Docket: T-565-15
Citation:
2015 FC 1239
Toronto, Ontario, November 2, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
BETWEEN:
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
|
Applicant
|
and
|
YANA KHOREVA
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration
seeks judicial review of the decision of a Citizenship Judge approving Yana
Khoreva’s application for Canadian citizenship. The Minister alleges that the
Citizenship Judge erred in his application of the physical presence test for
residency in Canada. Although Ms. Khoreva did not respond to the
Minister’s application, she did appear at the hearing and the Minister
consented to her making submissions opposing the application.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, I have concluded
that the Citizenship Judge’s decision was unreasonable. The application will
therefore be granted.
I.
Analysis
[3]
Ms. Khoreva originally declared that she
had been absent from Canada on 14 occasions during the relevant period, during
which she had been outside of Canada for a total of 364 days. In other words,
Ms. Khoreva’s citizenship application indicated that she was just one day
over the 1095-day minimum necessary to satisfy the residency requirements of
the Citizenship Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-29.
[4]
Because there were discrepancies between the
absences declared by Ms. Khoreva in her citizenship application and the
stamps in her passport, she was required to complete a Residence
Questionnaire. This time, Ms. Khoreva declared that she had been absent
from Canada for a total of 368 days during the relevant four-year period.
[5]
Thus, on Ms. Khoreva’s own evidence, she
was three days short of the 1095-day minimum.
[6]
The Citizenship Judge chose to apply the
physical presence test for residency established in Re Pourghasemi (1993),
62 F.T.R. 122, , [1993] F.C.J. No. 232. In approving Ms. Khoreva’s
citizenship application, the Citizenship Judge noted the discrepancies in the
absences that had been declared by Ms. Khoreva and the stamps in her
passport. The judge was nevertheless satisfied that “in
light of the documents provided post-hearing those discrepancies caused by
mistakes are minor in nature and do not impact on the residence requirement”.
[7]
The documents referred to by the Citizenship
Judge included Notices of Assessment, report cards for Ms. Khoreva’s
daughters, letters of employment and Ms. Khoreva’s separation agreement.
None of these documents shed any light on when Ms. Khoreva left Canada, or
the duration of her absences.
[8]
The Citizenship Judge made no mention of
Ms. Khoreva’s admission in her Residence Questionnaire that she had been
outside of Canada for 368 days during the period under review. It is true that
a tribunal is not required to refer to every piece of evidence in the record
and will be presumed to have considered all of the evidence that is before it: Hassan
v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), (1992), 147 N.R. 317,
[1992] F.C.J. No. 946 (F.C.A.). That said, the more important the evidence that
is not specifically mentioned and analyzed in the tribunal’s reasons, the more
willing the Court may be to infer that the tribunal made an erroneous finding
of fact without regards to the evidence: Cepeda-Gutierrez v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), (1998) 157 F.T.R. 35 at paras.14-17,
[1998] F.C.J. No. 1425.
[9]
In this case there was highly probative evidence
that directly contradicted the judge’s finding that Ms. Khoreva had
satisfied the Re Pourghasemi physical presence test. The failure of the
Citizenship Judge to come to grips with this evidence means the decision
approving Ms. Khoreva’s application for Canadian citizenship lacks the
transparency, justification and intelligibility required of a reasonable
decision.
[10]
This finding is sufficient to dispose of this
application. I will, however, address Ms. Khoreva’s submissions so that
she may better understand why the Citizenship Judge’s decision is being set
aside.
[11]
Ms. Khoreva explained to me that she had
done her best to be accurate in her citizenship application, and that she had
been mistaken when she stated that she had been outside of Canada for 364 days
during the relevant period. She says that she did not intend to mislead
citizenship officials, and that she had corrected her error when she completed her
Residence Questionnaire, correctly stating that she had been outside of Canada for
368 days during the period in issue. Ms. Khoreva also stated that had she
been aware of the number of days that she had actually been away from Canada,
she would have simply waited another week before filing her citizenship
application.
[12]
I accept Ms. Khoreva’s statement that she
had not intended to mislead anyone in relation to her application for Canadian
citizenship, and I have sympathy for the position in which she now finds
herself. However, once the Citizenship Judge chose to apply the physical
presence test for residence, Ms. Khoreva was required to establish that
she had in fact been physically present in Canada for at least 1095 days during
the four-year period immediately preceding her application for citizenship. She
admitted in her Residence Questionnaire that she had been outside of Canada for
368 days during this period, and the Citizenship Judge failed to consider this evidence.
This means that his decision cannot stand.
II.
Conclusion
[13]
For these reasons, the application for judicial
review is granted. I agree with the parties that the case is fact-specific, and
does not raise a question for certification.