Date: 20090424
Docket: IMM-3813-08
Citation: 2009 FC 415
Ottawa, Ontario, April 24,
2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
JEREMY DEAN HINZMAN
NGA THI NGUYEN and
LIAM LIEM NGUYEN HINZMAN
Applicants
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application pursuant to subsection 72 (1) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (Act) for judicial review
of a decision of a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) officer (Officer), dated
July 25, 2008 (Decision) refusing the Applicant’s application for permanent
residence from within Canada under section 25 of the Act on humanitarian and
compassionate (H&C) grounds.
BACKGROUND
[2]
Jeremy
(Principal Applicant), his wife Nga (Female Applicant) and their son Liam are
all citizens of the United States. The Female Applicant recently gave birth
to their second child, Meghan Hinzman on July 21, 2008, who is a Canadian
citizen. The Applicants currently reside in Toronto.
[3]
Prior
to entering Canada, the
Principal Applicant was a Specialist in Alpha Company, 2nd
Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 82nd
Airborne Division of the United States (U.S.) Army. He signed his enlistment
documents with the U.S. Army on November 27, 2000. The Principal Applicant
married his wife on January 12, 2001 and travelled to Fort Benning to begin
basic training on January 17, 2001. He committed to a period of four years. He
enlisted because of the college funding and improved job prospects he would
receive.
[4]
Following
basic training, the Principal Applicant began three weeks of training at the Airborne School and
received his parachutist badge on June 15, 2001. One month later, he received
his posting orders for Fort Bragg. He became airborne
qualified and continued to maintain his jump status. He was awarded his Expert
Infantryman’s Badge on September 21, 2001 and was promoted to Private First
Class earlier than average as a result of his positive performance in the Army.
The RPD noted that the Principal Applicant was one of the 15% of 135 soldiers
in his company selected for the pre-Ranger course.
[5]
The
Principal Applicant indicates that he began to have doubts about the military
and an aversion to killing when he began reading books on Buddhism at Fort Bragg. The Principal
Applicant and his wife began attending weekly meetings of the Religious Society
of Friends (Quakers) shortly after their wedding in 2001, when the female
Applicant was pregnant with their son, Liam. At this point, the Principal
Applicant realized that he had made a mistake in joining the infantry and took
steps to change his situation while honouring his commitment to the Army.
[6]
The
Principal Applicant applied for conscientious objector status in August 2002
and requested that he be granted non-combatant status. He says he gave the
appropriate forms to his commander, but three months later he was informed that
his application was never received. He resubmitted his application for
conscientious objector status on the eve of his battalion’s deployment in Afghanistan.
[7]
The
Principal Applicant’s hearing on his application for conscientious objector
status was held in Afghanistan on April 2, 2003. He was assigned menial
kitchen duties while in Afghanistan. The investigating
officer concluded that the Principal Applicant was using the conscientious
objector regulations to get out of the infantry, and that his beliefs were not
congruent with the definition of conscientious objector outlined in the military
regulations. The Principal Applicant continued his assigned duties in Afghanistan and resumed
his regular infantryman duties when he returned to Fort Bragg in
July 2003. He did not exercise any of his appeal rights within the military
chain of command or through the outside court system with respect to the
negative conscientious objector decision.
[8]
The
Principal Applicant received notification that his battalion was to be deployed
to Iraq in
mid-January 2004. He decided that he was not going to Iraq but he only
discussed this decision with his wife. They considered his two options: (1) refuse
the orders of his command and take the repercussions under the Uniform code of
Military Justice (UCMJ); or (2) go Absent Without Leave (AWOL) to Canada. The
Applicants arrived in Canada on January 3, 2004. The Principal
Applicant has been AWOL since January 2004.
[9]
The
Applicants made refugee protection claims on February 16, 2004 based on a
well-founded fear of persecution, a risk to life and risk of cruel and unusual
treatment or punishment, and danger of torture. The Applicants’ refugee claim
was heard by the RPD on December 6-8, 2004. The RPD rendered a negative
decision on March 16, 2005.
[10]
The
RPD found that the Applicants were not Convention refugees or persons in need
of protection as the U.S. court martial process would apply to the
Principal Applicant. The RPD noted that the UCMJ is a law of general
application and that the Principal Applicant had not discharged the onus of
showing that the law was inherently, or for any other reasons, persecutory in
relation to a Convention ground. The RPD found that the Principal Applicant had
brought forward no evidence to support that he would not be afforded full
protection of the state. The U.S. Military Law also has regulations in place to
provide for conscientious objector status. The Principal Applicant did not
provide sufficient evidence to establish that he was, or would be, denied due
process or treated differently were he to return to the U.S. and be
court-marshalled.
[11]
The
RPD considered whether the Principal Applicant met the definition of a refugee
based on his conscientious objection, but concluded that he was not a
conscientious objector because he was not opposed to war in all forms, or to
the bearing of arms in all circumstances due to his genuine political,
religious or moral convictions, or to valid reasons of conscience. As well, the
RPD noted the Principal Applicant’s failure to pursue an appeal of his refused conscientious
objector application, or to make a new application or request a delay of the
hearing until he returned to the U.S. The RPD also held that
the Principal Applicant had not established that he would have engaged, or been
associated with or complicit in military action, condemned by the international
community.
[12]
The
Applicants were granted leave to seek judicial review of the RPD’s decision on
November 10, 2005. The judicial review was denied by the Federal Court of
Canada on March 31, 2006, but a certified question was put forward:
When dealing with a refugee claim
advanced by a mere foot soldier, is the question whether a given conflict may
be unlawful in international law relevant to the determination which must be
made by the Refugee Division under paragraph 171 of the UNHCR Handbook?
The appeal of the Federal Court’s decision
was denied by the Federal Court of Appeal on April 30, 2007. The Federal Court of
Appeal did not answer the certified question as they found that the Applicants
had failed to satisfy the Court that they sought and were unable to obtain
state protection. Leave to appeal the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision was
denied by the Supreme Court of Canada on November 15, 2007.
[13]
The
Applicants submitted an H&C application on March 12, 2008, which was denied
on July 22, 2008.
PRRA
Decision
[14]
The
Applicants made a PRRA application and the decision dated July 25, 2008 found that
they
would not be subject to risk of persecution, danger of torture, risk to life or
risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment if returned to their country
of nationality or habitual residence.
[15]
The
Officer relied upon section 113 of the Act which requires that only new
evidence can be raised once a refugee claim has been rejected. She also relied
on subsection 161(2) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations,
SOR/2002-227
(Regulations) which states that the person who makes written submissions must
identify the evidence that meets the requirements of paragraph 113(a) of the
Act and show how that evidence is relevant to them. The Officer also noted that
her authority was limited to “whether the applicants meet the definition of
Convention refugees or persons in need of protections…not…to make findings with
respect to the legality of the war in Iraq or to comment on the foreign policy of
the United
States
government.”
[16]
The
Officer acknowledged that she was also the decision-maker for the Applicants’ H&C
application and that she considered the H&C submissions related to the Applicants’
identified risks but not other H&C submissions. The Officer relied upon Kim
v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2005 FC 437 at paragraph 70 for the
following:
By the same logic, I find that PRRA officers need not consider
humanitarian and compassionate factors in making their decisions. There is no
discretion afforded to a PRRA officer in making a risk assessment. Either the
officer is satisfied that the risk factors alleged exist and are sufficiently
serious to grant protection, or the officer is not satisfied. The PRRA inquiry
and decision-making process does not take into account factors other than risk…
[17]
The
Officer stated that a PRRA is not an appeal of a decision of the RPD: Perez
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2006 FC 1380. She found
that the documentary evidence did not indicate a material change in the country
conditions since the RPD and Federal Court of Appeal decisions. As well, the
risks put forward by the Applicants were the same that had been heard and
assessed by the RPD.
[18]
The
Officer found that the evidence did not support that the Principal Applicant
would not receive due process if charged with being AWOL, desertion or missing
movement upon his return to the U.S. The Principal Applicant
had availed himself of some of the recourse available under the U.S. military
justice system, but he had not exhausted all of the avenues available to him.
[19]
The
Officer accepted that the Applicants, particularly the Principal Applicant,
would be the object of criticism and negative commentary from military
personnel and members of the public in the U.S.. However,
the Officer did not find that the Applicants had provided sufficient evidence
to counter the RPD’s finding that the discrimination they could face upon returning
to the United
States
did not amount to persecution.
[20]
The
Officer concluded that the Applicants had not met the burden of providing clear
and convincing evidence that they were unable or unwilling to avail themselves
of state protection, including the military and civilian justice systems in the
United
States.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
H&C Decision
[21]
The
Officer noted that the Applicants bear the onus of demonstrating that their
personal circumstances, including the best interest of any child directly
affected by the Decision, would result in unusual, undeserved or
disproportionate hardship if their application was not granted. The Officer
noted that she did not have the authority to make findings with respect to the
legality of the war in Iraq or to comment on the foreign policy of the
United
States
government.
[22]
The
Officer noted that the Applicants had been in Canada for roughly 4.5 years and
had a certain level of establishment. They were involved in their community and
were employed and involved with a Quaker society. Their H&C application was
based on risk, establishment, best interests of the child and other factors
(the pregnancy of the Female Applicant).
Hardship
Associated with the Applicants’ Identified Risks
Judicial
Punishment
[23]
The
Officer found that it was objectively unreasonable to conclude that the Principal
Applicant would face the death penalty if court-marshalled upon his return to
the United
States.
As well, the Officer found that the objective evidence did not support that the
Principal Applicant would be subjected to disproportionate punishment should he
be charged and convicted in a court martial proceeding upon his return to the
United States. The Principal Applicant had chosen not to exhaust avenues of
appeal available to him in the U.S..
[24]
The
Officer also found that the Applicants had presented insufficient evidence to
support their claim that the UCMJ would be applied in a disproportionately
harsh manner against the Principal Applicant because of his personal
circumstances. An H&C application is not an avenue to circumvent lawful and
legitimate prosecutions commenced by a democratic country. Based on the
evidence of the Principal Applicant, he would face charges and be prosecuted
upon his return to the United States. However, the Officer
was not unconvinced that the Principal Applicant would not be afforded due
process or that accessing due process and state protection would be a hardship.
Non-Judicial
Hardship
[25]
The
Officer found that the existence of Army Regulation 27-10 (which allows a
commander to impose any non-judicial punishment deemed appropriate upon a
solider under their command) did not mean it would be applied towards the
Principal Applicant in a manner that amounted to unusual, undeserved or
disproportionate hardship.
Other
Identified Risks
[26]
The
Officer considered other risks identified by the Applicants, which included
being socially ostracized, possible physical danger from individuals opposed to
the Principal Applicant’s political opinions, the inability to vote or work in
certain occupations if convicted of desertion or other military convictions,
and the inability to apply to immigrate to Canada as a skilled
worker.
[27]
In
relation to social ostracism and physical violence, the Officer concluded that
the Applicants would be able to access state protection and that it was not a
hardship for them to access that protection. In relation to people disagreeing
with the Principal Applicant’s political opinions and public opposition to the
war in Iraq, the Officer
did not find that the potential or actual expression of opposing opinions to
those of the Applicants amounted to an unusual, undeserved or disproportionate
hardship. In relation to the Principal Applicant’s inability to vote or seek
employment in certain occupations, the Officer found that if the Principal
Applicant is convicted of a military offence, there is no evidence that
supports that the laws disproportionately targeted him compared to other
individuals charged and convicted of similar military offences.
[28]
Finally,
in relation to the Principal Applicant’s inability to apply to enter Canada under
the skilled worker program, the Officer found that if the Principal Applicant
was charged and/or convicted of being AWOL, he would not be inadmissible to Canada. However, if
he was charged and/or convicted of a different or additional offence, he would
be inadmissible. Therefore, a conviction for being AWOL from the U.S. military
was not unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship as it would not render
the Principal Applicant inadmissible to Canada. Even if the
Principal Applicant was charged and convicted of desertion and was inadmissible
to Canada, the Officer still did not find that this amounted to unusual,
undeserved or disproportionate hardship.
Establishment
[29]
The
Officer found that while the Applicants had made a commendable effort to
establish themselves in Canada, severing their ties in Canada would not
amount to unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship. The work experience
of the Principal Applicant is transferable to similar positions in the United States. The
Applicants would most likely be able to re-integrate themselves into the Quaker
Society in the United States and it would be a family decision whether
the Female Applicant remained at home to look after their children. None of this
amounted to hardship.
[30]
The
Officer found that although the Principal Applicant had been extensively
involved with the War Resisters Support Campaign in Canada, there was
no evidence that he would be unable to continue similar efforts in the United
States.
It was also reasonable to expect that his involvement in the war resisters
movement in Canada had provided him with contacts for similar movements in the United
States.
As well, the evidence did not support that the Principal Applicant’s family would
be recognized for their involvement in the campaigns against the war in Iraq and that this
would lead to difficulties that would amount to unusual and undeserved or
disproportionate hardship.
Best
Interests of the Child
[31]
The
Officer noted that Liam would start grade 1 in September 2008 and was enrolled
in French Immersion Kindergarten. He has attended all of his schooling in Canada. The Officer
states that Liam will have access to the education system in the United
States
and that Liam’s native language is English, so he will not have any language
difficulties in transferring to the U.S. school system. He may
not be able to attend French Immersion in the U.S.; however,
this was not a hardship in the Officer’s view.
[32]
Although
there are concerns that Liam could be bullied or negatively impacted because of
sentiments directed to the Principal Applicant, the Officer cites programs
available to Liam if he encounters problems at his school and discusses the
availability of police involvement. Given Liam’s age, the Officer found that
the difficulties he would experience on integration into the U.S. would be
minimal, as he would have the support of his family in the U.S., speaks
English and he would remain with his family unit.
Other
Factors—the Female Applicant’s pregnancy
[33]
At
the date of the Decision, the Female Applicant was pregnant. The Officer noted
that if the child was born before the Applicants left Canada, the child
would be a Canadian citizen. This child will not lose Canadian citizenship no
matter where she/he resides, and the child will also be a citizen of the U.S.
by descent of the parents, who are both U.S. citizens.
[34]
In
addition, the family will be returned to the U.S. by car
instead of by air, so the Female Applicant’s health will not be jeopardized by
their removal. There was no unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship arising
from the Female Applicant’s pregnancy.
ISSUES
[35]
The
Applicants raise the following issues on this application:
1)
Did
the Officer err in law by assessing risk in the Applicants’ H&C
applications under thresholds applicable to subsections 96 and 97 of the Act
and by failing to assess the hardship the Applicants would face if returned to
the U.S.?
2)
Did
the Officer err by failing to conduct an analysis of the best interests of the
children directly affected by this Decision?
3)
Did
the Officer err in law by failing to have regard to the totality of the
evidence before her, including failing to assess the Female Applicant’s
particular circumstances?
4)
Did
the Officer make an unreasonable decision in light of the evidence before her?
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[36]
The
following provisions of the Act are applicable in these proceedings:
Humanitarian
and compassionate considerations
25. (1) The Minister shall, upon request of a
foreign national who is inadmissible or who does not meet the requirements of
this Act, and may, on the Minister’s own initiative, 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.
|
Séjour
pour motif d’ordre humanitaire
25.
(1) Le
ministre doit, sur demande d’un étranger interdit de territoire ou qui ne se
conforme pas à la présente loi, et peut, de sa propre initiative, 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.
|
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[37]
In Dunsmuir v.
New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9,
the Supreme Court of Canada recognized that, although the reasonableness simpliciter
and patent unreasonableness standards are theoretically different, “the analytical
problems that arise in trying to apply the different standards undercut any
conceptual usefulness created by the inherently greater flexibility of having
multiple standards of review”: Dunsmuir at para. 44.
Consequently, the Supreme Court of Canada held that the two reasonableness
standards should be collapsed into a single form of “reasonableness” review.
[38]
The Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir also held that the
standard of review analysis need not be conducted in every instance. Instead,
where the standard of review applicable to the particular question before the
court is well-settled by past jurisprudence, the reviewing court may adopt that
standard of review. Only where this search proves fruitless must the reviewing
court undertake a consideration of the four factors comprising the standard of review
analysis.
[39]
In Baker v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration),
[1999] 2
S.C.R. 817 at paragraph 61 (Baker),
the Supreme Court held that the standard of review applicable to an officer’s
decision of whether or not to grant an exemption based on humanitarian and
compassionate considerations was reasonableness simpliciter. Thus, in
light of the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Dunsmuir and
the previous jurisprudence of this Court, I find the standard of review
applicable to issues 2, and 4 to be reasonableness. When reviewing a decision
on the standard of reasonableness, the analysis will be concerned with “the
existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility within the
decision-making process [and also with] whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law”: Dunsmuir at paragraph 47. Put another way,
the Court should only intervene if the Decision was unreasonable in the sense that it falls
outside the “range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in
respect of the facts and law.”
[40]
The Applicants submit that on a question of whether the Officer
applied the correct test in assessing risk in an H&C application is a
question of law and therefore must be reviewed on the standard of correctness: Pinter v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
2005 FC 296; Mooker
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2007] F.C.J.
No. 1029 at paragraph 16 and Kim v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2008] FC 632 at paragraph 24. I agree with this submission.
Also, I regard issue 3, in part at least, to raise procedural fairness issues
which I have reviewed on a standard of correctness.
ARGUMENTS
The Applicants
[41]
The
Applicants submit that the Officer erred in law by applying the wrong test when
assessing risk in their H&C application. The Officer also failed to assess
whether the consequences the Applicants would suffer constituted undue
hardship, even if they did not amount to risk.
[42]
The
Applicants say that the Federal Court has on numerous occasions found that it
is an error in law to conduct an analysis applicable to a PRRA application or
to a refugee claim when deciding an H&C application. H&C considerations
involve a broader understanding of hardship than the risk provisions set out in
sections 96 and 97 of the Act: Pinter v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2005] F.C.J. No. 366 at paragraphs 2, 5-6; Sha’er
v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2007] F.C.J. No. 297; Gaya v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2007] F.C.J. No. 1308; Ramirez v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2006] F.C.J. No. 1763 (Ramirez)
at paragraphs 46-47; Melchor v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration, [2004] F.C.J. No. 1600 at paragraphs 19-20; Sahota
v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2007] F.C.J. No. 882 at paragraphs 8,
12; Thalang v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2007]
F.C.J. No. 1001 at paragraph 14; Liyanage v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2005] F.C.J. No. 1293 and Kharrat
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2007] F.C.J.
No. 1096.
[43]
The
Applicants submit that they will suffer severe consequences upon returning to
the U.S., including
incarceration, judicial punishment, non-judicial punishment, social stigma,
disenfranchisement, financial and psychological hardship. The Applicants
further argue that they will experience hardship on the H&C standard even
if state protection is available to protect them from actual “persecution”
within the refugee definition. However, the Applicants submit that they will
not receive state protection.
[44]
The
Applicants submit that the Officer failed to conduct any analysis of the proper
risk assessment under the tests normally applied to a PRRA application or a
refugee claim. The Applicants claim that the Officer focused primarily on
whether the Applicants had rebutted the presumption of state protection and
whether they had exhausted avenues of state protection available in the United States prior to coming to
Canada. However, the Applicants submit that, in the circumstances of an H&C
application, it is not necessary for an Applicant to rebut a presumption of
adequate state protection or to demonstrate that they have exhausted all
avenues of protection. In the Applicants view, all they must show is that their
circumstances warrant humanitarian and compassionate relief regardless of any
available state protection.
Judicial Punishment
[45]
The
Applicants submit that, in the judicial punishment section of the Decision, the
Officer came to conclusions that show that she misunderstood the task before
her. In the Applicants’ view, the Officer applied the persecution test, which
would justify her terminating her analysis at her findings on state protection.
Therefore, there was no consideration of whether the Applicants would
experience hardship. The Officer accepts that the Principal Applicant will
suffer prosecution if returned; however, she should have determined whether he
would be afforded due process during his prosecution proceedings rather then
whether the prosecution and resulting incarceration and felony convictions
would warrant granting humanitarian and compassionate relief.
[46]
The
Applicants also assert that the Officer inappropriately addressed the burden
that the Applicants bear when rebutting the presumption of state protection.
While state protection may be a relevant consideration in an assessment of an
H&C application, the Officer erred when her analysis stopped with state
protection. The Applicants stress that, unlike a PRRA application or a refugee
claim, state protection is not a determinative factor in an H&C claim. Deciding
that state protection may exist in a country of removal does not relieve the officer
from the task of assessing whether, regardless of any available protection, the
circumstances warrant an exemption from the requirements of the Act based on
humanitarian and compassionate considerations.
Non-Judicial Punishment
[47]
The
Applicants argue that the Officer’s H&C assessment is almost identical with
the assessment of the Applicant’s PRRA decision. Therefore, the Applicants say
that the Officer did not conduct an analysis of the risk of non-judicial punishment
through the “right analytical prism.” She simply changed the words “cruel and
unusual treatment or punishment” to “unusual, undeserved, or disproportionate
hardship”: Ramirez.
[48]
The
Applicants submit that the Officer did not reach any conclusions on whether
non-judicial punishment would constitute hardship and simply concluded that the
existence of military regulation in itself did not constitute hardship. She
makes no findings on whether the experience of being subjected to non-judicial
punishment constitutes hardship. The Applicants conclude on this point by
stating that the Officer erred in law by applying a higher threshold for risk
than is applicable to a PRRA application or refugee claim.
Other Identified Risks
[49]
On
this issue, the Applicants submit that the Officer erred in law in her
assessment of the “other identified risks” by conducting an analysis
appropriate for a PRRA application or a refugee claim instead of considering
humanitarian and compassionate considerations as required by section 25 of the
Act. The Applicants submit that an appropriate analysis would have considered
whether, regardless of any available state protection, the Applicants’
circumstances warranted humanitarian and compassionate relief.
[50]
Specifically,
in relation to the Principal Applicant’s inadmissibility to Canada, the
Applicants point out that the Officer erred by failing to note what would
happen if the Principal Applicant is charged with more than one offence. The
Applicants insist he will be charged with more than one offence upon returning
to the U.S.. Hence, the Principal
Applicant will be inadmissible to Canada. There is no requirement, as the Officer
pointed out, in an H&C application to exhaust all or any available avenues
of protection in an applicant’s country of origin prior to seeking H&C
relief in Canada.
[51]
The
Applicants conclude on this issue by stating that the Officer conducted a
suitable analysis for a PRRA application but did not assess the Applicants’
circumstances under the hardship standard, which is required for an H&C
application. The Applicants rely on Barrak v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 962 at paragraph 34:
Of
course, it may well be that the result would have been no different had the
officer applied the correct standard. Indeed, the respondent alleges that the
officer considered all the allegations of risk advanced by the applicants. That
argument, however, begs the question…There being no certainty that the result
of her analysis would have been the same had she applied her mind to the proper
test, the file must be returned for a new determination.
Best Interests of the Child
Analysis Inadequate
[52]
The
Applicants submit that the Officer did not conduct an adequate analysis of the
best interests of Liam, because she did not acknowledge the effect that the
loss of a parent would have on Liam if his father was incarcerated.
[53]
As
well, the Applicants contend that, in relation to the bullying and social
stigma that Liam could suffer, the Officer discussed state protection instead
of the child’s best interests. The Applicants say the Officer should have
determined whether it was in Liam’s best interests to be placed in a situation
where he may experience bullying, regardless of any recourse available to him. An
officer must focus their analysis on the child themselves, and not examine
protections available after the fact, which might be accessed through the help
of others: Alie v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2008
FC 925 at paragraphs 9-10 and Kolosovs v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration) 2008 FC 165 at paragraph 12.
[54]
The
Applicants also submit that the Officer’s conclusion that Liam could maintain
friendships in a meaningful way through phone calls and e-mails, at the age of
6, is absurd and shows a complete lack of sensitivity to Liam’s situation. The
Applicants say that the impact of Liam losing his relationships in Canada would
not be in his best interests.
Ignoring Evidence and
Failure to Assess the Female Applicant’s Application
[55]
The
Applicants submit that the Officer failed to adequately assess the Female
Applicant’s application. This was an error in law. It is not the Female
Applicant’s pregnancy that would cause her hardship, but the separation from
her spouse and the father of her two children at such a critical time in their
lives. The Applicants cite Mansuri v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 650 which states that it is necessary
for officers to consider each application separately.
Decision on the Whole is
Unreasonable
[56]
The
Applicants rely upon Glass v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2008 FC 881 to refute the Officer’s conclusion that the
Principal Applicant would not be subjected to a disproportionate punishment
should he be charged and convicted in a court martial proceeding upon his
return to the U.S. The Applicants also cite the Inland Processing Policy
Manual, Chapter 5 for the guidelines concerning H&C applications. The
Applicants state that by requiring a “required threshold” of hardship, the
Officer did not perform the proper analysis for an H&C application.
[57]
The
Applicants also submit that the Officer failed to address the motivations of
the Principal Applicant in coming to Canada or the fact that he would be a
prisoner of conscience if returned to the U.S. and incarcerated upon returning to the U.S.
[58]
The
Applicants conclude that the Decision is unreasonable and that it does not meet
the test of “justification, transparency and intelligibility” and does not
stand up to a “somewhat probing examination”: Baker and Dunsmuir.
The Respondent
[59]
The
Respondent submits that the Officer did not apply the “wrong test” when
assessing the risks set forth in the H&C application, nor did she fail to
assess undue hardship. The Officer indicated that the H&C application had
been “assessed on the basis of unusual and undeserved or disproportionate
hardship” which is the correct test as conceded by the Applicant and outlined
in the Inland Processing Policy Manual, Chapter 5.
[60]
The
Respondent rejects the Applicants’ argument that the PRRA and H&C
application identified the same factors for both risk and hardship by citing Latifi
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2006 FC 1389 at paragraph
31:
It
is clear that when the Officer refers to “risks identified” she is referring to
the risks identified in the evidence as a whole. It is also clear that when she
says “I find that as there is little reliable evidence of risk, so there can be
little compelling evidence of associative hardships,” she is not saying that
she equates risk with hardship or that she is applying the same test as she did
in the PRRA Decision. She is merely saying that, of the hardships that might
accrue from the risks identified in the evidence, there is little compelling
evidence of associated hardships. In other words, it seems to me that she
relies upon the facts in her PRRA Decision but she applied the correct H&C
test to those facts.
[61]
The Respondent
also relies upon Mooker v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 518 (Mooker)
at paragraphs 28-30 for the following:
The applicants argue that the Officer erred by
addressing the issue of state protection, which is not relevant to the
assessment of an H&C application, and thereby erred in the assessment of
hardship.
It is clear from the Officer's reasons that
state protection was addressed only in the context of the risk assessment. The
Officer wrote at page 35 of the notes to file:
Therefore, even taken at face value, Mr.
Mooker's statement, that he was a victim of African nationalist youth,
"likely" members of Mungiki, would have to be weighed against the
availability of state protection, even where the risk is described simply in
terms of hardship. ...
It was open to the Officer, in the circumstances,
to consider state protection in so far as it might bear on the assessment of
risk and therefore hardship. In fact, it was the applicants who raised the
issue of state protection in their submissions to the Officer, and that it was
therefore open to him to examine the question.
[62]
The
Respondent says that the Applicants merely disagree with the Officer’s
conclusions and have failed to demonstrate any error on her part. The fact that
the Officer considered findings made in her own PRRA analysis was perfectly
acceptable and logical given that she specifically assessed and determined
whether punishment of the Principal Applicant would constitute unusual,
undeserved or disproportionate hardship, and not personalized risk.
[63]
In
relation to the consequences that the Principal Applicant could face upon his
return to the U.S., the Respondent says that the Applicant will be afforded due
process as pointed out in Hinzman v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2007 FCA 171 at paragraph 47:
Although
the United States, like other countries, has enacted
provisions to punish deserters, it has also established a comprehensive scheme
complete with abundant procedural safeguards for administering these provisions
justly.
[64]
The
Respondent says it is evident from the Officer’s detailed analysis that she
applied the correct test when assessing risk and that she assessed all aspects
of the claimed hardship. The Respondent points out that hardship suffered by an
applicant must be more then inconvenience or the predictable costs associated
with leaving Canada, which are consequences of the risk an applicant takes by
staying in Canada without landing. The
Respondent cites Irimie v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2000] F.C.J. No. 1906 at paragraphs 12 and 17:
If one then turns to the comments about unusual
or undeserved which appear in the Manual, one concludes that unusual and
undeserved is in relation to others who are being asked to leave Canada. It would
seem to follow that the hardship which would trigger the exercise of discretion
on humanitarian and compassionate grounds should be something other than that
which is inherent in being asked to leave after one has been in place for a
period of time. Thus, the fact that one would be leaving behind friends,
perhaps family, employment or a residence would not necessarily be enough to
justify the exercise of discretion.
…
Objection was also taken to the fact that the H & C officer
noted that the applicants had purchased a home but commented that they had done
so knowing that they were subject to a departure order. Counsel for the
applicants took the position that everyone who applied for relief under
subsection 114(2) of the Act knew that they could be required to leave. If this
should become a ground for not allowing the application, there would be no
successful applications, he argued. In fact, counsel is correct to this extent:
the risk of the loss of assets acquired while in Canada is common to all who are in Canada without permanent resident status. That possibility is therefore
not unusual. Whether such a loss is undeserved may well vary with the
circumstances but in general, one would think that if one assumes a certain
risk, the occurrence of the eventuality giving rise to the risk does not create
undeserved hardship. The hardship is a function of the risk assumed.
[65]
The
Respondent concludes on this point that the Applicants’ hardship can hardly be
characterized as “undeserved,” “unanticipated” or “beyond their control” as
they came to Canada so that the Principal Applicant could evade lawful sanctions
with respect to his military desertion. The Applicants made a refugee claim
based on the Principal Applicant’s claim of conscientious objection, but this
claim has been rejected as invalid. The Respondent cites Legault v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2002
FCA 125 at paragraph 19:
In short, the Immigration Act and the Canadian immigration policy
are founded on the idea that whoever comes to Canada with the intention of
settling must be of good faith and comply to the letter with the requirements
both in form and substance of the Act. Whoever enters Canada illegally contributes to
falsifying the immigration plan and policy and gives himself priority over
those who do respect the requirements of the Act. The Minister, who is
responsible for the application of the policy and the Act, is definitely
authorised to refuse the exception requested by a person who has established
the existence of humanitarian and compassionate grounds, if he believes, for
example, that the circumstances surrounding his entry and stay in Canada
discredit him or create a precedent susceptible of encouraging illegal entry in
Canada. In this sense, the Minister is at liberty to take into consideration
the fact that the humanitarian and compassionate grounds that a person claims
are the result of his own actions.
Best
Interests of the Child/ Female Applicant
[66]
On
these issues, the Respondent submits that the Officer considered the best
interests of the child and the H&C considerations of the Female Applicant
and came to a reasonable conclusion. The Respondent stresses that an H&C
officer does not have the jurisdiction to review a failed refugee claim.
[67]
The
Respondent concludes that any hardship that the Principal Applicant may
experience for being prosecuted and punished for his military desertion cannot
be laid at the feet of the state, as it was the Principal Applicant who is
responsible for the legal consequences of his actions. The Officer was alert to
the totality of the evidence before her and the general situation of the
Applicants.
ANALYSIS
Wrong Test
[68]
The
Applicants say that the Officer failed to assess the hardship they would face
if returned to the U.S.. They say this occurred
because the Officer adopted the wrong test and applied an analysis applicable
to a PRRA and a refugee claim instead of deciding whether what the Applicants
faced would constitute hardship under their H&C claim. Further, they say
the Officer failed to assess whether, even if the consequences of their return
did not amount to risk, they would, nevertheless, still constitute undue
hardship.
[69]
The
Applicants concede that the Officer states the applicable test under an H&C
claim as being unusual and undeserved or disproportionate hardship, but they
say that the Officer’s analysis is really nothing more than a risk assessment
which stops short at the availability of state protection and due process.
[70]
In
other words, the Applicants argue that the Officer clearly misunderstood the
task before her and applied a persecution and risk test that justified her in
terminating her analysis on finding that state protection existed in the U.S.. Deciding that state
protection may exist in a country of removal does not relieve the Officer from
the task of assessing whether, regardless of any available protection, the
Applicants’ circumstances warrant receiving an exemption from the requirements
of the Act on H&C grounds.
[71]
In
the section of the Decision dealing with “Identified Risks,” the Officer
acknowledges that she is being asked to consider “the hardships associated with
their identified risk” and whether those hardships are “unusual and undeserved,
or disproportionate … .”
[72]
In
order to decide whether the consequences of return will result in unusual and
undeserved, or disproportionate hardship the Officer was obliged to consider, inter
alia, the risks identified by the Applicants and whether those risks would
result in the required degree of hardship.
[73]
One
of the basic premises of the Decision is that “the possibility of prosecution
for a law of general application is not, in and of itself, sufficient evidence
that an applicant will face unusual and undeserved, or disproportionate
hardship.” This is because an “H&C application is not an avenue to
circumvent lawful and legitimate prosecutions commenced in a democratic
country.”
[74]
The
Officer even acknowledges that the Principal Applicant will face prosecution if
returned to the U.S.:
Nevertheless,
accepting the Applicant’s submissions that he will face charges and prosecution
upon his return to the United
States, documentary
evidence and evidence personal to the principal applicant, indicates that he
will be afforded due process and that accessing due process and state
protection would not be a hardship. As a result, I find that the evidence does
not support that the principal applicant would not receive due process if
charged with being AWOL, desertion, or missing movement upon his return to the United States.
[75]
In
discussing the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in this case dealing with the
availability of state protection, the Officer concludes as follows:
I
recognize that the Court was applying the standard of providing “clear and
convincing evidence” outlined in Ward when determining whether the
applicants had rebutted the presumption of state protection. Nevertheless, I
find that the democratic nature of the United
States and the country’s
sophisticated and comprehensive military justice system is relevant to an
assessment of an unusual and undeserved or disproportionate hardship faced by
the applicants.
[76]
When
read in the context of the whole Decision it is clear to me that the Officer
considers hardship from two perspectives:
1.
She
looks at the prosecutorial and military processes that the Principal Applicant
will face and concludes that they cannot be considered unusual, undeserved or
disproportionate hardship because the United States is merely applying laws of general
application and the Principal Applicant will be able to avail himself of due
process. Lawful and legitimate prosecution cannot, per se, be unusual,
undeserved or disproportionate hardship; and
2.
She considers
and concludes that accessing due process and state protection will not be a
hardship.
[77]
In
other words, I do not think it can be said that the Officer’s analysis stops at
risk assessment and the availability of state protection and due process.
[78]
The
Applicants have provided no authority or rationale to suggest that being
subjected to prosecutorial and military processes and sanctions in a democratic
country should itself be considered unusual and undeserved or disproportionate
hardship, or that being forced by a democratic state to rely upon due process
and state protection constitutes the necessary degree of hardship under an
H&C application.
[79]
The
Officer obviously had to address issues of due process and state protection in
her Decision because the Applicants identified their hardship with the legal
and military processes in the U.S..
But this does not mean that the Officer did not go beyond risk to consider
hardship.
[80]
It
is obviously a hardship for anyone to face and experience what awaits the
Principal Applicant in the United States; however, that does not make it an unusual and
undeserved or disproportionate hardship for the purposes of the Canadian
immigration system. Many people will undoubtedly hold the view that the
Principal Applicant should not be sanctioned for his conduct, and they may have
good reasons for that view, but there is no evidence that U.S. laws against desertion,
per se, are out of step with international norms or that Canadian immigration
law was intended to save people such as the Principal Applicant from facing the
consequences of their own choices in the United States by elevating laws of
general application to a form of unusual and undeserved or disproportionate
hardship.
[81]
In
my view, then, the Officer does examine and address hardship. In fact, she
accepts that the Principal Applicant will face prosecution and possible
sanctions, but she comes to the conclusion that the hardships attached to laws
of general application in a democratic state cannot be considered as unusual
and undeserved or disproportionate under Canadian law. She appropriately
addresses hardship for both judicial and non-judicial punishment. I have no authority
before me to suggest that she was wrong or unreasonable in these conclusions.
Other Risks
[82]
The Officer
acknowledged and addressed various “hardships associated with their identified
risks” as including “being socially ostracized, physical danger from
individuals opposed to the principal applicant’s political opinions, the
inability to vote or work in certain occupations if convicted of desertion or
other military convictions, and the inability to apply to immigrate to Canada
as a skilled worker.”
[83]
In
considering the Applicants’ refugee claim, the RPD had found that “Although Mr.
Hinzman may face some employment and societal discrimination, such
discrimination does not amount to persecution in that discrimination does not
lead to a consequence of a substantially prejudicial nature”:
I
find that it does not constitute cumulative discrimination, amounting to
persecution or to cruel and unusual treatment or punishment. The treatment does
not amount to a violation of a fundamental human right, and the harm is not
serious.
[84]
Once
again, the Applicants complain that the Officer did not consider whether
treatment, which may not be persecution, might nevertheless be hardship of a
kind that the Applicants should not be required to face.
[85]
As
regards physical violence, the Officer points out that state protection will be
available to the Applicants just as it is available to everyone else. This is
not a state protection analysis. The Officer is obviously concerned with
hardship but is making the point that the threat of physical violence is not an
unusual or undeserved or disproportionate hardship where state protection is
available.
[86]
As
regards social ostracism, the Officer concludes as follows:
While
I accept that being socially ostracized by certain members of the public will
be difficult, I find that the applicants would be able to access state
protection should they encounter incidents of violence and I do not find that
it amounts to a hardship for them to access such protection.
[87]
Less
violent forms of social ostracism are not susceptible to state protection, but
the Officer also addresses those “difficult,” non-violent forms of
confrontation and finds that “I do not find that the potential or actual
expression of opposing opinions to those of the applicants amounts to an
unusual and undeserved, or disproportionate hardship.”
[88]
Once
again, it is certainly possible to disagree with these conclusions, and I am
sure that many people do, but I do not think that they can be said to be
unreasonable in the legal sense and I do not think that the Officer applied a
wrong legal test and did not go beyond risk to consider hardship.
[89]
The
same can be said for each of the other identified hardships that the Officer
addresses.
Best Interests of the
Child
[90]
The
Applicants claim that, in relation to their son Liam, the Officer was not
alert, alive and sensitive to his best interests and did not provide an
adequate analysis of the hardships that he will face if the family is returned
to the U.S.. In particular, they
say that the Officer did not address the separation from his father and the
bullying and ostracism he might experience from those opposed to his father’s
views.
[91]
As
regards the bullying, the Officer notes that protections are available in U.S. schools against such
behavior. It is repugnant, of course, to think that Liam might be subjected to
any kind of adverse treatment as a result of the views and actions of his
father, but any concern that this will occur has to remain speculative. I do
not think the Officer could do more here than acknowledge such concerns by
Liam’s parents and point out that there are ways of dealing with them.
[92]
When
it comes to dealing with the possible temporary separation from his father,
however, the Officer acknowledges submissions that were made by counsel for the
Applicants that “the Principal Applicant’s likely incarceration upon his return
to the United
States
would also cause hardship to Liam.” The Officer makes the following observations:
However,
given his young age, it is reasonable to expect that the difficulties
associated with returning and re-integrating into the United States would be minimal. He speaks English and
has extended family members residing in the United States
who could help facilitate his re-integration.
The Officer does not deal with the family
separation issue in the way that the Applicants feel it should have been dealt
with. Obviously, from the family’s perspective, the thought of temporary
separation while the Principal Applicant is subjected to judicial and non-judicial
assessment and possible punishment, is a matter of concern. But just because
the Officer does not single out and showcase this particular issue in the way
the Applicants feel it should be addressed, and just because the Officer does
not find it determinative, does not mean it was overlooked or unreasonably
discounted. If the Decision is read as a whole it is obvious that the Officer
was aware of and considered this concern (it was specifically acknowledged) and
that it was necessarily a factor taken into account when assessing Liam’s
re-integration into U.S. society. The Officer
understood that temporary family separation could well occur in the U.S. but,
in analyzing Liam’s best interests, felt that Liam would remain with his
primary caregivers as they faced whatever awaits them in the U.S. and that any
difficulties faced by Liam as a result of what might happen in the U.S. would
be minimal. It is possible to disagree with the Officer’s position on this
issue, but I cannot say that separation was overlooked or that the Officer’s
approach was unreasonable.
The Female Applicant
[93]
Much
the same can be said for the way the Officer handles family separation in
relation to the female applicant. The Applicants feel that, in this regard, the
Officer’s conclusions were wide-of-the-mark and suggest that the only issue she
dealt with was Nga’s pregnancy: “I do not find that the female applicant’s
pregnancy amounts to an unusual and undeserved, or disproportionate hardship.”
[94]
The
whole point of the submissions made to the Officer concerning the Female Applicant
was the consequences of enforced family separation. Once again, however, I do
not think this was left out of account. The Officer acknowledges and identifies
the hardships that the Female Applicant claims she will face:
The
female applicant is a homemaker and provides child care to a friend’s son for 2
½ hours per week. Her affidavit states that it will be very difficult for her
to continue to be a stay-at-home parent if the family is returned to the United States because of her husband’s likely
incarceration.
…
Counsel’s
submissions state that the family would suffer severe hardship if the principal
applicant, as the primary breadwinner, were incarcerated upon their return to
the United States.
I cannot conclude that issues surrounding the
Female Applicant were overlooked or discounted merely because every concern
raised is not given separate treatment in the reasons. This would allow a
microscopic treatment of the Decision to prevail over what is a comprehensive
set of reasons. The Officer points to extended family and support available to
the Applicants in the U.S.. I think it is
reasonable to assume that the Officer’s general conclusion that the family
would remain a family unit with extended support available to it as the
Principal Applicant faces laws of general applicability in the U.S., which
could give rise to temporary separation, includes the Officer’s assessment of
the Female applicant’s particular concerns.
Differential Treatment
[95]
The
Applicants introduced evidence to show that, although the Principal Applicant
will be subject to laws of general application in the U.S., he will, because of
his high profile and virulent criticism of the U.S. policy in Iraq, be singled
out for differential treatment, which could well amount to unusual and
undeserved or disproportionate hardship and which would take the punishment he
faces outside of the range of what is considered acceptable under international
human rights law.
[96]
I
have reviewed the evidence in question and the Officer’s treatment of it in the
Decision, and, in my view, while it is certainly possible to disagree with the
Officer’s conclusions on this issue, I cannot say that relevant evidence was
overlooked or that the Officer’s conclusions were unreasonable within the
meaning of Dunsmuir. I cannot re-weigh the evidence and substitute my
own opinion for that of the Officer in these circumstances.
CONCLUSIONS
[97]
If Court
room attendance at the hearing is anything to go by, this application has
attracted significant public interest and debate. In completing my review of
the Officer’s Decision I have simply applied the relevant jurisprudence and the
principles of judicial review as I understand them. The result will obviously
displease not only the Applicants but also the larger community of supporters
behind them. My conclusions are in no way intended as a comment upon, or
sympathy for, either side in the public debate. They are simply the conclusions
I feel compelled to reach in applying Canadian law to the facts and arguments
before me. The fact that I have to conclude against the Applicants does not
mean that the Court does not recognize, or have sympathy for, the significant
challenges they may face as a family when returned to the U.S..
[98]
Counsel are requested to serve and
file any submissions with respect to certification of a question of general
importance within seven days of receipt of these Reasons for Judgment. Each
party will have a further period of three days to serve and file any reply to
the submission of the opposite party. Following that, a Judgment will be
issued.
“James Russell”