Docket: IMM-1117-16
Citation:
2016 FC 1274
Ottawa, Ontario, November 15, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Annis
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BETWEEN:
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JAMES ADENIYI TELUWO
TENIADE DEBORAH TELUWO
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Applicants
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and
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THE MINISTER OF IMMIGRATION, REFUGEES AND CITIZENSHIP
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is a judicial review, pursuant to
subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001,
c 27 [the Act], of a February 23, 2016 decision of the Refugee Appeal Division [RAD]
determining that the Applicants are not Convention Refugees or persons in need
of protection.
[2]
The Applicants argue that the RAD breached
procedural fairness by deciding the appeal on a new issue, that it erred by
unreasonably assuming that the Applicants would leave their daughter in Canada
and return to Nigeria, and that it contravened the principle of
non-refoulement.
[3]
The Respondent has submitted a motion to dismiss
the application for judicial review on the basis of mootness.
[4]
The application is dismissed on the ground
of mootness. The risks claimed by the Applicants have
become speculative and other, arguably more suitable forums, remain available
to make an application for permanent residence, should these risks arise in the
future.
I.
Background
[5]
The facts are not at issue in this case as the
Refugee Protection Division’s [RPD] factual findings are agreed upon. The Applicants
are citizens of Nigeria. They came to Canada with their daughter on May 30,
2015. The Applicants never intended to stay in Canada permanently. On
May 31, 2015, their daughter was rushed to the hospital and diagnosed with end
stage renal disease. They were unaware of this condition before their departure
from Nigeria, as she had been previously misdiagnosed.
[6]
The daughter, who is eight years old and their
only child, requires chronic hemodialysis treatment [the treatment] and,
ultimately, a kidney transplant to survive. While the treatment is available in
Nigeria, due to economic considerations it is only provided for older children.
The youngest child to undergo the treatment in Nigeria was 10 years old. Kidney
transplantation for children is currently not available in Nigeria and the
youngest transplant patient was 17 years old. Without the treatment, the
Applicants’ daughter would die in a short time upon returning to Nigeria.
[7]
The Applicants and their daughter applied for
refugee status on this basis. The RPD decided, on December 7, 2015, that the
Applicants and their daughter were Convention refugees and persons in need of
protection. The Respondent appealed to the RAD. In a February 23, 2016
decision, the RAD partially allowed the appeal confirming that the daughter was
a Convention Refugee but setting aside the determination that she was a minor
in need of protection and finding that the Applicants are neither Convention
refugees nor persons in need of protection.
[8]
On June 14, 2016, the Minister issued the
Applicants Temporary Resident Permits [TRPs] and work permits, valid for three
years.
II.
The Impugned Decision
[9]
The RAD confirmed the RPD’s finding that the Applicants’
daughter is a Convention Refugee as, although Nigeria has the capacity and
ability to provide the life-saving treatment she requires, this treatment will
not be provided to her because of her age. This unwillingness to provide
treatment on the basis of an immutable characteristic was found to be
persecutory. This finding is not challenged.
[10]
The RAD reversed the RPD’s finding and found
that the Applicants’ daughter was not a person in need of protection. The RAD
found that the facts of this case fell within the exclusion set out at Section
97(1) of the Act, as Nigeria is unwilling to provide her with the medical care
she requires because of economic considerations. This finding is not
challenged.
[11]
The subject matter of this application for
judicial review is the RAD’s finding that the Applicants are neither Convention
Refugees nor persons in need of protection. The RAD first noted that neither
party had provided persuasive argument on the issue of the Applicants’ independent
claim (as separate from the daughter’s) and that the RPD did not provide
sufficient reasons to support its conclusions on this question. The RAD concluded
that the Applicants were not Convention Refugees as it found “the risk of persecution faced by the minor Respondent does
not extend to them and that they can return to Nigeria.” The RAD also
concluded that the Applicants’ risk of harm is based on their daughter’s risk
of harm in Nigeria and that, having found that their daughter is a Convention
Refugee, the Applicants will not suffer the cruel and unusual treatment or
punishment of watching their child die. In conclusion on this point the RAD
stated:
The RAD finds that while it may be difficult
for the adult Appellants to return to Nigeria while the minor Respondent
remains in Canada and receives treatment, this does not rise to a level of
cruel and unusual treatment or punishment. While it is true that there may be
other options available to the adult Respondents that would allow them to
remain in Canada with their daughter, the RAD is limited in its jurisdiction to
its findings with respect to sections 96 and 97 of the IRPA.
III.
Issues
[12]
This application raises the following issues:
- Should the application be dismissed on grounds of mootness?
- Did the RAD breach procedural fairness by deciding the appeal
on a new issue?
- Did the RAD err by unreasonably assuming that the Applicants
would leave their daughter in Canada and return to Nigeria?
- Did the RAD contravene the principle of non-refoulement?
[13]
As the preliminary question of mootness warrants
the dismissal of this application, my analysis will limit itself to this first
issue.
IV.
Analysis
[14]
The Respondent has filed a motion to dismiss the
judicial review on grounds that the issue has become moot as the Applicants
have been granted TRPs and work permits valid for three years.
[15]
The test for mootness is well-established. First
the Court must consider whether a decision would have any practical effect on
solving a live controversy between the parties. The Court should consider
whether the issues have become academic, and whether the dispute has
disappeared, in which case the proceedings are moot. If this first step is met,
the Court may decide to hear the matter if, notwithstanding the fact that the
matter is moot, it should nonetheless exercise its discretion to decide the
case. This will be guided by three policy rationales: 1) the presence of an
adversarial context; 2) the concern for judicial economy; and 3) the
consideration of whether the Court would be encroaching upon the legislative
sphere rather than fulfilling its role as the adjudicative branch of government
see Harvan v Canada (Ctizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 1026 at para
7; Borowoski v Canada (Attorney General), [1989] 1 S.C.R. 342 at paras
15-17, 29-40.
[16]
The Respondent submits that the Applicants’ sole
basis for a claim for protection has expired as they can now remain in Canada
until their daughter is old enough to receive care in Nigeria. Furthermore, the
Court should not exercise its discretion to decide on this matter as there is
no longer an adversarial context and scarce judicial resources should not be
expended solely to adjudicate on the reasonableness of the RAD’s reasons when
the requested remedy has been granted. With the issuance of TRPs, any risk
caused to the Applicants by eventual separation from their daughter is, at this
point, purely speculative. In addition, should the Respondents wish to seek
permanent residence, nothing precludes them from submitting an application on
humanitarian and compassionate [H&C] grounds, a forum more appropriate for
considering the best interests of the child.
[17]
The Applicants submit that there is a live issue
before the Court. They argue that the first stage of the mootness test is not
met as the temporary status granted does not resolve the controversy with
regard to the RAD decision. This decision is challenged as the Applicants seek
to be recognized as Convention Refugees in order to be able to remain with
their daughter for the duration of her treatment, which may extend well beyond
three years. The issuance of TRPs does not resolve this issue as TRPs are
temporary in nature, can be withdrawn at any point, may be invalidated if the
holder leaves Canada, and do not have any guarantee of renewal. The Respondents
argue that these arguments with regards to TRPs are purely speculative. The
Applicants further argue that the issuance of TRPs or the speculative prospect
of a successful application on H&C grounds is irrelevant to this
proceeding. Should the Court decide the issue is moot, the Applicants submit
that the Court should exercise its discretion to hear the issue as the RAD’s
decision to introduce and decide a new issue without notice would be left
standing if unchallenged.
[18]
In order to decide on the question of mootness,
the Court is first required to consider scenarios pertaining to the application
to set aside the RAD decision, in order to determine if any live controversy
remains.
[19]
The RAD, after upholding the daughter’s claim,
proceeded to reject the position that her situation of risk was intertwined
with or extended to her parents’ situation. It found that the parents do not
have a well-founded fear of persecution upon return to Nigeria and that, while
it may be difficult for them to return to Nigeria while their daughter remains
in Canada for treatment, this does not arise to the level of cruel and unusual
treatment or punishment. The RAD concluded that the parent’s right to remain in
Canada would have to be considered as an H&C application under section 25
of the Act.
[20]
The Applicants submit that the RAD has breached
their right to procedural fairness by raising the new issue of the Applicants’
independent claim for protection and the scenario of family separation without
notice. Neither party argued before the RAD that the RPD had erred in finding
that the Applicants’ claims and their daughter’s claim were inextricably
linked. The issue of the Applicants’ independent claim was never contemplated
by the Applicants, the Respondent, or the RPD and no evidence or submissions
where filed by either party on this question prior to the RAD’s decision.
[21]
In being denied the opportunity to respond to
this new issue, the Applicants claim they were prevented from leading evidence
that would demonstrate that their being returned to Nigeria would endanger
their daughter’s medical treatment. The RPD agreed that the lack of parental
support would be detrimental to the daughter’s treatment (see paragraph 47 of
the RPD’s decision).
[22]
The Court is in agreement with the Applicants
that the RAD breached procedural fairness by raising and considering an issue
not argued by the parties without first giving them notice of the issue and an
opportunity to make submissions on the point. However, the Court must be
convinced that, should the matter be returned to the RAD for a new hearing, a
live controversy remains. The newly issued three-year TRPs allowing the parents
to remain in Canada must be considered in this determination.
[23]
The Applicants have always alleged and continue
to argue that their risk is tied to their daughter’s. They argue that they
would face cruel and unusual punishment or treatment by their being returned to
Nigeria while leaving their daughter in Canada for treatment. I find it
difficult to imagine that family separation alone would arise to this level.
[24]
They also argue that their daughter’s medical
treatment would be adversely affected should they be forced to return to
Nigeria. While a novel argument, I think it could be advanced if the evidence
demonstrated a causal relationship such that the daughter’s risk would be
intertwined with the parent’s remaining in Canada. The Applicants have
indicated that they will lead expert medical evidence to follow up the RPD’s
finding to this effect. This provides a further argument that the RAD decision
should be set aside in order for them to be able to pursue their statutory
right to lead this evidence under section 110(4) of the Act.
[25]
The issue then arises as to the effect of the
three-year TRPs on these arguments. In the Court’s view, the delay of the
Applicants’ removal by at least three years renders their risk argument
speculative. I am satisfied that expert evidence could not reasonably opine, at
this time, on circumstances of risk to the daughter were the parents to return
to Nigeria in three years time, or to events that could arise in the next three
years. The present situation is subject to change: the daughter’s treatment
could become available in Nigeria or further TRPs could be issued. At the
moment, an analysis of the Applicants’ prospective risk is speculative.
[26]
Moreover, if the motion to dismiss the
application on grounds of mootness was granted, there would not be any loss of
rights to the parents upon a future eventual notice of removal. They would be
open to bring applications to obtain permanent resident status by means of both
a pre-removal risk assessment [PRRA] and an H&C application, preferably
both at the same time, resulting in some judicial economy. They could advance
all the same arguments they would submit if this matter was sent back to the
RAD, with the important difference of these no longer being speculative.
[27]
The other reality is that the Applicants have a
viable H&C claim for permanent residence based on the best interest of the
child, which will only be strengthened by their establishment in Canada over
time. On this point, I again agree with the Respondent that the statutory
scheme is such that a claim in the nature of parents being forced to leave with
a child remaining in Canada is a matter normally to be considered by way of an
H&C application and not a section 97 risk application.
[28]
Dismissing this application as moot would not
have the effect of engaging the one year bar pursuant to sections 25 (H&C)
and 112 (PRRA) preventing subsequent applications. Once the one year period
following this decision expires, that issue would not even arise. These reasons
make it plain that the intention of the Court is not to uphold the RAD’s
decision, but only to terminate the application for mootness, on the
understanding that the Applicants would be able to bring a PRRA or H&C
application if facing a removal order in the future.
[29]
As such, the Court finds that the issues before
it have become moot. Furthermore, the Court should not exercise its discretion
to hear the issue as judicial economy does not favour granting an application
for judicial review and sending a matter back to an administrative decision
maker for reconsideration where there are significant concerns that it may not be
successful or necessary given the speculative nature of the rights involved.
[30]
Accordingly, the application is dismissed on
grounds of mootness. The parties agreed that there is no question to be
certified for appeal.