Docket: T-1954-14
Citation:
2015 FC 776
[UNREVISED ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario, June 22, 2015
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Gascon
BETWEEN:
|
ROGER CODERRE,
|
MADELEINE
CODERRE,
|
JOCELYN
CODERRE,
|
RICHARD
CODERRE,
|
ST-GERMAIN
TRANSPORT LTÉE,
|
LES IMMEUBLES
S.G.T. LTÉE AND
|
GESTION S.G.T.
LTÉE
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE INFORMATION
COMMISSIONER OF CANADA
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
In this case, applicants Roger Coderre, his
spouse, his two children and three companies controlled by him or a member of
his family filed an application for judicial review pursuant to section 18
of the Federal Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7, seeking a writ of mandamus
requiring the respondent, the Information Commissioner of Canada [the
Commissioner], to disclose to them the reports of the findings of various
investigations initiated by the Commissioner under the Access to Information
Act, RSC 1985, c A-1 [the AIA].
[2]
These investigations were launched by the
Commissioner in response to complaints submitted to her by the applications
after the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, now the Canada Revenue Agency
[CRA], refused to disclose certain records that they had requested.
[3]
For the reasons that follow, the application for
judicial review is dismissed.
II.
Facts
[4]
Applicant Roger Coderre is the spouse of
applicant Madeleine Coderre and the father of applicants Richard Coderre and
Jocelyn Coderre. Roger Coderre is also president of applicant St-Germain
Transport Ltée [SGT] and was acting president of applicant Gestions S.G.T. Ltée
[Gestions] before these two companies merged. SGT is a holding company, just as
Gestions was. Applicant Richard Coderre, meanwhile, is president of the third
company, applicant Les Immeubles S.G.T. Ltée [Immeubles].
[5]
The Commissioner is an independent agent of the
Parliament of Canada whose role is to enforce the AIA and investigate
complaints made to her, under the AIA, in respect of refusals by federal government
institutions to disclose a record or a part of a record.
[6]
On November 10, 2003, the applicants received
notices of reassessment made by the CRA pursuant to the Income Tax Act,
RSC 1985, c 1 (5th Supp.) [ITA], with regard to income declared by the
applicants for the years 1997 to 2000.
[7]
On January 16, 2014, six of the applicants made
a request to the CRA for access to records that the CRA had seized in its
investigation leading to notices of reassessment. On January 22, 2014, the
seventh applicant, Jocelyn Coderre, also made a similar request to the CRA for access
to records. These access requests pertained to [translation]
“[a]ll records in the possession of Revenue
Canada concerning the reassessments for the years 1997 to 2000”. In
addition, the applicants asked that certain records described in the requests be
given priority.
[8]
On February 28, 2014, the CRA gave notice,
pursuant to section 9 of the AIA, of an extension of the time limit to
respond to the applicants’ requests for access to records. By this notice of
extension, the CRA notified the applicants that it was extending the time limit
granted to it under the AIA to respond to their requests by an additional
180 days. Section 7 of the AIA provides that a government institution
that receives an access request is required to respond to it within
30 days, unless this time limit is extended.
[9]
On March 12, 2014, each of the applicants
submitted a complaint to the Commission, alleging that the length of the
extension declared by the CRA was excessive [extension complaints].
[10]
Then, between March 27 and August 6, 2014,
the CRA sent the applicants some of the records to which they had requested
access, including a portion of the records to which they had requested priority
access. However, the CRA had redacted these records in places, on various
grounds provided for in the AIA. All these records disclosed by the CRA thus
became the subject of a second series of five complaints by the applicants, on
the basis that several pages had been redacted or removed without justification
[exemption complaints].
[11]
The applicants submitted these five exemption
complaints to the Commissioner between April 2 and August 11, 2014.
[12]
On August 28, 2014, the CRA’s 180-day extension
came to an end. However, the CRA still did not disclose all the initially
requested records to the applicants.
[13]
On September 8, 2014, the applicants filled out
and submitted a third series of complaints, this time of the basis of a “deemed refusal to grant access” under section 10
of the AIA [deemed refusal complaints]. In these seven deemed refusal
complaints, the applicants alleged that the CRA had failed to give them access
to all the records described in their requests for access to records, despite
the extended time limit that the CRA had to do so.
[14]
On September 12, 2014, the applicants instituted
this application for judicial review by which they are seeking a writ of
mandamus requiring the Commissioner to give access, within 30 days of the
judgment, to reports of the findings of her investigations into all the
applicants’ complaints, of which there are now 19.
[15]
On November 5, 2014, the Commissioner sent the
CRA and each of the applicants the reports on her findings with regard to the
first series of seven extension complaints submitted on March 12, 2014.
The Commissioner’s investigation into the seven initial complaints having been
completed, this portion of this application for judicial review is now moot, so
there is nothing to be gained by hearing and dealing with it here (Nichol v
Canada (Privacy Commissioner), 2001 FCT 412, at paras. 6-7).
[16]
The Commissioner’s investigations regarding the
applicants’ other 12 complaints exemption or deemed refusal complaints,
however, have not been completed.
III.
Issue
[17]
The only issue raised in this case is whether
the applicants have met the necessary conditions for the Court to exercise its
discretion and issue a writ of mandamus ordering the Commissioner to provide
reports of the findings from her investigations into the various complaints
submitted by the applicants.
IV.
Applicable statutory provisions
[18]
The relevant provisions of the AIA are found in
sections 30, 34, 35, 37, 41, 62 and 63 of that Act. They read as follows:
Receipt and investigation of complaints
|
Réception des plaintes et enquêtes
|
30. (1) Subject to this Act, the
Information Commissioner shall receive and investigate complaints;
|
30. (1) Sous réserve des autres
dispositions de la présente loi, le Commissaire à l’information reçoit les
plaintes et fait enquête sur les plaintes :
|
(a) from persons who have been refused access to a record
requested under this Act or a part thereof;
|
a) déposées par des personnes qui se sont
vu refuser la communication totale ou partielle d’un document qu’elles ont
demandé en vertu de la présente loi;
|
(b) from persons who have been required to pay an amount under
section 11 that they consider unreasonable;
|
b) déposées par des personnes qui
considèrent comme excessif le montant réclamé en vertu de l’article 11;
|
(c) from persons who have requested access to records in
respect of which time limits have been extended pursuant to section 9 where they
consider the extension unreasonable;
|
c) déposées par des personnes qui ont
demandé des documents dont les délais de communication ont été prorogés en
vertu de l’article 9 et qui considèrent la prorogation comme abusive;
|
(d) from persons who have not been given access to a record or
a part thereof in the official language requested by the person under
subsection 12(2), or have not been given access in that language within a
period of time that they consider appropriate;
|
d) déposées par des personnes qui se sont
vu refuser la traduction visée au paragraphe 12(2) ou qui considèrent comme
contre-indiqué le délai de communication relatif à la traduction;
|
(d.1) from persons who have not been given access to a record
or a part thereof in an alternative format pursuant to a request made under
subsection 12(3), or have not been given such access within a period of time
that they consider appropriate;
|
d.1) déposées par des personnes qui se
sont vu refuser la communication des documents ou des parties en cause sur un
support de substitution au titre du paragraphe 12(3) ou qui considèrent comme
contre-indiqué le délai de communication relatif au transfert;
|
(e) in respect of any publication
or bulletin referred to in section 5; or
|
e) portant sur le
répertoire ou le bulletin visés à l’article 5;
|
(f) in respect of any other matter relating to requesting or
obtaining access to records under this Act.
|
f) portant sur toute autre question
relative à la demande ou à l’obtention de documents en vertu de la présente
loi.
|
Marginal note: Complaints submitted on behalf of
complainants
|
Note marginale : Entremise de
représentants
|
(2) Nothing in this Act precludes the Information Commissioner from
receiving and investigating complaints of a nature described in subsection
(1) that are submitted by a person authorized by the complainant to act on
behalf of the complainant, and a reference to a complainant in any other
section includes a reference to a person so authorized.
|
(2) Le Commissaire à l’information peut
recevoir les plaintes visées au paragraphe (1) par l’intermédiaire d’un
représentant du plaignant. Dans les autres articles de la présente loi, les
dispositions qui concernent le plaignant concernent également son
représentant.
|
Marginal note: Information Commissioner may initiate
complaint
|
Note marginale : Plaintes émanant du
Commissaire à l’information
|
(3) Where the Information Commissioner is satisfied that there are
reasonable grounds to investigate a matter relating to requesting or
obtaining access to records under this Act, the Commissioner may initiate a
complaint in respect thereof.
|
(3) Le Commissaire à l’information peut
lui-même prendre l’initiative d’une plainte s’il a des motifs raisonnables de
croire qu’une enquête devrait être menée sur une question relative à la
demande ou à l’obtention de documents en vertu de la présente loi.
|
. . .
|
[…]
|
Regulation of procedure
|
Procédure
|
34. Subject to this Act, the Information Commissioner may determine
the procedure to be followed in the performance of any duty or function of
the Commissioner under this Act.
|
34. Sous réserve des autres dispositions
de la présente loi, le Commissaire à l’information peut établir la procédure
à suivre dans l’exercice de ses pouvoirs et fonctions.
|
Investigations in private
|
Secret des enquêtes
|
35. (1) Every investigation of a complaint under this Act by the
Information Commissioner shall be conducted in private.
|
35. (1) Les enquêtes menées sur les
plaintes par le Commissaire à l’information sont secrètes.
|
Marginal note: Right to make representations
|
Note marginale
: Droit de présenter des observations
|
(2) In the course of an investigation of
a complaint under this Act by the Information Commissioner, a reasonable
opportunity to make representations shall be given to
|
(2) Au cours de
l’enquête, les personnes suivantes doivent avoir la possibilité de présenter
leurs observations au Commissaire à l’information, nul n’ayant toutefois le
droit absolu d’être présent lorsqu’une autre personne présente des
observations au Commissaire à l’information, ni d’en recevoir communication
ou de faire des commentaires à leur sujet :
|
(a) the person who made the complaint,
|
a) la personne qui a déposé la plainte;
|
(b) the head of the government institution concerned, and
|
b) le responsable de l’institution
fédérale concernée;
|
(c) a third party if (i) the Information Commissioner intends
to recommend the disclosure under subsection 37(1) of all or part of a record
that contains — or that the Information Commissioner has reason to believe
might contain — trade secrets of the third party, information described in
paragraph 20(1)(b) or (b.1) that was supplied by the third
party or information the disclosure of which the Information Commissioner can
reasonably foresee might effect a result described in paragraph 20(1)(c)
or (d) in respect of the third party, and (ii) the third party can
reasonably be located.
However no one is entitled as of right to be present during, to have
access to or to comment on representations made to the Information
Commissioner by any other person.
|
c) un tiers, s’il est possible de le
joindre sans difficultés, dans le cas où le Commissaire à l’information a
l’intention de recommander, aux termes du paragraphe 37(1), la communication
de tout ou partie d’un document qui contient ou est, selon lui, susceptible
de contenir des secrets industriels du tiers, des renseignements visés aux
alinéas 20(1)b) ou b.1) qui ont été fournis par le tiers ou des
renseignements dont la communication risquerait, selon lui, d’entraîner pour
le tiers les conséquences visées aux alinéas 20(1)c) ou d).
|
. . .
|
[…]
|
Findings and recommendations of
Information Commissioner
|
Conclusions et
recommandations du Commissaire à l’information
|
37. (1) If, on investigating a complaint
in respect of a record under this Act, the Information Commissioner finds
that the complaint is well-founded, the Commissioner shall provide the head
of the government institution that has control of the record with a report
containing
|
37. (1) Dans les
cas où il conclut au bien-fondé d’une plainte portant sur un document, le
Commissaire à l’information adresse au responsable de l’institution fédérale
de qui relève le document un rapport où :
|
(a) the findings of the investigation and any recommendations
that the Commissioner considers appropriate; and
|
a) il présente les conclusions de son
enquête ainsi que les recommandations qu’il juge indiquées;
|
(b) where appropriate, a request that, within a time specified
in the report, notice be given to the Commissioner of any action taken or
proposed to be taken to implement the recommendations contained in the report
or reasons why no such action has been or is proposed to be taken.
|
b) il demande, s’il le juge à propos, au
responsable de lui donner avis, dans un délai déterminé, soit des mesures
prises ou envisagées pour la mise en oeuvre de ses recommandations, soit des
motifs invoqués pour ne pas y donner suite.
|
Report to complainant and third parties
|
Compte rendu au plaignant
|
(2) The Information Commissioner shall, after investigating a
complaint under this Act, report to the complainant and any third party that
was entitled under subsection 35(2) to make and that made representations to
the Commissioner in respect of the complaint the results of the
investigation, but where a notice has been requested under paragraph (1)(b)
no report shall be made under this subsection until the expiration of the
time within which the notice is to be given to the Commissioner.
|
(2) Le Commissaire à l’information rend
compte des conclusions de son enquête au plaignant et aux tiers qui
pouvaient, en vertu du paragraphe 35(2), lui présenter des observations et
qui les ont présentées; toutefois, dans les cas prévus à l’alinéa (1)b), le
Commissaire à l’information ne peut faire son compte rendu qu’après
l’expiration du délai imparti au responsable de l’institution fédérale.
|
. . .
|
[…]
|
Review by Federal Court
|
Révision par
la Cour fédérale
|
41. Any person who has been refused
access to a record requested under this Act or a part thereof may, if a
complaint has been made to the Information Commissioner in respect of the
refusal, apply to the Court for a review of the matter within forty-five days
after the time the results of an investigation of the complaint by the
Information Commissioner are reported to the complainant under subsection 37(2)
or within such further time as the Court may, either before or after the
expiration of those forty-five days, fix or allow.
|
41. La personne
qui s’est vu refuser communication totale ou partielle d’un document demandé
en vertu de la présente loi et qui a déposé ou fait déposer une plainte à ce
sujet devant le Commissaire à l’information peut, dans un délai de
quarante-cinq jours suivant le compte rendu du Commissaire prévu au
paragraphe 37(2), exercer un recours en révision de la décision de refus devant
la Cour. La Cour peut, avant ou après l’expiration du délai, le proroger ou
en autoriser la prorogation.
|
. . .
|
[…]
|
Confidentiality
|
Secret
|
62. Subject to this Act, the Information Commissioner and every
person acting on behalf or under the direction of the Commissioner shall not
disclose any information that comes to their knowledge in the performance of
their duties and functions under this Act.
|
62. Sous réserve des autres dispositions
de la présente loi, le Commissaire à l’information et les personnes agissant
en son nom ou sous son autorité sont tenus au secret en ce qui concerne les
renseignements dont ils prennent connaissance dans l’exercice des pouvoirs et
fonctions que leur confère la présente loi.
|
Disclosure authorized
|
Divulgation autorisée
|
63. (1) The Information Commissioner may disclose or may authorize
any person acting on behalf or under the direction of the Commissioner to
disclose information
|
63. (1) Le Commissaire à l’information
peut divulguer, ou autoriser les personnes agissant en son nom ou sous son
autorité à divulguer, les renseignements :
|
(a) that, in the opinion of the Commissioner, is necessary to
|
a) qui, à son avis, sont nécessaires pour
:
|
(i) carry out an investigation under this Act, or
|
(i) mener une enquête prévue par la présente
loi,
|
(ii) establish the grounds for findings and recommendations contained
in any report under this Act; or
|
(ii) motiver les conclusions et
recommandations contenues dans les rapports et comptes rendus prévus par la
présente loi;
|
(b) in the course of a prosecution
for an offence under this Act, a prosecution for an offence under section 131
of the Criminal Code (perjury) in respect of a statement made under
this Act, a review before the Court under this Act or an appeal therefrom.
|
b) dont la divulgation
est nécessaire, soit dans le cadre des procédures intentées pour infraction à
la présente loi ou pour une infraction à l’article 131 du Code criminel
(parjure) se rapportant à une déclaration faite en vertu de la présente loi,
soit lors d’un recours en révision prévu par la présente loi devant la Cour
ou lors de l’appel de la décision rendue par celle-ci.
|
[emphasis added]
|
[nos soulignements]
|
V.
Parties’ arguments
[19]
The applicants submit that they should have
received the Commissioner’s reports on the findings regarding the complaints by
now, and that it is clearly unreasonable and contrary to the principles of
natural justice that they have not yet received them. According to the
applicants, the Commissioner’s failure to disclose these reports prevents them
from filing an application for judicial review, pursuant to section 41 of
the AIA, of the CRA’s decisions to refuse to disclose certain information and
records to them under statutory exemptions in the Act.
[20]
According to section 41 of the AIA, making
a complaint to the Commissioner and receiving a report on the results of her
investigation are conditions precedent to being able to apply for judicial
review of a government institution’s refusal to disclose a record or part
thereof (Statham v Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 2010 FCA 315; Whitty
v Canada (Attorney General), 2013 FC 595). The applicants state that, if
the Commissioner were given an extension for disclosing her reports, the
disclosure could end up not being made until such time as the reports would no
longer be of any relevant use to the applicants. In such circumstances, argue
the applicants, this would be a clear case allowing a writ of mandamus to be
issued, since the conditions established by the case law would be met (Apotex
Inc v Canada (Attorney General), [1994] 1 FC 742 (FCA), aff’d [1994] 3 SCR
1100 [Apotex]; Nautica Motors Inc c Canada (Minister of National
Revenue), 2002 FCT 422).
[21]
More specifically, the applicants submit that
they have proved the existence of their right and have already given the
Commissioner more than reasonable time; that the Commissioner’s power under the
AIA is fettered and non-discretionary; that they have no other recourse but
this application for mandamus; and that the balance of convenience is in their
favour.
[22]
In their oral submissions to the Court, the applicants
also argue that the delay in receiving the reports on the Commissioner’s
findings is unreasonable when compared with the time usually involved in such
cases. This situation therefore meets, according to the applicants, the
criteria laid down by the Supreme Court in Blencoe v British Columbia (Human
Rights Commission), 2000 SCC 44 [Blencoe] to establish that an
administrative agency’s delay is unreasonable. In fact, the applicants note
that the Commissioner’s silence prevents them from even knowing what stage has
been reached in processing their complaints and that the Commissioner has given
no explanation for the slow progress of her investigations.
[23]
The Commissioner, in contrast, states that the
applicants have not shown that the necessary conditions for issuing a writ of
mandamus, as set out in Apotex, have been met in this case. According to
the Commissioner, these criteria are cumulative and must be strictly met (Rocky
Mountain Ecosystem Coalition v Canada (National Energy Board) (1999), 174
FTR 17 [Rocky Mountain]). The Commissioner notes that she did not
refuse, expressly or implicitly, to investigate the applicants’ complaints or
disclose her reports; this is simply a situation where her investigations are
still in progress and have not yet been completed. Given the nature of the
investigation process required under the AIA and the various steps that the Act
imposes, the Commissioner submits that the delays in this case are not
unreasonable.
[24]
Moreover, according to the Commissioner, there
is another avenue available to the applicants (under the ITA) to directly
obtain access to the CRA records they requested under the AIA, and they have
not shown that the balance of convenience favours issuing the order sought.
[25]
The Commissioner points out that, with regard to
the seven deemed refusal complaints, the application for judicial review filed
by the applicants is clearly premature because it was instituted even before
the applicants received confirmation that these complaints had been received by
the Commissioner. Finally, the Commissioner submits that under the AIA, the
applicants do not have an acquired right to receive reports on the findings of
her investigations, their right being limited to requesting, through a
complaint, that the Commissioner conduct an investigation where a government
institution has denied access to certain records.
VI.
Analysis
[26]
The conditions that an applicant must meet to
satisfy the Court that a writ of mandamus may issue were established by the
Federal Court of Appeal in Apotex. These conditions can be summarized as
follows in respect of the exercise of a fettered, non-discretionary power such
as that of the Commissioner under the AIA:
1.
There must be a public legal duty to act;
- The duty must be
owed to the applicant;
3. There is a clear right to performance of that duty, in particular:
a.
The applicant has satisfied all conditions
precedent giving rise to the duty;
b. There was (i) a prior demand for performance of the duty; (ii) a
reasonable time to comply with the demand unless refused outright; and (iii) a
subsequent refusal which can be either expressed or implied, e.g. unreasonable
delay;
- No other
adequate remedy is available to the applicant;
- The order sought
will be of some practical value or effect;
- The Court in the
exercise of its discretion finds no equitable bar to the relief sought;
- On a “balance of convenience” an order in the nature
of mandamus should (or should not) issue.
[27]
Mandamus is an extraordinary remedy. The
criteria for mandamus are cumulative, and all the conditions set out in Apotex
must be strictly met before a writ of mandamus will issue (Rocky Mountain,
at para. 30).
[28]
Given the cumulative nature of these conditions,
the application for judicial review in this case can be disposed of by
considering the third condition mentioned above, namely, the existence of “a clear right to performance of that duty”, which
includes the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the delay in performing the
duty. I am of the opinion that, in this case, the applicants have not met this
condition precedent to issuing a writ of mandamus against the Commissioner. The
Commissioner has not breached the duty imposed on her by the AIA, and there has
been no unreasonable delay in handling the applicants’ complaints.
[29]
I note with regard to the five exemption
complaints that the first was filed on April 2, 2014, while the last is
dated August 11, 2014. The seven deemed refusal complaints, meanwhile, are
all dated September 8, 2014. When the application for judicial review was
filed by the applicants on September 12, 2014, the time elapsed since the
date of the first exemption complaint was therefore a little more than five
months, and barely four days for the more recent deemed refusal complaints. At
the date of this judgment, the time elapsed since the applicants’ various
complaints were filed with the Commissioner varied from a minimum of a little
more than 9 months for the most recent one to a maximum of a little more
than 14 months for the oldest one.
A.
Lack of refusal by Commissioner
[30]
The evidence in the record shows that the
Commissioner did start an investigation into the applicants’ complaints, as
prescribed by section 30 of the AIA, and that there was no refusal to
perform this duty on her part. Indeed, the Commissioner’s investigations into
the applicants’ complaints are still in progress and are not yet completed, be
it for the exemption complaints or for the deemed refusal complaints. Moreover,
there is nothing to indicate or suggest that the Commissioner is not pursuing
these investigations.
[31]
As for the duty to report the findings of her
investigations, as provided in subsection 37(2) of the AIA, this duty is
triggered only in cases where, as per subsection 37(1) of the AIA, the
Commissioner “finds that the complaint [in respect of a
record] is well-founded”, which cannot happen until the Commissioner’s
investigation into the complaint in question has been completed.
[32]
It should be noted that the AIA does not specify
or impose a time limit for the Commissioner to complete her investigations and issue
the reports on the findings of her investigations under section 37 of the
Act. Moreover, the AIA does not contain any provisions imposing a duty of care
on the Commissioner in conducting her investigations or issuing her reports.
Finally, section 34 of the AIA expressly provides that the Commissioner
alone determines the procedure to be followed in the performance of her duties
and functions.
[33]
The Commissioner not only did not refuse to
perform her duties under the AIA, but also followed, in respect of the
applicants’ complaints, the procedure and requirements prescribed by the AIA
for conducting her investigations.
[34]
The investigation process established in the AIA
for complaints such as those filed by the applicants has numerous steps and
imposes multiple duties on the Commissioner, such as the duty to conduct
investigations in private (section 35) or to give the complainant or the
government institution an opportunity to make representations (section 35)
before making findings and, if necessary, discussing them with the government
institution (section 37). It is only at the end of this entire process
that the Commissioner can close her investigation and forward the report on her
findings to the complainant under section 37 of the AIA.
[35]
Incidentally, the Federal Court of Appeal has
qualified the investigative powers of the Commissioner as the “cornerstone” of the access to information system in Canada
(Canada (Information Commissioner) v Canada (Minister of National Defence)
(1999), 240 N.R. 244, at para. 27; Statham v Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation, 2009 FC 1028, at para. 18).
[36]
The evidence therefore clearly demonstrates that
the application for judicial review filed by the applicants is premature
because the Commissioner needs more time to complete her investigation into
their complaints before being able to make the reports on her findings.
[37]
This Court has also stated, in the context of an
application for permanent residence under Canadian immigration legislation,
that reasonable time must be given to the authorities to complete their
investigation, review and analyze the facts of the case (Hechavarria v
Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2010 FC 767,
at para. 16). When the request that is the subject of an application for
mandamus is still being processed and the file is progressing, as is the case
here, there is no denying that one of the conditions for issuing a writ of
mandamus has not been met since there has been no categorical refusal on the
part of the administrative body to deal with the applicant’s request.
[38]
Finally, I note not only that the applicants’
complaints are still in the process of being dealt with by the Commissioner,
but that the delay in dealing with the complaints will in no way deprive the
applicants of their right to institute an application for judicial review,
pursuant to section 41 of the AIA, of any future decision that the CRA
might make to refuse to give them access to certain records following the
Commissioner’s investigation report. Indeed, the time limit for bringing an
application under section 41 does not start to run until the report on the
Commissioner’s findings has been received.
[39]
Moreover, as the Commissioner notes, it is
possible that, once her report has been completed and her reports and
recommendations have been given to the CRA, the government institution may
decide to give the applicants the records to which they have requested access.
If this does not happen, the applicants will then be able to apply for judicial
review of the CRA’s refusal to give access to these records. In either case, it
is clear that the time the Commissioner takes to process the applicants’
complaints and issue the reports on the findings of her investigations is not prejudicial
to the applicants.
[40]
This is not a situation where the applicant has
suffered significant prejudice because of the delay, such that this delay could
be called unreasonable (Vaziri v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2006 FC 1159, at para. 52 [Vaziri]; Blencoe, at para. 101).
B.
No unreasonable delay
[41]
It remains to be determined, however, whether
the time it has taken, up to now, to complete the investigations into the
applicants’ complaints and issue the reports on the Commissioner’s findings can
be considered to be an unreasonable delay.
[42]
In Conille v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), [1999] 2 F.C. 33, at para. 23 [Conille], the
Federal Court established that the following three conditions must be met for a
delay to be considered unreasonable: the delay has been longer than the
necessary delay normally required by the nature of the process and for
conducting the proceedings in question; the applicant and his or her counsel
are not responsible for the delay; and the administrative tribunal has not
provided satisfactory justification for the delay.
[43]
It should be added that, as the Supreme Court
stated in Blencoe, at para. 122, the determination of whether a
delay has become inordinate depends on, among other things, the nature of the
case and its complexity, the facts and issues, the purpose and nature of the
proceedings.
[44]
It is common ground that the applicants and
their legal counsel are not responsible for the delay.
[45]
However, based on the analysis of the evidence
in the record and considering the provisions of the AIA, I am of the opinion
that the applicants have not shown that the delay in processing their
complaints exceeds the time required for the Commissioner to conduct an
investigation. Moreover, the Commissioner has provided satisfactory
justification for the delay in processing the applicants’ complaints.
[46]
Indeed, a maximum delay of a little more than
5 months up to the date this application for judicial review was
instituted (or a little more than 14 and a half months up to the date of this
judgment) cannot be a delay that exceeds what the nature of the process under
the AIA requires, prima facie. Given all the steps required by the AIA
investigation process, I am of the opinion that the delay in completing the
investigation into the applicants’ complaints and preparing the reports on the
findings is by no means unreasonable.
[47]
According to the evidence adduced by the
Commissioner, the investigations into the applicants’ complaints are taking no
more time than what the Commissioner usually requires in such cases. The
reports submitted by the Commissioner state, among other things, that in
2013–2014, 63% of the complaints received were settled within nine months of
being filed, which means that 37% of the complaints required an investigation
exceeding nine months. On the whole, the median time for settling a complaint
was approximately six and a half months from the date of filing. I acknowledge
that the statistics that the Commissioner relies on are general in nature and
do not contain precise data that more specifically address times for processing
complaints relating to CRA activities. However, there is nothing in the
evidence or in the applicants’ submissions to suggest that the situation with
CRA would be any different from the overall reality experienced by the totality
of government institutions named in complaints received by the Commissioner.
[48]
While average processing times on their own are
not necessarily determinative of acting within a reasonable time, such averages
give a benchmark from which the Court may assess delay in a particular file (Tumarkin
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 915, at para. 18).
In the case before us, the delays in processing the applicants’ complaints,
which range from a minimum of a few days to a little more than five months up
to the date the applicants filed the application for judicial review, are
shorter than the median processing time experienced by the Commissioner for
processing the complaints she receives. What is more, if we look at the lengths
of these delays in relation to the date of this judgment (which delays then
range from a little more than 9 months to a maximum of a little more than
14 months), they still fall within a category (that of investigations
requiring more than 9 months) that represents more than a third of the
complaints received and processed by the Commissioner.
[49]
The Commissioner also referred to the volume of
complaints that she must process in a fiscal year (which is growing) and to the
limited resources available to her to carry out her responsibilities (which,
according to the 2014–2015 Plans and Priorities, should likely result in longer
times for conducting her investigations). Although this is a contextual factor
to consider, I nonetheless note that delays attributable to a government
institution’s limited resources or to a growing volume of complaints cannot be
considered as an explanation that could justify a delay that would otherwise be
unreasonable (Dragan v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2003] 4 F.C. 189, at para. 57 [Dragan]).
[50]
It is also important to place the longer
investigation time in the more specific context of the complaints filed by the
applicants. Several of the complaints concern the CRA’s application of
exclusions and exemptions and the redactions that the government institution
made in certain requested records. Such complaints require a more onerous
process by which the Commissioner must look at the records page by page and
hold discussions with the CRA to determine whether the exemptions relied on by
the government institution to refuse to disclose the information redacted or
deleted are justified and comply with the provisions of the AIA. This is an
additional factor supporting the conclusion that the delay is not unreasonable
in this case.
[51]
All these circumstances provide a reasonable
explanation for the delay in the Commissioner’s process for investigating the
applicants’ complaints, and thus meet the third condition of the legal test set
out in Conille, namely, a satisfactory explanation for the
administrative body’s delay.
[52]
I also note that the delays in this case,
ranging from a few days to a maximum of a little more than 14 and a half months
depending on the reference date used, are significantly less than many other
cases where this Court has recognized, in citizenship and immigration cases,
that the time that the government institution concerned spent processing
applications was reasonable (Vaziri, at para. 48; Dragan, at
para. 57; Conille, at para. 23). Indeed, in those cases, the
time to process the applications exceeded three or even four years. Similarly,
in Ashley v Canada (Commissioner of Competition), 2006 FC 459, the
applicants sought a writ of mandamus requiring the Commissioner of Competition
to complete an inquiry commenced pursuant to the Competition Act, RSC 1985,
c C-34. The applicants alleged that the Commissioner had unreasonably
delayed in completing his inquiry. The time between the beginning of the
inquiry and the filing of the application for judicial review was nearly
17 months in that case, and the Court nevertheless concluded that the
applicant had not shown that the Commissioner had delayed in conducting his
inquiry.
[53]
Moreover, the Commissioner argued in her
submissions that granting a writ of mandamus in these circumstances would be
contrary to Parliament’s intent and the scheme of the AIA. I agree. The AIA
does indeed provide for a two-level, independent review process for government
institution decisions to refuse to give access to records: the Commissioner is
the first level, and this court will intervene only at the second, after the
investigation initiated by the Commissioner and the notice issued by her
regarding the position taken by the government institution (Blank v Canada (Department
of Justice), 2009 FC 1221, at para. 26).
[54]
The system set up under the AIA therefore
provides that, after a government institution decides to refuse to give access
to a record, it is up to the Commissioner to investigate to determine whether
the federal agency’s position complies with the law. Issuing a writ of mandamus
while this investigation is still unfinished would put an end to the
Commissioner’s investigation and short-circuit the AIA process before the
Commissioner could report her findings regarding the refusal to disclose
information. This is a power that Parliament specifically gave to the
Commissioner, and it is not this Court’s place, in the context of an
application for judicial review, to supplant the Commissioner in regard to this
determination. In such a case, the Court’s intervention is not warranted.
[55]
Judicial review by this Court (pursuant to
section 41 of AIA) will remain as a remedy available to the applicants
should the government institution in question here ultimately refuse to
disclose the requested information after they receive the Commissioner’s
investigation report.
[56]
The Commissioner adds that she cannot provide
any more details or adduce in evidence any specific information regarding the
state of advancement of her investigations into the applicants’ complaints
because of section 62 of the AIA, which requires the Commissioner to
protect the confidentiality of the information she handles and not disclose any
information that comes to her knowledge in the performance of her duties and
functions. According to the Commissioner, this section prevents her from
disclosing any information whatsoever regarding these investigations. In light
of the conclusion I have reached regarding the reasonableness of the delay in this
case, there is no need for the Court to determine the scope of section 62 to
conclude that the applicants’ mandamus application must be rejected.
[57]
I note, however, that the Supreme Court stated
in Blencoe that the reasonableness of a delay must be assessed in
relation “to the inherent time requirements of the
matter before the particular administrative body”, which includes the
legal and factual complexities of the case (including “the
need to gather large amounts of information or technical data”) (at para. 160).
To the extent that a contextual analysis must be conducted to determine whether
a delay is reasonable, general information on the magnitude of the
investigatory work required in a particular case (in terms, for example, of the
number of records or pages to be examined) could therefore become an important
fact in explaining or justifying a longer than normal delay in a particular
investigation.
VII.
Conclusion
[58]
Given that the Commissioner did not refuse to
perform her duties to investigate and to report on her findings regarding the
investigation into the applicants’ complaints, that the investigations into
these complaints are still active and ongoing, and that the delay in completing
the investigations initiated by the Commissioner is reasonable, I find that the
applicants have not met the required conditions for a writ of mandamus to issue.
[59]
The Court, exercising its discretion, is
therefore not inclined to issue the writ of mandamus sought, and this
application for judicial review filed by the applicants is dismissed.