Docket: T-1959-15
Citation:
2016 FC 571
Ottawa, Ontario, May 26, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Southcott
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BETWEEN:
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YU-HSUAN LEE
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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
[1]
This is an application for judicial review,
brought by the Applicant, Yu-Hsuan Lee, of the decision of a Citizenship Judge
[the Judge] dated October 22, 2015, refusing her application for citizenship on
the basis that she did not meet the residency requirements as set out in
section 5(1)(c) of the Citizenship Act, RSC 1985, c-29 [the Act].
[2]
For the reasons that follow, this application is
dismissed.
I.
Background
[3]
The Applicant is a citizen of Taiwan who was
granted permanent resident status on November 29, 2008 as part of her family’s
investor class application. Her parents eventually returned to Taiwan in 2012
and did not obtain Canadian citizenship. The Applicant attended school in
Canada until December of 2011 and then pursued work and study opportunities in
Taiwan and the UK. She applied for citizenship on December 23, 2011.
[4]
The applicable section of the Act in force at
the relevant time provides as follows:
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5. (1) The Minister shall grant citizenship to any person who
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5. (1) Le ministre attribue la citoyenneté à toute personne qui, à
la fois :
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(a) makes application for citizenship;
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a) en fait la demande;
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(b) is eighteen years of age or over;
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b) est âgée d’au moins dix-huit ans;
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(c) is a permanent resident within the meaning of subsection 2(1)
of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, and has, within the
four years immediately preceding the date of his or her application,
accumulated at least three years of residence in Canada calculated in the
following manner:
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c) est un résident permanent au sens du paragraphe 2(1) de la Loi
sur l’immigration et la protection des réfugiés et a, dans les quatre ans qui
ont précédé la date de sa demande, résidé au Canada pendant au moins trois
ans en tout, la durée de sa résidence étant calculée de la manière suivante :
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(i) for
every day during which the person was resident in Canada before his lawful
admission to Canada for permanent residence the person shall be deemed to
have accumulated one-half of a day of residence, and
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(i) un demi-jour pour chaque jour de
résidence au Canada avant son admission à titre de résident permanent,
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(ii) for every day during which the person
was resident in Canada after his lawful admission to Canada for permanent
residence the person shall be deemed to have accumulated one day of
residence;
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(ii) un jour pour chaque jour de résidence
au Canada après son admission à titre de résident permanent;
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[5]
To meet the requirements of section 5(1)(c), the
Applicant was required to prove that she resided in Canada for at least 1095
days in the four years prior to her application, i.e. from December 23, 2007 to
December 23, 2011 [the Relevant Period]. At the time of her application, she
claimed 1096 days of physical presence in Canada, bringing her one day over the
requirement of 1095 days. On October 23, 2013, the Applicant had an interview
with a Citizenship Officer [the Officer], who identified concerns surrounding
an undeclared absence from Canada. The Officer referred her application to a
hearing with a citizenship judge.
II.
Impugned Decision
[6]
The Judge considered two unclaimed absences that
occurred around the dates of April 29, 2008 and November 13, 2010. The first
trip was the one that had given rise to the Officer’s concerns. The Applicant
had advised the Officer that she travelled to the US to attend her cousin’s
wedding for 13 days. This caused the Officer to adjust her days of physical presence
in Canada to 1090 days, 5 days short of the requirement. At the citizenship hearing,
the Applicant indicated that she had given the Officer the wrong date for the
wedding because English was not her first language and she was nervous. She
stated that, in fact, the wedding took place on August 23, 2010, which was
already claimed in her application form. The Judge did not accept the Applicant’s
explanation, finding that she was not forthcoming at the hearing, as it was
difficult to believe that a well-educated student trained at English speaking
universities for her Bachelor of Arts and Master’s degree had made this mistake.
[7]
Further, while the Applicant maintained that the
April 19, 2008 trip was a one-day trip to the US, the Judge noted that the
Applicant did not submit any documentation to indicate presence in Canada
before or after this trip to support her statement that this was a one-day trip.
[8]
The second unclaimed absence occurred around
November 13, 2010. The Applicant claimed that this was another one-day absence
for a shopping trip to the US. However, the Judge again noted that the
Applicant did not submit any documentation to prove that it was a one day trip.
[9]
The Judge also referred to the lack of any
documentation proving the Applicant’s residence in Vancouver while living with
her parents from September 2004 to September 2009 and lack of other documentary
evidence such as bank statements, credit card statements, her parents’ property
tax assessments, automobile insurance, cellular phone bills or medical services
history.
[10]
The Judge referred to the residency test described
by Justice Muldoon in Pourghasemi, (Re): [1993] FCJ No 232 [Pourghasemi],
as requiring an applicant to establish that he or she has been physically
present in Canada for 1095 days during the relevant four year period, and found
that it was impossible to determine how many days the Applicant was actually
present in Canada during the Relevant Period. As a result, the Judge concluded
that the Applicant had failed to discharge the burden of proof and that the
evidence suggested she was in Canada for less than the required 1095 days. On
that basis, the Judge denied her application for citizenship.
III.
Issues
[11]
The two issues raised by the parties in this
application are:
1.
Did the Judge err by failing to identify which
test for citizenship she would be applying in her determination?
2.
Was the Judge’s decision unreasonable?
IV.
Standard of Review
[12]
The first issue raised by the Applicant is one
of procedural fairness. The parties agree, and I concur, that this issue is to
be reviewed on a standard of correctness (see Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v. Khosa, 2009 SCC
12, at para 43; Abdou v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC
500, at para 4; Miji v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC
142 [Miji], at para 18).
[13]
The parties also agree that the other arguments raised
by the Applicant, as explained in more detail below, are to be reviewed on a
standard of reasonableness. I again concur that this is the applicable standard
when considering the decisions of citizenship judges (see Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Khadra, 2016 FC 71 at para 15; El-Khader v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship & Immigration), 2011 FC 328 at paras 8-10). The judge’s
decision is entitled to a high degree of deference (Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) v Patmore, 2015 FC 699 at para 14), but the Court
must intervene where the judge’s decision fails to evidence justification,
transparency, and intelligibility, and falls outside of the range of possible,
acceptable outcomes.
V.
Positions of the Parties
(1). Did the Judge err by failing to identify
which test for citizenship she would be applying in her determination?
A.
Applicant’s Position
[14]
The Applicant argues that the Judge failed to
advise the Applicant of the citizenship test that she would be applying to the
determination of residency. She relies on decisions of this Court, particularly
those in Dina v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2013 FC 712 [Dina]
and Miji v Canada ((Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC
142 [Miji] to the effect that procedural fairness requires a
citizenship judge to disclose to the applicant whether she will be applying the
quantitative or qualitative test for residency. Otherwise, the applicant would not
know the case he or she has to meet.
[15]
At the hearing of this application, the
Respondent identified the recent decision of Justice Kane in Fazail v Canada ((Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 111 [Fazail], which
distinguished Dina and Miji on the facts and found that the
citizenship judge did not breach procedural fairness by not advising the
applicant of the legal test that would be applied. The Applicant argues that
Justice Kane did not conclude that the principles in Dina and Miji are
wrong, only that it was not a case in which they should be applied. The
Applicant’s position is that Farzail just narrowed the scope of the
procedural fairness requirement and that, applied to the case at hand, there
was still a breach of that requirement. She argues that in Fazail the
claimant had the opportunity to make submissions on the test to be applied,
whereas in the current case, the Judge asked qualitative questions at the
hearing, leaving the Applicant confused as to the case she had to meet.
B.
Respondent’s Position
[16]
The Respondent submits that there was no breach
of procedural fairness in this case, as this Court has recognized a citizenship
judge’s discretion to apply any of the three tests recognized by the
jurisprudence. A judge may accept evidence related to both quantitative and
qualitative factors and then decide after the hearing which test to apply. The
Respondent refers to Justice de Montigny endorsing this approach in Boland v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 376 [Boland]
at para 24, stating that it is a citizenship judge’s prerogative to “opt in the final analysis for any of the tests currently in
use to assess residency.”
[17]
Referring to Fazail, the Respondent
argues that, notwithstanding the uncertainty in the law which permits a
citizenship judge to apply different tests which could lead to different
results, it is not a breach of procedural fairness not to bring this to an
applicant’s attention.
(1)
Was the Judge’s
decision unreasonable?
C. Applicant’s
Position
[18]
The Applicant submits that the Judge took into
account irrelevant factors, failed to provide an accounting of the days the
Applicant was absent from Canada, and failed to provide adequate reasons
regarding the insufficiency of documents.
[19]
While the Judge was entitled to apply the
physical presence test from Pourghasemi, the Applicant’s position is
that the Judge was obliged to limit consideration to the four year Relevant
Period (Deldelian v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FC 854 [Deldelian]). The Judge indicated that the Applicant failed
to provide documentation to prove her residence with her parents from September
2004 to September 2009, and part of this time frame falls outside the Relevant
Period. The Judge also discussed the Applicant’s employment and education
abroad and tax assessments after the Relevant Period, as well as whether she
owned property in Taiwan, all of which the Applicant argues was irrelevant to the
physical presence test.
[20]
The Applicant also submits that, under the
physical presence test, the Judge was required to count the days that the Applicant
was present in Canada. The Judge failed to do this and did not adequately
explain why she considered it impossible to do so. The Applicant refers to the discrepancy
in her evidence as to the timing of her attendance at her cousin’s wedding but
notes that she had already included the number of days spent in the US at the
wedding in her residency questionnaire, simply on other dates. Therefore, those
days should not have detracted from the count of the days spent by the Applicant
in Canada.
[21]
Finally, the Applicant submits that the Judge
found that the supporting evidence was insufficient to establish residency but
failed to explain why. In particular, the Applicant provided evidence of the
date of the wedding she attended in the US, to demonstrate that her earlier
statement to the Officer was an error, but the Judge did not assess this
evidence.
D.
Respondent’s Position
[22]
The Respondent submits that the decision was
reasonable. The Applicant claimed a presence of 1096 days, just one day over
the required 1095, but she failed to claim two trips into the US, one in 2008
and one in 2010. While she gave evidence that these were day-trips, there was
no corroborating documentary evidence to establish their actual length. It was
not possible to do a strict counting of days when it was unclear how long the Applicant
was absent from Canada during the undeclared trips.
[23]
The Respondent submits that the facts falling
outside the Relevant Period, while mentioned in the decision, did not factor into
the Judge’s determination.
VI. Analysis
(2)
Did the Judge err by
failing to identify which test for citizenship she would be applying in her
determination?
[24]
The different tests for citizenship, upon which
this issue turns, are explained as follows in paragraphs 19 to 20 of Miji:
[19] There are three separate tests to
determine whether the requirements in paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Act have
been met. One of these tests is quantitative and strictly based on an
applicant’s physical presence in Canada: Pourghasemi. The other two
tests are so-called qualitative ones: (i) the test of “centralized mode of
existence” established in Re Papadogiorgakis, [1978] 2 FC 208 (T.D.);
and (ii) the test of determining in which location the person applying for
Canadian citizenship “regularly, normally or customarily lives” established in Koo
(Re), [1993] 1 FC 286 (T.D.).
[20] It is now
established in recent case law that these three separate tests can be applied
by a citizenship judge and that this Judge can choose to apply, at his or her
discretion, any one of these three tests (Huang v.
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 576,
at para 25; Irani v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2013 FC 1273, at para 14; Vinat v. Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 1000, at
paras 22-24).
[25]
Justice Locke’s decision in Miji, and Justice
Hughes’ decision in Dina on which it relies, found that in those cases
it was a denial of procedural fairness not to reveal to the applicant, prior to
the determination of the matter, which of the three tests would be applied by
the citizenship judge. I agree with the Applicant that Fazail need not
be read as disagreeing with those decisions. However, in that case, Justice
Kane performs an analysis which is of significant assistance in understanding
the nature and scope of the duty of fairness in citizenship matters.
[26]
At paragraphs 39 to 46 of Fazail,
Justice Kane considered the factors prescribed by the Supreme Court of Canada
in Baker v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2
SCR 817 to be applied in determining the scope of a duty of procedural fairness,
and concluded that, while there is such a duty owed by citizenship judges to
applicants, it is at the lower end of the spectrum. The affected individual
must know the case he or she has to meet and have an opportunity to respond to
that case, but the scope of the duty does not extend beyond that.
[27]
In considering the impact of
Dina and Miji, Justice Kane noted at paragraphs 37 and 38 that
Justice Hughes did not elaborate on the scope of the duty of procedural
fairness or why, on the facts in Dina, the applicant did not know the
case to be met, and that Justice Locke in Miji had relied on Dina
without elaborating upon the scope of the duty. Justice Kane subsequently reviewed
the principle of judicial comity and concluded that this principle was not at
stake, because the key facts in Dina and Miji were different from
those in the case before her. In Fazail, the applicant was aware that
the citizenship judge had a choice of tests and made submissions that the
qualitative test in Koo should apply. Therefore, the applicant was aware
of the case to be met, had an opportunity to make submissions, and in fact did
so.
[28]
The applicant in Fazail, like the
Applicant in this case, argued that Dina imposes a duty on a citizenship
judge to advise an applicant in advance of the test that will be applied.
However, Justice Kane concluded that the issue for the Court to consider is not
whether the test a citizenship judge is contemplating using has been signaled
in a particular manner. Rather, it is whether there was a breach of procedural
fairness in that an applicant did not know the case to meet. Fazail did
not interpret that duty as requiring that an applicant be given an irrevocable
indication as to which test will be applied.
[29]
This interpretation assists
in reconciling these authorities with the decision in Boland on which the Respondent relies.
At paragraph 24 of that decision, Justice de Montigny stated as follows:
[24] The simple fact that
during an interview, a citizenship judge may pose questions to an applicant
that lead them to believe that one of the qualitative tests is being applied,
does not cause the final decision to fall into error if that judge ultimately
chooses to apply a quantitative test. The Citizenship Judge may well have
chosen to disregard the strict physical presence test and to apply another test
had she been convinced that the evidence established the Applicant’s attachment
to Canada or his centralized mode of existence in this country. It was her
prerogative, however, to opt in the final analysis for any of the three tests
currently in use to assess residency.
[30]
Understanding the duty of procedural fairness as
articulated in Fazail, I conclude that the record before me demonstrates
that the Applicant was aware of the case to be met and had an opportunity to
respond. The Judge chose to apply the Pourghasemi test, requiring the
Applicant to demonstrate the required number of days of strict physical
presence in Canada, and the Applicant had a fair opportunity to make
submissions in that regard.
[31]
In her Affidavit filed in support of this
judicial review, the Applicant explains that at her interview before the
citizenship officer, the officer interviewed her on her absences and that she
made a mistake with respect to the date of her cousin’s wedding. Her Affidavit
also states that, at the hearing, the Judge asked her questions about her
absences, the date of her cousin’s wedding, and the day trip on April 19, 2008,
and she explained that she has made a mistake when speaking with the officer.
The Judge’s notes of the hearing and the decision
itself also reflect this questioning, as well as questioning on the Applicant’s
trip to the United States on November 13, 2010, which the Applicant described
as a one-day trip to Seattle with friends.
[32]
As canvassed in more detail below in my
consideration of the reasonableness of the decision, the Judge’s conclusion
that the Applicant had not met the residence requirement under section 5(1)(c)
of the Act turns on the evidence surrounding these trips to the United States
and their impact upon the number of days the Applicant was physically present
in Canada. Given the focus on these facts both before and at the hearing, there
is no basis to conclude on the record in this case that the Applicant did not
know the case she had to meet or was deprived of an opportunity to respond to
it.
[33]
In support of her argument
that she was denied procedural fairness, the Applicant refers to the Judge’s
questioning on qualitative factors such as her family members’ presence in
Canada and Taiwan, her bank accounts, RRSPs, payment of Canadian taxes, and properties
in Canada. She argues these factors are relevant to the qualitative test, which
is not the test the Judge subsequently applied. In this respect, there are
similarities to Justice Locke’s observation at paragraph 24 of Miji that
the request for documentary evidence made to the applicant in that case at his
interview with the citizenship judge included material which could imply that a
qualitative test would be employed. However, the question whether an applicant
has been deprived of procedural fairness must be assessed on the facts of each
individual case. As explained above, my conclusion is that the Applicant had an
opportunity to address the absences that were the focus of the Judge’s decision
in applying the strict physical presence test and, on the facts of the present
case, the fact that the Judge asked questions that could be relevant to a
qualitative test does not detract from that conclusion.
(3)
Was the Judge’s
decision unreasonable?
[34]
I can find no basis to conclude that the Judge’s
decision was unreasonable.
[35]
The Applicant relies on the decision in Hussein
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 88 [Hussein]
to support her position that it is an error for a citizenship judge to fail to
count the days as required by Pourghasemi. Further, she argues that the
Judge’s reasons were not adequate to explain the conclusion that the supporting
evidence was insufficient to establish residency.
[36]
Justice LeBlanc’s explanation of the principles governing
the adequacy of reasons, at paragraph 24 of Hussein, is instructive:
[24] … [R]easons for decisions are adequate when they are clear, precise
and intelligible and when they state why the decision was reached. Adequate
reasons show a grasp of the issues raised by the evidence, allow the parties to
understand why the decision was made and allow the reviewing court to assess
the validity of the decision (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at
para 47, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190; Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses' Union v
Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 708,
at para 16; Jeizan, above, at para 17 and see also Lake v Canada
(Minister of Justice), 2008 SCC 23, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 761 at para. 46; Mehterian
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1992] F.C.J. No. 545
(F.C.A.); VIA Rail Canada Inc. v National Transportation Agency, [2001]
2 FC 25 (F.C.A.), at para. 22; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Arastu, 2008 FC 1222, at paras. 35-36).
[37]
Reading the Judge’s decision as a whole, I do
not have difficulty understanding why the decision was made or assessing its
validity. The Judge states that the Applicant’s original application declared
1096 days of physical presence in Canada during the Relevant Period, which is
one day more than the 1095 days required. However, the accuracy of that declaration
was called into question by the identification of the undeclared absences to
the United States in April 2008 and November 2010. While the Applicant stated
that these were both day trips and therefore should not detract from her days
of physical presence, the Judge observed that the Applicant did not provide any
documentation to support that contention. The Judge also found that the
Applicant was not forthcoming at the hearing, having difficulty believing the
Applicant’s explanation for giving the citizenship officer a mistaken date for
her cousin’s wedding during her interview. With credibility concerns and no
documentation to support the Applicant’s assertions that her undeclared
absences were only day trips, the Judge concluded that the Applicant had not
met her burden of proving she met the residency requirements.
[38]
I find the decision intelligible and, while a
different decision-maker could reach a different conclusion on the evidence,
the Judge’s conclusion is within the range of acceptable outcomes against which
it must be assessed, taking into account the deference to be given to the
decision. I read the Judge’s statement that it is impossible to determine how
many days the Applicant was actually present in Canada to be a reference to the
lack of supporting evidence. In Hussein, Justice LeBlanc found the
citizenship judge’s decision to be problematic because the judge did not
explain how inconsistencies in the evidence made it impossible to calculate the
number of days of physical presence. In the case at hand, the Judge did not
fail to engage with the evidence. Rather, the Judge had a starting point of the
Applicant’s declared 1096 days, but the evidence of the two undeclared trips
and the lack of documentary support for their duration resulted in the Judge
concluding that the Applicant had not met her burden.
[39]
The Applicant refers to the evidence she
provided to support the fact that her cousin’s wedding was in August 2010 and
argues that the 13 days represented by that trip were therefore taken into
account in her calculation of 1096 days. However, I do not consider this to be
material to the decision, which did not turn on either the timing or duration
of the wedding trip but rather the lack of evidence surrounding the trips in
April 2008 and November 2010, as well as a lack of documentary evidence overall.
[40]
Finally, I have considered the Applicant’s
argument that the Judge took into account irrelevant factors including information
that extended outside the Relevant Period. However, reading the decision as a
whole, I return to my conclusion that the decision is based on the lack of
support for the duration of the undeclared absences, which were both within the
Relevant Period. There is nothing in the decision that leads to a concern, as
it did in Deldelian, that the analysis underlying the decision took into
account events outside the Relevant Period.
[41]
I therefore find no basis to interfere with the
Judge’s decision, and I conclude that this application must be dismissed.
[42]
Neither party proposed a question of general
importance for certification for appeal, and none is stated.