Docket: T-484-16
Citation:
2016 FC 1264
Ottawa, Ontario, November 14, 2016
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Martineau
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BETWEEN:
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YAZEED ESNAN
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
IMMIGRATION, REFUGEES AND CITIZENSHIP CANADA
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Respondent
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ORDER AND REASONS
[1]
The present motion for stay made by Mr. Yazeed
Esnan [applicant] was argued concurrently with the stay motion presented by Ms.
Nesreen Al Madani, the applicant’s mother, in file T-482-16: Al Madani v
Canada (Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship), 2016 FC 1263.
[2]
For all the reasons that follow, the present
motion is dismissed. In addition to the evidence, submissions and case law
referred to by the parties, the Court has taken judicial notice of the decision
rendered by the Court on November 7, 2016 in British Columbia Civil
Liberties Association et al v Minister of Citizenship and Immigration et al,
2016 FC 1223, [2016] FCJ No 1217 [British Columbia Civil Liberties Association],
refusing to issue an interlocutory Order staying the operation of subsection
10(1) of the Citizenship Act, RSC 1985, c C-29 as amended [amended
Citizenship Act], pending the resolution of the constitutionality and validity
of that provision in Monla v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), Court
File T‑1570-15 [Monla Stay Order] and the cases being jointly case
managed with it [the Group 2 Revocation Judicial Review Applications].
[3]
The facts leading to the underlining judicial
review application – which is included in the Group 2 Revocation Judicial
Review Applications – and the actions taken by the Minister of Immigration,
Refugees and Citizenship (formerly the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
[Minister] to revoke the Canadian citizenship of the applicant and to ask the
return of the applicant’s Canadian passport are not challenged.
[4]
The applicant was born in Jordan in 1995. He
arrived in Canada with his family. The applicant is of Palestinian descent and
at the time of his landing in Toronto, he was holding a Jordanian passport. On
September 6, 2000, the applicant and the other declared family members became
permanent residents of Canada.
[5]
On January 5, 2004, the applicant’s father, Mr.
Nedal Esnan, signed his application for Canadian citizenship. The relevant
residence period for his application was September 6, 2000 (the date he was
granted permanent resident status) to January 4, 2004 (the day before the
father signed his application). The applicant’s father himself declared in his
own application for Canadian citizenship that he was absent from Canada for 45
days during the four years immediately preceding the date of his application
and that he was present in Canada for 1171 days.
[6]
On January 20, 2005, the applicant and other
family members became Canadian citizens.
[7]
After obtaining their citizenship, the parents
of the applicant decided to go to Qatar, and informed Canada Revenue Agency
that the family would not be residing in Canada from May, 1 2006, providing as
a new contact address, a postal box in Doha, Qatar. Be that as it may, on
September 3, 2013, the applicant’s father bought a residence in Bedford, Nova
Scotia, where the applicant and his sister Rayah – who are currently studying
at Dalhousie University – are apparently living. That being said, the
applicant’s parents are abroad with his younger brother.
[8]
On October 14, 2011, copies of evidence
collected by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police [RCMP] during its investigation
against an immigration consultant and his firm were received by Citizenship and
Immigration Canada [CIC] and reviewed by analysts. The immigration consultant’s
clients would use the consultant’s services to misrepresent their residence in
Canada in order to obtain Canadian citizenship. A client folder for the
applicant’s father and his immediate family was found in the office of the immigration
consultant’s firm and seized by the RCMP. Blank applications for Canadian
citizenship for the applicant’s father and himself bearing the applicant’s
father signature were found in the seized client folder. The firm did not
complete section 12 on either the applicant’s father or the applicant’s application
for Canadian citizenship, which requires the name, address and signature of the
individual, firm or organization that assisted in the completion of the
application.
[9]
Under the former subsection 10(1) of the Citizenship
Act, RSC 1985, c C-29 [former Citizenship Act], one’s citizenship could be
revoked by order of the Governor in Council where it is was satisfied that
citizenship had been obtained “by false representations
or fraud or by knowingly concealing material circumstances”. The
decision of the Governor in Council was based upon a report from the Minister.
The person concerned had the right to request that the matter be referred to
the Federal Court to determine whether he or she had obtained Canadian
citizenship by false representation or fraud or knowingly concealing material
circumstances. On August 28, 2012, a Notice of Intent to Revoke Citizenship
[revocation notice] for the applicant’s father and mother, as well as himself, was
issued on behalf of the Minister (we do not know whether the two other children
also received a revocation notice).
[10]
The Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act,
SC 2014, c 22, came into force on May 28, 2015 and provides a new revocation of
citizenship process. Subsection 10(1) of the amended Citizenship Act currently
provides that the Minister may revoke the Canadian citizenship of a person if
it was “obtained, retained, renounced or resumed […] by
false representation or fraud or by knowingly concealing material circumstances.”
It is only when an exceptional circumstance specified in the amended
Citizenship Act applies that the Minister is now required to refer the matter
to the Federal Court for a declaration. However, before the Minister can revoke
the citizenship of the person concerned, he must issue a notice that specifies “the person’s right to make written representations”
and “the grounds upon which the Minister is relying to
make his or her decision”. A hearing may be held if the Minister is
satisfied that it is necessary. On July 31, 2015, a new revocation notice for
the applicant was issued on behalf of the Minister.
[11]
On October 2, 2015, written submissions were
made by counsel on behalf of the applicant (and his parents). Counsel explained
that the applicant was 9 years old when he obtained Canadian citizenship and
that his father applied for Canadian citizenship on his behalf: “[…] mental intent to misrepresent oneself is an element that
is required in order to revoke that person’s Canadian citizenship, and […] due
to the fact that [the applicant] was unaware of the application […] and due to
his age at the time of said application, [the applicant] lacked the intent to
misrepresent himself with respect to his application for Canadian citizenship”.
Also included was an excerpt written by the applicant himself where he stated
that he was third year student at Dalhousie University, and that it was his
desire to work for the Government of Canada upon the completion of his studies:
“If my Canadian citizenship was to be revoked, my
opportunities in my education and career will be greatly prejudiced.” Furthermore,
the applicant’s counsel argued that while the applicant was originally served
with a revocation notice under the previous Canadian citizenship revocation model
on September 11, 2012 and that he requested that his case be referred to the
Federal Court, “rather than referring the case to the
Court, the Minister waited three years and then opted for the administrative
process as per the actual law. The option chosen by the Minister has aggravated
the prejudice done to [the applicant] as the delay to secure the Canadian
citizenship has been increased to ten years”.
[12]
On February 23, 2016, the delegate of the
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration revoked the applicant’s citizenship
because it was obtained by false representation or fraud or by knowingly
concealing material circumstances [impugned decision].
[13]
The delegate found in this regard:
On their applications for Canadian
citizenship, Mr. Esnan and Yazeed Esnan declared their home address to be
303-11 Amin Street, Bedford, Nova Scotia from June 2003 to the date upon which
they were filed with CIC. However, a Field Operations Support System (FOSS)
search for this address revealed that six (6) individuals unrelated to Mr.
Esnan and Yazeed Esnan declared to be residing at this address during the same
period of time that they declared to be residing there. Mr. Esnan and Yazeed
Esnan declared 301-1160 Bedford HWY, Bedford, Nova Scotia as their mailing
address. However, this address is listed as the registered address of CCG. Mr.
Esnan and Yazeed Esnan declared that their home telephone number was
902-832-1911 and that their work telephone number was 902-832-1915. A Google
search conducted on July 16, 2012 indicated that these telephone numbers
belonged to CCG. As such, the contact information declared by Mr. Esnan and
Yazeed Esnan on their applications for Canadian citizenship appears to be that
of CCG and not their own. Furthermore, section 12 of Mr. Esnan’s and Yazeed
Esnan’s applications does not identify that CCG assisted them with the
completion of their applications.
A LinkedIn search conducted on July 8, 2015
for Mr. Esnan under the name of Nedal Sinan lists his employer as Al Hamed
Development & Construction in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates from
September 2000 to January 2004, the relevant residence period for his
application for Canadian citizenship. This employer is a local construction
company in the United Arab Emirates. It does not appear to have a commercial
presence in Canada, nor does it appear to employ anyone to work remotely in
Canada.
As part of Yazeed Esnan’s written
submissions, Mr. Barchichat provided copies of Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) Visa
credit card statements detailing transactions for the period of July 31, 2104 to
August 7, 2015, inclusive. However, the matter at hand does not concern Yazeed
Esnan’s residence in Canada in the recent past. Yazeed Esnan obtained Canadian
citizenship directly as a result of his father, Mr. Esnan, obtaining Canadian
citizenship. Due to the fact that the approval of his application for Canadian
citizenship was contingent on his father being granted Canadian citizenship,
the matter at hand pertains to whether or not Mr. Esnan obtained Canadian
citizenship on the basis of false representation or fraud or by knowingly
concealing material circumstances. I note that all of these transactions took
place outside of the relevant residence period for Mr. Esnan’s application for
Canadian citizenship and, as such, they do not alleviate my concerns that he
failed to disclose all of his absences from Canada on his application for
Canadian citizenship.
Mr. Barchichat also provided a letter dated
December 10, 2013 from an attorney to Mr. Esnan detailing the purchase of a
home in Bedford, Nova Scotia, along with the Agreement of Purchase and Sale for
that home, 120 Southgate Drive, Unit 409, Bedford, Nova Scotial, B4A 0B1, dated
September 3, 2013 and signed by Mr. Esnan. However, I note that this
transaction took place outside of the relevant residence period for Mr. Esnan’s
application for Canadian citizenship and, as such, it does not alleviate my
concerns that he failed to disclose all of his absences from Canada on his
application for Canadian citizenship.
[…]
I note that it was not Yazeed Esnan who
completed his application for Canadian citizenship, but rather it was his
father, Mr. Nedal Esnan, who completed it. Yazeed Esnan was granted Canadian
citizenship based upon the fact that his father had become a Canadian citizen
as per subsection 5(2) of the Citizenship Act. Due to the fact that it
was not possible for Yazeed Esnan to become a Canadian citizen without his
father first becoming a Canadian citizenship, his father’s intentional
misrepresentation on his application for Canadian citizenship therefore
extended to his application for Canadian citizenship, meaning that Yazeed Esnan
acquired Canadian citizenship on the basis of Mr. Esnan’s false representation
or fraud or knowing concealment of material circumstances.
[…]
[…] On May 29, 2015, provisions of the Strengthening
Canadian Citizenship Act came into force which introduced a new
decision-making model for the revocation of Canadian citizenship. As the
Minister had not filed a Statement of Claim in the Federal Court as of May 29,
2015, the transitional provisions in the Citizenship Act provide that
the notice Yazeed Esnan received on September 11, 2012 is cancelled and that
the Minister may provide him a notice under subsection 10(3) and proceed with
his case under the new Canadian citizenship revocation process, and said notice
was signed on July 31, 2015. I note that there is no discretion afforded to the
Minister in the aforementioned transitional provisions; if a Federal Court
proceeding was not pending prior to the coming into force of the new
decision-making model for the revocation of Canadian citizenship, the Notice of
Intent to Revoke Citizenship that had previously been served is cancelled by
operation of law. The Minister, in this instance, chose to proceed with a new
Notice of Intent to Revoke Citizenship under the new Canadian citizenship
revocation model, and this Notice of Intent to Revoke Citizenship was signed
and sent to Yazeed Esnan without delay.
It is true that the length of the
prohibition against being granted Canadian citizenship or taking the oath of
citizenship as a result of revocation of Canadian citizenship has been
increased to ten (10) years; however, this was an intentional change made to
the Citizenship Act by the Government of Canada and its impact on Yazeed
Esnan is a direct consequence of his father’s misrepresentation on his
application for Canadian citizenship. It is unclear how Yazeed Esnan career
course and future goals would not be possible as stated by Mr. Barchichat, as
Yazeed Esnan’s has failed to demonstrate the prejudice that he would suffer as
a result of the revocation of his Canadian citizenship. I note that Yazeed
Esnan would become a permanent resident of Canada should his Canadian
citizenship be revoked and he would therefore be permitted to continue to
reside in Canada. I also note that to date, he has enjoyed the privileges of
Canadian citizenship.
On a balance of probabilities, I am
satisfied that Mr. Esnan misrepresented himself on his application for Canadian
citizenship by failing to disclose all his absences from Canada during the
relevant residence period of September 6, 2000 to January 4, 2004 and by
failing to declare receiving assistance from CCG in the completion of his and
Yazeed Esnan’s applications. As such, the citizenship judge and citizenship
officer who reviewed his application did not have accurate information before
them when they made their assessments about whether or not Mr. Esnan met the
residence requirement for a grant of Canadian citizenship as outlined in
paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Citizenship Act when his application for
Canadian citizenship was approved by the citizenship judge on December 14, 2004
and when Canadian citizenship was granted to him by the citizenship officer on
December 15, 2004.
Mr. Esnan signed an application for Canadian
citizenship on behalf of his son, Yazeed Esnan, on January 5, 2004 and he
became a Canadian citizen of January 20, 2005. While I have taken into
consideration the submissions provided on Yazeed Esnan’s behalf by Mr. Barchichat,
I am of the opinion that they do not mitigate the fact that he obtained
Canadian citizenship by false representation or fraud or by knowingly
concealing material circumstances directly as a result of the misrepresentation
of his father.
[14]
In the underlying application for leave and
judicial review which was served and filed on March 23, 2016, the applicant
challenges the legality of the impugned decision on the grounds that
subsections 10(3) and (4) of the amended Citizenship Act, as amended by the Strengthening
Canadian Citizenship Act, violate section 7 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms, Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, enacted
as Schedule B to the Canada Act 1982 (UK) 1982, c 11 [Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms]; that the Notice of Intent to Revoke
Citizenship, dated July 31, 2015 is null and void because it violates section
2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights, SC 1960, c 44, and the
transitional provisions in the Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act;
and that the respondent has otherwise abused the process due to the delays that
have elapsed.
[15]
It is important to note at this point that two
months prior to the serving and filing of the herein application for leave and
judicial review of the impugned decision, by Order dated January 19, 2016 [Monla
Stay Order], the Court enjoined the Minister from taking any steps or
proceedings under the notice to revoke citizenship in eight specific
applications for leave and judicial review until they are finally determined.
In so doing, Justice Zinn dismissed the Minister’s motions to strike these
applications on the ground that they were premature and that the applicants had
to avail themselves of the opportunity under the amended Citizenship Act to
make submissions to the Minister as to whether any revocation ought to happen: Monla
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 44, [2016] FCJ No 58 at
paragraphs 57 to 83 [Monla].
[16]
That being said, Justice Zinn was satisfied that
the applicants in Monla met the tri-partite test for the issuance of a
stay: (1) that an issue that is neither frivolous or vexatious has been raised;
(2) that irreparable harm will occur to the applicant in the interim period
between the date of the motion and the disposition of the application if the
stay is denied; and (3) that the balance of convenience rests with the
applicant (Manitoba (Attorney General) v Metropolitan Stores (MTS) Ltd,
[1987] 1 S.C.R. 110; Toth v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1988),
1988 CanLII 1420 (FCA), 86 NR 302 (FCA); and RJR – MacDonald Inc v
Canada, 1994 CanLII 117, [1994] 1 S.C.R. 311).
[17]
Justice Zinn notes in Monla at paragraphs
85 to 88:
[85] The previous conclusion that the
applications are not bereft of any possibility of success is sufficient to
establish that at least one serious issue has been raised. These include:
whether the transition provisions dictate that the revocation notices are a
nullity; whether the notices should be quashed as an abuse of process; and
whether the revocation procedure under the Amended Act violates the Charter,
the Bill of Rights, and general administrative law principles.
[86] In all but one of the
applications, the Minister commenced revocation proceedings under the Former
Act but chose not to refer the matter to the Federal Court for decision. Those
applications allege that, in light of the Minister’s failure to proceed with
his applications under the Former Act, his new notices are a nullity and
further constitute an abuse of process. In the remaining application, T-1696-15
(NADA), the notice is accepted as validly issued according to the terms of the
Amended Act but it is asserted that the Minister has engaged in an abuse of
process in delaying serving it for more than a decade.
[87] I agree with the applicants that
subjecting them to the process under the Amended Act prior to the determination
of the validity of the notices subjects them to a process which may be found to
be invalid and unconstitutional. I also agree that there is an air of reality
to the allegations that the proceedings constitute an abuse of process. Lastly,
I accept that requiring the applicants to participate in a process which
requires that they disclose their case by responding to the new notices may
well prejudice them if it is later determined that they ought to have been
before the Federal Court in an action where the Minister bears the burden of
proof. I accept that each of these real possibilities creates the likelihood
that the failure to stay the revocation proceedings pending the disposition of
the judicial review applications will constitute irreparable harm.
[88] I am also satisfied that the
balance of convenience does not rest with the Minister. He had every
opportunity to initiate proceedings many years ago to strip these applicants of
their citizenship but chose or failed to do so. He cannot reasonably now say
that he and Canada will be prejudiced by the delay that will be caused in
granting the stay when he himself has been responsible for years and years of
delay in taking steps to advance these proceedings.
[18]
Whereas the Court directed that these
application be case managed as a group [Group 2 Revocation Judicial Review
Applications], and that it was expected that additional applications for
judicial review would be filed, following a case management conference held
February 5, 2016, with respect to the Group 2 Revocation Judicial Review
Applications, on February 23, 2016, the Court issued an Order that effectively
enjoined the Minister from taking any steps to act on any future notices to
revoke citizenship provided the affected person brought an application for
judicial review of that decision [Case Management Order].
[19]
Paragraph 3 of the Case Management Order
provides as follows:
The Minister shall take no steps or
proceedings under a notice to revoke Canadian citizenship issued under the Citizenship
Act as amended by the Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act
relating to an application for judicial review that is now or in the future
included in the Group 2 Revocation Judicial Review Applications, until notice
is provided to the applicant and the Common Legal Issues have been litigated on
the basis of the Lead Cases have been finally determined.
[20]
The Court has set out three questions that are
to be addressed by the Court for the Group 2 Revocation Judicial Review
Applications on the basis of the identified eight lead cases, which are to be
argued at a three day hearing scheduled to commence in Toronto on November 15,
2016:
(a)
May the Minister issue a new notice of
revocation of Canadian citizenship after the coming into force of the Strengthening
Canadian Citizenship Act, thereby engaging the new revocation procedure or,
by virtue of the transitional provisions of the Strengthening Canadian
Citizenship Act, where the Minister had issued a revocation notice under
the former Act (and the applicant requested a referral to the Federal Court but
no such referral was made by the Minister), is the revocation to be determined
in accordance with the provisions of the former Act?
(b)
Are any of subsections 10(1), 10(3), or 10(4) of
the Citizenship Act as amended by the Strengthening Canadian
Citizenship Act, unconstitutional as violating section 7 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms and/or sections 1(a) and 2(e) of the Canadian
Bill of Rights?
(c)
Does section 10 of the Citizenship Act as
amended by the Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act, subject an
individual to cruel and unusual treatment in violation of section 12 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms?
[21]
On March 24, 2016, Justice Zinn who is case
managing the Group 2 Revocation Judicial Review Applications, directed that the
underlining judicial review application be added to the group.
[22]
Coincidently, the impugned decision revoking the
Canadian citizenship of the applicant was made on the same day that the Court
made the Case Management Order, which is February 23, 2016. Where an
applicant’s citizenship has been revoked prior to the filing of an application
to review the revocation decision, the Court in paragraph 4 of the Case
Management Order had directed that the Minister may continue the process and
require that the applicant return his or her Canadian passport, unless
prevented by further Order following a motion by the applicant:
If the Minister has revoked an applicant’s
Canadian citizenship under the Citizenship Act as amended by the Strengthening
Canadian Citizenship Act, then, subject to any further Order of the Court,
the Minister may request the applicant to return his or her Canadian passport.
[23]
Indeed, by letter dated August 24, 2016, the
Minister requested the applicant to return his Canadian passport, stating
notably that “[i]f no information is received from [the
applicant] by September 9, 2016, this letter shall serve as the final notice of
the Minister’s decision to revoke the passport”.
[24]
On September 7, 2016, the applicant’s counsel
sent a request to the Minister for an extension of delay until September 30,
2016.
[25]
On September 9, 2016, applicant’s counsel wrote
to Justice Zinn seeking the Court’s directions regarding this matter “allowing the applicant to keep his citizenship and passport
until a final decision is rendered on [the Case Management Order] regarding the
lead cases”.
[26]
On September 14, 2016, the following directions
were made by Justice Zinn:
The Court has considered Applicant's
counsel's letter dated September 9, 2016. It appears that the Applicant's
citizenship was revoked on February 23 2016.
The Court's Order dated February 23, 2016,
in T-1570-15 provides that where notice to revoke citizenship has issued then
the Minister will take no steps thereunder once the matter is before the Court
and included in the Group 2 case-managed files, which conditions appear to have
been met on March 29, 2016 The Order further provides that where the
citizenship has been revoked then the Minister may, subject to further Court
Order, request the return of the Canadian passport. It appears that the
Applicant's citizenship was revoked on the same day that the Order issued.
The Minister is to advise the Court and
Applicant's counsel within one week whether the circumstances as outlined above
are accurate and whether the Minister continues to seek the return of the
passport. If so, then the Applicant will be required to bring a motion,
presumably under Rule 369, seeking a stay of the decision to revoke and seeking
return the passport.
[27]
On September 20, 2016, respondent’s counsel
wrote to the Court confirming:
This letter is in response to the order of
the Honourable Justice Zinn on September 14, 2016. The Respondent confirms that
the Applicant’s citizenship has been revoked and that the Passport Program may
request the return of the Canadian passport issued to the Applicant.
The Respondent would also like to inform the
Court that the Passport Program intends to continue with the revocation of the
passport issued to the Applicant. If the Applicant wishes to file a motion
regarding the Passport Program’s decision, he must file a separate Application
for judicial review against this decision.
[28]
In the herein motion made pursuant to section
18.2 of the Federal Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7, as amended, the
applicant seeks an order of the Court staying any step or proceeding taken by
the respondent under the amended Citizenship Act and the Canadian Passport
Order, SI/81‑86, as the result of the impugned decision made on February
23, 2016 to revoke the Canadian citizenship of the applicant. The Court heard
the submissions of counsel in Montréal, Quebec on November 1, 2016.
[29]
I am not satisfied that the applicant meets all
three conditions of the test to obtain a stay or the issuance of an
interlocutory injunction.
[30]
Firstly, the constitutional issues raised by the
applicant in his notice of application for leave and judicial review – which
are neither frivolous nor vexatious – meet the low threshold of a serious issue
(see Monla at paragraphs 85 to 87). At the date of the present Order,
there has not been any further Order of the Court pursuant to paragraph 4 of
the Case Management Order. The present application for leave and judicial
review is being held in abeyance pending the final disposition of the Lead
Cases on the common legal issues identified by Justice Zinn in the Case
Management Order.
[31]
Secondly, I am not satisfied that the applicant
would suffer irreparable harm if the stay or the interlocutory injunction
sought by the applicant were refused by the Court.
[32]
The applicant wrongly assumes that he cannot travel
outside of Canada for fear of not being able to come back and complete his
studies. He explains in his affidavit that in February 2016 he purchased a
plane ticket to go to Cancun, Mexico, but decided to cancel it since he does
not have a permanent residency card. Moreover, has being Palestinian origin
carrying a Jordanian passport, traveling will become significantly more
difficult as more countries require entry visas. He feels that he is held
“hostage”, and that if for any reason, he has to leave Canada, he will not
permitted to came back by the Canadian authorities. Moreover, his plans for
post-graduate studies overseas will have to be revisited if his request for
stay of proceeding is not granted.
[33]
Paragraph 46(2)(b) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA] provides:
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(2) A person
becomes a permanent resident if he or she ceases to be a citizen under
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(2) Devient
résident permanent quiconque perd la citoyenneté :
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|
[…]
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[…]
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(b) subsection
10(1) of the Citizenship Act, other than in the circumstances set out
in section 10.2 of that Act; or
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b) soit au titre
du paragraphe 10(1) de la Loi sur la citoyenneté, sauf s’il est visé à
l’article 10.2 de cette loi;
|
|
[…]
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[…]
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[34]
Section 10.2 of amended Citizenship Act read as
follows:
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10.2 For the
purposes of subsections 10(1) and 10.1(1), a person has obtained or resumed
his or her citizenship by false representation or fraud or by knowingly
concealing material circumstances if the person became a permanent resident,
within the meaning of subsection 2(1) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, by false representation or fraud or by knowingly
concealing material circumstances and, because of having acquired that
status, the person subsequently obtained or resumed citizenship.
|
10.2 Pour
l’application des paragraphes 10(1) et 10.1(1), a acquis la citoyenneté ou a
été réintégrée dans celle-ci par fraude ou au moyen d’une fausse déclaration
ou de la dissimulation intentionnelle de faits essentiels la personne ayant
acquis la citoyenneté ou ayant été réintégrée dans celle-ci après être
devenue un résident permanent, au sens du paragraphe 2(1) de la Loi sur
l’immigration et la protection des réfugiés, par l’un de ces trois
moyens.
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[35]
Since the applicant’s misrepresentations were
made by the applicant’s father in his application for citizenship, the effect
of the revocation of his citizenship is that the applicant has become a
permanent resident by the operation of the law. This latter status of permanent
resident is effective at the date of revocation of his citizenship that is on
February 23, 2016 and not at the date that his father signed his application
for citizenship as submitted by the applicant’s counsel. The applicant will
therefore be able to leave and return to Canada, pursue his studies at
Dalhousie University and see his parents and other family members who live
abroad. As a Canadian permanent resident, the applicant is able to ask and
obtain a Canadian permanent resident card that will allow him to return to
Canada, if he respects his residency obligation, should he decide to travel
abroad temporarily or to pursue post-graduate studies overseas. The applicant,
like all other Jordanian citizens, will also be able to use a Jordanian
passport to travel abroad. I accept that the present situation may be
stressful, but I fail to see how this can amount to irreparable harm. The
applicant has known since February 2016 that his citizenship was revoked and
the Canadian passport issued in his name could not also be revoked. He was
aware that he had become a Canadian permanent resident. Therefore, he had
plenty of time to seek and to obtain a Canadian permanent resident card. Moreover,
the inconveniences alleged by the applicant who needs to comply with a
residency obligation of 730 days in Canada with respect to every five year
period under section 28 of the IRPA in his affidavit do not constitute
irreparable harm.
[36]
Thirdly, the balance of convenience is in favour
of the Minister. The applicant has chosen, through counsel, to make
comprehensive written representations on the grounds of revocation mentioned in
the second revocation notice. In addition to the argument of aggravated
prejudice caused by the delay, numerous submissions were made on the merit. It
turned out that the Minister’s delegate did not accept those arguments or found
this evidence not conclusive (notably because it was outside the relevant
residency period). In particular, while the Minister’s delegate took into
consideration the submissions provided by counsel on behalf of the applicant,
it remains that he obtained Canadian citizenship by false representation or
fraud or by knowingly concealing material circumstances directly as a result of
the misrepresentation of his father. Moreover, the applicant chose to wait
until the impugned decision was made to challenge the constitutionality of
section 10 of the amended Citizenship Act and illegality of the new revocation
process, and this, despite the fact that, in Monla, the Court had
already dismissed the respondent’s motions to dismiss the applications seeking
a prohibition writ on grounds of prematurity.
[37]
The applicant argues that the Case Management
Order of February 23, 2016, is unfair and discriminatory because it establishes
a distinction between applications in the nature of a writ of prohibition made
upon receipt of a revocation notice and applications in the nature of a writ of
certiorari where people have responded to the revocation notice and whose
citizenship has subsequently been revoked. The applicant claims that having a
stay of proceedings for people who filed a judicial review to challenge the
decision to revoke their citizenship will put all applicants at an equal level.
However, I agree with the respondent that there is significant difference, from
a legal point of view, between individuals who have raised the issues of Monla
upon receipt of the revocation notice and those who, like the applicant,
have only raised these issues after they filed a judicial review of the
decision to revoke their citizenship. Indeed, in cases of individuals who have
filed a writ of prohibition to challenge the revocation notice to revoke issued
under the new legislation, no decision has yet been rendered by the Minister on
the issue of whether they have obtained citizenship through false
representations. These individuals asked and obtained a stay from the Court
which defers the revocation process until the validity of the new legislative
scheme is determined. On the other hand, despite the fact that the issue of
delays was raised, the applicant availed himself of the opportunity to provide
evidence and submissions to contest the allegations in the revocation notice
that the applicant had obtained citizenship by fraud. The Minister’s delegate
reviewed the applicant’s submissions and found, on a balance of probabilities, that
the applicant’s citizenship has been obtained as a result of significant misrepresentations
as to the applicant’s presence in Canada in the four year period preceding the
filing of his application for citizenship.
[38]
Moreover, I agree with the respondent that the
applicant is in effect seeking to suspend the operation of the law. Today, the
applicant essentially relies on the constitutional arguments made in Monla.
In his stay motion, the applicant does not submit any additional argument to
show that the Minister’s delegate committed a reviewable error when he found
that the applicant had obtained his Canadian citizenship by false
representation or fraud or by knowingly concealing material circumstances as a
result of the misrepresentation of the applicant’s father. When the applicant
ceased to be a Canadian citizen he lost the right to hold a Canadian passport.
When a person has been advised by the Minister that a passport in their
possession is required to be returned to the Minister, the person shall return
it without delay. Allowing people to retain the privileges associated with
Canadian citizenship when it has been determined that they obtained their
citizenship by fraud would seriously under mind the public interest. Indeed,
the remedy the applicant is asking for would amount to suspend the law entirely
and would negate the general public interest in the continued application of
the law. Likewise, on November 7, 2016, the Court refused in British
Columbia Civil Liberties to stay the operation of subsection 10(1) of the
amended Citizenship Act on an interlocutory basis pending the resolution of the
constitutionality and validity of that provision.