Docket: IMM-2917-16
Citation:
2017 FC 472
Ottawa, Ontario, May 9, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice O'Reilly
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BETWEEN:
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HAPPYBEN
SHAILESHBHAI PATEL
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP
&
IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
In 2016, Ms Happyben Shaileshbhai Patel married
Rikinkumar Patel, a student who was in Canada on a post-graduate work permit.
Soon thereafter, Ms Patel applied for her own work permit. She stated on her
application that she had no previous visa refusals, which was untrue: she had twice
applied for a US visa in 2015, and was rejected both times because her ties to
her home country of India were insufficient to assure that she would return
home after her visa expired. Based on Ms Patel’s error, an immigration officer
denied her a Canadian work permit because she had misrepresented or withheld
material facts (pursuant to s 40(1)(a) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA] - see Annex).
[2]
Ms Patel submits that the officer treated her
unfairly by not allowing her to respond to the officer’s concerns. In addition,
she argues that the officer’s conclusion that she had misrepresented or
withheld material facts was unreasonable. She claims to have made an innocent
error. Ms Patel asks me to quash the officer’s decision and order another
officer to reconsider her application.
[3]
I cannot find any unfairness in the manner in
which the officer treated Ms Patel. Further, the officer’s decision was not
unreasonable on the evidence. Accordingly, I must dismiss this application for
judicial review.
[4]
There are two issues:
1.
Did the officer treat Ms Patel unfairly?
2.
Was the officer’s assessment unreasonable?
[5]
As a preliminary matter, Ms Patel disputes the
admissibility of an affidavit tendered by the Minister and authored by the
officer who refused Ms Patel’s application. Since I have not relied on this
affidavit, I need not decide whether it is admissible.
II.
Issue One: Did the Officer Treat Ms Patel Unfairly?
[6]
Ms Patel submits that the officer treated her
unfairly by failing to provide her a meaningful opportunity to respond to the
officer’s concerns.
[7]
I disagree.
[8]
The officer sent Ms Patel a letter setting out
the officer’s concern that Ms Patel may not have been truthful in her answers
relating to previous visa refusals. The officer offered Ms Patel an opportunity
to respond and she did so: Ms Patel explained that she had made an honest
mistake as English is not her first language, and that she believed the question
was directed only to Canadian visa refusals, of which she had none. On this
evidence, I find that the officer treated Ms Patel.
III.
Issue Two: Was the Officer’s Assessment Unreasonable?
[9]
In my view, no. It was open to the officer to
find that Ms Patel had misrepresented or withheld material facts on her visa application.
[10]
A person is inadmissible to Canada if he or she “withhold[s] material facts relating to a relevant matter
that induces or could induce an error in the administration” of IRPA (s
40(1)(a)). The onus fell on Ms Patel to ensure that her application was
complete and accurate (Goudarzi v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2012 FC 425 at para 24).
[11]
Although I accept that innocent mistakes can
occur, Ms Patel has not shown that she falls within the exception for errors
that are both honest and reasonable (Baro v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2007 FC 1299 at para 15). She was fully aware of her failed
visa applications, and no information about those applications was disclosed in
her application. Although Ms Patel asserts that the error was due in part to
language difficulties, I note that she was aided by an English-speaking
assistant.
[12]
Further, the officer reasonably concluded that the
mistake was material. The error went directly to the question of whether Ms
Patel was a bona fide temporary worker who would leave Canada upon the expiry
of her visa.
[13]
Although I sympathize with the situation in
which Ms Patel and her husband now find themselves, I cannot conclude that the officer’s
decision was unreasonable.
IV.
Conclusion and Disposition
[14]
The officer afforded Ms Patel an opportunity to
respond to the officer’s concerns, considered the relevant evidence, and
reasonably concluded that Ms Patel had misrepresented or withheld material
information on her application. I must, therefore, dismiss this application for
judicial review. Neither party proposed a question for certification, and none
is stated.