Docket: IMM-7866-14
Citation:
2015 FC 1187
Ottawa, Ontario, October 21, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Annis
BETWEEN:
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IRMA SAPIDA
INOCENTES
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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
I.
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for judicial review
pursuant to section 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA or the Act] of an Exclusion Order from the Immigration
Appeal Division [IAD] of the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada against
the Applicant, Irma Sapida Inocentes, under section 69(2) of the IRPA and
section 225 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations [IRPR].
The Applicant is seeking to have the decision quashed and referred back to a different
panel for reconsideration.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, the application is dismissed.
II.
Background
[3]
The Applicant, a citizen of the Philippines, entered
Canada on April 28, 2008 on a work permit issued under the Live-in Caregiver
program. Since May 2008, she has been solely employed by Ronnie Sarmiento [Mr.
Sarmiento].
[4]
In August 2010, the Applicant applied for
permanent residence under the Live-in Caregiver category. On September 20,
2012, her permanent residence application was refused based on the officer’s
findings that the Applicant made material misrepresentations that could have
induced an error in the administration of the IRPA and is therefore
inadmissible pursuant to section 40(1)(a) of the IRPA. The Officer concluded
that the Applicant “misrepresented herself on the history
and nature of her employment in order to make the program requirements (full-time
live-in caregiver) for the class which could have induced an error in the
administration of the IRPA, namely the granting of permanent residence.”
[5]
On July 30, 2013, an admissibility hearing was
held before the Immigration Division [the Board] of the Immigration and Refugee
Board. The Board concluded on November 19, 2013, that the Applicant was not
inadmissible because she “did not misrepresent herself
or withhold material facts.” The Board’s decision was appealed to the
IAD on December 13, 2013 by the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness. The appeal was granted and is the subject of this judicial
review.
III.
Impugned Decision
[6]
On November 4, 2014, the IAD issued an Exclusion
Order against the Applicant based on material misrepresentations she made on
the relationship with her employer and the financial circumstances of her
employment. The IAD concluded that the evidence relied on by the Applicant was
neither credible nor reliable.
[7]
The IAD found inconsistencies between the Applicant’s
testimony to the visa officer in Manila and her testimony before the IAD. The
Field Operations Support System [FOSS] notes from the interview in Manila, to
qualify for a live-in caregiver visa, indicated that the Applicant stated that
she was not related to her future employer, and only knew him through an agency.
Subsequently, the Applicant testified at the IAD hearing that she was indeed
related to her employer, Mr. Sarmiento, as he is married to her cousin. The IAD
concluded that the Applicant did not “satisfactorily
explain” why she claimed to have no relationship with her employer when
he is related to her by marriage.
[8]
The IAD further found that the Applicant
provided incomplete and inaccurate tax and banking records to support her
application for “permanent residency and an open work
permit under the live-in caregiver program.” The Applicant testified that
she was paid cash due to urgent requirements for her to send money for family
emergencies relating to her mother and brother. The IAD found no corroborating
evidence and concluded that the reasonable inference for cash payments was to
avoid the government tracing the payments. Furthermore, the Applicant’s cousin
and her employer, her cousin’s husband, all gave different versions of what
allegedly happened.
[9]
As a result, the IAD did not accept the
Applicant’s evidence and supporting witnesses as credible and reliable. It
concluded that the Applicant “misrepresented the
financial circumstances of her alleged employment which were material facts
relating to a relevant matter that induced or could have induced an error in
the administration of the IRPA.”
IV.
Legislative Framework
[10]
The following provisions of the IRPA are
applicable in these proceedings:
40. (1) A
permanent resident or a foreign national is inadmissible for
misrepresentation
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40. (1) Emportent
interdiction de territoire pour fausses déclarations les faits suivants :
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(a) for directly or indirectly misrepresenting or withholding
material facts relating to a relevant matter that induces or could induce an
error in the administration of this Act;
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a) directement ou indirectement, faire une présentation erronée
sur un fait important quant à un objet pertinent, ou une réticence sur ce
fait, ce qui entraîne ou risque d’entraîner une erreur dans l’application de
la présente loi;
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V.
Issue
[11]
The issue arising in this application is whether
the IAD’s decision to allow the appeal and render the Applicant inadmissible
for misrepresentation was reasonable.
VI.
Standard of Review
[12]
The IAD’s determination of whether the Applicant
misrepresented material facts is a matter of mixed fact and law that must be
assessed on the standard of reasonableness. So long as the IAD’s decision falls
within a range of reasonable, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in
respect of the facts and law and justified by transparent and intelligible
reasons, it is not subject to review (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC
9 at paras 47, 49).
VII.
Analysis
[13]
The Applicant argues that the IAD never
conducted an analysis of whether the misrepresentations were material. She
further argues that materiality only relates to the subject of the Section 44
report, which she characterizes as whether the Applicant actually worked as a
live-in caregiver. Accordingly, she argues that the fact that there may have
been a misrepresentations about her cousin being married to her employer or
that the financial information is not reliable are immaterial to whether on the
whole of the evidence it was demonstrated that the Applicant actually worked as
a live-in caregiver. Because the IAD failed to focus on the proper issue, a
reviewable error occurred and the decision should be set aside.
[14]
I reject this submission on a number of grounds.
First, on the basis of a fulsome analysis of the Applicant and her relatives’ financial
records, the IAD found that they were not credible and their evidence not
reliable. It therefore concluded that the Applicant misrepresented the
financial circumstances of the alleged employment which were material facts
relevant to a matter that induced or could have induced an error in the administration
of the IRPA. That conclusion is sufficient alone to decide that the Applicant
did not meet the issue, as she would narrowly define it, of demonstrating that
she actually worked as a live-in caregiver.
[15]
Second, I disagree that the Section 44 report
can be interpreted so narrowly as to limit the issue as to whether the
Applicant worked as a live-in caregiver. The report stated and the IAD concluded
that the Applicant misrepresented herself on “the
history and nature of her employment in order to meet the program requirements.”
The essence of the Applicant’s misrepresentation is that the nature of her
employment was one of an arms-length relationship, rather than being founded on
family relations. This distinction is fundamental as to how the immigration
officer would react in considering her application.
[16]
Even if the evidence established that she was actually
working as a live-in caregiver, the misrepresentation was sufficient for the
purposes of her being declared inadmissible. In other words, one cannot
misrepresent the nature of the employment relationship, whether innocent or
not, and thereafter prove that “no misrepresentation
occurred,” or that it is immaterial by conducting oneself in a proper
employment relationship. The issue of the risk of an error in the
administration of the Act must be determined at the time of the
misrepresentation, not afterwards.
[17]
That is so, because as Justice Tremblay-Lamer
stated in Sayedi v Canada (Minister of Cititzenship and Immigration),
2012 FC 420 at paras 23-24, the objective of section 40(1)(a) is to deter
misrepresentation and to maintain the integrity of the immigration process:
In determining
whether a misrepresentation is material, regard must be had for the wording of
the provision, and its underlying purpose.
Section 40(1)(a) is to be given a broad
interpretation in order to promote its underlying purpose: Khan v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2008 FC 512 at paragraph 25. The objective of this provision is to deter
misrepresentation and maintain the integrity of the immigration process – to
accomplish this objective the onus is placed on the applicant to ensure the
completeness and accuracy of his or her application. Section 40(1)(a) is
broadly worded to encompass misrepresentations even if made by another party,
without the knowledge of the applicant: [citation omitted]. The applicant
cannot misrepresent or withhold any material facts that could induce an error
in the administration of the Act.
[Emphasis added]
[18]
Similarly, Justice Scott
afforded section 40(1)(a) a broad interpretation in Kobrosli v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 757, stating at para 48 that “a risk of an error in the
administration of the IRPA is sufficient for paragraph 40(1)(a) to apply in
this case.” Misconstruing the nature of the relationship as one at arm’s
length as opposed to being one where family relationships are involved,
obviously raises a risk of an error in the administration of the Act.
[19]
I also reject the Applicant’s argument that it
is necessary for the decision-maker to carry out a materiality analysis when
the circumstances of the facts make it obvious that misrepresentation creates a
risk of error in the administration of the Act. The decision cited by the
Applicant, Koo v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2008
FC 931 at paragraph 29, would therefore not apply in these circumstances.
[20]
In that matter, the Court found that the
Applicant did not mislead Citizenship and Immigration authorities regarding his
identity because the record contained an extensive number of supporting
documents demonstrating that he had used both names throughout the file. This
also affected the materiality of the misrepresentation which was not obvious.
[21]
Here both the misrepresentation and its
materiality are clear. It is obvious that the nature of the employment
relationship would affect how the assessment would be carried out depending upon
the knowledge of whether it was one of arm’s length, or based on family
relations. Moreover, the misrepresentation was demonstrated as being material
to the administration of the Act. It gave rise to an investigation to determine
whether the Applicant and her alleged employer properly and consistently
documented the employment relationship, which they failed to do.
[22]
In these circumstances, there is no need to
conduct a formal materiality analysis. This would introduce a degree of
formalism into the administration of section 40(1)(a) that would undermine its
general objective of deterrence.
VIII.
Conclusion
The application is dismissed. No question is certified for appeal.