Docket: IMM-321-16
Citation:
2016 FC 916
Ottawa, Ontario, August 12, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Brown
BETWEEN:
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SYEDA HAFSA
IMRAN
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Nature of the Matter
[1]
This is an application for judicial review under
s. 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27
[IRPA] by Syeda Hafsa Imran [the Applicant] of a decision by the Immigration
Appeal Division [IAD] dated December 17, 2015, dismissing the Applicant's
sponsorship appeal for the Applicant's mother (Kausar Sultana), father (Habeeb
Imran) and younger brother (Habeeb Furqan) (collectively the family members or
the Applicants) [the Decision].
II.
Facts
[2]
The Applicant is Ms. Syeda Hafsa Imran, who
applied to sponsor her mother, father and brother for permanent residence to
Canada. The three family members currently live in India.
[3]
The Applicant initially came to Canada in 2000
for her studies. She has since obtained permanent residence and gainful
employment in Canada. The Applicant’s older brother arrived in Canada around
the same time and also obtained status in Canada. He is married and has an
eight-year-old son.
[4]
The mother and younger brother initially
accompanied the Applicant when she moved to Canada. Their status expired. They
argue this occurred due to their immigration consultant getting severely
injured in an accident and failing to submit their materials on time. No
complaints were filed. Then, allegedly following a new immigration consultant’s
advice, the mother and brother filed fraudulent claims for refugee status
alleging domestic abuse. These were found, and they admit they were found
correctly, to have no credible basis. Again, the mother and brother allege the
immigration consultant’s defective advice led them to make this unsupported
claim. The mother and brother stayed in Canada. There is no evidence on the
record of a complaint having been made against the immigration consultant(s)
involved, which is generally required before this Court will consider such a
complaint as a ground for judicial review: Kim v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2012 FC 687 (Shore J).
[5]
The Applicant’s father came to Canada in 2002 on
a visitor visa. When the visa was about to expire, he made a refugee claim on
the basis of his inability to practice his Muslim faith in India. Though found
to be credible by the Officer, his claim was refused because of adequate state
protection.
[6]
Once the family members had all failed in their
refugee claims, they applied for permanent residence on humanitarian and
compassionate grounds in 2004. Meanwhile, departure orders became effective
against the family members. The family had gainful employment in Canada.
[7]
At this time, allegedly in preparation for a
likely departure from Canada, the family members moved from their home and into
an apartment rented under the Applicant’s name. While living at the apartment,
the family members were sent a notice to attend their PRRA. The family members
claim never to have received the notice for the PRRA interview. The family
members did not to attend their PRRA meeting; the PRRA claims were dismissed.
Warrants were issued.
[8]
In December 2007, CBSA officers attended the
family apartment and arrested the mother, who was alone at home. The warrants
against the brother and father were executed some days later. The mother
returned to India within the week; the brother and father returned a bit later
due to the need to renew their passports. The FOSS notes from the CBSA officers
state that the mother was not cooperative during the arrest.
[9]
The mother testified before the IAD of her
version of the arrest, which contradicted in part the FOSS notes. In her
testimony, she explained she was caught by surprise and was cooperative with
the officers upon their attendance to her residence in 2007.
[10]
When the Applicant sought to sponsor her family
members, they were found inadmissible under section 52(1) of the IRPA.
The family members sought an authorization to return to Canada (ARC), which was
refused. There was no appeal of the inadmissibility finding. Only the refusal
of the ARC request was on appeal before the Immigration Appeal Division.The
IAD’s refusal to allow their appeal of the ARC decision is before this Court on
judicial review.
III.
Decision
[11]
The applicants were denied an authorization to
return to Canada (ARC) after an inadmissibility finding pursuant to section 52
of the IRPA. After a hearing, the IAD dismissed the appeal of the
decision to refuse special relief, on the grounds the applicants showed
continuing disregard for Canada’s laws and immigration processes, weighing
heavily against granting them special relief pursuant to section 67(1)(c) of
the IRPA. Additionally, there was little hardship experienced, and there
were no compelling best interests of the child.
IV.
Issues
[12]
As stated by the Applicants, this Application
raises the following issues: is the decision of the IAD reasonable and in
particular did it err in relying on the FOSS notes of the arrest in 2007, and
was the BIOC of the nephew/grandchild properly assessed.
V.
Analysis
A.
Standard of Review
[13]
In Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9
at paras 57, 62 [Dunsmuir], the Supreme Court of Canada held that a
standard of review analysis is unnecessary where “the
jurisprudence has already determined in a satisfactory manner the degree of
deference to be accorded with regard to a particular category of question.”
It is well known that findings of credibility by the IAD are judicially
reviewed on the reasonableness standard: Enright v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 209 at para 41.
[14]
In Dunsmuir at para 47, the Supreme Court
of Canada explained what is required of a court reviewing on the reasonableness
standard of review:
A court conducting a review for reasonableness
inquires into the qualities that make a decision reasonable, referring both to
the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes. In judicial review,
reasonableness is concerned mostly with the existence of justification,
transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making process. But it is
also concerned with whether the decision falls within a range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.
B.
Analysis
Is the
decision of the IAD reasonable and in particular did it err in relying on the
FOSS notes of the arrest in 2007?
[15] In my view, the decision of the
IAD is reasonable in this case as that term is considered in Dunsmuir.
It considered and relied upon far more than the mother’s cooperation or lack of
cooperation on her arrest in 2007. While no doubt that was a factor in the
overall assessment by the IAD, and while it arises from a comment in the FOSS
notes, it was not the only basis for the impugned Decision.
[16] First, to deal with the FOSS
comment directly, in my view the IAD is entitled to accept what is stated by
the arresting officer in the notes including the observation that the mother
was not cooperative. The notes were prepared by the arresting officer
contemporaneously with the arrest, unlike the mother’s evidence which was based
on her recollection of events 8 years earlier when she herself admitted to
being under stress at the time the events took place. Contrary to what the
Applicants allege, the IAD is given authority by Parliament by paragraph
175(1)(b) of IRPA to receive and base a decision on evidence that it
considers to be credible and trustworthy in the circumstances – that is, the
IAD need not follow strict rules of evidence, This is legislated as follows:
Proceedings
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Fonctionnement
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175 (1) The Immigration Appeal
Division, in any proceeding before it,
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175 (1) Dans toute affaire dont elle est saisie, la Section d’appel de
l’immigration
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(a) must, in the case of an appeal under subsection 63(4), hold a
hearing;
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a) dispose de l’appel formé au titre du
paragraphe 63(4) par la tenue d’une audience;
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(b) is not bound by any legal or technical rules of evidence;
and
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b) n’est pas liée par les règles légales
ou techniques de présentation de la preuve;
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(c) may receive and base a decision on evidence adduced in the
proceedings that it considers credible or trustworthy in the circumstances.
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c) peut recevoir les éléments
qu’elle juge crédibles ou dignes de foi en l’occurrence et fonder sur eux sa
décision.
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[emphasis added]
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[Je souligne.]
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[17] That evidence may be tenuous; it
is for the IAD and not this Court to decide the weight to be given to the
evidence. The Federal Court of Appeal in Balathavarajan v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration) 2006 FCA 340 [Balathavarajan] at
paras 11 and 12 put it this way per Linden JA:
[11] The appellant further argues that
the Judge erred when she affirmed the IAD in its finding that he was a gang
member, because it relied on unidentified informant evidence, which was
incapable of being tested. It is argued that this was a denial of natural
justice. This is in error. These are merely questions of fact and this
Court will defer to the Federal Court Judge’s decision in the absence of
palpable and overriding error: Housen, supra, at para. 36.
[12] Section 175 of the IRPA permits
the IAD to receive and base a decision on evidence adduced in immigration
proceedings that it considers to be credible and trustworthy in the
circumstances. The evidence can sometime be tenuous and may include evidence
of informants: Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v.
Thanabalasingham, [2004] 3 F.C.R. 523 (T.D.), at para.107; aff’d, [2004] 3
F.C.R. 572 (C.A.). It is up to the IAD, not the Court to decide the weight
to be given to the evidence.
[emphasis added]
[18] The Applicants rely on Du v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2001 FCT 485 at paras
11-14 [Du], Hoang v Canada (MCI), 2011 FC 545 and Tharmavarathan
v Canada (MCI), 2010 FC 985 at paras 18-19, 22-23. I raised the last two
cases at the hearing and invited written submissions in that connection. Having
considered the matter accordingly, in my respectful opinion these cases are
distinguishable. They deal with the admissibility of FOSS or CAIPS notes, that
is, notes prepared by various officers, and do so in the context of a hearing
before the Federal Court itself. The Federal Court is governed by the laws of
evidence. These laws, however, do not apply to the IAD as I just explained. I
therefore conclude that FOSS notes may be accepted into evidence before the
IAD, and may be found by the IAD, as happened here, to be “credible or trustworthy in the circumstances”,
subject to the reasonableness of the decision as determined on subsequent
judicial review by this Court.
[19] In addition, there were
inconsistencies and other difficulties with the mother’s evidence; for example
her claim to difficulty with the English language is questionable given she
attended university in India and had been examined in English, and that she had
workplace experience requiring use of English. Further, the mother persisted
before the IAD in casting blame for her situation on the consultant whom she
testified was the “root” of their problems. The
IAD properly noted this showed a lack of remorse, and a refusal to accept
responsibility for her past misconduct, and it in effect reaffirmed in the
present context a disrespect for Canada’s immigration process. In this
connection, it is worthwhile recalling that the mother participated in her own
fraudulent refugee claim, and while now she says she did not misrepresent her
situation, when confronted with her false refugee claim, the IAD was entitled
to accept at a minimum that she wrongfully attested to the truth of her false
PIF. This illustrates that her credibility was in issue concerning more than
just her attitude on arrest: she filed a false refugee claim, it was rejected
as having no credible basis, and indeed she had likely perjured herself at her
refugee hearing.
[20] I do not make anything of the family’s
failure to attend at the PRRA meeting in 2007; it may have been that they did
not get the notice.
[21] To summarize on the FOSS notes,
they were properly admitted and considered by the IAD and it was for the IAD to
weigh them in assessing credibility as it did. Credibility lies at the
heartland of the jurisdiction of the IAD particularly where, as here, the IAD
held a hearing. It is beyond doubt that the IAD is entitled to considerable
deference in assessing credibility and in determining the weight of evidence,
as noted by the Federal Court of Appeal in Balathavarajan. In my view, this
aspect of the application involves a disagreement with the assessment of
credibility and the weight of evidence. It is up to the IAD and not the Court
to decide the weight to be given to the evidence.
C.
Also at issue is whether the IAD properly
assessed BIOC of the nephew/grandchild
[22] The Applicants allege the IAD
erred in assessing the BIOC of the Applicant’s nephew in Canada. The issue is
whether and to what extent his interests may suffer in continuing to be
separated from his grandparents and uncle, i.e., the family members sponsored
by the Applicant. In my respectful view there is no merit in this submission.
The IAD correctly noted the child had both parents in Canada, that there was no
evidence of dependency between the child and either his grandparents or uncle
in India, and there was no suggestion that the child had special needs relating
to these relatives. The IAD also noted that while the child could not travel to
India with his mother due to her medical condition, he could do so with his
father and later by himself.
[23] I am asked to apply the two-part
analysis requirement discussed in Williams v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2012 FC 166. I disagree. First, I see no need for any
particular formulaic approach to the assessment of the best interests of a
child to be super-added or glossed on to current practices. In any event, to
the extent immigration authorities might be required to first define their
terms and set out what is in the best interests of the child, which I find they
need not do, the IAD met this test in this case. In my respectful view, BIOC
was reasonably assessed by the IAD.
VI.
Conclusion
[24] Judicial review is not a treasure
hunt for error; even if it were, and I speak of the FOSS notes issue, I found
no error in the IAD’s acceptance or assessment of the evidence as “credible and trustworthy”. Moreover, the decision on
judicial review is to be reviewed as an organic whole, the question being
whether the Decision falls within the permitted range of decisions that are
possible, acceptable outcomes defensible in respect of the facts and law. In my
view the IAD’s decision falls well within this permitted range. Therefore this
application must be dismissed.
[25] The Applicants proposed the
following question be certified, while the Respondent opposed:
In a best interests of the child analysis,
is an Officer required first to explicitly establish what the child’s best
interests are, and then to establish the degree to which the child’s interests
are compromised by one potential decision over another, in order to show that
the Officer has been alert, alive and sensitive to the best interests of the
child?
[26] No question will be certified
because as can be seen from the above, in my view the answer would not dispose
of this application in the circumstances of this case.