Docket: IMM-4662-15
Citation:
2016 FC 1144
Ottawa, Ontario, October 14, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Simpson
BETWEEN:
|
MIRIAN
VASHAKIDZE
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The applicant has applied for judicial review of
a decision of the Immigration and Refugee Board, Immigration Division [ID] dated
September 30, 2015 [the Decision] in which the ID found the applicant to be inadmissible
to Canada pursuant to section 37(1)(b) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA] on the grounds of organized criminality.
[2]
The applicant is a 48 year old citizen of
Georgia and a permanent resident of Canada who has been here since 2001.
I.
Background
[3]
On June 6, 2011, at approximately 1:20 a.m., two
RCMP Constables discovered a parked vehicle on Hill Island, Ontario. Tamazi
Gechuashvili (T.G.) was inside the car. He said he was lost.
[4]
The Constables searched T.G.’s vehicle and
found, among other things, a patch kit for a rubber raft and a backpack
containing a letter belonging to a man named Robert Comeau. T.G. was arrested.
[5]
Shortly after discovering T.G., the Constables
were notified that the United States Border Patrol had intercepted three
individuals. One was Michael Robertson, a Canadian citizen. He admitted that
the two foreign nationals who accompanied him were to be smuggled into Canada.
He also said that there were individuals on the Canadian side waiting for a
signal to row across the St. Lawrence River to pick them up.
[6]
A canine search was organized and the applicant
and Robert Comeau were found hiding on the Canadian side of the river. They
were also arrested. A rubber raft, two paddles, a pump, and a small duffle bag
were found at their place of arrest. No fishing equipment was located during
this search.
[7]
When interviewed, Comeau admitted that he was to
be paid $3,000 for his part in the people smuggling. He also said that
Robertson was to be paid $1,200 and that T.G. led the operation. T.G. claimed
that he did not know Comeau or the applicant and maintained that he had been
lost. The applicant admitted that he knew Comeau through work and T.G. through
the Georgian community in Toronto, but he denied any wrong doing and claimed
that he was merely fishing.
[8]
On the American side, Robertson admitted that
he, Comeau, T.G. and the applicant had been smuggling the two foreign
nationals. Robertson had transported them from New York City to the border. He
claimed that T.G. was in charge of the operation and was to pay him $1,000. He
said that he and the applicant had previously brought T.G.’s daughter and a
male individual into Canada, and had also taken a young male into the United
States.
[9]
The Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness alleged that both T.G. and the applicant were inadmissible under section
37(1)(b) of the IRPA. The Minister successfully brought an application to join
their admissibility hearings.
[10]
The joint admissibility hearing was held before
a member of the ID on June 8 and 10, 2015. Neither the applicant nor T.G. gave
evidence. The evidence consisted of the testimony of RCMP Constable Hataley and
documentary evidence which included the statements given by Robertson and
Comeau.
[11]
In its Decision, the ID concluded that the
Minister had met his burden of establishing that both the applicant and T.G.
were inadmissible pursuant to section 37(1)(b) of the IRPA because reasonable
grounds existed for believing that both had engaged in organized criminality in
the context of international crime; specifically, the activity of people
smuggling. Deportation Orders were made against both T.G. and the applicant.
The ID relied on the Decision of the Federal Court of Appeal in Canada
(Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness) v JP, 2013 FCA 262,
368 DLR (4th) 524 [JP] which held that when considering inadmissibility
for people smuggling under the IRPA, there was no requirement to show that
people smugglers received a financial or other material benefit. Accordingly,
the ID did not address this issue in its Decision.
[12]
However, two months later, on November 27, 2015,
the Supreme Court of Canada released its Decision in B010 v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 58, [2015] 3 S.C.R. 704
[B010]. It overturned the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in JP,
and concluded that people smuggling, for the purpose of section 37(1)(a) of the
IRPA, only occurred if the smugglers received a financial or other material
benefit.
[13]
T.G. and the applicant made separate
applications for judicial review of the Decision. T.G.’s application was
decided by Mr. Justice Gleeson on March 31, 2016: see Gechuashvili v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 365. Mr. Justice Gleeson
found that the Decision was unreasonable because the ID had not made a finding
that T.G. had received a financial or other material benefit.
[14]
Mr. Justice Shore initially dismissed the
applicant’s application for leave and judicial review. However, he reconsidered
the matter following Justice Gleeson’s decision and granted the application for
leave.
II.
The Issues
[15]
The first issue is whether the Decision is
unreasonable because it does not address whether the applicant received a
financial or other material benefit for his people smuggling activity.
[16]
The second issue is whether a re-consideration
is necessary or whether, on the record before the ID, I can conclude that the
applicant was to be paid for his role in the people smuggling operation.
[17]
The third issue is whether the ID acted unreasonably
when it relied on the statements made by Robertson and Comeau.
III.
Discussion and Conclusions
[18]
Since the applicant had an outstanding
opportunity to apply for judicial review, a final decision about his
inadmissibility had not been made when the Supreme Court of Canada changed the
law in B010.
[19]
Because the common law has retrospective effect
in cases where final decisions have not been made, the applicant is entitled to
have his inadmissibility considered using the principles set forth by the
Supreme Court of Canada in B010.
[20]
This entitlement would normally require
reconsideration by the ID. However, counsel for the respondent submits that I
should supplement the Decision with a conclusion that there are reasonable
grounds to believe that the applicant was to be paid.
[21]
The Respondent submits that such a conclusion
would be supported by:
a)
Robertson’s statement that the applicant was a
participant in the people smuggling operation on June 6, 2011, and that the
applicant had smuggled people on earlier occasions;
b)
The fact that the applicant’s statement that he
was “fishing” was not credible given that he was
hiding in the dark with people smuggling equipment and without any fishing gear
in the company of an admitted people smuggler;
c)
The statements of Robertson and Comeau which
showed that all other participants were to be paid; and
d)
Evidence which suggested that the applicant
joined the people smuggling operation because he was short of money.
[22]
In other words, it is submitted that the
evidence in the record, which was accepted by the ID, provides reasonable
grounds to believe that the applicant participated in and would have been paid
for his role in the people smuggling operation.
[23]
In my view, although relevant evidence was in
the record, the ID was silent on a critical issue. It did not turn its mind to
the question of a financial or other material benefit because, at the time, by
reason of the decision of the Federal Court of Appeal in JP, there was
no requirement to do so. Since the issue never arose, it is my conclusion that
I should not supplement the Decision and that the question of a financial or
material benefit ought to be decided by the ID.
[24]
For these reasons, and because the applicant has
indicated through his counsel that he wishes to testify and call two other
witnesses on the question of whether he was to receive a financial or other
material benefit, I have concluded that a reconsideration is necessary.
However, it is to be limited as follows:
a)
The Member of the ID who made the Decision is to
preside on the reconsideration if she is available;
b)
Unless the presiding Member directs otherwise,
the reconsideration of the applicant’s inadmissibility for criminality is to
deal only with whether there are reasonable grounds to believe that the
applicant, as a participant in the people smuggling operation, was going to
receive a financial or other material benefit;
c)
The record before the ID in the earlier hearing is
to be evidence on the reconsideration and is not to be challenged;
d)
The applicant may cross-examine any respondent’s
witnesses and he may testify himself and call two witnesses who are to be T.G.
and Irina Berko; and
e)
The respondent may call further evidence and may
cross-examine the applicant and his two witnesses.
[25]
Lastly, I have reviewed the Decision (paras 39
to 51) as it describes the reasoning behind the weight the ID assigned to the
statements of Messrs. Robertson and Comeau, and have found no basis for
concluding that the treatment of the statements was unreasonable. This
conclusion is supported by section 173(c) of the IRPA which provides that the
ID is not bound by any legal or technical rules of evidence.
IV.
Certification
[26]
No questions were posed for certification for
appeal.