Docket: A-455-14
Citation:
2015 FCA 141
CORAM:
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STRATAS J.A.
SCOTT J.A.
BOIVIN J.A.
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BETWEEN:
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OWAIS AHMED
ASAD
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RAHIM AHMED
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Appellants
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
BOIVIN J.A.
I.
Background
[1]
This is an appeal from a decision of Mr. Justice
Russell of the Federal Court (the Judge) dated September 26, 2014 (2014 FC
921). The Judge dismissed the application for judicial review from the decision
of an Officer at the Canadian High Commission in Islamabad, Pakistan (the Officer). The Officer refused the application of Mr. Owais Ahmed Asad (the adult appellant)
for citizenship of his adopted son Rahim Ahmed (the child appellant)
(collectively, the appellants) made under subsection 5.1(1) of the Citizenship
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-29 (the Act).
[2]
The adult appellant and his wife are Canadian
citizens who, after a number of years of marriage, had no children. The adult
appellant signed an “Irrevocable Deed of Adoption” (Deed
of Adoption) for the child appellant, who was born in Pakistan on October 22,
2008. The said Deed of Adoption was executed on April 18, 2009 and notarized on
June 23, 2009. Pursuant to the Guardian and Wards Act, 1890 in force in
Pakistan, the Court of Civil/Family Judge & Judicial Magistrate of
Hyderabad Sindh (the Family Court) issued a Guardianship Certificate to the
adult appellant and his wife, also on June 23, 2009.
[3]
In March 2011, the adult appellant applied for
Canadian citizenship for the child appellant under section 5.1 of the Act,
which provides that a non-Canadian child, adopted by Canadian parents and
meeting the requirements of the Act, can directly be granted citizenship
without the requirement of first becoming a permanent resident.
[4]
The Deed of Adoption and the Guardianship
Certificate issued by the Family Court were submitted in support of the
application.
[5]
By letter dated October 2, 2013, the Officer
refused the grant of citizenship. The main ground for refusal was that the Muslim
Family Laws Ordinance, 1961 (the Ordinance 1961) only allows for the sharia
law practice of kafala, which
is akin to the concept of guardianship. Kafala, noted the Officer, does not
create a permanent parent-child relationship. Although the Officer did not
reference it explicitly, section 5.1 of the Citizenship Regulations,
SOR/93-246 (the Regulations) mandates that a valid adoption includes full severance
of the legal relationship between the child and his or her biological parents. The
Officer’s conclusion was expressed as follows:
[…] no adoption as it is understood in Canada or under the framework provided by Hague Convention on Protection of Children and
Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption has taken place. Therefore
the application for Canadian Citizenship for a person under the guardianship of
a Canadian Citizen to be adopted cannot be processed.
(Appeal book at page 127)
[6]
In reviewing the Officer’s decision, the Judge
found that the standard of review was reasonableness. He upheld the Officer’s
decision on the basis that there was no evidence as to whether an adoption had
taken place in accordance to the laws of Pakistan. In so doing, the Judge made
the following observations at paragraphs 41 and 60 of his reasons:
[41] In attacking the Officer’s reasons
and conclusions by way of judicial review, the Applicants have attempted to
suggest various ways in which the Officer is either wrong or unreasonable. In
the end, however, it has to be acknowledged that they chose not to provide the
Officer with direct evidence on point such as, for example, an opinion by a
qualified expert on the law or laws of adoption in Pakistan and how they had complied
with those laws. If adoption is possible in Pakistan as it is understood under
the Hague Convention on Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect
of Interlocutory [sic] Adoption [Hague Convention], the
Applicants could easily have settled this point with appropriate evidence.
Instead they have chosen to challenge the Decision after the fact by suggesting
in various indirect ways why the Officer was either wrong or unreasonable.
…
[60] In my view, the adoption deed and
related documentation do not establish that, under the law of Pakistan, a severance has occurred in this case. We do not know whether these parties
could, by agreement, sever the biological relationship as a matter of law. The
Applicants have not established that the Officer was either wrong or
unreasonable when he found that the adoption deed establishes a form of
guardianship, which is not an adoption as required by Canadian law.
II.
Legislation and Regulation
[7]
Section 5.1 of the Citizenship Act
provides, in relevant portions:
5.1(1) Subject to subsections (3) and (4), the Minister shall, on
application, grant citizenship to a person who was adopted by a citizen on or
after January 1, 1947 while the person was a minor child if the adoption
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5.1 (1) Sous
réserve des paragraphes (3) et (4), le ministre attribue, sur demande, la
citoyenneté à la personne adoptée par un citoyen le 1er janvier
1947 ou subséquemment lorsqu’elle était un enfant mineur. L’adoption doit par
ailleurs satisfaire aux conditions suivantes :
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(a) was in the best interests of
the child;
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a) elle a été faite dans l’intérêt supérieur de l’enfant;
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(b) created a genuine relationship of parent and child;
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b) elle a créé un véritable lien affectif parent-enfant entre
l’adoptant et l’adopté;
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(c) was in accordance with the
laws of the place where the adoption took place and the laws of the country
of residence of the adopting citizen; and
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c) elle a été faite conformément au droit du lieu de
l’adoption et du pays de résidence de l’adoptant;
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(d) was not entered into
primarily for the purpose of acquiring a status or privilege in relation to
immigration or citizenship.
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d) elle ne visait pas principalement l’acquisition d’un statut
ou d’un privilège relatifs à l’immigration ou à la citoyenneté.
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[8]
Subsection 5.1(3) of the Citizenship
Regulations provides as follows:
5.1(3) The following factors are to be considered in determining whether
the requirements of subsection 5.1(1) of the Act have been met in respect of
the adoption of a person referred to in subsection (1):
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5.1(3) Les facteurs ci-après sont considérés pour établir si les
conditions prévues au paragraphe 5.1(1) de la Loi sont remplies à l’égard de
l’adoption de la personne visée au paragraphe (1) :
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(a) whether, in the case of a
person who has been adopted by a citizen who resided in Canada at the time of
the adoption,
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a) dans le cas où la personne a été adoptée par un citoyen qui
résidait au Canada au moment de l’adoption :
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(i) a
competent authority of the province in which the citizen resided at the time
of the adoption has stated in writing that it does not object to the
adoption, and
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(i) le fait
que les autorités compétentes de la province de résidence du citoyen au
moment de l’adoption ont déclaré par écrit qu’elles ne s’opposent pas à celle-ci,
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(ii) the
pre-existing legal parent-child relationship was permanently severed by the
adoption;
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(ii) le
fait que l’adoption a définitivement rompu tout lien de filiation
préexistant;
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(b) whether, in the case of a
person who has been adopted outside Canada in a country that is a party to
the Hague Convention on Adoption and whose intended destination at the time
of the adoption is a province,
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b) dans le cas où la personne a été adoptée à l’étranger dans
un pays qui est partie à la Convention sur l’adoption et dont la destination
prévue au moment de l’adoption est une province :
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(i) the
competent authority of the country and of the province of the person’s
intended destination have stated in writing that they approve the adoption as
conforming to that Convention,
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(i) le fait
que les autorités compétentes de ce pays et celles de la province de
destination de la personne ont déclaré par écrit que l’adoption était
conforme à cette convention,
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(ii) a
competent authority of the province — in which the citizen who is a parent of
the person resided at the time of the adoption — has stated in writing that
it does not object to the adoption, and
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(ii) le
fait que les autorités compétentes de la province de résidence, au moment de
l’adoption, du citoyen qui est le parent de la personne ont déclaré par écrit
qu’elles ne s’opposent pas à l’adoption
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(iii) the
pre-existing legal parent-child relationship was permanently severed by the
adoption; and
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(iii) le
fait que l’adoption a définitivement rompu tout lien de filiation préexistant;
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(c) whether, in all other cases,
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c) dans les autres cas :
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(i) a
competent authority has conducted or approved a home study of the parent or
parents, as the case may be,
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(i) le fait
qu’une étude du milieu familial a été faite ou approuvée par les autorités
compétentes,
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(ii) before
the adoption, the person’s parent or parents, as the case may be, gave their
free and informed consent to the adoption,
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(ii) le
fait que le ou les parents, selon le cas, ont, avant l’adoption, donné un
consentement véritable et éclairé à l’adoption,
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(iii) the
pre-existing legal parent-child relationship was permanently severed by the
adoption, and
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(iii) le
fait que l’adoption a définitivement rompu tout lien de filiation
préexistant,
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(iv) there
is no evidence that the adoption was for the purpose of child trafficking or
undue gain within the meaning of the Hague Convention on Adoption.
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(iv) le
fait que rien n’indique que l’adoption avait pour objet la traite de la
personne ou la réalisation d’un gain indu au sens de la Convention sur
l’adoption.
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III.
The Issues
[9]
In my view, the issues to be resolved in this
appeal are the following:
a)
What is the appropriate standard of review?
b)
Was the appropriate standard of review applied
properly in the present case?
IV.
The Appropriate Standard of Review
[10]
On an appeal from an application for judicial
review, the task of our Court is to first determine whether the judge
identified the proper standard of review and, second, whether he or she
properly applied it to each of the issues raised. This Court must thus “step into the shoes” of the Federal Court and
focus on the administrative decision at issue (Agraira v. Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2013 SCC 36, [2013] 2 S.C.R. 559 at
paras. 45-47).
[11]
The parties disagree as to the applicable
standard of review.
[12]
While the appellants agree that the content of
foreign law is a question of fact and findings on such content should attract
the standard of review of reasonableness, they submit that the determination as
to the content of foreign law in this case is not just a finding of fact on the
part of the Officer. Rather, it is a question of general importance to the
legal system attracting the correctness standard. As such, the appellants argue,
the Federal Court is better placed than the Officer to interpret foreign law. In
the alternative, they argue that if the standard of review is reasonableness,
the level of deference owed to the Officer is lower and he should be granted
only a narrow margin of appreciation.
[13]
For its part, the respondent argues that the
standard of review is reasonableness and that the Officer is entitled to
considerable deference.
[14]
For a number of decades, it has been established
that in the context of foreign law and citizenship, the Federal Court applies the
standard of review of reasonableness. But recently, jurisprudence has emerged
resulting in contradictory decisions with some applying the reasonableness
standard, and others, correctness.
[15]
The case according to which reasonableness has
become the applicable standard of review can be traced back to Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Saini, 2001 FCA 311, [2002]
1 F.C. 200 [Saini].
[16]
In that case, our Court determined that a
finding of foreign law was one of fact (Saini at para. 26). While Saini
concerned the review of a Federal Court decision and not one of an
administrative decision-maker, subsequent citizenship decisions have applied
the standard of reasonableness to findings of foreign law (because it is one of
fact) and have found that, as such, officers are entitled to considerable
deference: e.g. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v. Sharma, 2004 FC 1069, [2004] F.C.J. No. 1313; Lakhani v.
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 674, [2007] F.C.J.
No. 914; Lai v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2007 FC 361, [2008] 2 F.C.R. 3; Tindungan v. Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2013 FC 115, [2014] 3 F.C.R. 275.
[17]
Likewise, in the particular context of assessing
whether an adoption has occurred in accordance with foreign law, the Federal
Court has applied the reasonableness standard. It has consistently afforded
deference to the officers’ determinations, as to whether a foreign adoption
complies with the laws of the country in which it took place (see Boachie v.
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 672, [2010] F.C.J. No. 821; Bhagria
v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 1015, [2012] F.C.J. No.
1118; Cheshenchuk v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 33,
[2014] F.C.J. No. 20; Vasquez v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FC 782, [2014] F.C.J. No. 819; Dolker v. Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2015 FC 124, [2015] F.C.J. No. 174).
[18]
However, in two recent decisions, the Federal
Court has ruled that determinations regarding the content of foreign law are to
be reviewed not on the reasonableness standard but correctness: Kim v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 720, [2010] F.C.J. No. 870 and Dufour v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 340, [2013] F.C.J. No. 393 [Dufour].
The appellants in the present case rely on these two Federal Court decisions in
support of their argument that correctness should be the standard here. It is
to be recalled that the Federal Court’s decision in Dufour was appealed to
the Federal Court of Appeal. In confirming the Federal Court’s Dufour decision,
our Court ruled that it did not need to decide the issue of the standard of
review because the issue did not arise (Canada (Citizenship and Immigration)
v. Dufour, 2014 FCA 81, [2014] F.C.J. No. 324 at para.
27).
[19]
Seizing upon the unsettled jurisprudence, the
appellants submit that clarification is needed. Echoing Dunsmuir v. New
Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 at paragraph 62 [Dunsmuir],
the appellants further contend that the applicable standard of review in the
context of foreign law and citizenship has yet to be determined in a
satisfactory manner because going as far back as Saini, a fulsome
analysis has never been undertaken in this regard. The appellants thus strongly
invite our Court to “address the issue head on through
reasoning”, and that a standard of review analysis as per Dunsmuir is
appropriate in the present case.
[20]
For the benefit of future cases, I agree.
[21]
As set forth by the Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir,
the standard of review analysis for purposes of determining whether to apply
the reasonableness or the correctness standard is dependent on the following
relevant factors:
1.
the presence or absence of a privative clause;
2.
the purpose of the tribunal as determined by
interpretation of enabling legislation;
3.
the nature of the question at issue; and
4.
the expertise of the tribunal.
[22]
Turning to the first factor, I note that
although decisions such as the one at issue, which are rendered in the context
of citizenship, can only be judicially reviewed upon leave, the Act does not
contain any privative clause. As observed by the respondent, the “privative clause” factor is “typically
assessed as being neutral” and I agree that it is so in the
circumstances.
[23]
With respect to the second factor, which goes to
the “purpose of the decision-making process regarding
citizenship”, a reading of section 5.1 of the Act, shows that a
determination as to whether the requirements for a grant of citizenship are met
do not involve obvious determinative policy or polycentric considerations. As
such, this can be considered an indicium for deference favouring the
standard of reasonableness.
[24]
The third factor concerns the nature of the
question at issue. Here, it is undoubtedly fact-driven because the Officer will
render a decision based on the evidence adduced and the facts of the case. In
addition, foreign law is a question of fact (Saini) and must be proven
by evidence. This too attracts deference, again favouring the standard of reasonableness.
[25]
Finally, in terms of the expertise factor, it is
trite to note that an officer posted overseas will have developed a significant
degree of expertise in the field as well as expertise in assessing foreign law.
Here, factual interpretation and specialized understanding predominate. I
accordingly have no difficulty finding that an officer’s expertise in this
context is greater than that of the courts. Again, this attracts deference and
hence the standard of reasonableness.
[26]
A review of the foregoing Dunsmuir
factors convinces me that, as found by the Judge in the present case, the
applicable standard of review is reasonableness. Deference is owed to officers
who consider foreign law, including when they do so in the context of alleged
adoptions under section 5.1 of the Act.
[27]
However, the level of deference to be afforded
to an officer is not unfettered nor set in stone.
[28]
When applying the reasonableness standard to an
officer’s decision, the reviewing court must decide whether it “falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes, which
are defensible in respect of the facts and law” (Dunsmuir at para.
47). In other words, the court must determine whether the decision at issue is
within the decision-maker’s margin or range of appreciation (Delios v. Canada (Attorney General), 2015 FCA 117, [2015] F.C.J. No. 549). This margin or range
of appreciation can be narrow or wide depending on the nature of the question
at issue and circumstances before the administrative decision-maker (Catalyst
Paper Corp. v. North Cowichan (District), 2012 SCC 2, [2012] 1 S.C.R. 5; Halifax
(Regional Municipality) v. Nova Scotia (Human Rights Commission), 2012 SCC
10, [2012] 1 S.C.R. 364; McLean v. British Columbia
(Securities Commission), 2013 SCC 67, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 895).
[29]
Applying these principles to decisions of
officers who consider foreign law when deciding citizenship applications, the
breadth of the margin or range of reasonableness will very much depend on the
circumstances of each case.
[30]
More specifically, in cases where no evidence of
foreign law is adduced, as in the present matter, the nature of the officer’s
task, as to whether the statutory standards set forth by section 5.1 of the Act
are met, allows a wide margin of appreciation to the officer and a hence a wider
range of possible and acceptable outcomes (Canada (Minister of Transport,
Infrastructure and Communities) v. Jagjit Singh Farwaha, 2014 FCA 56, [2014] F.C.J. No. 227).
[31]
For completeness, I would add that it
necessarily follows from the above analysis that the two cases relied upon by
the appellants in support of the correctness standard - i.e. the Kim and
Dufour decisions of the Federal Court - are not to be considered good
law and should not be followed in circumstances such as the ones at issue in
the present case.
[32]
One last word on the standard of review before
moving to the next portion of these reasons. At hearing before this Court,
reference was made by the parties to Kent Trade and Finance Inc. v. JP
Morgan Chase Bank, 2008 FCA 399, [2009] 4 F.C.R. 109 and General Motors
Acceptance Corp. of Canada Ltd. v. Town and Country Chrysler Ltd., 2007
ONCA 904, [2007] O.J. No. 5046. Those cases were rendered in the context of an
appellate review, not in the context of an administrative review. They have
strictly no application in the present matter.
V.
Application of the Reasonableness Standard
[33]
In the present case, the appellants essentially
contend that the Ordinance 1961 does not bar secular adoption, and hence the
Deed of Adoption was made in accordance with the laws of Pakistan as required
by paragraph 5.1(1)(c) of the Act. Moreover, according to the
appellants, this Deed of Adoption effects the necessary legal severance to
fulfill the requirements of adoption under Canadian law. These contentions were
rejected by the Officer who determined that the appellants had failed to
demonstrate that an adoption had taken place for purposes of the Act. The Judge
found that this decision was reasonable.
[34]
As part of their challenge, the appellants very
much rely on the decision of the Immigration Appeal Division of the Immigration
and Refugee Board of Canada [IAD] in Massey v. Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), [2010] I.A.D.D. No. 820, No. VA7-00874 [Massey].
In that case, the IAD accepted a deed of adoption as proof of adoption and
allowed the appeal from the visa office in Pakistan.
[35]
However, this decision does not assist the
appellants. Contrary to Massey, the appellants in this case have
failed to adduce relevant evidence in support of their contentions. For
instance, the Officer was not provided with expert evidence regarding the laws
of Pakistan or whether the appellants complied with those laws. Nor did the
appellants adduce evidence to the effect that the Deed of Adoption resulted in
an adoption in Pakistan as understood in Canadian law. Similarly, there was no
evidence that the said deed is the same - or a similar - deed than the one
adduced in Massey. While I agree with the appellants that the Deed of
Adoption evidences a strong intention to take care of the child at issue, its
legal effects remain unknown, more particularly as it relates to severance of
ties with the child’s biological parents (Section 5.1 of the Regulations and
decision of the Family Court in Pakistan). The Massey decision was also
rendered in a different context and by a different tribunal. In the
circumstance, I find that Massey is entirely distinguishable and the
Officer was in no way bound to follow it.
[36]
The appellants also resort to the conflict of
laws principle of lex fori to
advance their position. They submit that, in the
absence of any evidence of foreign law, there is a legal presumption that
foreign law is the same as Canadian law. As there is no evidence that the
Ordinance 1961, which is a religious law, supersedes secular Pakistani law, the
appellants maintain that the Court must apply Canadian law, which allows for
secular adoption and give full effect to the Deed of Adoption.
[37]
This argument is without merit. As is readily
apparent from subsection 5.1(1) of the Act, Parliament has set a statutory
standard pursuant to which an adoption must notably be shown to have occurred “in accordance with the laws of the place where the adoption
took place and the laws of the country of residence of the adopting citizen”
(paragraph 5.1(1)(c)). The language of the Act creates an obligation to adduce
evidence of foreign law and the Officer’s decision has to be measured according
to this standard.
[38]
As observed by both the Officer and the Judge,
the difficulty for the appellants in the present case stems from the total lack
of evidence on record regarding the laws of Pakistan, which would support their
position. As such, I can only agree with the respondent that “the appellants have not identified any “secular” law, which
supports the proposition that the adoption of Muslims in Pakistan is legal, nor have they established that there is a difference between “secular” law and
“religious” law in Pakistan” (Memorandum of the respondent at para. 57).
The appellants also relied upon the UN Report entitled United Nations
Committee on the Rights of the Child: Second Periodic Reports of States Parties
Due in 1997, Pakistan, 11 April 2003, CRC/C/65/Add.21, online:
Refworld http://www.refworld.org/docid/45377e700.html ; Affidavit of
Raymond Gillis, appeal book, page 68 at paragraph 7. However, it does not contain
findings that could undercut the Officer’s decision.
[39]
In the end, I am of the view that the Judge did
not err in selecting the reasonableness as the standard of review for all
issues before him, including the Officer’s determinations regarding the laws of
Pakistan. Nor did he err in applying the reasonableness standard.
[40]
Accordingly, I would dismiss the appeal. As the
parties did not request costs, none shall be awarded.
“Richard Boivin”
“I agree
David Stratas J.A.”
“I agree
A.F. Scott J.A.”