Docket: T-1362-15
Citation:
2016 FC 58
Montréal, Quebec, January 20, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice LeBlanc
BETWEEN:
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Applicant
|
and
|
JIA LIN
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
This is a judicial review application brought by
the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration (the Minister) under section 22.1
of the Citizenship Act, RSC 1985, c C-29 (the Act) of a decision by a
Citizenship Judge, dated July 21, 2015, which approved the Respondent’s
application for Canadian citizenship.
[2]
The Respondent did not file a notice of appearance,
nor file any materials before this Court and did not attend the hearing.
II.
Background
[3]
Ms. Lin is a citizen of China. She arrived in Canada with her husband
and daughter in June 2007 and they were all landed as permanent residents.
[4]
In November 2010, Ms. Lin filed an application for Canadian citizenship
where she declared that she was absent from Canada for 90 days and present for
1148 days during the period from June 26, 2007 to November 5, 2010 (the
Relevant Period). She met with a Citizenship Judge in December 2014 and again on
May 28, 2015 for the purpose of determining whether she satisfied the residency
requirement of paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Act.
[5]
In her decision, the Citizenship Judge stated that her only concern was
the absence of Ms. Lin’s passport for the entire Relevant Period since Ms.
Lin had only submitted a passport that was valid from November 15, 2010 to
November 14, 2020. However, since Ms. Lin had brought the missing passport to
the second hearing, the Citizenship Judge approved Ms. Lin’s application for
Canadian citizenship noting that the passport’s entry and exist stamps matched
her only declared trip of February 22, 2009 to May 21, 2009.
[6]
The Minister challenges the Citizenship Judge’s decision on the
ground that she failed to identify the test used to determine how the
Respondent met the Act’s residency requirement. The Minister also claims that
the Citizenship Judge committed a reviewable error by failing to address
numerous concerns flagged by a Citizenship officer’s File Preparation and
Analysis Template report (FPAT Report) dated April 10, 2014. In identifying the
following gaps and contradictions in the Respondent’s
citizenship application, the officer concluded that there were “significant” concerns about Ms. Lin’s credibility regarding
her establishment and physical presence in Canada during the Relevant Period,
namely:
a. No credit card or bank statements or other supporting documents to
verify Ms. Lin’s presences and absences from Canada were provided;
b. No documentation to support her declared residences in Canada was
provided;
c. No documentation was provided in support of any home or family ties
in Canada;
d. Her employment during the Relevant Period could not be assessed
since she did not provide any supporting documentation;
e. Ms. Lin declared that she spends her vacation in China at her own
home, yet failed to declare any property owned overseas;
f. No medical records were provided to establish that Ms. Lin had received
medical services in Canada;
g. No documentation was provided to demonstrate Ms. Lin’s social ties
in Canada; and
h. Ms. Lin did not provide any passive indications of residence in Canada during the Relevant Period (i.e. utility bills, property tax statements, income tax
returns).
[7]
According to the FPAT Report, which was put before the Citizenship Judge, it was simply not
possible to assess, with any degree of certainty, whether Ms. Lin had resided
in Canada during the Relevant Period.
III.
Issues and Standard of Review
[8]
The issue to be determined in this case is
whether the Citizenship Judge, by granting the Respondent’s citizenship
application, committed a reviewable error as contemplated by subsection 18.1(4)
of the Federal Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7.
[9]
In order to answer this question, I have applied
the standard of reasonableness which is the standard of review applicable in
citizenship appeals dealing with the Act’s residency requirement (Saad v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 570, at para 18, 433 FTR 174
and see also Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Rahman, 2013 FC
1274, at para 13, 445 FTR 32; Balta v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2011 FC 1509, at para 5, 403 FTR 134; Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v
Baron, 2011 FC 480, at para 9, 388 FTR 261; Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration) v Diallo, 2012 FC 1537, at para 13, 424 FTR 156; Huang v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 576, at paras 24 to
26; Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Abou-Zahra, 2010 FC 1073, at
para 15, 196 ACWS (3d) 928 [Abou-Zahra]; Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration) v Bayani, 2015 FC 670, at para 17 [Bayani].
[10]
As is well established, the standard of
reasonableness not only requires that the decision at issue fall within a range
of possible, acceptable outcomes defensible in respect of the facts and law,
but it also requires the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process (Dunsmuir v New
Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at para 47, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, at para 47).
IV.
Analysis
[11]
Pursuant to paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Act, as it read
at the time Ms. Lin submitted her citizenship application, the Minister shall
grant citizenship to any person who has “within four
years immediately preceding the date of his or her application, accumulated at
least three years of residence in Canada”. The onus is on the citizenship
applicant to establish that the residency requirement set out in the Act is met
and a Citizenship Judge cannot rely on the applicant’s claims alone in that
regard, especially in the face of contradictory evidence (El Falah v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 736, at para 21).
[12]
While this Court’s jurisprudence allows them to choose
between three tests to assess whether the Act’s residency requirement has been
met (Bayani, above at paras 19-23; Pourzand v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2008 FC 395, at para 16), citizenship judges must at the very
least indicate which residency test was used and why the test was met or not.
Failure to do so is a reviewable error (Bayani, at paras 30-32; Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration v Jeizan 2010 FC 323, at para 18, 386 FTR 1).
[13]
In the case at bar, there is no indication
whatsoever in the Citizenship Judge’s decision as to whether the physical
presence test was used, as elaborated in Pourghasemi (Re) (FCTD) 62 FTR
122, [1993] FCJ No 232 (QL), or if one of the two qualitative tests, as set out
in Re Papadogiorgakis, [1978] 2 FC 208, [1978]
FCJ No 31 (QL) and Koo (Re), [1993] 1 FC 286, 59 FTR
27, was used to determine whether the Respondent was compliant with the
residency requirement. In particular, the Citizenship Judge’s reasons for
decision make it impossible to relate them, in any comprehensive way, to any of
these three tests.
[14]
As I have indicated in Bayani, the
provision of reasons in the citizenship context “assumes
a special significance” as the Minister must grant citizenship in the
event of a positive recommendation by a citizenship judge (Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v Mahmoud, 2009 FC 57, at par 6, 339
FTR 273 [Mahmoud]; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
v Wong, 2009 FC 1085, at para 17-18). They should be “sufficiently clear and detailed so as to demonstrate to the
Minister that all relevant facts have been considered and weighed appropriately
and that the correct legal tests have been applied” (Mahmoud,
above at para 6). At a minimum, this includes indicating which one of the three
legal tests available to assess the residency requirement was used and why it
was satisfied (Bayani, above at para 31).
[15]
I must therefore find that the Citizenship Judge’s
decision lacks justification, transparency and intelligibility as the Judge
failed to articulate, in any meaningful way, the residency test that was
applied.
[16]
I am also of the opinion that the Citizenship
Judge committed a reviewable error by ignoring concerns raised by the
Citizenship officer`s FPAT Report with respect to the Respondent’s
establishment and physical presence in Canada. In the past, this Court has
found a citizenship judge’s decision to be unreasonable where the citizenship
judge failed to address concerns raised in a memorandum prepared by a
Citizenship officer (Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Raphaël, 2012
FC 1039, at paras 24-25, 417 FTR 177). Moreover, in Abou‑Zahra,
Justice Richard Boivin found that a citizenship judge’s decision to be
unreasonable where “the citizenship judge did not
mention or attempt to explain the contradictions, inconsistencies and omissions
that the documentary evidence revealed” (at para 28).
[17]
It is evident that the Citizenship officer who
prepared the FPAT Report found several contradictions and omissions in the
Respondent’s citizenship application, which raised serious doubts that the
Respondent satisfied the residency requirement of paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Act.
Despite this, the Citizenship Judge did not address any of the officer’s
concerns or turn her mind to the question of Ms. Lin’s credibility, which has also
been found to be a reviewable error ( see Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration) v Vijayan, 2015 FC 289, at para 65).
[18]
As the record that was before the Citizenship
Judge stands, it is simply not possible, as noted in the FPAT Report, to assess,
in any meaningful way, whether Ms. Lin had resided in Canada during the
Relevant Period, be it under the physical presence test (the Pourghasemi
test) or either of the two qualitative tests (the Papadogiorgakis or Koo tests).
[19]
For these reasons, the Minister’s judicial
review application is granted and the Citizenship Judge’s decision is set
aside. The Respondent, who did not seem concerned with the Minister’s
proceedings and the possibility of the Citizenship Judge’s decision being
overturned as she failed to appear and participate in these proceedings, will
have to make a new application to the Minister if she decides to apply for
Canadian citizenship again.