Docket: IMM-4835-15
Citation:
2016 FC 513
Ottawa, Ontario, May 6, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Strickland
BETWEEN:
|
BINAY CHHETRY
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is an application for judicial review of a
decision of a visa officer (“Visa Officer”) dated August 24, 2015, finding the
Applicant to be inadmissible, pursuant to s 40(1)(a) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 (“IRPA”), for misrepresentation and
refusing his application for permanent residence in Canada.
Background
[2]
The Applicant is a citizen of Nepal. In October
2014, he applied for permanent residence in Canada in the Economic Class, under
the skilled worker category, university professors and lecturers
classification. When making his application, he was represented by Everest
Immigration & Legal Services Inc, a registered immigration consultant
(“Immigration Consultant”).
[3]
On April 10, 2015, the Applicant was notified in
an email from the Canadian Embassy in Poland (“fairness letter”) that open source
information suggested that he had been employed at Jet Airways until 2012. If
true, this information would conflict with the employment information he had
provided in his application form which stated that: from September 2012 to the
date of his application he was a lecturer at Nona Koirala Media College; from
April 2011 to August 2012 he was a tutor at Birat Victoria Memorial Higher
Secondary School; and, from January 2007 to August 2010 he was a public
relations officer and writer with Zen Nepal Tours. On that basis, the author
of the email stated that he or she believed that the Applicant had deliberately
mispresented information and advised the Applicant that he or she was therefore
considering a recommendation that the Applicant be found to be inadmissible. The
Applicant was provided 30 days to respond to these concerns.
[4]
On April 20, 2015, the Immigration Consultant
responded with a letter explaining the missing employment information and
attaching updated immigration forms. The Immigration Consultant stated that
the significant errors in the originally submitted forms were the result of
administrative errors by his office employees which were unintentional and
accidental. Further, that the Applicant had worked at Jet Airways as a
Customer Service Assistant and at Zen Nepal Tours simultaneously. In August
2010, he left both positions to work on a cruise ship in Italy, returning in
April 2011 when he began work as a tutor. The Immigration Consultant explained
that the reference to Jet Airways on the Applicant’s Facebook page, which the
Immigration Consultant believed was the open source information referenced in
the fairness letter, was not accurate. Further, that the Applicant had no role
in making the errors and there was no attempt to misrepresent. Documentary
evidence to substantiate the explanations was provided.
[5]
In a May 19, 2015 entry in the Global Case
Management System (“GCMS”), a processing officer noted that the new personal
history provided in the Immigration Consultant’s April 20, 2015 submissions
stated that the Applicant worked with Jet Airways from March 2008 to August
2010 and on a cruise ship from August 2010 to March 20l1. However, the processing
officer noted that the Applicant’s Jet Airways employment contract contained a
start date of September 23, 2008, that it was valid for five years and
that the Applicant had provided no evidence regarding the length of his
employment. Further, that the information provided conflicted with the updated
Schedule A Background/Declaration. Based on this discrepancy, the processing
officer was of the opinion that the Applicant had misrepresented material facts
and recommended that he be found to be inadmissible.
[6]
In a GCMS entry dated August 21, 2015, the Visa
Officer noted that, upon review of the application, the verification of
employment, the notes of the processing officer and the response to the
fairness letter, it was reasonable to conclude that the Applicant did not have
the employment experience claimed and that this could have led to an error in
the number of points awarded in assessing his application. A refusal letter
was sent to the Applicant on August 24, 2105 stating that he had
provided an inaccurate account of his employment experience history, which
conclusion was reached based on open source information and the response to the
fairness letter. The application was refused and the Applicant was found to be
inadmissible.
Relevant Legislation
Application before entering Canada
|
Visa et documents
|
11 (1) A foreign national must,
before entering Canada, apply to an officer for a visa or for any other
document required by the regulations. The visa or document may be issued if,
following an examination, the officer is satisfied that the foreign national
is not inadmissible and meets the requirements of this Act.
|
11 (1) L’étranger doit, préalablement
à son entrée au Canada, demander à l’agent les visa et autres documents
requis par règlement. L’agent peut les délivrer sur preuve, à la suite d’un
contrôle, que l’étranger n’est pas interdit de territoire et se conforme à la
présente loi.
|
Obligation — answer truthfully
|
Obligation du demandeur
|
16 (1) A person who makes an
application must answer truthfully all questions put to them for the purpose
of the examination and must produce a visa and all relevant evidence and
documents that the officer reasonably requires.
|
16 (1) L’auteur d’une demande au
titre de la présente loi doit répondre véridiquement aux questions qui lui
sont posées lors du contrôle, donner les renseignements et tous éléments de
preuve pertinents et présenter les visa et documents requis.
|
Misrepresentation
|
Fausses déclarations
|
40 (1) A permanent resident or a
foreign national is inadmissible for misrepresentation
|
40 (1) Emportent interdiction de
territoire pour fausses déclarations les faits suivants :
|
(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;
|
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;
|
…
|
…
|
Issue and Standard of Review
[7]
The only issue arising in this matter is whether
the Visa Officer’s decision was reasonable.
[8]
This Court has previously held that the
reasonableness standard applies to a visa officer’s assessment of whether an applicant
made a material misrepresentation as described in s 40(1)(a) of the IRPA (Oloumi
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 428 at para 12 [Oloumi];
Goburdhun v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 971 at para 19
[Goburdhun]; Singh v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015
FC 377 at para 12 [Singh]). Reasonableness is concerned with the
existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility, and whether the
decision falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes (Dunsmuir v
New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at para 47).
Analysis
Applicant’s Position
[9]
The Applicant submits that while s 40(1)(a) of
the IRPA imposes a duty of candour which requires disclosure of material facts,
an exception arises when the applicant can demonstrate that they honestly and
reasonably believed that they were not withholding material information (Medel
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1990] 2 FC 345 [Medel];
Tofangchi v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 427 [Tofangchi]).
In this case, the Applicant did not knowingly misrepresent his employment
history. He provided the details of his employment history that were relevant
to the category in which he was applying, being teacher/lecturer. In this
regard, he relied on the Immigration Consultant, who advised him to omit other
irrelevant employment information. And, although the Applicant reviewed and
signed the application, he honestly and reasonably believed the omission was
not a misrepresentation because the information was not relevant to the class in
which he was applying. Further, he had no onus to disclose all possibly
relevant information (Baro v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2007
FC 1299). And, although he did not believe that he had made an error, he had clarified
the discrepancy when the concern was raised by the processing officer.
[10]
The Applicant also submits that he should not be
penalized for his Immigration Consultant’s incompetence. Further, since he did
not refer to his Facebook page in his application, it was unreasonable to
expect him to ensure its accuracy and for the Visa Officer to use it to
discredit the employment history established by his employment records.
[11]
Further, the omitted information was not
material as it did not affect the process (Goburdhun at para 37).
It could not have induced errors in the administration of the IRPA because the
application was complete and could have been processed without the additional
employment experience which was irrelevant and extraneous.
[12]
Finally, the Applicant points out, amongst other
things, that the April 20, 2015 letter attesting to the term of his employment
at Jet Airways, provided in response to the fairness letter, is signed by the
same person who signed his employment contract and confirms that he worked with
Jet Airways from March 23, 2008 to August 15, 2010. Further, although the
contract stated that it was valid for a five year term, the Applicant resigned
in 2010, as permitted under the contract. And, in August 2010 he started
working with MSC International as a server on a cruise ship. The Applicant
submits that this evidence explains the discrepancy in his employment history
but was not addressed by the Visa Officer.
Respondent’s Position
[13]
The Respondent submits that much of the
Applicant’s Reply, made in response to the Respondent’s written submissions,
was improper and that a letter dated January 20, 2016 from an assistant manager
at Jet Airways, attached to the Reply, was not properly submitted as an exhibit
nor was it before the Visa Officer. Further, the Applicant’s claims based on
his Immigration Consultant’s incompetence do not comply with the Federal Court’s
procedural protocol, dated March 7, 2014, on pleading allegations of misconduct
against former counsel, which includes immigration consultants.
[14]
The Respondent submits that the Applicant’s
misrepresentation was not honest and reasonable because his explanation – that
he omitted information he thought was irrelevant – was not before the Visa
Officer. Rather, the explanation given was that there had been administrative
errors by the Immigration Consultant’s employees. The Visa Officer could not
evaluate an explanation that was never given. Further, the misrepresentation
was not merely an omission. The Visa Officer found that even the updated
information was unreliable because it was internally contradictory. Additionally,
the application form instructs applicants to account for their activities over
the last ten years and requires letters of reference from all employers during
that period. Accordingly, the Applicant could not have interpreted this as
permitting him to omit recent employment experience that he deemed irrelevant
and, had this been the case, he would also have omitted his position at Zen
Nepal Tours which was equally irrelevant to his application. Finally, even if
the Applicant’s explanation were accepted, he is still inadmissible as s
40(1)(a) of the IRPA does not require an applicant to have subjective knowledge
of the misrepresentation (Tofangchi). Nor does the narrow exception to Tofangchi
apply in this case.
[15]
On the materiality of the misrepresentation, the
Respondent submits that the Applicant misunderstands the Visa Officer’s
reasons. The Visa Officer found that he had misrepresented all of his
employment, not just his employment with Jet Airways. The Visa Officer’s
initial concern arose from the fact that his only employment listed on his
Facebook page was with Jet Airways. When confronted with this, the Applicant
provided conflicting information about when he worked for Jet Airways.
Further, the employment contract with Jet Airways ended in 2013, when he was
supposedly working as a college lecturer. On this basis, and since the
Applicant failed to offer a reasonable explanation for the initial omission, the
Visa Officer concluded that the Applicant misrepresented his employment history
and does not have the employment experience he claims. The Respondent submits
that this could have led the Visa Officer to award points where none were
merited, leading to an error in the administration of the IRPA.
Analysis
[16]
It is first necessary to address the
Respondent’s preliminary point, being that there are a number of improprieties
contained in the Applicant’s Reply. I agree with the Respondent that the
alleged facts it has identified in the Applicant’s Reply are not supported by
any affidavit or other evidence. I therefore give them no weight. I also
agree that the January 20, 2016 letter from Jet Airways, attached to the Reply,
was not before the Visa Officer nor was it submitted to this Court by way of an
affidavit. Therefore, I also afford it no weight. It is trite law that the
record before this Court on judicial review is generally restricted to that
which was before the decision-maker (Assn of Universities and Colleges of
Canada v Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency, 2012 FCA 22 at para 19).
[17]
On the second preliminary matter, the Respondent
submits that the Court should not entertain the Applicant’s allegations of
misconduct and incompetence against his Immigration Consultant. I again agree
with the Respondent. Because the Applicant did not provide any evidence that
he followed the procedural protocol, the Court has insufficient information
regarding the alleged incompetence, and, the Immigration Consultant has not
been afforded the required opportunity to respond (Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration) v Singh, 2016 FCA 96 at para 67; Rezko v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 6 at paras 6-9). In any event, as discussed
below, the onus is on the applicant to ensure the completeness and accuracy of
his or her application.
[18]
As to the merits of the matter, in the
application form, Schedule A Background/Declaration, applicants are instructed
to provide the details of their personal history for the past ten years
including work, study, employment and to ensure that there are no unaccounted
for gaps in time. In Schedule 3, Economic Classes – Federal Skilled Workers,
of the application, under work experience, applicants are instructed to list
their occupations for the ten years preceding the date of their application
identifying the dates of employment, occupation, and other information. In my
view, by failing to list his employment with Jet Airways and with MSC
International, the Applicant misrepresented his employment history.
[19]
The Applicant submits, in essence, that there
was no misrepresentation because this employment was not relevant and, even if
there was, it falls within the exception to the requirement to disclose
material facts established by Medel, as he honestly and reasonably
believed that he was not withholding material information.
[20]
However, as I have previously found in Goburdhun,
the Medel exception is narrow and has been held to require “subjective unawareness” of the material information (Mohammed
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1997] 3 FC 299; Singh
at paras 39-40).
[21]
This is not a circumstance where the Applicant
was not aware of the information that was not disclosed, the Applicant clearly
knew all of the details of his own employment history. Rather, the Applicant
claims that he did not think the omitted information, being his employment with
Jet Airways and MSC International, was material to his application. On this
point I would first note that when responding to the fairness letter, the
Immigration Consultant ascribed the omissions as administrative errors of its
employees. It did not state the nature of these errors or that the reason the
information was omitted was because the employees deemed it not to be relevant.
Therefore, I agree with the Respondent that the Visa Officer cannot be faulted
for not considering an explanation that was not provided to him or her.
[22]
Further, the Applicant’s claim that he relied on
his Immigration Consultant does not assist him. As I noted in Goburdhun:
[32] In Haque, above, the
applicants therein similarly argued that the misrepresentations were not
intentional and that it was their consultant who erred in filling out the
application. Justice Mosley rejected this argument and stated the following:
[15] […] Nonetheless, he signed
the application and so cannot be absolved of his personal duty to ensure the
information he provided was true and complete. This was expressed succinctly by
Justice Robert Mainville at para 31 of Cao, supra:
The
Applicant signed her temporary residence application and consequently must be
held personally accountable for the information provided in that application.
It is as simple as that.
[23]
Here the Applicant chose to rely on a consultant
and does not dispute that he signed the application himself and knew of its
contents. Therefore, he was required to ensure its accuracy and completeness (Haque
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 315 at paras 15-16 [Haque];
Tofangchi at paras 41-42).
[24]
In any event, it is not the role of the
Applicant to determine what is or is not relevant to his application. As stated
by Justice Russell in Singh:
[32] But the Decision is not really
about culpability. It is about the integrity of the visa process and what is
required to maintain that integrity. To put it bluntly, it is not for the
Applicant, or any other visa applicant, to decide what is relevant. Applicants
are required to make full disclosure and it is the role of the officer who
examines the application to decide what is relevant and what weight to give to
any particular fact that is disclosed. The system simply could not work if
applicants, no matter how honest, were allowed to decide what is relevant for
their application. If full disclosure is made, and an applicant believes that a
visa has been unreasonably denied, then there is recourse before this Court.
But the problem with misrepresentations is that they do not allow decisions to
be made on the full facts by officers who have been fixed by Parliament with
the power to make those decisions. That is precisely the problem in this
application.
[25]
Applicants are required to provide all of the
information requested of them. If they choose not to do so, they assume the
risk that their application will be denied. Based on the forgoing, I conclude
that there was a misrepresentation and that the circumstances do not fall
within the Medel exception.
[26]
However, for the following reasons, I find that
the Visa Officer’s treatment of the evidence submitted by the Applicant in response
to the fairness letter was unreasonable.
[27]
It is well-established that GCMS notes form part
of the reasons for the decisions of visa officers (Singh at para 52). In
the GCMS notes in this matter the Visa Officer states that upon review of the
documentation, information and the employment documents submitted with the
application, together with the notes of the processing officer and the response
to the fairness letter, “The response from the client
has not disabused me of the concerns raised”. This led the Visa Officer
to conclude that the Applicant did not have the employment experience that he
claimed. Although the GCMS notes are brief, it appears that this is based, at
least in part, on the processing officer’s finding that the Jet Airways
contract was valid for five years and that no evidence had been provided as to
the length of the Applicant’s employment. Thus, there was a perceived conflict
between the dates in the Jet Airways contract and the dates provided by the
Applicant for his other employment periods.
[28]
In this regard the Respondent submits that the
contract states that it expires in 2013, when the Applicant claims he was a
lecturer, and that this contradiction calls into question the Applicant’s
entire reported employment history. However, I note that the contract provides
for resignation or termination on one month’s notice. Further, in response to
the fairness letter, the Applicant provided a letter dated April 20, 2015,
signed by the managing director of Jet Airways, stating that he worked as a
Customer Service Assistant from March 23, 2008 to August 15, 2010. As the
Applicant points out, the same managing director signed his original employment
contract in 2008. Despite this, the processing officer found that there was “no evidence provided as to length of employment” and
that the evidence submitted in response to the fairness letter conflicted with
the information provided in Schedule A. This finding suggests either that the
processing officer did not see the managing director’s letter, which clearly stated
the Applicant’s period of employment, or failed to consider it.
[29]
Further, the new personal history stated that
the Applicant was employed by Jet Airways from March 2008 to August 2010 and
worked on a cruise ship from August 2010 to March 2011. The period of work
specified with Jet Airways is consistent with the period of employment set out
in the Jet Airways managing director’s letter and a June 22, 2010 letter from
the cruise line which stated that he started work there on August 22, 2010.
The Applicant also provided letters and documents from each of his other
employers corroborating the periods he claims to have worked with them. The
Visa Officer, who reviewed the processing officer’s notes as well as the other
information noted, does not address this evidence or state why the response to
the fairness letter did not disabuse him or her of the concerns raised.
[30]
Further, a misrepresentation must also be
material. To be material it need not be decisive or determinative, it is sufficient
if it is important enough to affect the process. The wording of s 40 also
confirms that a misrepresentation does not actually have to induce an error, it
is enough that it could do so (Tofangchi at para 26; Goburdhun at
para 37; Oloumi at paras 22 and 25; Haque at para 11; Mai v
Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2011 FC 101
at para 18; Nazim v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2009 FC 471).
[31]
In this case, the GCMS entry by the Visa Officer
states that the information provided by the Applicant could have led to an
error in the administration of the IRPA. The Visa Officer stated that the
Applicant’s misrepresentation could have led an officer to believe that the
Applicant met the requirements of the IRPA with respect to employment and earned
him unmerited points. However, contrary to the Visa Officer’s conclusion, the
additional evidence submitted by the Applicant and discussed above demonstrates
that the previously omitted work with Jet Airways and the cruise line did not
impact the employment included in the original application. The Immigration
Consultant’s letter also explains that the Applicant had worked with Zen Nepal
Tours and with Jet Airways simultaneously. Thus it is unclear how that
employment conflicts with any of the Applicant’s other claimed periods of
employment or how it would impact his claimed employment as a tutor or lecturer
which commenced after those employment periods. When appearing before me the
Respondent submitted that the Applicant had failed to explain why the contract
start date was not consistent with the employment contract start date. While
this may be so, I do not accept that this alone would be sufficient to bring into
question all of the Applicant’s work experiences, particularly as the Visa
Officer did not refer to the Jet Airways managing director’s letter.
[32]
The Visa Officer also did not question the
credibility of the Applicant’s documentary evidence. The fairness letter made
reference to an unspecified open information source which indicated that he was
employed at Jet Airways. While the processing officer did not identify that
source, the Applicant surmised that it referred to his Facebook page. The GCMS
notes of April 10, 2015 state that the only employment listed on his
Facebook page is at Jet Airways which he left in 2012. A copy of a Facebook page,
dated April 10, 2015, is contained in the Certified Tribunal Record but does
not refer to any dates of employment at Jet Airways. The Applicant’s response
to the fairness letter addressed the concern, confirming that he had worked at
Jet Airways but that the period of his employment there as indicated on the
Facebook page was not accurate. As noted above, he also provided documentary
evidence to support his corrected employment history. In my view, an
applicant’s Facebook page may give rise to a legitimate concern as to the
accuracy of the information provided in an application. However, when this concern
has been put to the applicant and the applicant provides an explanation
supported by documentary evidence from his employers corroborating his
employment for the periods he claims, the explanation and evidence must be
considered.
[33]
As the Applicant notes, the preliminary
assessment of his application set out in the GCMS notes appears to find the
employment reported in his original application sufficient to meet the required
minimum to ensure he had a sufficient number of points. The evidence provided
in response to the fairness letter suggests that the employment periods
reported in the original application pertaining to the Applicant’s work as a
teacher/lecturer were not altered by his employment at Jet Airways and MSC
International. It is, therefore, not apparent how the misrepresentation was
material in these circumstances.
[34]
The difficulty in this case is that neither the
decision nor the record demonstrate that the Applicant’s response to the
fairness letter, including the assessment of the supplementary evidence, was
reasonably assessed. The Visa Officer’s apparent misapprehension or ignorance of
some of the evidence seems to have led to a view that there was a conflict in
the employment documentation. This, together with the lack of reasons for why
the Visa Officer was not disabused of his or her concerns in the face of the
explanation and evidence provided by the Applicant, brings the materiality of
the omission into question as it is unclear how the misrepresentation could
affect the process (Goburdhun at para 37).
[35]
For these reasons, the decision is not reasonable
as the process and the outcome do not fit comfortably within the principles of
justification, transparency and intelligibility (Khosa v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 SCC 12 at para 59; Newfoundland
and Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board),
2011 SCC 62 at para 16).