Docket: IMM-3026-15
Citation:
2016 FC 862
Ottawa, Ontario, July 22, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
|
LLANA MAGNOLA
POMPEY
|
Applicant
|
and
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MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application under s 72(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [Act] for judicial review of
a decision of an officer [Officer or Minister’s Delegate] of Canada Border
Services Agency [CBSA] dated June 9, 2015 [Decision], which issued an exclusion
order against the Applicant.
II.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The Applicant was born on September 9, 1971 and
is a citizen of St. Vincent and the Grenadines. She entered Canada at Pearson
International Airport in Toronto on October 23, 2010 with a visitor’s visa that
authorized her to stay for six months. The Applicant’s visa expired in April
2011, but she has remained continuously in Canada, without legal status, since
that time.
[3]
The Applicant now says she came to Canada to
escape the abuse and ongoing assaults of her common law husband. She claims she
once went to the police for aid, but was beaten by her husband when she
returned home. She did not seek out the help of the authorities and, instead,
took matters into her own hands. With the assistance of her sister, who lives
in Canada, she left her two children in St. Vincent in the care of her father
and left for Canada on October 20, 2010.
[4]
Once in Canada, the Applicant says she began to
work illegally in a factory in order to support her two children back home. She
says she did not know that she could claim refugee status in Canada, and so she
never did. The Applicant has learned from her children that her husband,
embarrassed that his wife abandoned him, has said he will “get his day” when she is returned home. She says that
her husband has been involved in many violent altercations, including one in
which he cut off his uncle’s hand with a machete. She says that she could be
killed at his hands if she goes back to St. Vincent.
[5]
On June 8, 2015, the Applicant was arrested at
her place of employment by CBSA. At the time of her arrest, she allegedly told
the officer that she had been sending money home and had no fears of returning
there.
[6]
On June 9, 2015, following her interview with
the Minister’s Delegate, an exclusion order was made against the Applicant.
[7]
On June 26, 2015, the Applicant filed an
application for leave and judicial review challenging the Decision.
[8]
The Applicant was scheduled for removal on
February 6, 2016. The Respondent did not oppose a motion for a stay of removal
filed by the Applicant on February 2, 2016 which Justice Zinn granted.
III.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
[9]
The Decision under review consists of the exclusion
order against the Applicant dated June 9, 2015 and the completed Minister’s
Delegate review form. These documents indicate that the Applicant is deemed
inadmissible for failing to comply with the conditions imposed by the Act on
temporary residents.
IV.
ISSUES
[10]
The Applicant raises the following issues:
1. Whether procedural fairness was breached in the making of the
exclusion order;
2. Whether the Minister’s Delegate reasonably made the exclusion order;
3. Whether there are special reasons to award costs.
V.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[11]
The Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v New
Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 [Dunsmuir] held that a standard of review
analysis need not be conducted in every instance. Instead, where the standard
of review applicable to a particular question before the court is settled in a
satisfactory manner by past jurisprudence, the reviewing court may adopt that
standard of review. Only where this search proves fruitless, or where the
relevant precedents appear to be inconsistent with new developments in the
common law principles of judicial review, must the reviewing court undertake a
consideration of the four factors comprising the standard of review analysis: Agraira
v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2013 SCC 36 at para
48.
[12]
The first issue addresses procedural fairness
and will be determined using the correctness standard of review: Doe v
Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2016 FC 518 at para 22; Sanif
v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2010 FC 115 at para
23. The second issue will be reviewed using the reasonableness standard: Finta
v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2012 FC 1127 at para
31.
[13]
As regards the third issue raised by the
Applicant, the Federal Court does not ordinarily award costs in immigration
proceedings. As Rule 22 of the Federal Courts Immigration and Refugee
Protection Rules, SOR/93-22 provides, costs will not be awarded to or
payable by any party in respect of an application for leave, an application for
judicial review or an appeal under these Rules unless the Court, for special
reasons, so orders. The Court has held repeatedly that the threshold to
establish “special reasons” is high, but they
may be found where one party has engaged in conduct which is unfair,
oppressive, improper or actuated by bad faith or has unnecessarily or
unreasonably prolonged proceedings: Green v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2016 FC 698; Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v A76,
2014 FC 524 at para 31; Johnson v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2005 FC 1262 at para 26.
[14]
When reviewing a decision on the standard of reasonableness, the analysis will be
concerned with “the existence of justification,
transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making process [and also
with] whether the decision falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes
which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.” See Dunsmuir,
above, at para 47, and Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa,
2009 SCC 12 at para 59. Put another way, the Court should intervene only if the Decision was unreasonable in the sense that it
falls outside the “range of possible, acceptable
outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.”
VI.
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[15]
The following provisions of the Act are
applicable in this matter:
Right of
temporary residents
|
Droit du résident temporaire
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29 (1) A temporary resident is,
subject to the other provisions of this Act, authorized to enter and remain
in Canada on a temporary basis as a visitor or as a holder of a temporary
resident permit.
|
29 (1) Le résident temporaire a, sous
réserve des autres dispositions de la présente loi, l’autorisation d’entrer
au Canada et d’y séjourner à titre temporaire comme visiteur ou titulaire
d’un permis de séjour temporaire.
|
Obligation — temporary resident
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Obligation du résident temporaire
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(2) A temporary resident must comply
with any conditions imposed under the regulations and with any requirements
under this Act, must leave Canada by the end of the period authorized for
their stay and may re-enter Canada only if their authorization provides for re-entry.
|
(2) Le résident temporaire est
assujetti aux conditions imposées par les règlements et doit se conformer à
la présente loi et avoir quitté le pays à la fin de la période de séjour
autorisée. Il ne peut y rentrer que si l’autorisation le prévoit.
|
…
|
…
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Preparation of report
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Rapport d’interdiction de
territoire
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44 (1) An
officer who is of the opinion that a permanent resident or a foreign national
who is in Canada is inadmissible may prepare a report setting out the
relevant facts, which report shall be transmitted to the Minister.
|
44 (1) S’il estime que le résident
permanent ou l’étranger qui se trouve au Canada est interdit de territoire,
l’agent peut établir un rapport circonstancié, qu’il transmet au ministre.
|
Referral
or removal order
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Suivi
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(2) If the Minister is of the opinion
that the report is well-founded, the Minister may refer the report to the
Immigration Division for an admissibility hearing, except in the case of a
permanent resident who is inadmissible solely on the grounds that they have
failed to comply with the residency obligation under section 28 and except,
in the circumstances prescribed by the regulations, in the case of a foreign
national. In those cases, the Minister may make a removal order.
|
(2) S’il estime le rapport bien fondé,
le ministre peut déférer l’affaire à la Section de l’immigration pour
enquête, sauf s’il s’agit d’un résident permanent interdit de territoire pour
le seul motif qu’il n’a pas respecté l’obligation de résidence ou, dans les
circonstances visées par les règlements, d’un étranger; il peut alors prendre
une mesure de renvoi.
|
[16]
The following provisions of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 are applicable in this
matter:
Subsection
44(2) of the Act — foreign nationals
|
Application du paragraphe 44(2) de
la Loi : étrangers
|
228 (1) For the purposes of
subsection 44(2) of the Act, and subject to subsections (3) and (4), if a
report in respect of a foreign national does not include any grounds of
inadmissibility other than those set out in the following circumstances, the
report shall not be referred to the Immigration Division and any removal
order made shall be
|
228 (1) Pour l’application du
paragraphe 44(2) de la Loi, mais sous réserve des paragraphes (3) et (4),
dans le cas où elle ne comporte pas de motif d’interdiction de territoire
autre que ceux prévus dans l’une des circonstances ci-après, l’affaire n’est
pas déférée à la Section de l’immigration et la mesure de renvoi à prendre
est celle indiquée en regard du motif en cause :
|
…
|
…
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(c) if the foreign national is
inadmissible under section 41 of the Act on grounds of
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c) en cas d’interdiction de
territoire de l’étranger au titre de l’article 41 de la Loi pour manquement à
:
|
…
|
…
|
(iv) failing to leave Canada by the
end of the period authorized for their stay as required by subsection 29(2)
of the Act, an exclusion order,
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iv) l’obligation prévue au paragraphe
29(2) de la Loi de quitter le Canada à la fin de la période de séjour
autorisée, l’exclusion,
|
…
|
…
|
[17]
The following provision of the Federal Court
Immigration and Refugee Protection Rules, SOR/93-22 is applicable in this
matter:
Costs
|
Dépens
|
22 No costs
shall be awarded to or payable by any party in respect of an application for
leave, an application for judicial review or an appeal under these Rules
unless the Court, for special reasons, so orders.
|
22 Sauf
ordonnance contraire rendue par un juge pour des raisons spéciales, la
demande d’autorisation, la demande de contrôle judiciaire ou l’appel
introduit en application des présentes règles ne donnent pas lieu à des
dépens.
|
VII.
ARGUMENTS
A.
Applicant
(1)
Procedural Fairness
[18]
The Applicant says that the relevant manuals
under which the exclusion order was issued are ENF 6: Review of Reports Under
A44(1) and ENG 2/OP: Evaluating Inadmissibility. The Applicant submits that she
had a legitimate expectation that the Minister’s Delegate would carry out his
function as set out in the manuals, but he dismally failed to do so: Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v Don, 2014 FCA 4 at paras 50-54.
[19]
The Applicant argues that it is clear that the
Minister’s Delegate should have been guided by factors that went unconsidered
in this case. His failure to provide any details about his decision-making
process is a barrier to understanding the Decision.
[20]
By way of affidavit evidence, the Applicant recalls
her experience with the Minister’s Delegate as being rushed and lasting
only five minutes. The Applicant says she has a limited education and was not
given the opportunity to seek advice from anyone, be it lawyer or friend. She
was asked if there was anything preventing her from going home. She says she
interpreted the question as asking if there was anything in Canada that would
prevent her return to St. Vincent. She was not asked whether she feared for her
life or whether she wished to make a refugee claim. She says that had she been
asked such things, she would have quickly told the Minister’s Delegate about
her husband and the danger he posed. She said she was given no opportunity to
explain why she was in Canada, and no other questions were asked of her. She
says that it is simply not true that she had no fear of returning to St. Vincent.
[21]
The Minister’s Delegate swore an affidavit on
May 17, 2016, almost a year after the Decision was made, and the Applicant says
the affidavit is an attempt to augment the record. The Court has recognized
this type of evidence to be improper: Eshraghian v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2013 FC 828.
(2)
Minister’s Delegate’s Jurisdiction
[22]
The Applicant submits that the conduct of the
Minister’s Delegate reveals that, even before he began to consider her case, he
was of the view that an exclusion order would be issued – it was a fait
accompli. Therefore, it seems as though the Minister’s Delegate approached
his task with a closed mind, and fettered his discretion. The manuals do not
make it mandatory that someone in the Applicant’s position be excluded. Implicit
in the power of the Minister’s Delegate is the discretion not to issue a
removal order.
[23]
Specifically, the Minister’s Delegate failed to
do the following in accordance with the manuals:
•
Explain to the Applicant before he convoked the
hearing or during the hearing what the matter was about;
•
Advise the Applicant that as a detainee at the
Rexdale Immigration Detention Centre she had a right to counsel;
•
Complete the Minister’s Delegate Review form in
many critical areas; and
•
Ask the Applicant whether she wished to make a
refugee claim.
(3)
Costs
[24]
As this is a unique case where CBSA showed
significant resistance to common sense accommodations, the Applicant argues
that there should be a finding of special reasons warranting the award of
costs. The Applicant is seeking costs related to the motion she brought for a
stay of removal which was consented to at the last minute. Counsel for the
Applicant wrote to CBSA on several occasions beginning in July 2015, but did not
receive a response until January 2016 when CBSA contacted the Applicant with a
Call In Notice to report to CBSA for the purpose of scheduling her deportation.
After counsel sought a deferral of the Applicant’s removal so that she could
have her risk assessed by the Refugee Protection Division, CBSA rejected the
request. The Applicant says that it was clear that the officer who rejected
this request knew that there had been no risk assessment completed, but
appeared content to send the Applicant back to St. Vincent knowing full well
she would likely face a risk to her life. The officer was reckless in the
discharge of his duties, and the Applicant was left with no choice but to
engage the Federal Court to seek a stay.
B.
Respondent
(1)
Procedural Fairness
[25]
The Respondent says that in conducting the
interview with the Applicant, the Minister’s Delegate did not breach the
principles of procedural fairness. The interview notes reflect that she was
treated more than fairly: she was informed of the purpose of the interview; was
asked if she wanted counsel; and was asked if she feared returning home. The
Minister’s Delegate swore an affidavit in response to the Applicant’s
allegations of a lack of procedural fairness, supplementing his interview notes
which form part of the Decision. The Respondent says this evidence should be
preferred over the Applicant’s affidavit, sworn five months after her
interview, as it reflects what transpired during the interview as set out in the
notes: Paracha v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[1997] FCJ No 1786 at paras 6-7. The Minister’s Delegate makes it clear that,
although he does not specifically remember the Applicant, the interview notes
and his set practice reveal the following:
•
He recorded the information provided by the
Applicant on the Minister’s Delegate Review form as the interview progressed.
•
He was not rushed as he had only two cases that
morning.
•
The interview would have taken about 30 minutes,
and certainly could not have been completed in 5 minutes.
•
As per his practice, he took the Applicant
through the allegations of overstaying her visa set out in the s 44(1) report
to ensure that she understood what was being alleged against her.
•
He asked, as he does in all cases, whether the
Applicant wanted counsel and would not have proceeded with the interview had
she indicated that she did.
•
He asked, as he does in all cases, whether she
had a fear of return. Had she indicated a fear of return, he would have
initiated the paperwork for a refugee claim, as he has done in approximately
800 cases since beginning work as a Minister’s Delegate 8 years ago.
•
He did not make further notations regarding the
evidence of inadmissibility on the Minister’s Delegate Review form because the
Applicant conceded the allegations regarding overstaying her visa. There was,
therefore, no need to repeat the same information on the next page.
•
He made the decision to issue the exclusion
order and printed the order during the course of the interview. He went through
the order with the Applicant and also explained her right to seek judicial
review. The Applicant signed the exclusion order and the document regarding her
right to seek judicial review and the timelines involved.
[26]
The Minister’s Delegate’s affidavit is not, as
the Applicant alleges, improper. While he may not supplement the reasons in the
Decision, he is entitled to submit additional evidence to address allegations
of procedural fairness: Mohagheghzadeh v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2013 FC 533 at para 6 [Mohagheghzadeh]; Pinto v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 349 at para 8 [Pinto].
The Respondent asserts that there is nothing in the affidavit that bolsters the
Minister’s Delegate’s reasons for issuing the exclusion order and it is
therefore proper evidence: Kalra v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2003 FC 941 at para 15.
[27]
The Respondent notes that not only do the
Minister’s Delegate’s notes indicate that the Applicant did not express a fear
of returning to St. Vincent, but so does a notation made on the previous day by
the CBSA investigating officer. Therefore, the Applicant told two officials
that she had no such fear. The evidence of the Minister’s Delegate should be
considered to be reliable, as it was corroborated by a second party with no
interest in the outcome of the case. Furthermore, there is no obligation created
by jurisprudence or guidance manuals on the Minister’s Delegate to ask a person
subject to a s 44(1) report whether they are at risk in their home country
before issuing a removal order. The Respondent says that procedural fairness
requirements in the issuance of removal orders by the Minister’s delegates are
minimal, and do not include a right to counsel in the interview: Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v Cha, 2006 FCA 126 at paras 52, 54-55.
(2)
Minister’s Delegate’s Jurisdiction
[28]
The Respondent argues that the Minister’s
Delegate made a valid decision to issue the exclusion order in accordance with
his jurisdiction as established by law. According to the Court’s jurisprudence,
he had restricted discretion in deciding whether to make the exclusion order
and was essentially limited to fact-finding: Rosenberry v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 882 at paras 36-37 [Rosenberry];
Eberhardt v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2013 FC
1077 at para 55 [Eberhardt]. The Applicant has made several submissions
that rely on sections of the Operational Manual, but where these conflict with
the jurisprudence, the jurisprudence must prevail.
[29]
It cannot be said that the Applicant had a
legitimate expectation that a removal order would not be issued in this case.
Not only does the doctrine apply only to procedural rights, but the manual
relied on by the Applicant does not give a “clear,
unambiguous and unqualified” representation to individuals that they
will not be issued removal orders.
(3)
Costs
[30]
The Respondent says there are no special reasons
for the Applicant to be awarded costs with respect to the provisions of reasons,
or the stay motion in this matter. While reasons for the Decision may not have
been provided after the Federal Court Registry’s request, they were immediately
given after it became clear that the first request had been missed. There was no
misconduct on the part of CBSA here.
[31]
Furthermore, in seeking to enforce the
provisions of the Act and scheduling the removal of the Applicant after she had
remained in Canada without status for more than four years without making a
refugee claim, CBSA was acting in an appropriate manner. There was no bad faith
or improper conduct to justify an award of costs.
VIII.
ANALYSIS
[32]
The Minister’s Delegate’s affidavit is admissible
in this case in so far as it speaks to the accusations of procedural unfairness
raised by the Applicant. See Mohagheghzadeh, above, at para 6; Pinto,
above, at para 8. The affidavit cannot, however, be used to bolster the Minister’s Delegate’s
reasons which are found in the contemporaneous notes he made at the interview
with the Applicant. I find the affidavit does not attempt to bolster the
reasons for the Decision. It simply addresses the procedural unfairness
allegations raised by the Applicant. It is therefore admissible.
[33]
In her affidavit, the Applicant gives an account
significantly at odds with the Minister’s Delegate’s affidavit and with
the notes that make up the Minister’s Delegate’s Review form. In order to
accept the Applicant’s account, the Court would have to accept that the
contemporaneous notes were deliberately concocted to mislead anyone who made
reference to them.
[34]
For example, on the central issue of whether the
Applicant faces risk if she is retuned to St. Vincent, the Applicant opines
that she was asked “if there is anything that was
preventing me from going home” and that she “interpreted
the question as asking me if there is anything in Canada which would prevent me
from going back to St. Vincent.” The Applicant is adamant that the Minister’s Delegate
“never asked me if I had any concerns in St. Vincent or
whether I feared for my life or whether I wish to make a refugee claim.”
[35]
This is totally at odds with the Minister’s Delegate’s
account of his usual and invariable practice that is supported by his
contemporaneous notes which read as follows:
Do you fear returning to St. Vincent for any
reasons? (If subject identifies a fear, you must explore it and determine if
subject intends to make a claim for refugee protected person status)
The Minister’s Delegate has written
next to this question:
No fear of returning
Both the question and the answer could not
have been clearer. Yet the Applicant says this is not how it was.
[36]
As is usual in these cases, the Minister’s Delegate’s
version is to be preferred, and for good reason. The Minister’s Delegate had
no reason to lie and his version is supported by contemporaneous notes and, in
this case, is also corroborated by the CBSA investigating officer’s notation
that the Applicant told her “no fears – sending money
home.” See Sribalaganeshamoorthy v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2010 FC 11 at para 27; Sehgal v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2001 FCT 212 at para 7.
[37]
The Applicant’s version, on the other hand, is
found in her affidavit sworn for the purposes of this application some 5 months
after the interview. The Court is being asked to assume that the Minister’s Delegate
is lying and that, at the time of the interview, he made inaccurate notes in
order to make it look like he had addressed the fear in St. Vincent factor
when, in fact, he had not.
[38]
Much of the same can be said about the
disagreement over whether the Applicant was asked whether she wanted legal
counsel.
[39]
The weight of evidence favours the Minister’s Delegate’s
version of events and the Applicant has not convinced me that she was treated
in any way that was procedurally unfair. Much the same goes for the other
discrepancies between what the Applicant says transpired at the meeting and the
way it was conducted, and what the Minister’s Delegate says and his notes
support. His version is also supported by the fact that the Applicant has lived
in Canada for four years and has never sought refugee protection. In addition,
she was offered a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment but she asked that it be deferred.
[40]
The Minister’s Delegate also made no
reviewable error in making the exclusion order. As the Court made clear in Rosenberry,
above:
[36] The substance of the decision did
not require the Minister’s delegate to consider the H&C application or
H&C factors at all. Under section 44 immigration officials are simply
involved in fact-finding. They are under an obligation to act on facts
indicating inadmissibility. It is not the function of such officers to consider
H&C factors or risk factors that would be considered in a pre-removal risk
assessment. This was recently confirmed in Cha v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FCA 126, [2007] 1 F.C.R. 409 at
paragraphs 35 and 37.
[37] Nor was it necessary in the
context of the admissibility decision or the request for an adjournment to
consider issues relating to the practicability of removal. At the time the
request was made, it would have been reasonable for the Minister’s delegate to
consider that in the event that removal orders were made against the
applicants, the applicants would still be entitled to make a request under
section 48 of the Act to stay their removal, at which point a pending H&C
application and other factors relating the practicability of removal are often
considered.
[41]
The same point was made in Lasin v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 1356 [Lasin]:
[19] The immigration officer only had
to conclude, based on the facts that the applicant did not have the proper
status in order to remain in Canada. The standard of review for this type of
administrative fact finding decision is that of patently unreasonable. I am
convinced that the immigration officer followed the process set out in the Act
and made a reasonable determination.
[42]
Even more recently, in Eberhardt, above, at
para 55 (citing Lasin, above) and para 59, the Court has made it clear
that “[t]he only question before the immigration
officer in determining whether to issue the order, was whether the information
regarding the applicant's inadmissibility was accurate.”
[43]
Whatever may appear in the manual, the
jurisprudence of the Court is clear that the Minister’s Delegate only
needed to consider the allegations of inadmissibility before a decision was
made to remove the Applicant, and she could have no legitimate expectation of
anything else.
[44]
The Applicant also complains that the
contemporaneous notes are not detailed enough and are not made in accordance
with the applicable manual instructions. She points out that no answers are
placed beside the questions “Do you wish to add any
information or make any comments?” and “Do you
have any questions?” But these questions do not go to the principal
issues in dispute, i.e. that no legal counsel was requested and that the
Applicant had no fear of returning to St. Vincent. The manual provides
instructions, but a failure to follow it does not mean that the Applicant was
not provided procedural fairness on the issues that she raises. The length of a
decision is not what matters. Provided it deals with the relevant points in a
fair and reasonable way then there is no reviewable error. The Applicant has
not convinced me that she was not asked if she wanted legal counsel and was
never asked about fears in St. Vincent. These are the central and deciding
issues in this case.
[45]
The Applicant has asked me to admit into
evidence Citizenship and Immigration Canada’s Exclusion Order Information Sheet
and an example of detailed interview notes made by another Minister’s delegate.
I have admitted these documents as evidence. However, notes and records from
another case do not establish a minimum standard of procedural fairness that
must be followed in all cases. These comparator notes tell us nothing about how
the matters in dispute in this application were handled at the interview. For
that, we have to look at the two affidavits and, in particular, the Minister’s Delegate’s
contemporaneous notes and decide if procedural fairness was observed in this
case.
[46]
The Applicant has also asked that costs be
awarded for the work done on a stay motion that did not proceed because the Respondent
consented to the stay on the day before it was heard. She says it is clear on
the face of the record that the Respondent behaved unreasonable by, first, issuing
a notice of removal knowing that the Applicant had not had her risk assessed
and, then, by refusing to defer the removal and putting the Applicant through
the trouble of seeking a stay which was then consented to at the last minute.
[47]
The Applicant was offered a risk assessment but
asked that it be deferred. There is really nothing on the record before me to
suggest that CBSA behaved improperly or is guilty of unfair, oppressive or bad
faith conduct. The fact that consent came on the eve of the stay hearing is
not, in itself, evidence of conduct that requires an award of costs. Stay
motions often end this way.
[48]
Consequently, I can find no special reason for
an award of costs in this case.
[49]
Counsel for the Applicant has suggested a
question for certification along the following lines:
In the event that the Court finds that the
Applicant was not notified of her right to counsel – so that she could not have
declined – do the instructions in the Manual (ENF 6 Review of reports under
A44(1)) that officers must inform persons of the possibility of retaining
counsel prior to commencing the interview, even though they don’t have a right
to counsel, give interviewees a participatory right to counsel in light of the
decision in Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Cha, 2006 FCA 126 at
para s 54 and 55?
[50]
On the facts of this case, this question does
not arise because my conclusion is that the Applicant was alerted to her right
to counsel but declined.