discretionary power to decide whether a breach of
conditions is severe enough to warrant the forfeiture of the deposit or the
guarantee. However, CIC as well as CBSA managers and officers do not have
discretionary power to reduce or otherwise alter the amount of the deposit or
guarantee.
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Les gestionnaires et agents de CIC et de l’ASFC possèdent le
pouvoir discrétionnaire de décider si le non-respect des conditions est
suffisamment grave pour justifier la confiscation du dépôt de garantie ou la
réalisation de la garantie d’exécution. Toutefois, les gestionnaires et
agents de CIC et de l’ASFC ne possèdent pas le pouvoir discrétionnaire de
réduire ou de modifier autrement le montant du dépôt de garantie ou de la
garantie d’exécution.
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When a breach of
conditions occurs that will result in forfeiture of a deposit or action to
realize on a guarantee, the depositor or guarantor must be informed in
writing of the breach and the possible forfeiture or enforcement action, and
be granted an opportunity for written representation. If the final decision
is to forfeit the deposit or guarantee, the depositor or guarantor will be
held accountable for the entire amount of the deposit or guarantee.
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Quand une violation des conditions peut avoir pour conséquence la
confiscation d’un dépôt de garantie ou l’exécution d’une garantie
d’exécution, le déposant ou le garant doit être informé par écrit de
l’infraction aux conditions et d’une possible confiscation ou exécution et
doit se voir accorder la possibilité de présenter ses observations par écrit.
Si la décision finale vise la confiscation du dépôt ou la réalisation de la
garantie d’exécution, le déposant ou le garant sera tenu responsable de
l’intégralité du montant du dépôt ou de la garantie.
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When the
guarantor refuses or is unable to honour a commitment in a guarantee, CIC or
CBSA officers should refer the matter to the regional office of the Justice
Department for civil prosecution.
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Si le garant refuse
ou est incapable d’honorer un engagement de garantie d’exécution, les agents
de CIC ou de l’ASFC doivent renvoyer l’affaire au bureau régional du
ministère de la Justice pour une poursuite au civil.
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VI.
Submissions of the Parties
A.
Did the officer err in estreating the bonds?
(1)
Applicants’ Submissions
[23]
The applicants argue that the officer erred in
fettering his discretion and in failing to consider their submissions.
[24]
In Khalife, the Court held that an
immigration officer has discretion with respect to the estreatment of a bond.
In that case, the officer estreated only a portion of the applicant’s deposit.
The Court was left in doubt as to how the officer had reached the conclusion
that $50,000 was appropriate, as opposed to some other amount, but it was unable
to conclude that the decision was unreasonable. Accordingly, the application
for judicial review was dismissed.
[25]
In Kang v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2006 FC 652, the Court set aside a decision to estreat a
bond of $5,000 because the officer had fettered his discretion by asserting
that he did not have the ability to estreat only a portion of the bond.
[26]
The Court again set aside a decision to estreat
a bond in Hussain v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness),
2008 FC 234. The Court found that the officer had erred in failing to consider
the applicant’s submissions to the effect that he had not breached any
conditions. The Court further observed that the officer had erred in concluding
that he did not have any discretion to estreat only a portion of the bond. At
paras 10-12, the Court noted that there had been a change in the relevant
policy manual but declared that the respondent’s policy did not have the force
of law.
[27]
More recently, the Court repeated that officers
have discretion and that the policy manual is not binding in Etienne v
Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2014 FC 1128.
[28]
The applicants contend that the jurisprudence
makes it clear that an immigration officer has the discretion to order no
forfeiture, partial forfeiture or full forfeiture once he is satisfied that
there has been a breach of conditions. This discretion is grounded in
subsection 49(4) of the Regulations, which has the force of law. Since the
legislator has not changed the legislation, a change in policy cannot displace
the existing jurisprudence. It is an error for an officer to fetter his
discretion on the basis of the policy manual: Yhap v Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration), [1990] FCJ No 205 (TD).
[29]
In the criminal context, the applicants submit,
the degree of the surety’s fault is a central criterion to consider when
exercising discretion in the matter of forfeiture: see e.g. the Ontario Court
of Appeal’s decision R v Huang, [1998] OJ No 2991 at para 11, citing
British jurisprudence.
[30]
Moreover, the applicants submit that the officer
rendered an unreasonable decision. There is no evidence that he considered any
of the detailed submissions made by the applicants in reply to the letters
dated December 2, 2013. The officer did not consider whether the applicants had
exercised due diligence; whether Nabil’s self-removal from Canada had achieved
the purpose of the bonds; the reasons why he left; the need to protect his
family; or the previous three years of compliance.
[31]
While the Court can supplement the officer’s
reasons on the basis of Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’ Union v
Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62 [NL Nurses],
there is a wealth of jurisprudence holding that the Court cannot provide its
own reasons for decision where none exist or where the decision-maker ignored
central facts or issues. See e.g. Pathmanathan v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2013 FC 353 at para 28; Komolafe v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2013 FC 431 at para 11; Korolove v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2013 FC 370 at paras 42-46; Abbasi v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 278 at paras 7-8; Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v Raphaël, 2012 FC 1039 at para 28; Fook
Cheung v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 348 at para 17; Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v B451, 2013 FC 441 at paras 33-37; Vilvaratnam
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 154 at para 36.
(2)
Respondent’s Submissions
[32]
The respondent points out that there is no reference
in section 49 of the Regulations to any discretion on the part of the CBSA to
demand only partial forfeiture of a bond. Similarly, the policy manual
expressly instructs CBSA officers that they must demand full forfeiture.
[33]
The respondent submits that guarantees are
fundamental to the implementation of conditional release in the immigration
context. In Uanseru v Canada (Solicitor General), 2005 FC 428 at para
18, Justice Mactavish held that “[t]he reason for using
bonds is to allow for the release of individuals in immigration detention on
terms that will ensure compliance with immigration legislation”. See
also Ferzly v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 1064.
[34]
The forfeiture procedure is carried out in two
steps. First, a CBSA officer recommends enforcing the guarantee. The CBSA
provides notice to the persons affected in order to comply with the duty of
fairness, as is acknowledged in the policy manual. Afterwards, the CBSA may
exercise its discretion to order repayment. If the final decision is to forfeit
the deposit or guarantee, the bondspersons are held accountable for the entire
amount.
[35]
There is no discretion to demand only partial
forfeiture. The respondent submits that the Federal Court has accepted that
this is the case since changes were made to the policy manual in 2007: Domitlia,
above, at paras 34-36. Therefore, he contends, the CBSA did not act
unreasonably in ordering full forfeiture, since it had no discretion to estreat
a lesser amount.
[36]
The question of discretion aside, the respondent
further argues that the decision under review is reasonable. The applicants
concede that Nabil breached his conditions in the manner described in the
letters sent by the CBSA. Moreover, the CBSA gave notice of its position to the
applicants and received their submissions. It is clear from the record, the
Minister submits, that the CBSA considered their submissions before making a
final decision.
[37]
The respondent argues that the breach of Nabil’s
conditions was not technical or insignificant. It undermines the integrity of
the IRPA. Nabil breached his conditions deliberately. He committed
criminal behaviour by leaving the country under an assumed name with fraudulent
documents. The CBSA is not in a position to confirm that he has left the
country, nor can it lend credence to the applicants’ vague claim that he is
somewhere “in the Middle East”.
[38]
Pursuant to the Regulations, certain criteria
must be satisfied when enforcing a removal order. The Court has held that an
individual cannot unilaterally enforce a removal order by voluntarily leaving
Canada: Nagalingam v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness),
2012 FC 362 at paras 60-78. The Court confirmed in Ferzly that the CBSA
had acted reasonably in forfeiting the full amount of a bond after an
individual had breached his conditions by “effecting
his own removal”.
[39]
Whether or not the applicants are at fault for
the breach is of no consequence, the respondent submits. A refusal to enforce
guarantees where the guarantor asserts that he is not at fault would undermine
the usefulness of requiring guarantees. In this case, the breach of the release
conditions was severe enough to warrant forfeiture of the bonds. Even if the
CBSA officer had the discretion to order partial forfeiture (an argument that the
respondent rejects), the severity of the breaches would militate against a
reduction in the forfeited amount.
VII.
Analysis
[40]
The Court must first determine whether the
officer improperly fettered his discretion. The law is settled that fettering
discretion is a reviewable error. See Stemijon Investments Ltd v Canada
(Attorney General), 2011 FCA 299 at para 60:
[D]ecision-makers who have a broad
discretion under a law cannot fetter the exercise of their discretion by
relying exclusively on an administrative policy: Thamotharem, supra
at paragraph 59; Maple Lodge Farms, supra at page 6. An
administrative policy is not law. It cannot cut down the discretion that the
law gives to a decision-maker. It cannot amend the legislator’s law. A policy
can aid or guide the exercise of discretion under a law, but it cannot dictate
in a binding way how that discretion is to be exercised.
[41]
The old version of the policy manual in the
present matter expressly told officers that they held the discretion to forfeit
only a portion of the total amount of a deposit or guarantee. In Khalife
and Kang, I read section 49 of the Regulations together with the manual
as it stood at that time, concluding that officers erroneously fettered their
discretion if they asserted that they could not estreat any amount inferior to
the full amount.
[42]
The policy manual changed in February 2007 but
the legislation has remained the same. Has this change affected the scope of
discretion? The only case cited by either party which answers this question
directly says that it has. Indeed, in Domitlia, above, at paras 35-36,
Justice Beaudry wrote:
The respondent refers to the Guide and
specifies that before February 1, 2007, there was some discretion for officers,
who were able to require forfeiture of an amount less than the guarantee
provided.
Given that the condition was breached on May
12, 2010, the new directives must apply. In fact, since February 1, 2007,
officers no longer have the discretion to require forfeiture of an amount less
that the guarantee provided. Evidently, the officer did not commit an
error.
[Emphasis added]
[43]
In Hussain, above, at paras 10-12,
Justice Hughes acknowledged that changes to the policy manual do not have the
force of law. Yet when he discussed the scope of the officer’s discretion, at
para 16, Justice Hughes suggested that that discretion extended only so far as
to permit the officer to apply the old manual’s guidelines to the case before
him – because that case had arisen before the new manual’s publication.
[44]
The amount of forfeiture (full or partial) was
not at issue in Etienne. Justice Shore made no comment upon an officer’s
purported discretion to forfeit a partial amount as opposed to the full amount.
He allowed the application upon finding that the CBSA had breached the duty of
fairness by refusing to grant the bondsperson an extension of time to make
submissions. In so doing, Justice Shore suggested that the manual is
binding on officers with respect to the procedural protections they must afford
to affected parties: see especially paras 28-29.
[45]
The legislative text does not expressly mention
discretion to estreat a sum inferior to the total amount of a deposit or
guarantee. In the past, the policy manual expressly recognized the existence of
such discretion, a position endorsed by this Court in Khalife and Kang.
The manual now tells officers that they do not have discretion to estreat less
than the full amount. There can be no question that such manuals do not have
the force of law. As I see it, the real issue is whether the policy manual can
affect the scope of discretion in the face of legislative silence.
[46]
I am not inclined to agree with the respondent that
officers no longer have the discretion alleged by the applicants. It seems to
me that such a change would require legislative endorsement. It is not clear
how discretion may be granted by the manual to estreat all or none but not a
portion of the bond when that is not expressly authorized by the legislation. However,
in the circumstances of this case, it is not necessary for me to arrive at a
conclusion on that question. I would prefer to leave it open for a case in
which it squarely arises on the facts.
[47]
There is no indication in the record that the
officer believed that he lacked the ability to estreat a lesser fraction of the
bonds. The Minister has made arguments to that effect but he cannot speak on
behalf of the decision-maker. In the absence of any evidence to the contrary,
I infer that the CBSA officer decided that estreating the full amount was
appropriate in the circumstances. I would prefer to decide the case by focusing
on the reasonableness of that decision as opposed to the rule against fettering
discretion.
[48]
The applicants argue that the decision to
estreat the full amount is unreasonable because the officer ignored several
relevant factors. In particular, the applicants insist on two points: first,
Nabil’s breach was not serious because he gave effect to the removal order
against him; second, they were not at fault for his breach.
[49]
The officer did not explicitly respond to the
applicants’ arguments. Yet this does not mean that the Court must necessarily
quash his decision. If the ultimate outcome is reasonable in light of the
record, NL Nurses instructs the Court to supplement the officer’s
reasons and uphold his decision.
[50]
At the same time, the applicants are right that
it is not the Court’s task to correct erroneous reasoning or engage in
boundless speculation. From the many authorities cited by the applicants, I
have selected three passages which express the limits which the Court should
respect.
[51]
In Pathmanathan, above, at para 28,
Justice Rennie (then a member of this Court) explained:
Newfoundland Nurses does not authorize a court to rewrite the decision which was based
on erroneous reasoning. The reviewing court may look to the record in assessing
whether a decision is reasonable and a reviewing court may fill in gaps or
inferences reasonably arising and supported by the record. Newfoundland
Nurses is a case about the standard of review. It is not an invitation to the
supervising court to re-cast the reasons given, to change the factual
foundation on which it is based, or to speculate as to what the outcome would
have been had the decision maker properly assessed the evidence.
[Emphasis added]
[52]
In Komolafe, above, at para 11, it was
again Justice Rennie who commented:
Newfoundland Nurses allows reviewing courts to connect the dots on the page where the
lines, and the direction they are headed, may be readily drawn. Here, there
were no dots on the page.
[53]
Finally, in Korolove, above, at paras
45-46, Justice Strickland observed:
In my view, the Respondent in the present
case is essentially asking the Court to undertake its own assessment of the
record and, to paraphrase Kane, attribute a justification to the
Citizenship Judge. The Respondent’s submissions require the Court to examine
the record with a fine-tooth comb, pull out the relevant dates, undertake its
own calculation of the Applicant’s absences and assume that this constitutes
the justification underlying the Citizenship Judge’s conclusion. This is
precisely the exercise undertaken by the Respondent in its written submissions.
In my view, such ‘reverse-engineering’ of
the Citizenship Judge’s Decision crosses the line between supplementing and
substituting reasons.
[Emphasis added]
[54]
In the case at bar, the record and the
jurisprudence provide ample justification to the decision under review. By
upholding the decision, the Court would be merely filling in the gaps and
connecting the dots – a task which falls squarely within its mandate on
judicial review. It would not be “reverse engineering”
a decision with erroneous reasoning.
[55]
To begin, the applicants concede that Nabil
breached the conditions listed in the decision letters. Therefore, it cannot be
said that any error of fact tainted the officer’s decision.
[56]
Contrary to the applicants’ submissions, the
fact that Nabil left the country on his own initiative does not mitigate the
severity of his breach of conditions. The case law is unequivocal that a person
who is subject to a removal order and leaves Canada without the permission of
the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration does not thereby execute the order
issued against him. In Nagalingam, above, at paras 68-75, Justice
Russell summarized four authorities which stand for this principle: Mercier
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1986] FCJ No 739 (TD); Saprai
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1986] FCJ No 273 (TD); Bhawan
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1987] FCJ No 573 (TD);
and Raza v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] FCJ
No 1826 (TD).
[57]
Moreover, Justice Shore upheld a decision to
fully estreat a bond on similar facts in Ferzly. The applicant’s
boyfriend had been released from immigration detention on the condition that he
take a specific flight to Burkina Faso from the Montreal airport. Instead of
doing so, he went to the Ottawa airport and tried to take an airplane to Boston
but was arrested. The applicant argued that the cash bond she had posted should
be returned to her because her boyfriend had attempted to give effect to the
removal order. Justice Shore rejected this argument, finding that the
boyfriend’s unilateral attempt to leave the country amounted to a breach of
conditions and that, in the circumstances, the decision to estreat the deposit
was reasonable in light of the statutory purpose: see paras 25 and 34-35.
[58]
The applicants have not argued that these cases
are incorrect or distinguishable. They have merely asserted, without any jurisprudential
support, that a secret escape from the country with illegal documents amounts
to a technical or insignificant breach which actually promotes the proper
administration of the IRPA. The opposite view was reasonably open to the
officer.
[59]
The applicants’ second main argument is that the
bonds should not be estreated because they were not at fault for Nabil’s
flight. They extract this principle by analogy to the criminal law. To begin,
the propriety of the analogy is questionable. In Khalife, above, at
paras 27-38, I cited Uanseru and expressed a wariness to draw parallels
with the criminal law, due to the particular statutory provisions and purposes
of the immigration regime. The applicants’ argument that reliance on the
criminal law is now appropriate, because changes were made to the policy manual
in 2007, is not persuasive. The amended manual does not set out a process that
is any closer to the criminal process. Moreover, the underlying statutory and
regulatory provisions have not been amended. As such, I see no reason to
abandon the position I took in Khalife. The culpability of the
bondspersons should not be a primary consideration for a CBSA officer deciding
whether to estreat a bond.
[60]
In any event, I agree with the respondent that
the officer could reasonably form the opinion that Hossein and Soumayya were
not wholly without guilt. It is true that there is no evidence that they
facilitated his flight. Yet they knew that their son was supposed to reside
with his wife and respect a strict curfew. Louisa has sworn a statutory
declaration that she contacted Nabil’s parents as soon as she realized that he
was missing from their home. Consequently, Hossein and Soumayya should have
discovered their son’s disappearance within a day. Yet they and Louisa waited
three days before informing the CBSA, despite being aware that it was essential
that Nabil respect his conditions. Their alleged belief that Nabil’s life was
in danger does not render their behaviour more excusable. Moreover, they have
not shown the immigration authorities any corroborating evidence that Nabil is
outside of Canada or even told them where he is actually located, other than
offering the vague generality that he is somewhere in the Middle East. On these
facts, the conclusion that the applicants did not exercise due diligence was
reasonably open to the decision-maker.
[61]
Nabil’s purported willingness to meet with
Canadian authorities abroad to confirm his departure does not excuse his breach
of the conditions of his release nor his parents’ lack of diligence.
[62]
The facts and the jurisprudence point towards
the outcome reached by the officer. Although the applicants contend that he
ignored their submissions, it is more likely that he took them into account and
dismissed them because they found almost no support in the case law and the
record before him.
[63]
The applicants have not met the onus of
establishing a reviewable error. The decision to estreat the full amount of the
performance and cash bonds was reasonable in view of the facts and the law. Accordingly,
the application will be dismissed.
[64]
The parties were given an opportunity to propose
questions for certification. None were proposed.