Date: 20060601
Docket: T-100-06
Citation: 2006 FC 676
Ottawa, Ontario, June 1, 2006
Present:
The Honourable Mr. Justice Harrington
BETWEEN:
FATEH
KAMEL
Applicant
and
ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
Mr. Kamel
is a Canadian. Passport Canada refused to issue him a passport based on
national security concerns. He therefore filed an application for judicial
review of that decision. He alleges that his freedom of movement under the
Canadian Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms was violated and that the
relevant provisions of the Canadian Passport Order (SI/81-86) as amended
by the Order Amending the Canadian Passport Order (SI/2004-113) are
invalid.
[2]
This
review involves section 317 of the Federal Courts Rules. This rule
provides that Mr. Kamel can request all the material in the possession of
the tribunal not in his possession. Pursuant to this rule, Mr. Kamel asked
that Passport Canada give him all of his documents.
[3]
Under
section 318, Passport Canada had 20 days to produce the material in question.
If Passport Canada were to dispute the request, it had to inform the applicant
as well as the Court of the reason for its objection so that the Court would be
able to issue directions regarding the procedure for deciding the issue.
[4]
Passport
Canada then produced a set of documents with an accompanying note stating the
following: [TRANSLATION]
“Attached please find a certified copy of the documents in Passport Canada’s
possession regarding the above-mentioned individual. These documents are filed
under the Rules of practice of the Federal Court of 1998, sections 317 and 318.
. . .”
[5]
In short,
Mr. Kamel claims that the disclosed material is not the material in its
entirety. In his opinion, the entire record is necessary to the litigation
since many essential elements were missing, such as:
·
Passport
Canada’s correspondence dated August 5, 2005;
·
Passport
Canada’s correspondence dated October 28, 2005;
·
The notes,
documents and recommendations by the Investigations Section in regard to
identifying the grounds justifying the refusal of the passport;
·
The
reference to the Minister;
·
The
recommendations of the Security Bureau;
·
The notes
or documents relating to the decision to recommend that the Minister decide the
passport application rather than an adjudicator;
·
The
grounds or other documents considered by the Minister.
[6]
Mr. Kamel
made an application for the production of these documents. His application was
dismissed by a Prothonotary who determined that:
Finally, the applicant’s
motion record does not really establish the relevance of any document sought
vis-à-vis the substantive reasons set out in the notice of application for
judicial review and the affidavit filed by the applicant on April 3. In these
documents, the applicant challenged first and foremost the institutional
process – which he is familiar with – followed by Passport Canada rather than
the prejudicial content of the information that may or may not have been
brought to the attention of the decision-maker (See Beno, supra, at
paragraph 15).
[7]
This is an
appeal from that decision.
ANALYSIS
A priori, I find that the Prothonotary’s order is not
discretionary. Therefore Merck & Co., Inc. v. Apotex Inc. 2003 FCA
488 (F.C.A.), [2004] 2 F.C.R. 459 (QL) – which stipulates that the
discretionary order of a prothonotary is reviewable de
novo only when the prothonotary has erred in law (a concept in which I include
a discretion based upon a wrong principle or upon a misapprehension of the
facts), or where the issues raised are vital to the final issue of the case –
does not apply. I perceive the order in this case as purely a question of legal
interpretation. However, if I am wrong on this point, the refusal to grant Mr.
Kamel’s request underscored fundamental issues and was based on an improper
principle of law.
[8]
Passport
Canada was entitled to challenge the request for production of documents on the
basis that it lacked relevance, that it was not before the decision-maker, or
even for any other reason. This did not however entitle Passport Canada to act
as though the documents did not exist. Pursuant to subsection 318(2),
Passport Canada was supposed to inform Mr. Kamel and the Court, in writing, of
the reasons for its objection. Something that it did not do.
[9]
Passport
Canada therefore obliged Mr. Kamel to bring a motion, only to contest it like
it should have done in the first place. The prothonotary’s position was that
the motion’s dismissal was justified by Passport Canada’s argument to the
effect that it did not have to produce the documents that Mr. Kamel already had
in his possession. This is true. Passport Canada did not produce the two
letters to Mr. Kamel, one dated August 5, 2005 and the other October 28, 2005,
signed by Michel Leduc and Jody Thomas. It is important to note that
Ms. Thomas is the same person who signed the letter denying the passport
application.
[10]
Nevertheless,
with all due respect to the prothonotary, what is important in this case is not
the two letters dated August 5 and October 28, but rather the documents
referred to therein. Specifically, the letter dated August 5 states that [TRANSLATION] “your eligibility for a
Canadian passport is the subject of an administrative investigation” by
Passport Canada and the letter dated October 28 states that [TRANSLATION] “according to the information
in your file, in France you were convicted for a terrorist offence and passport
fraud in support of terrorist activities”. These documents were not included in
the material sent to Mr. Kamel.
[11]
While the
two above-mentioned letters were not provided to Mr. Kamel, the letters that he
had sent to Passport Canada were provided to him.
[12]
The
documents referred to in the letters dated August 5 and October 28 are clearly
relevant. These letters were referred to up until the proceeding leading to
the tribunal’s decision to deny Mr. Kamel’s passport. It would be absurd
to allege that the documents referred to in the letters dated August 5 and
October 28 were not before the decision-maker. Even if the documents were not before
the decision-maker, they should have been, see Tremblay v. Canada (Attorney
General), 2005 FC 339, [2005] F.C.J. No. 421 (QL), Association des
crabiers acadiens v. Canada (Attorney General), 2006 FC 222, [2006] F.C.J.
No. 294 (QL) at paragraphs 13 and 14 and Cooke v. Canada (Correctional
Service) 2005 FC 712, [2005] F.C.J. No 886
(QL).
[13]
Further,
Mr. Kamel responded to the letters dated August 5, 2005 and October 28, trying
to appease and respond to the potential concerns mentioned in those letters. It
is therefore obvious, according to the documents produced, that the
decision-maker had taken into account the documents referred to in the letters.
As stated in Haghighi v. Canada Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (C.A.),
[2000] 4 F.C. 407; Ali v. Canada Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) [1998]
F.C.J. 468 (QL); and Mazumder v. Canada Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2005 FC 444, decision-makers who have concerns regarding
extrinsic evidence must advise the applicant of their concerns. Although this
matter was not heard in the context of an immigration application, the
principle of natural justice nevertheless applies. The decision-maker had in
his possession documents which had been requested by Mr. Kamel. Passport Canada
therefore had an obligation to produce them. How is it possible for this Court
to assess the scope of the refusal without the documents which were or had been
in the decision-maker’s possession? See Alwan v. The Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration 2006 FC 665.
[14]
In such
circumstances, I would make a parallel with Sogi v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2005] 1 F.C.R. 171 (F.C.A.). In that
case, the Federal Court of Appeal determined that the Federal Court judge
hearing a judicial review involving a confidentiality order made by an
Immigration Division member would have an opportunity to review the
confidential information and in camera evidence that was before the member. In
other words, that confidential information that was before the Immigration
Division automatically became part of the record on judicial review. Given that
the documents that were assessed by the Minister in order to deny
Mr. Kamel’s passport were included in what the Minister considered, those
very documents are part of the record and must be produced.
ORDER
THE COURT ORDERS that:
- The appeal is allowed, with costs;
and
- Without prejudice to any rights the
respondent may have to object to the production of documents under the Canada
Evidence Act or any other legal provisions, the Court orders that the
material sought by the applicant be produced in its entirety.
“Sean Harrington”
Certified
true translation
Kelley
A. Harvey, BCL, LLB
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: T-100-06
STYLE OF CAUSE: FATEH
KAMEL v. ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
PLACE OF HEARING: Montréal, Quebec
DATE OF HEARING: May 8, 2006
REASONS FOR ORDER
AND ORDER: HARRINGTON J.
DATE OF REASONS: June 1, 2006
APPEARANCES:
Johanne Doyon
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
Nathalie Benoit
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Doyon et Associés
Montréal, Quebec
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
John H. Sims, Q.C.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|