Docket: IMM-1-17
Citation:
2017 FC 760
Ottawa, Ontario, August 09, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice McDonald
BETWEEN:
|
HONGYING CHEN,
YING CHEN, JACKY CHEN, A MINOR, BY HIS LITIGATION GUARDIAN HONGYING CHEN AND
JERRY CHEN, A MINOR, BY HIS LITIGATION GUARDIAN HONGYING CHEN
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Applicants
|
and
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THE MINISTER OF
PUBLIC SAFETY AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The Applicants seek judicial review pursuant to
section 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protect Act, SC 2001, c 27
[IRPA], of the decision of an Inland Enforcement Officer [the Officer] refusing
to defer their removal from Canada.
[2]
The Applicants, Hongying and Ying Chen, are a
married couple and are citizens of China who have three children. Two of their
children, Jacky and Jerry, are Canadian citizens. Their other child, Jenny, is
a citizen of the United States. The Applicants face removal after an unsuccessful
refugee claim and two unsuccessful applications for permanent residence on
humanitarian and compassionate [H&C] grounds.
[3]
A stay of their removal from Canada was issued
by Justice Gleeson on January 6, 2017 pending the final disposition of this
application for judicial review. For the reasons that follow, this judicial
review is granted.
I.
Background
[4]
In October 2016, the Applicants were notified
that the removal orders against them were enforceable. The Applicants advised
that their daughter would be returning to the United States to live with her
grandmother. The Applicants subsequently signed a direction to report for
removal which was scheduled for January 7, 2017.
[5]
On December 23, 2016, the Applicants submitted a
deferral request. They requested that removal be deferred until their two older
children finish their school year and until the family could submit a third
H&C application. The Applicants explained that their previous immigration
consultants did not properly represent them and failed to provide sufficient
evidence in support of their H&C claim. The Applicants raised the best
interests of the children, and in particular, the legal status of their
children in China in light of China’s family planning policies. On the deferral
request, the Applicants argued that the previous H&C decisions did not
assess the children’s best interests. Finally, the Applicants explained that
their circumstances had changed since the H&C decision, as they had a third
child.
[6]
The Officer acknowledged that the children were
born in North America with no experience of China and he acknowledged that the
children have strong ties to Canada, including education experience and
extensive family networks. However, the Officer concluded that the children could
adjust to the Chinese language, education system, and culture.
[7]
The deferral was refused. The Officer relied
upon the previous H&C decision to conclude that the H&C factors raised
by the Applicants in their deferral request were adequately addressed.
II.
Issue
[8]
The Applicants raise a number of issues with
respect to the Officer’s decision, however it is the Officer’s treatment of the
best interests of the child analysis which is dispositive of this judicial
review application.
III.
Analysis
A.
Standard of Review
[9]
An enforcement Officer’s decision on a deferral
request is reviewed on the reasonableness standard (Nguyen v Canada (Public
Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2017 FC 225, [Nguyen]).
B.
Best Interest of Child
[10]
The Applicants acknowledge that the enforcement
Officer’s discretion to defer removal is limited, but they argue that the Officer
is nonetheless required to assess the short-term interests of any affected
child. The Applicants rely on Turay v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2009 FC 1090 at para 15, where this Court held that “if the court concludes there has been a faulty analysis of
the best interests of the children, the enforcement Officer’s decision will be
rendered unreasonable.”
[11]
The Applicants argue that the Officer here failed
to analyse their submissions regarding the children’s difficulty in obtaining
legal status in China, and access to healthcare and education, as the
Applicants would be in violation of China’s family planning policies. The Officer
relied on the H&C decision to conclude that the issues raised by the Applicants
had been adequately assessed. However, in the H&C decision the Officer
there notes that there was insufficient evidence to make the assessment. Further
the Applicants argue they were inadequately represented on the H&C. However
that issue is not necessary to address as this judicial review can be determined
on the issue of the Officer’s obligation to assess the best interests of the
child.
[12]
I agree with the Applicants that the Officer’s
assessment is “logically incoherent” when he
states that the issues of the best interests of the children were assessed in
the H&C decision. At the time of the H&C decision, the Applicants did
not have 3 children. Therefore the H&C decision did not address the best
interests of the third child. The H&C decision also does not address the
issues the family may face as three children would be in violation of China’s
family planning policies. The deferral Officer did not give these issues any
consideration as he relied on the H&C decision.
[13]
In Nguyen, Justice Boswell reviewed the
jurisprudence on this issue and concluded the following:
[17] The jurisprudence has established
that enforcement officers are required to consider the short-term best
interests of a child in a fair and sensitive manner (see: Joarder v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 230 (CanLII) at para 3,
146 ACWS (3d) 305; Kampemana at para 34). It is also clear that: “while
the best interests of the children are certainly a factor that must be
considered in the context of a removal order, they are not an over-riding
consideration” (Pangallo v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness),
2014 FC 229 (CanLII) at para 25, 238 ACWS (3d) 711).
[14]
Here although the best interests of the children
may not ultimately be the overriding consideration, the Officer failed whatsoever
to assess the short-term best interests of the Applicants’ third child. The Officer
relied on the previous H&C decision, which was rendered before the third
child was born, to conclude that these interests had already been adequately
addressed. The Applicants’ deferral request raised the possibility that their
third child would be unable to obtain legal status in China, therefore
depriving him the opportunity to access educational and healthcare services.
The Officer, however, does not directly engage with this issue and instead,
simply refers to an H&C decision which was released before the third child
was born.
[15]
The Officer’s reliance on an H&C decision
which pre-dates the child’s birth as evidence to assess the child’s short-term
best interests is unreasonable. Even considering the Officer’s narrow discretion,
the Officer’s reasoning lacks both justification and intelligibility, and the
decision is therefore unreasonable.
[16]
The application for judicial review is allowed
and the decision of the enforcement Officer refusing the request for deferral
of removal is set aside.