Docket: IMM-1305-17
Citation:
2017 FC 1129
Ottawa, Ontario, December 8, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice McVeigh
BETWEEN:
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COSTEL
SLATINEANU
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
On March 22, 2017, Costel Slatineanu [the
Applicant] filed for judicial review of an Immigration and Refugee Board,
Immigration Appeal Division [IAD] decision that declared his appeal abandoned. Within
days, the Applicant also applied to the IAD to reopen his appeal on the same
grounds pursuant to section 71 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA]. Because judicial review is prohibited until any
right of appeal that may be provided by the IRPA is exhausted, I will dismiss
this appeal for being pre-mature for the reasons that follow.
II.
Background
[2]
The Applicant left Romania and came to Canada
where he obtained refugee status in 2005. He and his daughter became permanent
residents on December 9, 2010. He now also has three children who were born in
Canada.
[3]
On December 10, 2012, the Applicant pled guilty
to break and enter of a commercial building. He indicates in his material that
he “received a 3- month discontinued sentence, which [he]
served over 45 weekends. [He] was also given 1 year of probation.” I
assume that the sentence he was rendered was an intermittent sentence and not a
discontinued sentence as he called it. But nothing rides on what the correct
nomenclature was for the sentence.
[4]
As a result, an Admissibility hearing took place
on June 3, 2014. The hearing determined the Applicant was inadmissible, and he
was issued a deportation order. On that same date, the Applicant (through his
counsel, Ethan Friedman) filed an appeal of this decision.
[5]
On November 22, 2016, over two years after the
Applicant filed the appeal, the IAD sent a Notice of Intent [NOI] to Mr.
Friedman and the Applicant. The NOI asked the Applicant to confirm his intent
to proceed with the appeal by December 20, 2016. Although the IAD says the
letter was never returned in the mail, the Applicant says he did not receive
his copy. According to the Applicant, his legal counsel, Mr. Friedman, says he
tried to contact him by using his correct phone number, but never reached him. The
Applicant’s position is that he did not receive an update regarding the NOI. As
a result, nothing was ever filed and the IAD was not contacted.
[6]
In a decision dated January 10, 2017, the IAD declared
the Applicant’s appeal abandoned without inviting the Applicant to participate
in a show-cause hearing. The IAD sent a notice of abandonment to both the
Applicant at the same address as the previous notice was sent as well as to Mr.
Friedman. The Applicant received this notice on March 7, 2017, at his
residential address. The Applicant then retained the new counsel who represents
him in this judicial review.
[7]
The Applicant says he filed for judicial review of
the abandonment decision on March 22, 2017, to preserve his right to have the
Federal Court review this decision. Six days later, the Applicant applied to the
IAD to reopen his appeal pursuant to section 71 of the IPRA. Leave was granted in
the Federal Court on July 21, 2017.
A.
Preliminary
[8]
The parties by consent requested, and I granted,
that the Certified Tribunal Record [CTR] be amended to reflect what was before
the decision maker.
III.
Issues
[9]
The issues are:
- Is this judicial review premature because the Applicant did not
exhaust all of his appeal rights as statutorily required under section
72(2)(a) of the IRPA?;
- Did the IAD breach
the Applicant’s right to procedural fairness by failing to provide him
with a show-cause hearing?
[10]
Below are the relevant provisions of the IRPA:
Reopening appeal
71
The Immigration Appeal Division, on application by a foreign national who has
not left Canada under a removal order, may reopen an appeal if it is
satisfied that it failed to observe a principle of natural justice.
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Réouverture de l’appel
71
L’étranger qui n’a pas quitté le Canada à la suite de la mesure de renvoi
peut demander la réouverture de l’appel sur preuve de manquement à un
principe de justice naturelle.
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Application for judicial review
72 (1) Judicial review by the Federal Court with respect to any matter —
a decision, determination or order made, a measure taken or a question raised
— under this Act is, subject to section 86.1, commenced by making an
application for leave to the Court.
Application
(2) The following provisions
govern an application under subsection (1):
(a) the application may not be
made until any right of appeal that may be provided by this Act is exhausted;
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Demande d’autorisation
72 (1) Le contrôle judiciaire par la Cour fédérale de toute mesure —
décision, ordonnance, question ou affaire — prise dans le cadre de la
présente loi est, sous réserve de l’article 86.1, subordonné au dépôt d’une
demande d’autorisation.
Application
(2) Les dispositions suivantes
s’appliquent à la demande d’autorisation :
a) elle ne peut être présentée
tant que les voies d’appel ne sont pas épuisées;
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Emphasis added Mon
soulignement
IV.
Analysis
[11]
The Applicant argued that section 72(2)(a) of
the IRPA, which says an application for judicial review “may not be made until any right of appeal that may be
provided by this Act is exhausted,” does not cover this situation. He
submits his application to reopen the appeal pursuant to section 71 of the IRPA
is not a right of appeal because it is limited to breaches of natural justice,
and therefore it is not a de novo appeal. The Applicant argued that
section 72(2)(a) does not apply to him and that this judicial review
application can proceed on the merits.
[12]
The Applicant presented argument on the merits
that there had been procedural unfairness as the IAD did not provide him a show-cause
hearing before declaring his application abandoned. In addition, the Applicant
argues the IAD breached his right to procedural fairness when it declared his
appeal abandoned although he had not received the NOI through the mail or his
lawyer. Both of these arguments are directly within the wheelhouse of section 71
of the IRPA.
[13]
In this situation the Applicant had two matters
proceed at the same time on the same procedural fairness grounds—an application
for the Federal Court to judicially review the abandonment decision, and an
application for the IAD to reopen his appeal. This gave the Applicant the
ability to then judicially review the application to reopen the appeal if the
instant judicial review is not decided as he wishes.
[14]
The Federal Court of Appeal [FCA] looked at the
prohibition of premature applications in Somodi v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2009 FCA 288 [Somodi]. While Somodi took
place in the context of a spousal sponsorship application, the principles
discussed by Justice Letourneau apply generally in the IRPA. At paragraphs
21-23, he explains that “any” right of appeal,
(not just a de novo appeal), must be exhausted prior to a judicial
review:
In the IRPA, Parliament has established a
comprehensive, self-contained process with specific rules to deal with the
admission of foreign nationals as members of the family class. The right of
appeal given to the sponsor to challenge the visa officer’s decision on his or
her behalf to the benefit of the foreign national, as well as the statute bar
against judicial review until any right of appeal has been exhausted, are
distinguishing features of this new process. They make the earlier
jurisprudence relied upon by the appellant obsolete.
Parliament has prescribed a route through
which the family sponsorship applications must be processed, culminating, after
an appeal, with a possibility for the sponsor to seek relief in the Federal
Court. Parliament’s intent to enact a comprehensive set of rules in the IRPA
governing family class sponsorship applications is evidenced both by paragraph
72(2)(a) and subsection 75(2).
The broad prohibition in paragraph 72(2)(a)
to resort to judicial review until “any” right of appeal has been exhausted is
now provided for in the enabling statute as opposed
to the more limited statutory bar provided by section 18.5 of the Federal
Courts Act.
[Emphasis added]
[15]
Section 18.5 of the Federal Courts Act, RSC,
1985, c F-7 is a prohibition; an applicant must exhaust all rights of appeal
before being able to bring a judicial review. Moreover, the IRPA has a
comprehensive scheme that specifically bars a judicial review until all rights
of appeal are exhausted. The FCA has confirmed that Somodi stands for
the principle that a right to appeal is an adequate alternative remedy, and
section 72(2)(a) of the IRPA bars this Court from judicial review until that
right is exhausted (Habtenkiel v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2014 FCA 180 at paras 35-36). There can be no doubt that Parliament
intended for this comprehensive scheme to avoid multiplicity of decision making
processes.
[16]
To proceed to make a determination on the merits
of this case and at the same time have an application before the IAD on the
same grounds would be exactly what Parliament strived to prevent in this
legislation.
[17]
I find that the Applicant had a right of appeal
as described in section 72(2)(a) of the IRPA that he is required to exhaust
before he applies for judicial review. I do not agree that because the re-opened
appeal (section 71 of the IRPA) is narrower, and only exercised if there is a
failure to observe a principle of natural justice, that it is still not a right
of appeal as per section 72(2)(a) of the IRPA.
[18]
There is no doubt in my mind that section
72(2)(a) does apply in this case because the argument on the merits in this judicial
review are in fact based on procedural unfairness grounds. So the re-opening
application is not prejudiced as it is also on the same procedural unfairness
grounds and this right must be exhausted before it can be judicially reviewed.
[19]
Because the Applicant did not exhaust his right
of appeal, I am dismissing this application as being pre-mature.
[20]
The Applicant submitted his understanding was
that the application was not premature because leave was granted. Again I do
not agree. Leave being granted does not mean that all prematurity,
jurisdictional, or mootness arguments (to name a few) are no longer in issue. I
suspect that leave was granted for a judge on a judicial review to make this
exact determination regarding prematurity, but given there are never any
reasons for granting leave I am only speculating.
[21]
I will dismiss this application as I find that
section 71 of the IRPA—with the heading “Reopening
Appeal”—must be exhausted before an application for judicial review
pursuant to section 72(2)(a) of the IRPA proceeds in this Court.
[22]
As I find this matter was premature, I am not
commenting on the arguments related to the merits.
[23]
The Court was informed the IAD made a decision
regarding the appeal to re-open on July 7, 2017, but this decision was not
before the Court in this judicial review. In fairness, I will grant the
Applicant an extension of time to bring a judicial review of the July 7, 2017 decision.
V.
Certified Question
[24]
The Applicant proposed the following Certified Question:
Does section
72(2)(a) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, which precludes
an Application for Leave and Judicial Review from being commenced until any
right of appeal that is provided by the Act is exhausted, include an
application to re-open an appeal pursuant to section 71 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act that has been determined to be abandoned by the
Immigration and Refugee Protection Board, Appeal Division.
[25]
The Respondent opposed and argued that the Court
should not certify this question.
[26]
A Certified Question must be a question of
general importance. This means the question “transcends
the interests of the immediate parties to the litigation and contemplates
issues of broad significance or general application” (Liyanagamage v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (1994), 176 NR 4 at para 4
(FCA)). The question must also be dispositive of the appeal (Zazai v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FCA 89 at para 11).
[27]
I will not certify the question as it is not a
question of general importance given that the FCA in Somodi had a
similar question before them.