Date:
20120813
Docket:
IMM-8956-11
Citation:
2012 FC 982
Ottawa, Ontario,
August 13, 2012
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Rennie
BETWEEN:
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SERENA ELIZABETH
ATKINS
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION AND THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS
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Respondents
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The
applicant seeks judicial review of a decision of Senior Immigration Officer
M.C. Bennett (Officer), dated October 31, 2011, refusing the applicant’s
application for permanent residence on humanitarian and compassionate (H&C)
grounds pursuant to section 25 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001,
c 27
(IRPA). For the reasons that follow the application is dismissed.
Facts
[2]
The
applicant, Serena Elizabeth Atkins, is a citizen of Jamaica. She arrived in Canada in February 2009 and made a refugee claim in December 2009. Her claim was based on
her fear of crime and violence in Jamaica, particularly following the sexual
assault and beating of a close friend. She also alleged she was at greater
risk than other women because she was a teacher.
[3]
Her
claim was rejected on April 8, 2011. While she was found credible, the Refugee
Protection Division (RPD) determined that her evidence did not establish that
she faced a risk to her life or more than a mere possibility of persecution. She
submitted her Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) application on August 26,
2011, and her H&C application on September 16, 2011. In her PRRA
application she advanced new allegations of risk from her creditors in Jamaica, arising from her failure to repay significant loans, to come to Canada.
[4]
By
decision dated October 31, 2011, the Officer refused the applicant’s
application for permanent residence on H&C grounds. The Officer noted that
the grounds advanced by the applicant were her risk upon return to Jamaica, her
degree of establishment in Canada, and that she was being questioned as a
witness in a Live-In-Caregiver Program scam.
[5]
In
the section of the decision titled “Factors for Consideration”, the Officer
noted the following risk factors:
[T]he applicant stated that she wanted to leave
Jamaica for years due to the escalating crime and violence; particularly due to
an incident that occurred to a close friend.
[6]
In
the section titled “Reasons and Decision”, the Officer stated the following
regarding the applicant’s allegations of risk:
The applicant stated that she is at risk in Jamaica. I am the Senior Immigration Officer who assessed the applicant’s Pre Removal Risk
Assessment application and I am guided by the principle that when risk is cited
as a factor in an H&C application, the risk is assessed in the context of
the applicant’s degree of hardship.
[7]
The
Officer then recounted the applicant’s fear of violence particularly due to an
incident in which her friend was beaten and sexually assaulted. The Officer
found that no risk had been established on a balance of probabilities on this
basis. The Officer further found that crime and violence are generalized
problems in Jamaica and are not risks that are personal to the applicant. The
Officer therefore found that the applicant had not established unusual and
undeserved or disproportionate hardship on the basis of risk.
[8]
The
Officer also found that the applicant’s length of time in Canada and establishment in Canada were not out of the ordinary and did not warrant an H&C
exemption. The Officer noted that there was no evidence that the applicant
needed to remain in Canada to be questioned about the Live-In Caregiver Program
scam, and therefore found no H&C grounds in this regard.
[9]
It
is evident, therefore, that the Officer did not consider, in the context of the
H&C decision, the risk arising from the creditors.
[10]
The
application was therefore refused.
Standard of
Review and Issue
[11]
The
applicant argues that the Officer ignored relevant evidence and breached the
principles of procedural fairness. The former issue is reviewable on a
standard of reasonableness and the latter is reviewable on a standard of
correctness: Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190.
Analysis
[12]
The
applicant argues that by ignoring the allegation of risk from her creditors the
Officer erred in rendering the H&C decision. The Officer noted this
allegation of risk in the PRRA decision but the discussion of risk factors in
the H&C decision was limited to general risks from crime and violence in Jamaica.
[13]
The
respondent notes that the applicant did not allege in her H&C application
that she was at risk from her creditors; instead, she alleged that she was
heavily in debt, that bill collectors were harassing her mother, and that she
would be unable to support her daughter if returned. The respondent also notes
that, in the PRRA decision, the Officer found that the applicant had presented
no evidence to establish a risk from her creditors.
[14]
Specifically,
in the PRRA decision the Officer concluded: “[t]he applicant has presented no
evidence regarding any loan she took out from a bank in Jamaica, that any bank
sued the co-signer(s) to recover their money, or that any co-signer(s) are
making any threats against the applicant.” The respondent therefore argues, in
my view, correctly, that it could not have been an error for the Officer to not
mention this allegation in the H&C decision since it was not supported by
any evidence. A review of the Certified Tribunal Record confirms that no
evidence was submitted to substantiate these allegations and therefore the
failure to explicitly address the risk from creditors was not a reviewable
error. To put the point more directly, as there was no evidence to support the
allegation of risk in the PRRA decision the Officer was under no obligation to
migrate or transpose the same non-existent evidence to the H&C context and
re-cast it as hardship scenario. The onus rested with the applicant to advance
the argument that risk from creditors posed a separate and discrete aspect for
consideration in the H&C conduct; indeed, legislative amendments to the IRPA
make clear that the PRRA and H&C considerations are discrete:
IRPA, Section 25 (1.3)
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LIPR, section 25 (1.3)
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25 (1.3) In examining the request of a
foreign national in Canada, the Minister may not consider the factors that
are taken into account in the determination of whether a person is a
Convention refugee under section 96 or a person in need of protection under
subsection 97(1) but must consider elements related to the hardships that
affect the foreign national.
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25 (1.3) Le ministre, dans
l’étude de la demande d’un étranger se trouvant au Canada, ne tient compte
d’aucun des facteurs servant à établir la qualité de réfugié — au sens de la
Convention — aux termes de l’article 96 ou de personne à protéger au titre du
paragraphe 97(1); il tient compte, toutefois, des difficultés auxquelles
l’étranger fait face.
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[15]
The
applicant also argues that the Officer breached the principles of procedural
fairness by failing to interview her before rendering her decision. However,
as the respondent notes, there were no issues of credibility in the decision
and thus there is no breach of the duty of fairness.
Certified
Question
[16]
The
following question was proposed for certification:
In the determination of the application for
permanent residence, does the PRRA Officer who is also seized of the
application for permanent residence on Humanitarian and Compassionate grounds
have an obligation to apply and consider the risk factors raised in the PRRA
application but not in the H&C application, as these factors relate to the
question of hardship?
[17]
As
noted above, the Officer was under no obligation to migrate or transpose a
risk, in respect of which there was no supporting evidence, from the PRRA
context into the H&C context. The proposed question has no factual
foundation, and is therefore a hypothetical question. It does not meet the
criteria for a certified question: Varela v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2009 FCA 145, [2010] 1 FCR 129, paras. 22-29. Even if
answered in the affirmative, it would not be dispositive of the appeal.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S
JUDGMENT is that the application for judicial review be
and is hereby dismissed. There is no question for certification.
"Donald J.
Rennie"