Dockets: IMM-1340-15
IMM-1592-15
Citation:
2016 FC 805
Ottawa, Ontario, July 15, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice O'Reilly
Docket: IMM-1340-15
|
BETWEEN:
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THI THANH HIEN
TRAN
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP & IMMIGRATION CANADA
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Respondent
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Docket: IMM-1592-15
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AND BETWEEN:
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THI HONG PHAM
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP & IMMIGRATION CANADA
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
Ms Thi Hong Pham, sponsored by her daughter, applied
to immigrate in Canada as a member of the family class. She included her son, Mr
Tran Trong Hau, as a dependent in the application because, even though he was
over the age of 22, he was a full-time student at the time. An immigration
officer found that the documentation relating to Mr Tran’s studies was
fraudulent, and concluded that Ms Pham and Mr Tran were inadmissible to Canada
for misrepresentation.
[2]
Ms Pham and her daughter each brought an
application for judicial review of the officer’s decision. As a preliminary
matter, the applications have been combined here as they both relate to the
same decision. In addition, the Minister has consented to Ms Pham’s request for
an extension of time to commence her application.
[3]
Ms Pham argues that, although she included Mr
Tran as a dependent in the application, the gaps in his educational record
disqualified him from being considered a dependent. Therefore, she submits, the
officer should not have considered whether his education documentation was
genuine. She maintains that the officer acted unfairly and rendered an
unreasonable decision. She asks me to quash the officer’s decision and to order
another officer to reconsider the sponsorship application in respect of Ms Pham
and the rest of the family, without including Mr Tran.
[4]
I cannot find a basis for overturning the
officer’s decision and must, therefore, dismiss this application for judicial
review. In my view, the officer treated Ms Pham and Mr Tran fairly and came to
a conclusion that was supported by the evidence.
[5]
There are two issues:
1.
Did the officer treat Ms Pham and Mr Tran
unfairly?
2.
Did the officer err in finding
misrepresentation?
II.
Issue One – Did the officer treat Ms Pham and Mr
Tran unfairly?
[6]
Ms Pham argues that she and her son were treated
unfairly because they did not have a real opportunity to address the officer’s
concerns regarding the educational documentation in their application. She
submits that they were, in effect, ambushed by the officer at an interview with
questions about Mr Tran’s education.
[7]
I disagree. The officer provided Ms Pham and Mr
Tran an adequate opportunity to respond to discrepancies in the evidence. The
officer sent letters to Ms Pham requesting transcripts and other evidence of
educational programs. In response, she supplied documentation. At the interview,
the officer explicitly notified Ms Pham that misrepresentation was an issue. The
officer pointed out contradictions between the documentation Ms Pham had
provided and information that the officer retrieved directly through the
college.
[8]
Therefore, in the circumstances of this case,
the applicants had sufficient notice of the officer’s concerns and an adequate
opportunity to respond (Kunkel v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2009 FCA 347, at para 11).
III.
Issue Two – Did the officer err in finding
misrepresentation?
[9]
In an unusual submission, Ms Pham argues that,
even though she included her son as a dependent, the officer should never have
considered the quality of the materials she filed in support of that claim. In
her view, the officer should have noticed that there was gap in Mr Tran’s
education and concluded that her son was not a dependent. The officer should
have stopped there, she claims, and not considered the genuineness of the
evidence relating to Mr Tran’s academic pursuits.
[10]
I cannot agree with Ms Pham. Since Ms Pham
claimed that Mr Tran was her dependent, the officer had a duty to review the
evidence supporting that contention. Further, contrary to Ms Pham’s submission,
it was not obvious that Mr Tran did not meet the definition of a dependent.
[11]
Ms Pham maintains that gaps in Mr Tran’s
education clearly demonstrate that he was not continuously enrolled in
full-time studies and that he could never have met the definition of a
dependent. I see no support for Ms Pham’s proposed interpretation of the
definition of a dependent. At the time of her application, a dependent was
defined as a person who is under the age of 22 or, if over the age of 22, has
been engaged in full-time studies before attaining that age and has continued
thereafter (Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations,
SOR/2002-227, s 2(1) – see Annex (now repealed)). A gap in studies prior to
turning 22 years of age did not disqualify a person from being a dependent. The
question is whether the person was enrolled in full-time studies before turning
22 and continued in those studies thereafter. There was no obvious basis for
concluding that Mr Tran did not meet the definition of a dependent.
[12]
Ms Pham also submits that the evidence does not
support the officer’s finding that false information was included in the
materials she provided to the officer. In an effort to dispute the officer’s
findings, Ms Pham has placed fresh evidence before the Court on this
application for judicial review. However, I can only consider the evidence that
was actually before the officer in deciding whether the officer’s decision was
reasonable. While Ms Pham submits that the new evidence supports her procedural
fairness submissions, I find that the fresh evidence actually attempts to
address the merits of the officer’s decision. In particular, the affidavit of
Kim Ngan Nguyen explains and interprets the evidence before the officer regarding
certain educational programs with additional background information that was
not in front of the officer at the time of the decision.
[13]
The essential problem with Ms Pham’s application
was that the officer could not find support for her assertion that Mr Tran was
enrolled in school at various times after he turned 22. In response to the
officer’s inquiries, Ms Pham provided additional information, but the officer
was simply unable to confirm its veracity.
[14]
Accordingly, I find that the officer had a duty
to consider the evidence put forward by Ms Pham in support of her application,
and had a valid basis for concluding that the information Ms Pham had supplied
was not genuine. Therefore, I cannot conclude that the officer’s conclusion was
unreasonable.
IV.
Conclusion and Disposition
[15]
The officer did not treat Ms Pham unfairly or
render an unreasonable decision. I must, therefore, dismiss this application
for judicial review. Neither party proposed a question of general importance
for me to certify, and none is stated.