Date: 20090611
Docket: IMM-3933-08
Citation: 2009 FC 599
Ottawa, Ontario, June 11, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice O'Keefe
BETWEEN:
ALENA
LISITSA
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
O’KEEFE J.
[1]
This
is an application pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (IRPA or the Act) for judicial
review of a decision of an enforcement officer (the officer) dated September 9,
2008 which refused the applicant’s request for a deferral of removal. Removal
was stayed by Mr. Justice Russell on September 10, 2008 pending the judicial
review of the enforcement officer’s decision.
[2]
The
applicant requests that the decision be declared invalid, quashed or set aside
and such further and other relief as this Honourable Court may allow.
Background
[3]
Alena
Lisitsa, (the
applicant), is a citizen of Belarus. She came to Canada with her
common law husband, Alexander Poliakov (the husband) in September 2001 from Israel where they
had been living and made refugee claims soon after their arrival. Their
applications, filed separately, were rejected. The applicant’s refugee claim
was based on her alleged forced entry into a prostitution ring and was denied
in October 2003. The husband’s refugee claim was based on persecution and
denial of citizenship in Israel.
[4]
Subsequently,
the applicant submitted a pre-removal risk assessment (PRRA). This was denied
on July 9, 2008 and communicated to the applicant on August 28, 2007. The
applicant’s reaction to the negative PRRA finding and her initial refusal to
sign acknowledgement of it, led to her being detained by Citizenship and
Immigration Canada/Canada Border Services (GTEC). Since that meeting, the
applicant has been detained as a flight risk. In response, the husband
initially suggested that he wanted to waive his PRRA rights so that he could be
removed with the applicant but later decided that he would try through a bonds
person to secure the applicant’s release. Despite his efforts, the applicant
remains at the detention centre.
[5]
Before
filing the PRRA application, the applicant and her husband were advised that
they could apply for permanent residence on humanitarian and compassionate
grounds (H&C grounds). An H&C application was submitted in June 2007.
The file was transferred from Vegreville, Alberta to the
Scarborough office in October 2007. The applicant and her husband have
requested an expedited response to their H&C request but Citizenship and
Immigration Canada is unable to accommodate the request citing fairness to
other applicants.
[6]
The
basis for the request for deferral is to avoid the separation of the applicant
and her husband. The husband’s situation is complicated because he is allegedly
stateless. As a young boy, he moved from Azerbaijan to Israel with his aunt
after his mother died. While he and his adopted family were initially accepted
as landed immigrants because they were Jewish, it was later questioned by the
Israeli government and their citizenship was withdrawn. In the mean time,
Azerbaijan declared independence from the Soviet Union which left
the husband without a straightforward claim to citizenship. The husband’s
removal process appears to be stalled and GTEC has sought and received the
applicant’s husband’s cooperation in resolving this issue by seeking to obtain travel
documents from the Azerbaijani embassy in Ottawa. In the meantime,
the applicant’s removal has proceeded.
Officer’s Decision
[7]
On
September 9th, the enforcement officer denied the applicant’s request for
deferral of the execution of the removal order. The officer states that an
H&C application “is not an impediment to removal … therefore should not be
utilized as a mechanism of impediment to removal”. It is noted that the
applicant and her husband waited until 2007, “long after their refugee claims
had been denied” to file for permanent residence. The officer also notes that
the normal application time for an H&C application transferred to the
Scarborough location is 24 to 28 months, and that there would not be any
expedited process for the application.
[8]
The
officer then reviewed the basis for the request. He states that it is based
largely on the applicant’s husband. The officer does not equate an on-going
difficulty obtaining a travel document with statelessness and states that there
is no indication in the applicant’s husband’s file that he cannot be returned
to either Israel or Azerbaijan. The officer
also finds it “interesting” that the applicant’s husband returned to Israel
voluntarily in 2000 and returned to Canada a year later with a
valid Israeli passport before filing his refugee claim. He doubts that he
cannot be returned because the officer states that “these documents are never
issued to someone who has never had any status in Israel”.
[9]
The
officer concludes that the information presented did not satisfy him that
deferral was “appropriate in the circumstances of this case”.
Issues
[10]
The
applicant submitted the following issues:
1. Is the decision of
the officer not to defer the applicant’s removal unreasonable? In particular,
did the officer fetter his discretion, ignore evidence, make serious factual
errors or come to an unreasonable decision when he decided not to defer the
applicant’s removal from Canada?
2. Is the issue of the
refusal to defer the removal date ‘moot’ given that the applicant was granted a
stay of removal and as such the removal date of September 10, 2008 has passed
and the applicant has therefore obtained the relief she sought in the
application?
[11]
I
would rephrase the issues as follows:
1. What is the standard
of review?
2. Is this review
‘moot’ given that the applicant has obtained the relief of a stay of removal
that she sought?
3. Did the officer err
in his finding of fact related to evidence submitted to support a deferral of
removal?
Applicants’ Submissions
[12]
The
applicant submits that her husband “was stripped of his Israeli citizenship in
1998 after an investigation into the authenticity of his adopted mother’s
Jewishness resulted in a finding of a lack of proof of Jewish ethnicity”. As
well, the applicant’s husband missed Azerbaijan’s deadline for
registration for citizenship after the breakup of the Soviet Union around 1998.
And, despite the efforts of GTEC and the applicant’s husband, he has been
unable to obtain status from the Azerbaijani embassy without an official
request by the Canadian government in writing. The applicant’s husband, at the
request of GTEC, also called the Embassy of Belarus for an application on
naturalization through his wife; however, he was told that he needed a Canadian
landing document.
[13]
Further,
the officer’s suggestion that there is no reason that the applicant’s husband
cannot get travel documents is at odds with GTEC’s awareness and involvement in
the process of obtaining travel documents from either Azerbaijan or Belarus;
all of which has not been revisited since 2007 by GTEC despite assurances that
the applicant and her husband would be dealt with together.
[14]
The
applicant states that their claims about Israel are
legitimate. They both entered Canada from Israel in 2001 with false documents
and a pre-hearing conference by members of the Refugee Protection Division
found that they did not have “citizenship or any other form of status in Israel”. The travel
document that the officer points to was only issued by Israel for the
purpose of exiting because he had no status in Israel. The
officer’s assertion that the travel document would not have been issued by Israel unless he
had status was stated without authority.
[15]
The
applicant states that the delay in filing an H&C application is only
because the applicant and her husband only learned of it from GTEC in 2007.
They immediately filed an H&C application in June 2007. At the time of
filing with the Federal Court, the application has been processing for 16
months, with one year being at Scarborough.
[16]
The
applicant states that she and her husband are “extremely emotionally close and
attached married couple” in part because of the difficult life they have
experienced before they came to Canada and more recently after
enduring a difficult miscarriage. The applicant contends that the officer
should have considered the trauma that would occur in separating her from her husband
without him even being able to travel to visit her.
[17]
They
were reassured many times by their GTEC officer that they would be dealt with
as a couple after they explained to the GTEC officer in numerous interviews
that whether they remained in Canada or not, they did not want to be separated.
They state that their dealings with this officer were always polite and
cooperative until the day that the applicant’s PRRA application was refused and
she was informed that she would be removed without her husband. She was not
prepared to hear this news and became emotionally distressed at the thought of
being removed without him. The applicant regrets her response as she and her
husband have always cooperated with GTEC. Further, this incident is at odds
with the applicant and her husband’s conduct in Canada gaining
employment, paying taxes and contributing to their communities and applying for
permanent residence as soon as they knew it was possible.
[18]
Also,
the applicant was not able to verify the officer’s 24 to 28 month processing
time and states that a letter from Scarborough CIC indicated that the
processing time was about 18 months which would mean that a possible resolution
of the file would be in May 2009 or October 2009 (at the earliest according to
the officer’s time frame).
[19]
The
applicant states that the officer “confus[es] two separate issues”. On one
hand, the officer states correctly that and H&C application is “in itself”
not an impediment to removal but on the other hand, also states that it “should
not be utilized as a mechanism of impediment of removal”. The applicant
suggests that he “misinterpreted his role and fettered his discretion”. The
applicant states that their request was not on the bare existence of the
application but that it was well into the process which suggested a deferral
was warranted in accordance with the discretion in subsection 48(2) of the Act.
In addition, this was not an application that was filed in response to a
removal process but an application in process where the timing is under the
respondent’s control.
[20]
The
applicant states that the words “reasonably practicable” in subsection 48(2) of
the Act has been held to cover a broad range of circumstances including a
pending H&C decision as in Cortes v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2007 FC 78.
[21]
Finally,
the applicant, in her submissions before the Federal Court of Appeal decision
in Baron v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness),
[2009] F.C.J. No. 314, stated that judicial review is not moot because it has a
practical utility as in Palka v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness), 2008 FC 342 and that utility is best realized when
the underlying issue is resolved in the judicial review.
Respondent’s Submissions
[22]
The
respondent submits that the applicant “has provided no meaningful reason” for a
judicial review of the officer’s decision. The basis of the applicant’s request
was considered: her pending H&C application and the separation from her
husband.
[23]
The
respondent disagrees with the applicant that the officer was in error regarding
the pending H&C determination. The respondent states that the officer was
under “no obligation” to grant a deferral until the H&C application was
decided and “the officer’s narrow discretion does not encompass deferring
removal based on the age of a particular H&C application”. Nonetheless, the
officer did verify that the H&C decision was not imminent and as such
concluded that deferral would not be granted on that ground.
[24]
The
respondent also approached the issue of the husband’s statelessness as not an
erroneous assumption but that the officer was not convinced of the husband’s
statelessness. The officer cited insufficient evidence and stated that in any
case, negotiations were continuing to secure a travel document for him.
Ultimately, this issue is an H&C factor which “the Court has made it clear
that Enforcement Officers are under no obligation to engage in “mini-H&C”
assessment” Munar v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 1180 at paragraph 36.
[25]
The
respondent also states that difficulty making removal arrangements is also
self-serving for the applicant’s husband and as such it was not unreasonable
for the officer to not accept his claims. As well, the officer did not have the
affidavit evidence regarding the husband’s travel documents before him when he
made his decision and as such, they are not relevant (see Franz v. Canada (Minister
of Employment and Immigration) (1994), 80 F.T.R. 79.
[26]
The
standard of review to be applied is reasonableness as defined in Dunsmuirv. New
Brunswick,
[2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, which is “within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes
which are defensible in respect of facts and law” as was the case for this
decision. The application has not raised an arguable issue that is outside
these parameters.
Analysis
[27]
Issue
1
What is the standard of
review?
In the very recent decision of Baron above, the
Federal Court of Appeal stated:
24 There
is no dispute between the parties that the appropriate standard of review with
respect to the mootness issue is the correctness standard. I agree (See: Housen v.
Nikolaisen, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235).
25 With
respect to the enforcement officer's decision refusing to defer the appellants'
removal from Canada, I cannot see how it can be
disputed that the applicable standard is that of reasonableness (See: Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190).
The Supreme Court in Dunsmuir above,
noted that the analysis of the appropriate standard of review need not be
undertaken where courts have arrived at consensus in similar cases. Therefore,
reliance can be paid on the standards established in paragraphs 24 and 25 of Baron
above.
[28]
Issue
2
Is this review ‘moot’ given
that the applicant has obtained the relief of a stay of removal that she
sought?
The applicant raises an issue
that is preliminary in nature: whether the issue of refusing to defer the
removal order is moot given that the applicant has received the relief she
sought in the application, namely a stay on her removal. Further, the fact that
another judicial review may be available to the applicant if this one is
granted and she is refused deferral again suggests that the practical effect of
this review is limited. According to Black’s Law Dictionary, a moot case is one
where “a determination is sought on a matter which, when rendered, cannot have
any practical effect on the existing controversy” and the reasons will be
either “academic or dead”.
[29]
The
issue of whether the judicial review is moot was recently decided by the
Federal Court of Appeal in Baron above. The Federal Court of Appeal held
that a judicial review such as the present one is not moot. The parties did not
take exception to this at the hearing and accordingly, I am of the view that
the judicial review is not moot.
[30]
Issue
3
Did the officer err in his
finding of fact related to evidence submitted to support a deferral of removal?
The applicant filed an H&C
application in June 2007 which was transferred to Scarborough in October
2007. The officer stated in the decision that it would take 24 to 28 months to
process the application after it came to Scarborough. The applicant stated that
the Scarborough CIC told her the processing time was 18 months.
[31]
It
is absolutely clear that the mere filing of an H&C application does not
result in a requirement to defer a removal. However, it may be a different
situation for a timely filed H&C application which has been in the system
for a long period of time.
[32]
Mr.
Justice Nadon of the Federal Court of Appeal in Baron above, stated at
paragraphs 49 to 51:
49 It is trite law that an enforcement
officer's discretion to defer removal is limited. I expressed that opinion in Simoes
v. Canada (M.C.I.), [2000] F.C.J. No. 936 (T.D.) (QL), 7 Imm.L.R. (3d) 141, at paragraph 12:
[12] In my opinion, the discretion that a
removal officer may exercise is very limited, and in any case, is restricted to
when a removal order will be executed. In deciding when it is "reasonably
practicable" for a removal order to be executed, a removal officer may
consider various factors such as illness, other impediments to travelling, and
pending H&C applications that were brought on a timely basis but have yet
to be resolved due to backlogs in the system. For instance, in this case, the
removal of the Applicant scheduled for May 10, 2000 was deferred due to medical
reasons, and was rescheduled for May 31, 2000. Furthermore, in my view, it was
within the removal officer's discretion to defer removal until the Applicant's
eight-year old child terminated her school year.
50 I further opined that the mere
existence of an H&C application did not constitute a bar to the execution
of a valid removal order. With respect to the presence of Canadian-born children,
I took the view that an enforcement officer was not required to undertake a
substantive review of the children's best interests before executing a removal
order.
51
Subsequent
to my decision in Simoes, supra, my colleague Pelletier J.A., then a member
of the Federal Court Trial Division, had occasion in Wang v. Canada (M.C.I.),
[2001] 3 F.C. 682 (F.C.), in
the context of a motion to stay the execution of a removal order, to address
the issue of an enforcement officer's discretion to defer a removal. After a
careful and thorough review of the relevant statutory provisions and
jurisprudence pertaining thereto, Mr. Justice Pelletier circumscribed the
boundaries of an enforcement officer's discretion to defer. In Reasons which I
find myself unable to improve, he made the following points:
- There are a range of factors that can
validly influence the timing of removal on even the narrowest reading of
section 48, such as those factors related to making effective travel
arrangements and other factors affected by those arrangements, such as
children's school years and pending births or deaths.
- The Minister is bound by law to execute a
valid removal order and, consequently, any deferral policy should reflect this
imperative of the Act. In considering the duty to comply with section 48, the
availability of an alternate remedy, such as a right to return, should be given
great consideration because it is a remedy other than failing to comply with a
positive statutory obligation. In instances where applicants are successful in
their H&C applications, they can be made whole by readmission.
- In order to respect the policy of the Act
which imposes a positive obligation on the Minister, while allowing for some
discretion with respect to the timing of a removal, deferral should be reserved
for those applications where failure to defer will expose the applicant to the
risk of death, extreme sanction or inhumane treatment. With respect to H&C
applications, absent special considerations, such applications will not justify
deferral unless based upon a threat to personal safety.
- Cases where the only harm suffered by the
applicant will be family hardship can be remedied by readmitting the person to
the country following the successful conclusion of the pending application.
I
agree entirely with Mr. Justice Pelletier's statement of the law.
[33]
The
officer stated in his reasons:
Submitting an H & C application in
itself is not an impediment to removal, which is clearly stated in the
application guide and therefore should not be utilized as a mechanism of
impediment to removal.
[34]
In
Simoes above, the Court spoke of H&C applications brought on a
timely basis which were caught in the system for a long time and Wang above,
stated, “With respect to H&C applications, absent special circumstances
will not justify deferral unless based upon a threat to personal safety”. I do
not view the adoption of the statements from Wang above as taking away
from the factors listed in Simoes above if “special circumstances
exist”. In the present case, the application has been filed since June 2007
and is still outstanding. This could be considered a special circumstance
however, the approach taken by the officer in the above quoted portion of his
reasons would never allow a timely H&C application to be the basis to grant
a deferral. In my view, this conclusion makes the officer’s decision
unreasonable. I do not know what the officer’s decision would be if he
considered the request in light of the law stated in Simoes above and Baron
above, hence the decision must be set aside and the matter referred to a
different officer for redetermination.
[35]
Neither
party wished to submit a proposed serious question of general importance for my
consideration for certification.
JUDGMENT
[36]
IT
IS ORDERED that the application for judicial review is allowed and the
matter is referred to a different officer for redetermination. I retain
jurisdiction to deal with any issues that might flow from the granting of this
order.
“John
A. O’Keefe”
ANNEX
Relevant
Statutory Provisions
The relevant
statutory provisions are set out in this section.
The Immigration and Refugee Protection
Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27:
48.(1) A removal order is enforceable if it has come into
force and is not stayed.
(2) If a
removal order is enforceable, the foreign national against whom it was made
must leave Canada immediately and it must be enforced as
soon as is reasonably practicable.
|
48.(1)
La mesure de renvoi est exécutoire depuis sa prise d’effet dès lors qu’elle
ne fait pas l’objet d’un sursis.
(2)
L’étranger visé par la mesure de renvoi exécutoire doit immédiatement quitter
le territoire du Canada, la mesure devant être appliquée dès que les
circonstances le permettent.
|