Docket: IMM-4415-16
Citation:
2017 FC 448
Ottawa, Ontario, May 4, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Elliott
BETWEEN:
|
ISRAEL OCHOA
GONZALEZ
NORA EVELYN
TRUENA ALTAMIRANO
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP &
IMMIGRATION CANADA
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
The Applicants have applied under subsection
72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA]
for judicial review of the decision dated July 22, 2016 [Decision] of a Senior
Immigration Officer [the Officer] who refused their application for permanent
residence on humanitarian and compassionate grounds [H&C Application].
[2]
The Applicants are nationals of Mexico, who
first arrived in Canada on May 8, 2005, as visitors at a time when no visa was
required. On September 6, 2005, they made a claim for refugee protection.
However, they never submitted a Personal Information Form, and their claim was
declared abandoned on June 16, 2006. The Applicants worked as cleaners for
Harbour Sixty Steakhouse [Harbour Sixty] for eight and a half years, starting
in January 2007. Before that, they worked as cleaners in various homes. On June
29, 2015, the Applicants started their own cleaning business, Israel Cleaner
Company. Other than a brief period of receiving social assistance prior to
obtaining work permits on May 4, 2016, the Applicants have been employed or
self-sufficient while in Canada.
[3]
The Applicants have also had three children
while in Canada. The children are Canadian citizens. They are Carlos, born in
2007, Luka, born in 2011, and Kayden, born in 2012. At the time of the H&C
Application, Carlos was in grade three at St. Helen Catholic School and Luka
was at the same school in Junior Kindergarten. Kayden was at St. Helen
Parenting, a daycare centre.
[4]
The Applicants attempted to regularize their
status by filing an H&C Application on July 8, 2015. On October 26, 2015,
the H&C Application was refused. The Applicants’ sought judicial review on
November 13, 2015, and served and filed their application record on January 11,
2016. The Respondent consented to having the Applicants file a Notice of
Discontinuance, in exchange for which the H&C Application was remitted to a
new officer for evaluation, resulting in the decision under review.
[5]
For the reasons that follow, this application is
allowed as the Officer’s analysis of the best interests of the children failed
to analyse those interests, show how they were weighed or make clear why the
Officer made the determinative findings.
II.
The Decision Under Review
[6]
The Applicants filed updated extensive submissions
to support their H&C Application. The submissions addressed the Applicants’
establishment in Canada, the children’s best interests and the hardship the
family would face if returned to Mexico both from adverse country conditions as
well as the inability to find work or have a social support network.
[7]
The Officer noted that the onus is on the
Applicants to show why an exemption is warranted from the rule requiring
permanent residence applications to be submitted from within Canada. The
Officer divided the reasons for refusing the exemption into three areas: (1)
establishment in Canada; (2) best interests of the children; and (3) factors in
country of origin.
[8]
On establishment, the Officer noted the
Applicants’ long work history in Canada, but also noted that while tax returns
had been provided for 2015, no documentation had been provided to validate
employment earnings or business income before then. The Officer gave the
Applicants credit for being active with their church, volunteering with the
Salvation Army, upgrading their language skills and having a pattern of sound
financial management.
[9]
However, the Officer also found that the
integration and establishment of over 11 years was based on a wilful disregard
of Canadian immigration law, by continuously remaining and working in Canada
without authorization. The Officer therefore found that the Applicants had
assumed their establishment efforts while knowing that their immigration status
was uncertain and removal could become an eventuality.
[10]
Regarding the best interests of the children,
the Officer found that the children were dependent on their parents and assumed
that the children would have to return to Mexico with the Applicants. The
Officer noted that Kayden’s student application records for Junior Kindergarten
indicated that Spanish was the language of the home, so the Officer found that
the children likely had some Spanish ability, though they were unlikely to be
fluent. The Officer found that with education presumptively available for them
in Mexico, their initial Spanish skills, combined with their resiliency as
young children and the support of their parents, would allow them to assimilate
after a period of adjustment. They would be able to adapt to a country that was
not culturally unfamiliar to their parents.
[11]
The Officer also considered that the
socio-economic environment in Mexico was likely to be inferior to Canada’s, but
that the comparative socio-economic advantage that would be enjoyed in Canada
was not a determinative factor in the application.
[12]
The Officer acknowledged that Mexico had a
serious problem with crime and violence, but these conditions were generally
faced by other Mexicans since they could indiscriminately face any citizen.
[13]
Regarding the Applicants’ poor employment
prospects, the Officer found that while regrettable, difficulty finding
employment is an ordinary consequence of removal to a country with less viable
economic conditions than Canada. The Officer found that the hardships associated
with removal to Mexico were not sufficient to warrant H&C relief.
[14]
The Officer found that considered cumulatively,
the factors in the H&C Application did not warrant an exception under
subsection 25(1) of the IRPA and denied the Applicants’ application. Concluding,
the Officer did “not find that the applicants have
provided sufficient objective evidence to demonstrate that their removal from
Canada would be contrary to the best interests of their three sons”.
III.
Issue and Standard of Review
[15]
The only question for determination is whether
the Officer erred in arriving at the Decision. Within that issue, the Applicant
raises a failure to properly consider the best interests of the children and an
erroneous assessment of the Applicants’ establishment in Canada.
[16]
The parties agree, as do I, that the standard of
review is reasonableness as the Decision involves questions of mixed fact and
law: Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at para 53 [Dunsmuir].
[17]
A decision is reasonable if the decision-making
process is justified, transparent and intelligible, resulting in a
determination that falls within the range of possible, acceptable outcomes
which are defensible on the facts and law: Dunsmuir at para 47.
IV.
Submissions of the Parties
[18]
The Applicants submit that the establishment
analysis by the Officer was inadequate. The Officer simply listed the positive
establishment evidence, and then found it to be insufficient. The Applicants say
that the Officer’s analysis of the best interests of the children did not have
regard to the children’s circumstances from each child’s perspective.
[19]
The Applicants also submit the Officer erred
with respect to whether the children speak and understand some Spanish. They
indicate they have clarified a number of times that the children do not speak
Spanish. Included in the record was a handwritten letter from the eldest son
Carlos confirming that fact. The Applicants also point out that the Officer did
not take into account whether the children could write or read in Spanish.
[20]
The Respondent’s position is quite simple: the
Applicants failed to meet the evidentiary burden upon them to convince the
Officer to exercise discretion in their favour. With respect to speaking
Spanish, the Officer reasonably noted the student application record for
youngest child, Kayden, indicated that Spanish was the primary language spoken
most often at home. The Officer rightly found it was in the best interests of
the children to remain with their parents, as they were dependent upon the
parents.
[21]
The Applicants, in reply, point to the Officer’s
statement that the Applicants had not provided “sufficient
objective evidence to demonstrate that the removal from Canada would be
contrary to the best interests of their three sons” is unreasonable; it
is not transparent given that the Officer failed to identify what were the best
interests of each child. The Officer merely said, “I
have taken the best interest of the child into account”. The Applicants
provided as an example of this the fact that the Officer failed to address that
their son Carlos, in his handwritten letter expressing a desire to remain in
Canada, specifically stated he did not speak Spanish.
V.
Analysis
[22]
In reviewing the impact on the three Canadian-born
boys of leaving Canada for Mexico, the Officer noted the parents were concerned
about the children’s safety, health, education and overall well-being if they
had to accompany their parents back to Mexico rather than remain in Canada. The
Officer noted the two older children appeared to be happy, well-adjusted and
progressing well in school, recognized that they have integrated themselves
into the Canadian school system and acknowledged that it may be difficult for
them to leave a familiar environment. However the Officer found it reasonable
to expect that continued education would be available to them in Mexico and
given their young ages, they were “resilient”
and capable of “assimilating to a new scholastic
environment after an initial period of adjustment”. As they spoke some
Spanish, the Officer found it would mitigate any social or academic hardships
associated with transferring to the Mexican school system. Ultimately, the
Officer found that the Applicants had not provided “sufficient
objective evidence to demonstrate that their removal from Canada would be
contrary to the best interests of their three sons”.
[23]
One problem with the Officer’s overall analysis
is that with respect to the difference between living in Canada and living in
Mexico the Officer had this to say:
I have also considered the existing
socio-economic environment of the three boys in Canada vis-a-vis the
realities identified on record by counsel that they could face in Mexico
including inferior educational prospects, healthcare availability and security
conditions. In doing so, I recognize that societal factors in Mexico may not be
favourable relative to those in Canada for raising children. Canada could be
considered a more desirable place to live for Carlos, Luka and Kayden. It
stands to reason that they may enjoy better future opportunities and find
greater comfort in Canada than in Mexico. However, the comparative
socioeconomic advantage that Canada offers is not in and of itself a
determinative factor in this application.
[24]
The Officer fails to explain how the evidence
was weighed and does not justify the conclusion that the socio-economic
environment advantage in Canada was not determinative. The Officer’s analysis
on the children’s best interests is neither intelligible nor transparent; it is
unclear how the various factors that were reviewed and accepted as indicating
that Canada was a better place for the children than Mexico were weighed in
arriving at the Officer’s conclusion. The Officer fails to identify a best
interest either in staying in Canada or being removed to Mexico – the analysis
is simply missing.
[25]
To arrive at a finding that the children’s best
interests do not lie in remaining in Canada, there ought to have been factors
expressed along the way which, when added together, outweigh the clear finding
by the Officer that Canada is a more desirable place for the children to live. The
Officer fails to explain why removal to Mexico would not be contrary to their
best interests. I am unable to identify any factor mentioned by the Officer
indicating that Mexico is a better place for the children, particularly when
viewed from the perspective of these young, English-speaking, Canadian children
who have never been to Mexico.
[26]
The Officer clearly stated that Mexico has “inferior educational prospects, healthcare availability and
security conditions”, all of which plainly are important to young
children. Moreover, the Officer indicated receipt of numerous articles and
reports from various sources describing numerous human rights abuses, violent
crime linked to drug-trafficking organizations, and corruption at the state and
local levels of the security forces and judicial sector. It is hard therefore
to believe that, on a cumulative basis, the Officer decided that the best
interests of the children would be to go to Mexico with their parents rather
than stay in Canada.
[27]
The same lack of analysis is present in the
Officer’s conclusion which states:
I have examined all the factors the Applicants have put forth within
this application. Considered cumulatively, I am not of the opinion that
granting the requested exemption under subsection 25(1) of the Act is justified
by humanitarian and compassionate considerations.
[28]
At no point does the Officer seem to weigh the
negative consequences on the children of their parents’ removal to Mexico in
either determining where their best interests lie or directly against the other
H&C factors to determine whether an exemption from the IRPA is
warranted. The outcome may or may not be defensible on the facts and law, but the
reasons given for it are neither transparent nor intelligible, and it is not
clear that the Officer paid sufficient mind to the perspective of the children
in arriving at the Decision.
[29]
As a result, the application is allowed and the
matter will be remitted to a third different officer for re-determination.