Docket: IMM-2549-14
Citation:
2015 FC 709
Ottawa, Ontario, June 4, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Gleason
BETWEEN:
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RUSUDAN TABAGUA
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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
[1]
The applicant, Rusudan Tabagua, seeks to set
aside the March 13, 2014 decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the
Immigration and Refugee Board [the RPD or the Board] in which the Board found
that the applicant was excluded from refugee protection by reason of serious
criminality.
[2]
For the reasons set out below, I have determined
that the Board’s decision must be set aside because the RPD’s exclusion
analysis cannot stand in light of the recent decision of the Supreme Court of
Canada in Febles v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 SCC 68,
[2014] 3 S.C.R. 431 [Febles].
I.
Background
[3]
To put this determination in context, it is
necessary to review the relevant facts that were before the RPD. The applicant
is a citizen of the Republic of Georgia, who fled that country due to an
alleged fear of violence at the hands of a member of the police force in
Georgia with whom she claims she had an extramarital affair.
[4]
The applicant first went to the United States of America in 1999, allegedly to have a break from this individual, and
travelled under her own passport. At this point she says she had not yet
decided to leave Georgia permanently and, indeed, voluntarily returned to Georgia in 2000. She says her husband was killed in an automobile accident in 2000 and that
the individuals responsible for the accident approached her lover, to try and
have him pressure her to stop making inquiries about the accident. When she
refused to do so, she says that her lover threatened and beat her, causing her
to seek to flee Georgia to return to the U.S. She claims that she was too
frightened to seek a U.S. visa in Georgia as she feared her lover was having
her watched and instead went to Moscow, where she purchased a false Russian
passport, issued under the name of Irina Khachirova. She obtained the requisite
U.S. visa under the false passport and returned to the U.S. in September of 2001, using the Khachirova passport. In early 2002, the applicant’s own
passport was returned to her by a friend, and, consequently, the applicant was
then in possession of two passports.
[5]
After she had received her own passport, the
applicant was charged with shoplifting in May 2002. She provided her name as Irina
Khachirova and a conviction was entered against her under this name. It is
unclear whether she provided the authorities with the Khachirova passport in
respect of these charges. The applicant received a small fine for this shoplifting
offence.
[6]
Later that year, in September 2002, the applicant
made an asylum claim with the U.S. authorities under her own name and
presumably provided them with her own passport. In 2005 she was again convicted
of and fined for shoplifting, this time in her own name. In 2009, the applicant
was deported from the U.S. to Georgia, and in 2010 she came to Canada and made a refugee claim here.
[7]
The applicant provided incomplete and inaccurate
information about her American convictions in her Personal Identification Form [PIF]
that she filed in support of her Canadian asylum claim. In the original PIF,
she referred only to having faced charges for (but not being convicted of)
shoplifting in 2002, and in her amended PIF referred only to the second
conviction, which she represented as being her first “defence”
(by which she presumably meant her first offence). Through questioning, the
Member discovered that the applicant had, in fact, received two convictions for
shoplifting in the U.S. and also learned that she had used a false name for
part of the time she was in the U.S. The hearing was therefore adjourned to
provide notice to the Minister, to allow the respondent to make representations
on the question of exclusion and to obtain additional information about the
applicant’s U.S. immigration history and convictions.
II.
The RPD’s Decision
[8]
Following two additional days of hearing, the
RPD issued the decision that is the subject of the present application for
judicial review. In this decision, the RPD confined its reasons to the issue of
exclusion and did not address the bona fides of the applicant’s asylum
claims (despite there being grounds to question her credibility as the
respondent correctly notes).
[9]
In terms of exclusion, the RPD held that there
were serious reasons for considering that the applicant had committed a serious
non-political crime outside of Canada prior to coming to Canada and was
therefore excluded from protection by virtue of section 98 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the IRPA] and Article
1F(b) of the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees,
July 28, 1951, [1969] Can TS No 6 [the Refugee Convention].
[10]
In reaching this determination, the Board
applied the test enunciated in Jayasekara v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2008 FCA 404, [2009] 4 FCR 164 [Jayasekara], which the Board held comported two
aspects: first, determining whether the offence if committed in Canada would
carry a maximum penalty of at least ten years’ imprisonment, in which event it
would presumptively be serious, and, second, analysing the elements of the
crime, the mode of prosecution, the penalty prescribed, the facts surrounding
the commission of the crime and any mitigating and aggravating factors.
[11]
The Board then went on to find that there were
serious reasons to consider that the applicant’s actions, had they been
committed in Canada, would carry a maximum penalty of at least ten years’
imprisonment. It focussed in this regard not on the shoplifting but rather on
the applicant’s use of the forged passport and of the fraudulent Khachirova
identity when she was arrested and convicted of shoplifting and held that such
actions would correspond to the offences set out in paragraph 57(b)(i) and subsection
403(1) and (2) of the Criminal Code of Canada, RSC 1985, c C-46, [Criminal
Code] — namely forgery of or uttering a forged passport and identity fraud.
The RPD found that these crimes are indictable offences and that, depending on
the offence in question, carry a maximum sentence of 10 to 14 years’
imprisonment. It thus held that the first branch of the Jayasekara inquiry
was satisfied.
[12]
In terms of the other Jayasekara factors,
the RPD focussed on four potentially aggravating factors, namely, the
applicant’s lack of candour about her convictions in her PIF, her use of a real
person’s name in connection with her first shoplifting conviction, her
provision to Citizenship and Immigration Canada of a police clearance from
Pennsylvania in her own name even though she was aware she had a criminal
record under her assumed Khachirova name and, finally, the fact she had
purposefully lied to the police in 2002 about her identity to avoid a
conviction in her own name when she no longer had any need to use the
Khachirova name as she had, by then, received her own passport. Based on these
aggravating concerns as well as the nature of her actions and their correspondence
to the crimes set out in paragraph 57(b)(i) and subsection 403(1) and (2) of
the Criminal Code, the Board concluded that the applicant had committed
a serious non-political crime outside Canada and was therefore excluded from
protection under section 98 of the IRPA and Article 1F(b) of the Refugee
Convention.
III.
The Impact of the Decision of the Supreme Court
of Canada in Febles
[13]
In its recent decision in Febles, the
Supreme Court of Canada made comments regarding the test applicable to the
determination of serious criminality under section 98 of the IRPA and
Article 1F(b) of the Refugee Convention that are determinative in this
case.
[14]
Prior to Febles, as my colleague Justice
de Montigny recently noted at para 32 of Jung v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 464 [Jung], “… the presumption that a crime is ‘serious’ under Article
1F(b) if, were it committed in Canada, it would be punishable by a maximum of
at least 10 years’ imprisonment, was consistently applied by the Courts …”.
The Supreme Court, however, significantly nuanced this proposition in Febles.
There, the majority stated as follows regarding how the seriousness of a crime is
to be ascertained:
[62] The Federal Court of Appeal in Chan
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2000] 4 F.C. 390
(C.A.), and Jayasekara has taken the view that where a maximum sentence
of ten years or more could have been imposed had the crime been committed in
Canada, the crime will generally be considered serious. I agree. However,
this generalization should not be understood as a rigid presumption that is
impossible to rebut. Where a provision of the Canadian Criminal Code,
R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, has a large sentencing range, the upper end being ten
years or more and the lower end being quite low, a claimant whose crime would
fall at the less serious end of the range in Canada should not be presumptively
excluded. Article 1F (b) is designed to exclude only those whose crimes are
serious. The UNHCR has suggested that a presumption of serious crime might be
raised by evidence of commission of any of the following offences: homicide,
rape, child molesting, wounding, arson, drugs trafficking, and armed robbery
(G. S. Goodwin-Gill, The Refugee in International Law (3rd ed. 2007), at p.
179). These are good examples of crimes that are sufficiently serious to
presumptively warrant exclusion from refugee protection. However, as indicated,
the presumption may be rebutted in a particular case. While consideration of
whether a maximum sentence of ten years or more could have been imposed had the
crime been committed in Canada is a useful guideline, and crimes attracting a
maximum sentence of ten years or more in Canada will generally be sufficiently serious
to warrant exclusion, the ten-year rule should not be applied in a mechanistic,
decontextualized, or unjust manner.
[Emphasis
added]
[15]
In Jung, Justice de Montigny set aside a
decision of the RPD that, like the decision in this case, was premised in large
part on the fact that the maximum punishment for the crimes in question was a
sentence of more than ten years’ imprisonment. He wrote as follows:
[48] At the end of the day, however,
the most egregious error of the Board member was her failure to take into
account what the Supreme Court considered a critical factor in Febles,
namely the wide Canadian sentencing range and the fact that the crime for which
the Applicant was convicted would fall at the less serious end of the range.
This consideration was quite relevant in the case at bar: the Canadian sentence
for fraud over $5,000 has a large sentencing range (0 to 14 years), and the
Applicant’s crime – fraud of $50,000 with a 10 month sentence – prima facie
falls at the low end of this range. The wide sentencing range and the
Applicant’s low actual sentence (not only was the actual sentence only two
years but it was suspended and the only jail time was 165 days pre-trial
custody) were clearly a most relevant factor in determining whether the crime
was serious.
[49] On that basis alone, the decision
of the Board ought to be quashed and the matter returned for reconsideration by
a different panel of the Board.
[16]
The Board’s reasoning in this case evinces the
same problems. Here, in assessing seriousness, the RPD looked only to the
maximum potential sentences and, indeed, erroneously stated that both crimes
were indictable offences.
[17]
In fact, the offence of identity theft, created
by section 403 of the Criminal Code, is a hybrid offence, in respect of
which the Crown may elect to proceed either by way of indictment or by way of
summary conviction. Section 403 of the Criminal Code provides in this
regard:
Identity fraud
403. (1) Everyone commits an offence who
fraudulently personates another person, living or dead,
(a) with intent
to gain advantage for themselves or another person;
(b) with intent
to obtain any property or an interest in any property;
(c) with intent
to cause disadvantage to the person being personated or another person; or
(d) with intent
to avoid arrest or prosecution or to obstruct, pervert or defeat the course
of justice.
[…]
(3) Everyone
who commits an offence under subsection (1)
(a) is guilty
of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term of not more
than 10 years; or
(b) is guilty of
an offence punishable on summary conviction.
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Fraude à l’identité
403. (1) Commet une infraction quiconque,
frauduleusement, se fait passer pour une autre personne, vivante ou morte :
a) soit avec
l’intention d’obtenir un avantage pour lui-même ou pour une autre personne;
b) soit avec
l’intention d’obtenir un bien ou un intérêt sur un bien;
c) soit avec
l’intention de causer un désavantage à la personne pour laquelle il se fait
passer, ou à une autre personne;
d) soit avec
l’intention d’éviter une arrestation ou une poursuite, ou d’entraver, de
détourner ou de contrecarrer le cours de la justice.
[…]
(3) Quiconque
commet une infraction prévue au paragraphe (1) est coupable :
a) soit d’un
acte criminel passible d’un emprisonnement maximal de dix ans;
b) soit d’une
infraction punissable sur déclaration de culpabilité par procédure sommaire.
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[18]
If the Crown were to elect to proceed by way of
summary conviction in a case of identity theft, the maximum sentence available
would only be 6 months of imprisonment, a fine of $5,000 or both by virtue of
section 787 of the Criminal Code. This is so as section 403 of
the Code does not prescribe a minimum sentence for identity theft when
the Crown elects to proceed by summary conviction. Section 787 of the Criminal
Code prescribes the foregoing as the maximum sentences for summary
conviction crimes where there is not a penalty specifically prescribed for the
offence.
[19]
As for the use of a forged passport, the maximum
sentence prescribed by section 57 of the Criminal Code is 14 years’
imprisonment (in respect of a forgery committed in respect of a Canadian
passport). However, as my colleague, Justice Mosley, noted in Almrei v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 1002, 247 ACWS
(3d) 650 (at para 48), “[t]he actual penalty that would
be imposed for such an offence is, of course, likely to be much less,
particularly for an offender without any prior criminal history in this
country.” The same might also be said of the offence of identity theft,
even if prosecuted by way of indictment.
[20]
Here, the RPD failed to discuss what penalty the
applicant might have received, had she been charged in Canada, and failed to
note that the only evidence of the actual use by the applicant of the forged
passport (as opposed to the use of the fraudulent Khachirova identity) was the
fact that the applicant used the forged passport to gain access to the U.S.
However, she claims she was required to do so to escape her persecutor. If
believed, this would constitute a mitigating factor that the Board did not
assess and that would also possibly have mitigated a sentence had the crime
been committed in Canada and had the applicant been charged with it.
[21]
As the RPD failed to undertake the type of
analysis that the Supreme Court mandated is required in Febles and
failed to assess the seriousness of the applicant’s conduct in light of the
range of sentences available, the Board’s decision must be set aside and the
matter remitted for reconsideration as occurred in Jung. Contrary to
what the respondent argues, the need for the type of analysis mandated by Febles
is not lessened by the fact that the applicant was not charged and therefore
was not sentenced. If anything, these facts would tend to show that the
applicant’s actions fall at the less serious end of the spectrum and therefore
that a sentence well below the maximum would likely have been imposed had the
applicant committed the offences and been charged in Canada.
[22]
The foregoing points should have been considered
by the Board and its failure to do so renders its decision unreasonable. As in Jung,
for much the same reasons, the Board’s decision in this case must be set aside.
[23]
Neither party suggested a question for
certification under section 74 of the IRPA and none arises in this case.