Docket: T-1613-15
Citation:
2016 FC 375
Toronto, Ontario, April 5, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Diner
Docket: T-1613-15
|
BETWEEN:
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Applicant
|
and
|
MONSURAT
ADEDOLAPO BALOGUN
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
BACKGROUND
[1]
This is a judicial review of a decision by a
Citizenship Judge [the Judge] dated August 26, 2015. In that decision, the
Judge found that the Respondent met the residence requirements under paragraph
5(1)(c) of the Citizenship Act, RSC 1985, c-29 [the Act] and approved
her application for citizenship.
[2]
Briefly, the Respondent is a petroleum engineer
from Nigeria and a permanent resident of Canada. She submitted her citizenship
application on April 14, 2014. There were absences and inconsistencies in her
application. These were flagged by a Citizenship Officer in a File Preparation
and Analysis Template [FPAT] completed February 18, 2015. As a result of that
FPAT analysis and of various concerns raised about residency period, including
her work, travel and medical history, the Judge held a lengthy hearing [the Hearing]
on August 11, 2015.
[3]
Ultimately, the Judge found that the Respondent had
sufficiently explained the concerns about her residency. Both at the Hearing
and in a subsequent Affidavit, the Respondent addressed the issues raised by
the Judge, including: her reasons for spending time in the U.S.; her L-1 “intracompany” work authorization, maternity leave and
subsequent resignation from her employer in the U.S.; her reliance on travel
from U.S. airports; and the birth of her children in the U.S. She also
explained related points such as the Canadian visas she had obtained; the
details of her Nigerian passports; and a discrepancy between the residency
questionnaire she completed and her entry stamps. The Respondent also addressed
questions raised about her OHIP claim history and various periods of non-use; her
PR card history; her receipt of a diploma from a British Columbia-based institution
when she claimed to be living in Ontario; and her living arrangements in
Brampton, Ontario with her extended family before purchasing a home there.
Finally, she provided explanations for the work status of her husband, a
Canadian citizen, and his ability to telework as an IT project manager.
II.
ANALYSIS
[4]
A citizenship judge’s assessment of whether an
individual has met the residency requirements under the Act is reviewable on a
standard of reasonableness (Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v
Abdulghafoor, 2015 FC 1020 at para 15; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Matar, 2015 FC 669 at para 11; Hussein v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 88 at para 10). As such, this Court must
approach this decision with deference, and with this guidance in mind, the
Applicant has failed to persuade the Court that the Judge’s decision should be
disturbed.
[5]
Citizenship judges are the primary arbiters of
credibility when it comes to citizenship hearings. This Court is not and so
should defer when credibility is at issue. Such deference is warranted because
citizenship judges conduct their credibility assessments through a hearing, and
this Court unfortunately does not have a transcript or written record of this
hearing. As Justice Rennie – then of this Court – stated in Martinez-Caro v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 640 at para 46:
Citizenship Court
judges are unquestionably better situated as triers of fact and assessors of
credibility. They are better situated to make the factual determination as to
whether the threshold question of the existence of “a residence”, has been
established. They are unquestionably better situated to determine whether
exigent circumstances exist and to make recommendations under subsection 5(4)
of the Act. These are matters of proof requiring the production and
assessment of evidence and the hearing of testimony. It is in this regard
that deference is properly accorded.
[6]
In this case, the Judge interviewed the
Respondent for “a lengthy period”, identified
credibility as a “major issue”, found the
Respondent credible, and ultimately concluded that she met the quantitative
residency test. Credibility determinations, particularly when there is viva
voce evidence given, invariably attract a heightened measure of deference. I
can see no reason to diverge from that well-established axiom.
[7]
Furthermore, as Justice Gascon recently wrote in
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Suleiman, 2015 FC 891 at para 23
[Suleiman]:
A decision-maker
like a citizenship judge is deemed to have considered all the evidence on the
record (Hassan v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[1992] FCJ No 946 (FCA) at para 3). A failure to mention an element of evidence
does not mean that it was ignored or that there was a reviewable error. In this
case, the judge has also had the benefit of a long hearing with Mr. Suleiman,
for which there is no transcript to contradict the evidence on the record or
the affidavit filed by Mr. Suleiman. The decision of the citizenship judge
evidently took into account the oral evidence provided by Mr. Suleiman.
[8]
Justice Gascon went on to explain that while
there is a positive obligation on citizenship applicants to provide true,
correct and complete information and to refrain from making false declarations,
this does not mean that corroborative evidence is required on every single
element. Rather, it is the responsibility of the Judge, taking the context into
consideration, to determine the extent and nature of the evidence required (Suleiman
at para 27; see also Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v
El Bousserghini, 2012 FC 88 at para 19).
[9]
In the present case, the Judge accepted the
evidence of the Respondent and wrote a complete set of reasons. Those reasons
may not have been perfect, but they are more than adequate, and, it is not this
Court’s role to intrude on that basis. Nor is it this Court’s role to reweigh
that evidence to come to a different conclusion (Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) v Lee, 2013 FC 270 at para 48),
particularly when that conclusion is based on testimony provided during a
lengthy hearing in which the Judge focused specifically on a list of concerns
enumerated by a Citizenship Officer in an FPAT. Indeed, the Judge even provided
further opportunity for post-hearing clarifications, of which the Respondent availed
herself, both in the form of a detailed Affidavit and in accompanying
submissions from her counsel. As the Judge wrote,
All of the
concerns previously listed were brought to the attention of Ms. Balogun and her
legal representative during the 11 Aug. 2015 hearing. They addressed some of
them during the hearing while they asked [for] a few days to collect more
information and forward them to me during the next ten days… Ms. Balogun
addressed my concerns in an affidavit and a presentation letter from her
lawyer.
(AR, p 8)
[10]
Certainly deference does not mean blind
adherence to the result or carte blanche immunity for the Judge: where reasons
are deficient, inadequate or unjustifiable and the outcome falls outside of the
range of acceptable outcomes, they will not stand (see e.g. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration) v Bayani, 2015 FC 670 paras 31; and Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Saad, 2015 FC 245 at paras 22-23).
[11]
In this case, however, I find that the Judge
provided ample reasons as to the facts to be distinguishable from those cases. The
decision displayed all the markers of justifiability, transparency,
intelligibility, and adequacy of reasons that define reasonableness.
[12]
I make two observations by way of obiter
in closing. First, since no transcript or recording is provided to this Court of
citizenship hearings, it is difficult to assess a citizenship judge’s decision
when it relies on an applicant’s credibility and the explanations they provided
in a hearing.
[13]
Second, in addition to the Hearing materials,
the Respondent provided a further Affidavit for the purpose of this judicial
review, incorporating by reference the preceding Affidavit. The Applicant could
have cross-examined the Respondent on the material in the further Affidavit but
decided not to do so. Later, before this Court, the Applicant took issue with a
lack of documentation tying the Respondent to Canada during a certain portion
of the residency period in question. This, however, is exactly the kind of
concern that the Applicant should have had the Respondent address on
cross-examination.
[14]
All that is before the Court from the
citizenship application process is the Judge’s decision and the paper record, which
includes the FPAT notes and related internal documents, such as the Judge’s
Feedback Form. A review of all of these, when read together and in their full
context, shows that the Judge addressed the points of concern raised by the
Citizenship Officer and concluded that the Applicant was credible, with
accompanying explanations on the points of contention. Faced with this
evidence, I see no basis in which to interfere in the decision.
III.
CONCLUSION
[15]
Despite able representations from counsel, this
application for judicial review is denied. There are no certified questions or
costs ordered.