Date:
20110922
Docket: IMM-923-11
Citation: 2011 FC 1089
Calgary, Alberta, September
22, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn
BETWEEN:
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JUAN JOSE GONZALEZ VAZQUEZ
CARLA MARCELA ALVAREZ RODRIGUEZ
AGUSTINA MANON ALVAREZ RODRIGUEZ
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Applicants
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an application for
judicial review, pursuant to section 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27, of a decision that denied the applicants’ permission
to file their application for permanent residency from within Canada on
Humanitarian and Compassionate grounds (H&C application). The officer
determined that Mr. Vazquez and the members of his family would not face
unusual and undeserved or disproportionate hardship in the event they were to
return to Uruguay to file a permanent residence application.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, this
application must be dismissed.
[3]
The applicants are citizens of Uruguay. Juan
Jose Gonzalez Vazquez and Carla Marcela Alvarez Rodriguez are in a common law
relationship. They have two children: Agustina Manon Alvarez Rodriguez, age
12, and Deonna Ashelen, age 9. Deonna is not a party to this application as
she was born in Canada and is a Canadian citizen. Carla also has a third
daughter, Belen Vaz Alvarez, age 15, who lives in Uruguay with
her paternal aunt.
[4]
The applicants arrived in Canada on
December 10, 2000 and initiated a claim for refugee protection the
following day. Their claim was heard by the Refugee Protection Division on May
3, 2005 and subsequently rejected on May 13, 2005. The applicants applied for
judicial review of that decision to this Court but leave was denied on
September 7, 2005.
[5]
On February 5, 2008, the
applicants initiated their first Pre-Removal Risk Assessment application (PRRA
application). It was rejected on April 21, 2008.
[6]
On April 20, 2008, the applicants
initiated a request for exemption on H&C grounds and on November 19, 2009
they initiated a second PRRA application. Both these applications were
rejected by the same officer on August 23, 2010. Only the H&C decision is
before the Court.
[7]
The sole issue raised in the
applicants’ Memorandum of Argument is whether the officer failed to properly
consider the best interests of the three children. The applicants set out two
additional issues in their Further Memorandum of Argument, namely (1) did the
officer make an unreasonable conclusion with respect to the degree of the
applicants’ establishment in Canada, and (2) did the officer fail to consider the
hardship to the applicants upon return to Uruguay. However, although stated as issues, neither is
addressed in the Further Memorandum of Argument and counsel at the hearing
directed his submissions only to the issue of the best interests of the
children which, in my view, is the only issue properly before the Court.
[8]
Before
turning to the substantive issue, I must address an objection raised by the
respondent that evidence not before the officer was set out in the applicants’
affidavit filed in this application. It is well settled that the Court cannot
consider anything on a judicial review application that was not before the
decision-maker. Counsel for the applicants agreed with that proposition and
accordingly, to the extent that new evidence has been raised by the applicants,
it has been rejected and was not considered in rendering judgment.
[9]
The
submission of the applicants with respect to the alleged error is that the
officer ignored or failed to take full account of evidence with respect to the
best interests of the children. Specifically, they point to the following
facts:
(i) The children
would be deprived of love and affection from their aunts, school
mates and
neighbourhood friends. They have also been living in Canada for more
than ten years and
have adopted Canadian customs, rules and regulations.
(ii) The children
would be deprived of good quality of life, education and health
care.
(iii) The
children speak English at home and hardly speak Spanish. They would
have no future if
they went back to Uruguay and would live in
poverty and be
exposed to
violence.
(iv) There is forced
prostitution and trafficking of children in Uruguay.
(v) They are
trying to establish themselves in Canada and have many friends. The
applicant is
working full time and making approximately $60,000.00 per year.
[10]
The
applicants submit that the officer did not take full consideration of these
issues. They allege that this is demonstrated by the officer’s statement
pertaining to the fact that the applicants did not provide sufficient evidence
to establish that the children would be deprived of their basic rights and
needs.
[11]
I agree with the respondent that
the applicants are essentially arguing that the officer should have come to a
different conclusion on the evidence. In essence, they submit that the officer
ought to have weighed the evidence differently. There is no evidence in the
record that the officer considered any irrelevant facts, or that the weight
given the evidence was disproportionate so as to be perverse.
[12]
The officer examined the
applicants’ risk, their establishment in Canada and the children’s best interests before concluding
that there were insufficient grounds to warrant an exemption.
[13]
With respect to the best interests
of the children, the officer noted that there was little reason to believe that
the Canadian born child would not accompany the parents were they to be removed
from Canada.
[14]
The officer reviewed the written
submissions prepared by the applicants, the letters of support and the
documentary evidence reporting on the educational system in Uruguay and found
that while the educational system may not be the same as that which is found in
Canada, the evidence was insufficient to establish that the children would not
have access to education in Uruguay. It was also found that the objective
documentation did not support the claim that the education system was such that
the children would not receive a quality education or would be subjected to
harassment and discrimination. On the contrary, the evidence showed the
education system to be of high quality.
[15]
The officer also noted that health
care was free in Uruguay and that there was insufficient evidence to establish
that the children’s health and welfare needs would not be met should they be
deported. The officer also gave careful consideration to the children’s ties
to Uruguay. In this regard, the officer found little reason to believe that with
the support of their parents, they would be unable to adjust to life in Uruguay. Importantly,
the officer considered the circumstances that could place the children at risk
in Uruguay and found that the parents’ personal background militated against it.
Lastly, the officer examined the family and friends of the applicants and the
children and found, reasonably, that while one never wishes to be removed from
known friends, they would be removed as a family and they had additional family
members in Uruguay.
[16]
Finally, the officer considered
the best interests of Belen Vaz Alvarez, Carla’s 15 year old daughter who lives
in Uruguay with her parental aunt. Finding that the applicants’ submissions were
lacking meaningful information regarding Belen, the officer reasonably found
that it was unclear how her best interests would be affected by the applicants’
removal from Canada.
[17]
The one area that was of concern
to the Court was a statement made by one of the children’s teachers that the
ability of the two children in Canada to speak Spanish was meager. Specifically, she
wrote:
[T]he same value is not placed on
“safe and caring” schools, and children are often in danger of being harassed
by others, or having their belongings stolen. Would their children be a
target? It seems likely, since they have only known Canadian culture, and
barely speak Spanish.
[18]
The officer considered this
statement in the context in which it was made; the context that their inability
to communicate in Spanish was likely to lead to harassment and their being
targeted. There was no submission made nor is there any evidence in the record
before the officer that this language issue would have an adverse impact on
their ability to have proper access to and reasonable success at school.
Perhaps this was an oversight by the applicants or their counsel, or perhaps it
was not mentioned because their fluency in Spanish is not as lacking as the one
teacher believes. In any event, the officer had to render a decision on the
basis of the submissions and evidence placed before her by the applicants. As
was stated by the Court of Appeal in Owusu v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004
FCA 38, at para 8: “applicants have the onus of establishing the facts on which
their claim rests, they omit pertinent information from their written
submissions at their peril.” These applicants failed to raise the possible
impact the children’s language deficiency in Spanish might have on their
schooling and thus the officer was not required to consider it. Further, I
accept the submission of the respondent that the officer was under no duty to
develop that possible submission herself. She was entitled to rely on the
submissions made by the applicants and need not explore other possible issues
that were not clearly and directly raised by them in their application.
[19]
There
was no doubt in the mind of the officer, or in mine, that these children will
face challenges in adjusting to life in Uruguay. However, it was not found to be of such a
nature so as to tip the balance in favour of granting the H&C application.
Based on the record, I cannot say that the decision reached was unreasonable
and I cannot say that the officer ignored or improperly weighed the evidence
before her.
[20]
For
these reasons this application must be dismissed. Neither party proposed a
question for certification.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is
that this application is dismissed and no question is
certified.
Russel W. Zinn”
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-923-11
STYLE OF CAUSE: JUAN
JOSE GONZALEZ VAZQUEZ et al v. THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
PLACE OF HEARING: Calgary, Alberta
DATE OF HEARING: September 21, 2011
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT: ZINN,
J.
DATED: September 22, 2011
APPEARANCES:
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Mr. Manjit Walia
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FOR THE APPLICANT
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Mr. Rick Garvin
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FOR THE RESPONDENT
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SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
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Walia Law Office
Calgary, Alberta
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FOR THE APPLICANT
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Myles J. Kirvan
Deputy Attorney General of Canada
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FOR THE RESPONDENT
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