Date: 20100825
Docket: T-262-10
Citation: 2010 FC 841
Ottawa, Ontario, August 25,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mandamin
BETWEEN:
TING
TING WANG
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The Applicant, Ms. Ting Ting Wang, applies for a
Writ of Mandamus compelling the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration to
assess and process her citizenship application.
Background
[2]
Ms. Wang is a citizen of China who has resided in Canada since June
2000, initially as a student and later as a permanent resident, when she
acquired permanent resident status in Canada in September 2005. Ms. Wang applied for citizenship in July 2008
and her citizenship test was scheduled for March 9, 2009. In her application,
Ms. Wang indicated her home address was in Surrey, B.C. V4A 9V4. She also listed a Richmond, B.C. address as a previous residence.
[3]
On April 7, 2009, a third party purporting to
write in support of Ms. Wang and another applicant for citizenship sent a
letter to Citizenship officials, in which she wrote in part:
I am not a
consultant. I am the friend of [another applicant] and Ting Ting Wang….The
dates of their absences were all true and correct.
Recently, your
officer noticed that some applicants’ home address [sic] were the same in
Surrey but their mailing address were all sent to 7271 Ash Street in Richmond.
The reason why people would like to take the test in Surrey because they think
they will have an easier oral test and the officer will not check their
passport stamps.
…
Ms. [the other
applicant] is a University graduate in China and Ms. Ting Ting Wang is a University graduate in New Brunswick...Your office mixed up their
files. Please check with your head office in Nova
Scotia. They provided all true residency information
in Canada especially [the other applicant] honestly declared that she did not
live in Canada enough time to
apply for the citizenship.
[4]
On April 11, 2009, Ms. Wang answered the Residence
Questionnaire. She listed her various addresses in Canada from June 2000 to April 2009 as well as her absences from Canada before and after applying for
citizenship. By a further letter dated December 11, 2009 Ms. Wang advised she
moved to Victoria, B.C.
[5]
On January 14, 2010, the Citizenship Officer
reviewed Ms. Wang’s file and recommended the file be sent to the RCMP for an
investigation under paragraph 29 of the Citizenship Act, as it appeared
to the Officer that Ms. Wang had misrepresented herself with regards to her
home address.
[6]
On February 5, 2010 Ms. Wang’s representative
requested an update on the status of Ms. Wang’s application for citizenship and
expedited processing. The Citizenship Officer responded on February 22, 2010,
writing:
This refers to
Ms. Wang’s application for citizenship. At this stage we are still reviewing
her file as it pertains to her residence. Unfortunately at this stage I cannot
give a specific time, as to when our review will be completed. However, once
we have completed our review, her file will be sent back to the local office
for the conclusion of her application.
[7]
On May 12, 2010, 20 months after applying for
citizenship, Ms. Wang applied for an order of mandamus requiring the Minister
to proceed with processing her application for citizenship.
Decision Under Review
[8]
The Citizenship Officer reviewing the
Applicant’s application for citizenship on January 14, 2010 identified the
issue concerning another applicant and Ms. Wang as:
Surrey
Suspicious addresses. Believe that … Ms. Wang did not reside at the home
address listed on their citizenship application.
[9]
The Officer referred to the third party letter
and stated:
Would seem that
with the information on file that ... Ms. Wang, did not reside at the home addresses
listed on their citizenship application. The absences listed on their
application may not be all of their declared absences.
[10]
The Officer recommended:
File to be sent
to the RCMP for a possible Section 29 investigation. Ms Wang … would seem to
has have misrepresented themselves with regards to their home address.
Legislation
[11]
The Citizenship Act, R.S.C. 1985, C-29 as
amended provides:
5(1) The
Minister shall grant citizenship to any person who
(a) makes
application for citizenship;
…
(c) is a permanent
resident within the meaning of subsection 2(1) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, and has, within the four years immediately
preceding the date of his or her application, accumulated at least three
years of residence in Canada calculated in the following manner;
(i) for
every day during which the person was resident in Canada before his lawful
admission to Canada for permanent residence the person shall be deemed to
have accumulated one-half of a day of residence, and
(ii) for
every day during which the person was resident in Canada after his lawful
admission to Canada for permanent residence the person shall be deemed to
have accumulated one day of residence;
…
14(1) An
application for
(a) a grant of
citizenship under subsection 5(1) or (5),
…
shall be
considered by a citizenship judge who shall, within sixty days of the day the
application was referred to the judge, determine whether or not the person
who made the application meets the requirements of this Act and the
regulations with respect to the application.
…
17. Where a
person has made an application under this Act and the Minister is of the
opinion that there is insufficient information to ascertain whether that
person meets the requirements of this Act and the regulations with respect to
the application, the Minister may suspend the processing of the
application for the period, not to exceed six months immediately
following the day on which the processing is suspended, required by the
Minister to obtain the necessary information.
…
29(2) A person
who
(a) for
any of the purposes of this Act makes any false representation, commits fraud
or knowingly conceals any material circumstances,
…
is guilty of
an offence and liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding one thousand
dollars or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding one year or to both.
|
5. (1) Le
ministre attribue la citoyenneté à toute personne qui, à la fois :
a) en fait la
demande;
…
c) est un
résident permanent au sens du paragraphe 2(1) de la Loi sur l’immigration et
la protection des réfugiés et a, dans les quatre ans qui ont précédé la date
de sa demande, résidé au Canada pendant au moins trois ans en tout, la durée
de sa résidence étant calculée de la manière suivante :
(i) un
demi-jour pour chaque jour de résidence au Canada avant son admission à titre de résident permanent,
(ii) un jour
pour chaque jour de résidence au Canada après son admission à titre de résident permanent;
….
14. (1) Dans
les soixante jours de sa saisine, le juge de la citoyenneté statue sur la
conformité — avec les dispositions applicables en l’espèce de la présente loi
et de ses règlements — des demandes déposées en vue de:
a)
l’attribution de la citoyenneté, au titre des paragraphes 5(1) ou (5);
...
17. S’il
estime ne pas avoir tous les renseignements nécessaires pour lui permettre
d’établir si le demandeur remplit les conditions prévues par la présente loi
et ses règlements, le ministre peut suspendre la procédure d’examende la
demande pendant la période nécessaire — qui ne peut dépasser six mois suivant
la date de la suspension — pour obtenir les renseignements qui manquent.
…
29(2) Commet
une infraction et encourt, sur déclaration de culpabilité par procédure
sommaire, une amende maximale de mille dollars et un emprisonnement maximal
d’un an, ou l’une de ces peines, quiconque :
a) dans le
cadre de la présente loi, fait une fausse déclaration, commet une fraude ou
dissimule intentionnellement des faits essentiels;
|
(emphasis added)
[12]
The Citizenship Regulations, SOR/93- 246 as
amended provide:
11(1) On receipt of an application made
in accordance with subsection 3(1), 3.1(1), 7(1) or 8(1), the Registrar
shall cause to be commenced the inquiries necessary to determine whether the
person in respect of whom the application is made meets the
requirements of the Act and these Regulations with respect to the
application.
…
11(5) After completion of the inquiries
commenced under subsection (1), the Registrar shall
(a) in the case of an application and
materials filed in accordance with subsection 3(1), request the citizenship
officer to whom the application and materials have been forwarded to refer
the application and materials to a citizenship judge for consideration; and
…
11(7) If it appears to a
citizenship judge that the approval of an application referred to the
citizenship judge under subsection (5) may not be possible on the basis of
the information available, that citizenship judge shall ask the Minister to
send a notice in writing by mail to the applicant, at the applicant's latest
known address, giving the applicant an opportunity to appear in person before
that citizenship judge at the date, time and place specified in the notice.
…
(emphasis added)
|
11. (1) Sur réception d’une demande visée
aux paragraphes 3(1), 3.1(1), 7(1) ou 8(1), le greffier fait entreprendre les
enquêtes nécessaires pour déterminer si la personne faisant l’objet de la
demande remplit les exigences applicables de la Loi et du présent règlement.
…
(5) Une fois que les enquêtes entreprises
en vertu du paragraphe (1) sont terminées, le greffier :
a) dans le cas d’une demande et des
documents déposés conformément au paragraphe 3(1), demande à l’agent de la
citoyenneté à qui ils ont été transmis d’en saisir le juge de la citoyenneté;
…
(7) Lorsque le juge de la citoyenneté
saisi de la demande conformément au paragraphe (5) estime qu’il lui est
impossible d’approuver celle-ci sans de plus amples renseignements, il
demande au ministre d’envoyer un avis écrit au demandeur à sa dernière
adresse connue, par courrier, l’informant qu’il a la possibilité de
comparaître devant ce juge aux date, heure et lieu qui y sont précisés.
|
Analysis
[13]
In Kaur v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),2002 FCT 1040, Justice Dawson wrote:
4 The following criteria must be
satisfied before the Court will issue a writ of mandamus:
(a) there must be a public legal
duty to act under the circumstances;
(b) the duty must be owed to the applicant;
(c) there must be a clear right to performance of that duty, and in particular
the applicant must have satisfied all conditions precedent giving rise to the
duty;
(d) no other adequate remedy is available to the applicant;
(e) the order sought must have some practical effect;
(f) in the exercise of its discretion, the Court must find no equitable bar to
the relief sought; and,
(g) on a balance of convenience, an order of mandamus should issue.
[14]
The Applicant filed her application on April 11,
2008. Her citizenship test was held March 19, 2010. Insofar as the Applicant
understands, she has completed all requirements for the processing of her
citizenship application. Her application is prima facie complete. The
Applicant was not informed of the investigation into her Canadian residence and
was left without any idea of how much processing time she could expect to her
application to take.
[15]
The Applicant submits the Citizenship Officer
referred the Applicant’s citizenship application to the RCMP without just cause
and in doing so has delayed her application for citizenship. The Applicant
says the Minister has breached a duty to grant the Applicant citizenship
without delay. The Applicant refers to Conille v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 F.C. 33 (Conille) where
Justice Tremblay-Lamer stated that when a citizenship judge finds the
application meets the requirements for citizenship, the Minister has a public
duty to the applicant to grant citizenship. However, in the instant case, the
Applicant’s documentation has yet to come before a citizenship judge, and
therefore the duty to grant citizenship mentioned in Conille would not
arise in this particular circumstance.
[16]
The Applicant submits that the Citizenship
Officer has no basis to refer the application to the RCMP for investigation.
She submits the Officer breached procedural fairness by relying on a third
party letter as grounds for suspecting that the Applicant may not have resided
in Surrey as she declared. The Applicant submits that the locations of the
Applicant’s residences within Canada are not relevant to her citizenship application.
[17]
I must observe that the Citizenship Officer’s
concern is directed at the question of whether the Applicant has attained the
required period of residence in Canada rather than residing at different locations within Canada. This is apparent by his notation:
“The absences listed on their application may not be all of their declared
absences.” The Applicant’s submissions on the location of residence within Canada do not address the substantive
question the Officer identified for investigation.
[18]
Since subsection 11 (1) of the
Regulations provides that the Registrar shall cause inquiries necessary to
determine whether an applicant meets the requirements of the Act, I
should think that this includes a citizenship officer’s request for an RCMP
investigation into a question of residence in Canada.
[19]
The Applicant also submits that should the
Minister wish to investigate, he may only suspend processing of the application
for a period of six months pursuant to section 17 of the Act, but
not beyond six months. The Applicant submits these legislated processes are
transparent and governed by the limitations set out in the legislation, unlike
the process to which the Applicant is being subjected. The Respondent counters
that the Minister has not “suspended” the process.
[20]
The language of the provision does not specify
the stage in the citizenship application process to which section 17 applies,
whether before or after a citizenship judge considers a citizenship application.
[21]
In Platonov v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship & Immigration), 2005 FC 569, the applicant brought an application
for mandamus because his citizenship application, although complete, was still
in the hands of the Registrar and had not yet been brought before the citizenship
judge, even though three years had passed, due to an ongoing security
investigation. Justice Harrington recognized the Minister owed a general duty
to act with reasonable diligence but held that section 17 is not a
mandatory time limit. Justice Harrington wrote:
31
Be it that the scheme of the Act and Regulations is defective in that there is
no prescribed delay to complete a security check (Conille, supra), or be it that the Minister is
asking for an investigation under section 19 of the Act … I cannot accept
that the effect of section 17 of the Act is that the Minister may only suspend
the processing of the application for six months. As the Minister pointed
out, section 17 comes into play once the application is before a Citizenship
Judge. There could, for instance, be some confusion with respect to time
actually spent in Canada which might justify a unilateral suspension.
The Minister has a duty to check out applicants. A security investigation, which will, by necessity, require
inquiries of foreign governments, may well take more than six months. It would
be intolerable that persons come to enjoy the wonders of Canadian citizenship
simply because time ran out on their security check.
(emphasis added)
[22]
Justice Harrington’s wording suggests that
section 17 comes into play after a citizenship judge has decided and the
Minister is obligated to confer citizenship. Here, the Applicant’s citizenship
application has not yet come before a citizenship judge. Nevertheless, the
inclusion of a six month time period in section 17 has to have some purpose. It
seems to me that while the overall purpose for a section 17 suspension is to
allow the Minister flexibility to investigate when he is not satisfied with
information provided, it also imposes a constraint. In my view, once that six
month period is exceeded, it would be incumbent on the Minister to explain the
delay in processing the citizenship application. Such an explanation provides
applicants with an opportunity to assist their cause by providing additional
information, or cooperation with the investigation, or initiating a process for
a remedy. More importantly, such a requirement would provide transparency in
the citizenship application process.
[23]
In any event, section 17 is not of assistance to
the Applicant because the inquiry is still in the hands of the Registrar.
[24]
In Conille, Justice Tremblay-Lamer
articulated the issue with respect to over long delay. She stated:
18 Certainly, some types of investigations
may delay processing of citizenship applications.
19 Can they, however, justify
an application being indefinitely suspended? In my view, when an applicant prima
facie meets the requirements listed in subsection 5(1) of the Act, and
there is a demand for performance, the authorities involved have a duty to act.
...
20 It is too easy to argue, as
does the respondent, that the Registrar has no legal obligation to act as long
as the inquiries have not been completed. By that reckoning, an investigation
could go on indefinitely and the Registrar would never have a duty to act. The
difficulty lies essentially in the fact that there is no time limit provided in
the Regulations for completing these inquiries. In fact, the source of the
problem is a defective statutory framework. For one thing, the powers of the
registrar to direct that an investigation be conducted in order to ascertain
that the requirements of the Act have been met are not subject to any temporal
or pragmatic parameters, apart from the obligation to await completion of the
inquiries provided for in section 11 of the Regulations, and for another, no
time limits are placed on the powers of the investigators, in this instance
CSIS. Given these circumstances, the processing time may extend well beyond the
time required for conducting the investigation. At what point can that time be
regarded as unreasonable?
[25]
I see no reason why the Registrar ought not to observe
a similar requirement for transparency I believe the Minister bears under
section 17 where the Registrar has commenced an inquiry delaying a citizenship
application from going before a citizenship judge beyond the usual processing
time. While there is no time limit set for processing, an indefinite period of
time for processing a citizenship application would clearly be excessive.
[26]
The constraint set out in section 17 provides a
useful guide to address additional delay resulting from the Registrar’s
inquiries as well. Although the Citizenship Officer is not precluded from
requesting an RCMP investigation for more information, it is important that the
resulting delay not be unreasonably extended. The provision of an explanation
or justification of the delay would mitigate uncertainty and may provide
applicants with information which may assist them advance their applications.
In the case at hand, the Applicant was not provided with an acceptable
explanation for the delay.
[27]
If a delay is to be considered unreasonable,
then three requirements, as set out in paragraph 23 of Conille, must
first be met:
1.
the delay in question has been longer that the
nature of the process required;
2. the applicant is not responsible for the delay; and
3.
the authority responsible for the delay has not
provided satisfactory
justification.
[28]
I must first determine whether the delay in
question has been longer than the nature of the process required. The
Regulatory Impact Analysis Statement that accompanied the Citizenship
Regulations amendments, in force as of April 17, 2009, states that the
current average processing time for proof of citizenship applications is ten
months. The processing of the Applicant’s citizenship application has now
taken sixteen months, significantly longer that the average ten months required
for processing of citizenship applications. The Citizenship Officer referred the
matter to the RCMP for investigation on January 14, 2010. The additional delay
which is relevant to this application arising from investigating the bona
fides of the Applicant’s reported residency is now seven months.
[29]
One must also look at the length of the delay,
as it would not be appropriate to grant mandamus for a delay that is not
excessively longer than the nature of the process required. Is the delay now
so long as to be unreasonable? For the sake of comparison, the delays in
comparable cases are:
·
a fifteen month delay in Voropaev v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2008 FC 994, a permanent residence
application;
·
a three year delay in processing a citizenship
application in Conille due to a CSIS investigation;
·
a five year delay in Victoria v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2006 FC 857, another citizenship
application.
[30]
Each case depends on its own facts. In Voropaev,
the fifteen month additional delay was not so long as to long as to warrant
mandamus while in Conille, the three year overall delay was.
Nevertheless, given these comparisons which were all considerably longer, I
cannot conclude that a seven month delay in processing the Applicant’s
application is an unreasonable delay such that it warrants Court intervention
by way of mandamus.
[31]
Because this situation does not meet the first
requirement, I do not have to address the other two. I will note, however, that
the Court has been informed that an RCMP inquiry usually requires at least six
months from the date of request. That time has now passed and one would expect
the processing of the Applicant’s citizenship to resume. It is useful to
recall Justice Tremblay-Lamer’s words in Conille:
25 When, as it is in this case, an investigation drags
on beyond the normal time for this kind of investigation, it is my opinion that
the registrar may inform the investigator that he will consider the
investigation to be concluded, unless he is informed, as soon as he considers
appropriate, that there are serious reasons to justify continuing it.
[32]
Since acquiring citizenship is an important step
for the Applicant, I would observe that, without serious reason to justify
continuing the investigation, the clock on unreasonable delay has started to
run.
Conclusion
[33]
The application for mandamus is dismissed
without prejudice to a future application for mandamus by the Applicant.
[34]
I make no order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND
ADJUDGES that:
1.
The
application for mandamus is dismissed without prejudice to a future application
for mandamus by the Applicant.
2.
I
make no order as to costs.
“Leonard
S. Mandamin”