Docket: IMM-1153-17
Citation:
2017 FC 959
Ottawa, Ontario, October 27, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Brown
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BETWEEN:
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NANCY BIBIANA
SEPULVEDA CARDONA
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ERICK NORBERTO
ROMERO CORTES
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Applicants
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION CANADA
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Nature of the Matters
[1]
This is an application for judicial review under
section 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c
27 [the IRPA] of the decision of a representative of the Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration at the Embassy of Canada in Bogota, Columbia
[the Minister’s representative] dated January 12, 2017, which rejected Nancy
Bibiana Sepulveda Cardona’s [the Applicant] application for a permanent
resident visa as a member of the family class [the Decision] which was
sponsored by Erick Norberto Romero Cortes [the Sponsor]. In the same
application, the Applicant also requested permanent resident status based on
humanitarian and compassionate [H&C] grounds per section 25(1) of IRPA
[the H&C Application], which was also denied.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, the application is
granted.
II.
Facts
[3]
The Applicant, a citizen of Colombia, met the
Sponsor in February 2008 in Bogota, Columbia. In August 2008, the Applicant and
Sponsor began dating. In November 2009, the Sponsor made an application for a
permanent resident visa for Canada as a skilled worker. In March 2011, the
Applicant and Sponsor moved in together. In November 2011, the Sponsor was
granted permanent residence in Canada. The Sponsor was landed in July 2012. The
Sponsor has become a successful and contributing member of Canadian society.
[4]
An application for permanent residence under the
skilled worker class requires that an applicant declare all of his or her
dependents, which includes a common-law spouse. The Sponsor did not declare the
Applicant as a dependent because he and the Applicant were not married when he
left Columbia, and because the parties agreed that their relationship ended when
he left Columbia. The Sponsor also believed a common-law relationship required
two years of cohabitation, which is in fact the law in Colombia but not in
Canada, where it is only one year.
[5]
After the Sponsor moved to Canada, he and the
Applicant communicated. In December 2012, the Sponsor returned to Colombia for
Christmas and he and the Applicant discussed the possibility of the Applicant
moving to Canada with him. It was not until May 2013, when he and the Applicant
started travelling to other countries to meet, that they started seriously
evaluating the possibility of sponsorship.
[6]
In April 2014, the Sponsor filed an application
to sponsor the Applicant for permanent residence as his common-law spouse.
[7]
In August 2014, the application was refused
because the Sponsor did not declare the Applicant as a dependent family member
in his application for permanent residence [the First Refusal]. The Sponsor
states that he did not understand the refusal; he believed he could overturn
the First Refusal if he and the Applicant were married.
[8]
The Applicant and Sponsor were married in
Colombia on October 27, 2014.
[9]
In November 2014, the Sponsor reapplied to
sponsor the Applicant for permanent residence, and the Applicant applied for a
temporary resident visa [TRV] in January 2015. In February 2015, the second
application by the Sponsor was refused for the same reasons as the First
Refusal [the Second Refusal], i.e., because the Sponsor did not declare the
Applicant as a dependent family member. The Applicant’s TRV application was
also refused in February 2015.
[10]
In December 2015, the Sponsor submitted a third
application to sponsor the Applicant, in which he advised that his failure to
include the Applicant in his initial application was due to his unfamiliarity
with the legal definition of common-law spouse under Canadian law.
[11]
On November 30, 2016, the Applicant was
interviewed by the Minister’s representative, who informed the Applicant that
there were concerns that she was excluded because she had not been declared by
the Sponsor. The Applicant explained that she and the Sponsor believed she was
not his common-law spouse because they had not lived together for two years.
The Applicant also explained that she had no intention to move to Canada
because she did not want to leave her family. It was not until after the
Sponsor was landed that she realized she wanted to be with him in Canada.
[12]
On January 12, 2017, the Applicant received the
third refusal on the same grounds as the First Refusal and the Second Refusal,
which refusal is the subject of this judicial review.
[13]
The Applicant filed this Application on March
13, 2017. The Respondent filed his Memorandum on May 11, 2017. The Applicants’
Reply Memorandum was filed May 23, 2017. The Respondent filed a Further
Memorandum on September 8, 2017.
[14]
The Court heard the application on September 25,
2017, when, without notice, and at the opening of the hearing, the Respondent
moved to dismiss, alleging for the first time that the Court lacked
jurisdiction to hear the application.
III.
Issues
[15]
At issue is whether the refusal of the
Applicant’s application for a permanent resident visa as a member of the family
class is reasonable, and whether this Court has jurisdiction to hear this application.
IV.
Standard of Review
[16]
In Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9
at paras 57, 62 [Dunsmuir], the Supreme Court of Canada held that a standard
of review analysis is not necessary where “the
jurisprudence has already determined in a satisfactory manner the degree of
deference to be accorded with regard to a particular category of question.”
This Court has already determined that the standard of review under paragraph
117(9)(d) of Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations [IRPR]
is reasonableness: Ling Du v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012
FC 1094 at 47 per O’Keefe J, and Sekinatu v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2015 FC 729 at paras 10-11 per Shore J. Therefore, reasonableness
is the standard of review.
[17]
In Dunsmuir at para 47, the Supreme Court
of Canada explained what is required of a court reviewing on the reasonableness
standard of review:
A court conducting a review for
reasonableness inquires into the qualities that make a decision reasonable,
referring both to the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes. In
judicial review, reasonableness is concerned mostly with the existence of
justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making
process. But it is also concerned with whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law.
[18]
The Supreme Court of Canada also instructs that
judicial review is not a line-by-line treasure hunt for errors; the decision
should be approached as an organic whole: Communications, Energy and
Paperworkers Union of Canada, Local 30 v Irving Pulp & Paper, Ltd, 2013
SCC 34. Further, a reviewing court must determine whether the decision, viewed
as a whole in the context of the record, is reasonable: Construction Labour
Relations v Driver Iron Inc, 2012 SCC 65; see also Newfoundland and
Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011
SCC 62.
[19]
The appropriate standard of review of the
H&C aspect of the decision at issue is reasonableness: Kanthasamy v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 61 [Kanthasamy].
[20]
H&C reviews under section 25 of IRPA
offer special and additional considerations for an exemption from Canadian
immigration laws that are otherwise universally applied. The purpose of the
high degree of discretion conferred by the legislation is to allow flexibility
to approve deserving cases not anticipated by IRPA, see the decision of
O’Keefe J in Mikhno v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 386.
V.
Analysis
Decision respecting paragraph 117(9)(d) of the IRPR
[21]
In my respectful view, this case must be decided
in favour of the Applicants for several reasons.
[22]
First, in my view, this application should be
granted for substantially the same reasons as those provided by Heneghan J in Odicho
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 1039, where the facts and
conclusion were:
[11] There is no dispute that the
husband failed to declare his wife as a non-accompanying dependent when he
landed in Canada in January 2005. There is no evidence to challenge the bona
fide of the marriage of the Applicants. There is no evidence to challenge the
status of the infant as their child. Indeed, the Respondent did not file an
affidavit from the Visa Officer.
[12] There is one critical fact and
that is the husband’s failure to declare the change in his marital status when
he landed in Canada. This failure gave rise to the exclusion of his wife
pursuant to the terms of paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations which provides
as follows:
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117(9) A foreign
national shall not be considered a member of the family class by virtue of their
relationship to a sponsor if
…
(d) subject to
subsection (10), the sponsor previously made an application for permanent
residence and became a permanent resident and, at the time of that
application, the foreign national was a non-accompanying family member of the
sponsor and was not examined.
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117(9) Ne sont
pas considérées comme appartenant à la catégorie du regroupement familial du
fait de leur relation avec le répondant les personnes suivantes :
…
d) sous réserve
du paragraphe (10), dans le cas où le répondant est devenu résident permanent
à la suite d’une demande à cet effet, l’étranger qui, à l’époque où cette
demande a été faite, était un membre de la famille du répondant
n’accompagnant pas ce dernier et n’a pas fait l’objet d’un contrôle.
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[13] Subsection
25(1) of the Act provides a means for persons to overcome the consequences of
non-compliance with the requirements of the Act and the Regulations. Subsection
25(1) provides as follows:
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Humanitarian and compassionate considerations
25. (1) The Minister
shall, upon request of a foreign national in Canada who is inadmissible or
who does not meet the requirements of this Act, and may, on the Minister’s
own initiative or on request of a foreign national outside Canada, examine
the circumstances concerning the foreign national and may grant the foreign
national permanent resident status or an exemption from any applicable
criteria or obligation of this Act if the Minister is of the opinion that it
is justified by humanitarian and compassionate considerations relating to
them, taking into account the best interests of a child directly affected, or
by public policy considerations.
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Séjour pour motif d’ordre humanitaire
25. (1) Le ministre doit, sur demande d’un étranger se trouvant au
Canada qui est interdit de territoire ou qui ne se conforme pas à la présente
loi, et peut, de sa propre initiative ou sur demande d’un étranger se
trouvant hors du Canada, étudier le cas de cet étranger et peut lui octroyer
le statut de résident permanent ou lever tout ou partie des critères et
obligations applicables, s’il estime que des circonstances d’ordre
humanitaire relatives à l’étranger — compte tenu de l’intérêt supérieur de
l’enfant directement touché — ou l’intérêt public le justifient.
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[14] This
provision of the Act addresses the examination of the “circumstances” of a
foreign national who is inadmissible or who does not meet the statutory
requirements, including the requirements of the Regulations. It is an
ameliorative provision.
[15] In the present case, the Visa Officer
apparently ignored the material that was submitted concerning the
“circumstances” of the husband’s failure to declare the change in his marital
status at the time he landed in Canada. In my view, the Applicants
tendered the essential evidence, which is the existence of a marriage, of a
family and of a desire to be together. The husband provided an explanation for
his initial failure to disclose the change in his marital status and, in my
view, there is nothing more to be said. The Applicants have submitted the
necessary facts. They carry the burden of establishing the evidence to justify
an exercise of discretion, but in my opinion the discharge of this burden does
not require superfluity.
[16] The Visa Officer’s decision does
not demonstrate an understanding of the purpose of subsection 25(1), which is
to overcome the consequences of being in breach of the statutory requirements.
The initial decision of February 6, 2007, which excluded the child, as well as
the wife, illustrates an excess of zeal on the part of the original
decision-maker, if not a misunderstanding of section 117 of the Regulations.
[17] As a result, the application for
judicial review is allowed. The decision of May 3, 2007, is quashed and
the matter is remitted for reconsideration by a different member of the
Canadian Embassy in Syria.
[23]
In my view, the decision with respect to
paragraph 117(9)(d) of the IRPR is also unreasonable as not being within
the range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of
the facts and law. The record was as follows:
•
when the Sponsor made his application for
permanent residence for Canada at the end of 2009, he was not living with the
Applicant;
•
during the time that they lived together,
neither of them considered the other his or her common-law spouse; they treated
each other as boy / girlfriend living together, knowing well that there was a
real prospect that their relationship would end if the Sponsor left Colombia;
•
the Sponsor and the Applicant finished their
relationship when the Sponsor left Colombia because at the time, the Applicant
was not interested in leaving Colombia;
•
At the relevant time, the Sponsor was under the
impression that a common law relationship could exist only after two years of
cohabitation, as is the case under Colombia’s law, and he had not lived with
the Applicant that long.
[24]
In my view, this evidence was effectively
ignored; on this record, it was not open to the Minister’s representative to find
that the Sponsor had been in a common-law relationship with the Applicant at
the time he applied for permanent residence and, at the time, he was granted
permanent residence in Canada. This aspect of the decision is not defensible in
respect of the facts.
H&C Decision
[25]
The record in the terms of the H&C
Application was that:
•
The Applicant and Sponsor have a strong
relationship, and have been together for over 8 years;
•
The Sponsor had been in Canada for almost 5
years, the same time that they have been separated;
•
The Sponsor is a permanent resident of Canada
where he is well established;
•
The Applicant and Sponsor wish to form a family
in Canada;
•
It would be hard for Applicant to continue
separated from her husband;
•
They had made several attempts at being together
in Canada, including three sponsorship applications and one TRV application;
•
During the years the Applicant and Sponsor were
separated, they made approximately 13 trips to different places to spend time
together as a couple; and,
•
They never had an intention to provide incorrect
information to the Canadian authorities.
[26]
The decision of the Visa Officer as stated in
his GCMS notes [the H&C decision] is contained in a single sentence at the
end of the visa decision which reads:
Decision: Sponsor became a PR in Canada on
19 July 2012. At the time of landing the Sponsor did not declare a common law
relationship with the applicant. As a result of the sponsor not declaring that
he was in a common law relationship to the applicant prior to becoming a
permanent resident, the applicant is now excluded. The sponsor was free to
disclose relationship details as instructed on the applicant’s forms at the
time of his application in and subsequent landing in 2012. I find the applicant
excluded R 117(9)(d). Eligibility: failed with regards to the H&C
elements. I am not satisfied sufficient humanitarian compassionate grounds
exist to support and exception to the exclusion of the application.
[Emphasis added]
[27]
I am not persuaded and am unable to agree that
the H&C decision was reasonable in the circumstances. It is cursory to say
the least, curt and dismissive. Moreover, the reason given for refusing the
H&C relief are the same as the reason why H&C relief was denied in the
first place: this lacks reasonableness because of circularity. In addition, these
reasons are doubtless inadequate; however, it must be acknowledged that inadequacy
of reasons is not a standalone ground for judicial review. However, these
reasons do not explain how the Minister’s representative balanced the evidence
of a long-lasting, strong relationship where the Applicant and Sponsor made
numerous attempts to be together in order to start a family in Canada, with the
humanitarian and compassionate grounds that must be assessed per Kanthasamy.
I am compelled to agree that the reasons of the Minister’s representative lack the
justification, transparency and intelligibility demanded by Dunsmuir. Therefore,
judicial review must be granted.
Late motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction
[28]
At the very opening of hearing and without
notice, the Respondent moved to dismiss the application on the ground that the
Court allegedly lacked jurisdiction to entertain it.
[29]
The Respondent argues that this Court cannot
entertain a challenge to the H&C analysis by the Minister’s representative
because the Applicant is statutorily-barred from applying for judicial review.
The Respondent also alleges that a sponsored person can only seek judicial
review of an H&C decision after accepting the conclusion that he or she is
not a member of the family class pursuant to paragraph 117(9)(d) of the IRPR.
[30]
The Respondent relies on Somodi v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FCA 288 [Somodi] (and other
cases). In Somodi, the Federal Court of Appeal answered in the
affirmative the following certified question of law: does section 72 of IRPA
bar application for judicial review by applicant of spousal application while
sponsor exercises right of appeal pursuant to section 63 of IRPA.
[31]
Somodi was
distinguished by Mosley J in Phung v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 585 [Phung]. In Phung, a
Vietnamese woman married a Canadian man in Vietnam. The couple had a child in
Vietnam and the family moved to Canada. Upon arriving in Canada, the wife did
not disclose a previous son, born from a different father. An immigration
officer later refused to allow the oldest son’s application because he was said
to be excluded from the family class. In setting aside the visa officer’s
decision, Mosley J found that at first impression, it would seem that paragraph
72(2)(a) of IRPA would bar an application for judicial review of the
decision until the right of appeal to the IAD has been dismissed. However, Mosley
J also found that the only procedural route open to the minor was to bring a
separate application under section 25 of IRPA, which, in seeking an
exemption from inadmissibility under section 25, the minor applicant had
already done.
[32]
Mosley J relied on Martineau J’s decision in Huot
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 180, at paras 26 and 28:
[26] A right of appeal from a visa
officer’s decision is only meaningful if the concerns with the decision can be
addressed through the appellate procedure.
[28] Here, as in Huot, the
applicant had made extensive H&C submissions to the office. I agree with
Justice Martineau that in such situations, the limitation in paragraph 72(2)(a)
of the IRPA does not override the Court’s jurisdiction to review whether the
officer erred in considering H&C factors. To conclude otherwise would deny
foreign national who are excluded from the family class an effective remedy and
would be inconsistent with the broad discretion to grant an exemption,
particularly where the best interests of a child are concerned.
[33]
Mosley J concluded at para 37:
37 […]The officer did not ignore the
H&C considerations but her review of them was cursory in contrast to her
discussion of the occasions on which the principal could have disclosed her son
but did not. The officer’s review of the factors was coloured, in my view, by
her awareness of the principal applicant’s misrepresentations during their
earlier interactions and perceived failure to look after the interests of her
son when she had the opportunity to do so earlier.
[34]
I also agree with Martineau J in Huot at
paras 14-15:
[14] Normally, when leave is
granted, procedure must defer to the law. It is understandable that in cases
where there is no jurisdiction or order extending the time to file an
application for judicial review, these issues must be determined at the outset.
However, the hearing before the judge on the application for review must not
become an arena where a party can present yet again each and every possible
preliminary motion and objection that has not previously been decided or heard.
[15] The Court must be able to control
the proceedings that are before it so as to prevent abuse. In this regard, a
party’s lack of status should normally have been decided prior to the hearing
on the merits by means of a motion to strike, if necessary. […]
[Emphasis added]
[35]
I also agree with Near J (as he was then) in Mahmood
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 433, at paras 13-16:
A.
Does the Applicant Have Standing?
[13] The Respondent submits that the
Applicant, as the sponsor of Ms. Bashir, has no standing to challenge the
refusal of the application since he is not “directly affected” by the decision
as required by subsection 18.1(1) of the Federal Courts Act (RS, 1985, c
F-7). The jurisprudence of this Court supports this position.
The Respondent cites Carson v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) (1995), 95 FTR 137 at para 4:
[4] While Mrs. Carson has an
interest in this proceeding, in that she is Mr. Carson’s sponsor for landing in
Canada and she was interviewed as part of the marriage interview involving the
H&C determination, these facts are insufficient to give her standing in
this judicial review. Mrs. Carson is a Canadian citizen and does not require
any exemption whatsoever from the Immigration Act or regulations. Moreover,
whether she has standing or not has no impact whatsoever on the ultimate issue
in this matter. Accordingly, with respect to this proceeding, the applicant,
Tonya Carson, is struck as a party.
(see also Wu v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) (2000), 183 FTR 309, 4 Imm LR (3d) 145 at para
15).
[14] The Respondent submits that this
application for judicial review should be dismissed on this basis alone.
[15] I have had the benefit of reading
my colleague, Justice Luc Martineau’s recent decision, Huot v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 180. He determined
that the statements made in Carson and Wu, “made at another
time…under the former Immigration Act” were not binding and
determinative, and that the facts of the case before the Court would need to be
considered in exercising the Court’s discretion to grant standing to a party
(at para 20). In the present matter, I would like to echo the sentiment
expressed by Justice Martineau at paras 14 and 15:
[14] […] the hearing before the
judge on the application for review must not become an arena where a party can
present yet again each and every possible preliminary motion and objection that
has not previously been decided or heard.
[15] The Court must be able to
control the proceedings that are before it so as to prevent abuse. In this
regard, a party's lack of status should normally have been decided prior to the
hearing on the merits by means of a motion to strike, if necessary. […]
[16] In the interests of justice, I
am of the view that this preliminary objection on the part of the Respondent at
this late stage should be dismissed. However, if I am wrong, given my
conclusion with respect to whether the Officer’s decision was reasonable there
is no need to make a finding with respect to the standing of the Applicant.
[Emphasis added]
[36]
The great delay in bringing this motion also counts
against the Respondent. The Minister could and if he was so inclined, should
have resisted the application for leave to appeal on jurisdictional grounds; he
did not. Leave was then granted by this Court. The grant of leave gave rise to a
second opportunity for the Respondent to raise the issue of jurisdiction, i.e.,
in the supplementary memorandum permitted by the Order granting leave. Once
again, the Respondent was silent.
[37]
As noted, the matter was raised only on the
morning of the hearing. While the Respondent’s counsel attempted to reach the
Applicant’s counsel by telephone on the Friday before the hearing, nothing in
writing was sent at that time to either the Court or the Applicant; failure to
alert the Court and opposing counsel in writing cannot be encouraged. The
normal rule is that motions such as this require notice; this rule is salutary
and benefits not only the parties but also the Court. I heard oral arguments on
the point and also gave the parties time to file supplementary material after
the hearing.
[38]
The Respondent’s motion to dismiss is
dismissed.
Certified Question
[39]
Neither counsel proposed a question for
certification, and none arises.