Date: 20080325
Docket: IMM-3533-07
Citation:
2008 FC 375
Ottawa, Ontario, the 25th
day of March 2008
Present:
the Honourable Mr. Justice de Montigny
BETWEEN:
ZINEB
BELKACEM
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an
application for judicial review from a decision by visa officer Karine
Roy-Tremblay of the Canadian Embassy at Rabat in Morocco, denying the applicant’s application for
permanent residence in the class “skilled workers – Quebec”. The applicant alleged there had been a
breach of procedural fairness and the visa officer had drawn a mistaken
conclusion of fact from the evidence in the record. For the reasons that
follow, I accept the applicant’s arguments.
I. Facts
[2]
The applicant
made a Quebec selection certificate
application in October 2002 that was finally granted in 2005. The applicant
then filed a federal visa application with the Canadian visa service in Rabat in April 2005. Under the terms of the
Canada-Quebec Agreement, it was for the federal government to determine whether
the candidate pre-selected by Quebec was admissible.
[3]
In her
form the applicant stated she had worked between 1996 and December 2006. She
accordingly supplied the following documents in support of her statement: a
certificate of salary issued by the Director of the Caisse nationale de
sécurité sociale (CNSS) in Rabat for the period from January 1993 to August
1999 with regard to her employment with CIEME Maroc, an employment
certification letter from the DMW company from 2001 to date and three pay slips
dated 2006.
[4]
The visa
officer tried to check the applicant’s employment with DMW and to do this
consulted the CNSS Internet site, which indicated no statements subsequent to
1999. The visa officer accordingly tried to contact the DMW manager who filled
out the employment certification. However, it appeared that the telephone
number shown on the certification was not the company’s number. The officer
subsequently tried to obtain the necessary information through the Rabat telephone centre, which finally
confirmed that the DMW company did not exist.
[5]
In order
to clarify this situation the applicant was called to an interview on April 2,
2007. The applicant again alleged that DMW existed and that she had worked for
this business. The visa officer then gave the applicant 30 days to provide any
further documents that would confirm her statements.
[6]
In
accordance with this request, Ms. Belkacem sent the visa officer the following
documents: a copy of the business register for the DMW company, a certificate
from the Ministère des Finances et des Investissements Extérieurs, a
certification from CNSS regarding the company’s payroll, a certification from
CNSS concerning another DMW employee, copies of results of online consultations
of CNSS for two other employees and two credit notices for a bank account held
by the applicant.
II. Impugned decision
[7]
As she
considered that this further information did not confirm the applicant’s
employment and DMW’s new address, the visa officer concluded that it was
impossible to establish the applicant’s employment for the period from 2001 to
2006. Accordingly, she rejected the permanent residence application on June 25, 2007 by the following letter:
[TRANSLATION]
…
I have now completed the review of your
application and have come to the conclusion that you do not meet the criteria
for admission to Canada as a Quebec skilled worker.
In subsection 16(1) of the 2001 Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, it states that “A person who makes an
application must answer truthfully all questions put to them for the purpose of
the examination and must produce a visa and all relevant evidence and documents
that the officer reasonably requires”. At an interview with immigration on
02-04-2007, you were asked to provide the following information in order to
assess whether you were admissible to Canada:
-
proof of
your employment with the DMW company.
You stated that you worked
with that company from January 2001 to December 2006 but you did not provide
any evidence to show your employment with the company. All that you provided
was the company’s business register, two transfers that you received from the
company, a certification of affiliation of the company with CNSS and CNSS stubs
for other employees. You indicated that you had not been reported to CNSS when
your pay slips showed CNSS deductions.
Subsection 11(1) of the Act
provides that: “A foreign national must, before entering Canada, apply to an officer for a
visa or for any other document required by the regulations. The visa or
document shall be issued if, following an examination, the officer is satisfied
that the foreign national is not inadmissible and meets the requirements of
this Act”.
After reviewing the
information in my possession, I am not satisfied that you meet the eligibility
criteria and requirements laid down by the Act. I am accordingly denying your
application.
…
[8]
The
applicant is now seeking judicial review by this Court of this decision by the
visa officer.
III.
Issues
[9]
Two issues
emerge from the parties’ written and oral submissions:
(a) Did the visa officer err
in dismissing the applicant’s permanent residence application? In particular,
could the officer conclude it was impossible to check the applicant’s admissibility
pursuant to sections 34 to 38 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
S.C. 2001, c. 27 (the IRPA), solely based on the doubts she had regarding
the employment relationship with the DMW company?
(b) Were the requirements of
procedural fairness observed? Was the applicant sufficiently informed of the
fact that she had to submit evidence not only of the existence of the DMW
company but also of her employment relationship with that company at the
relevant dates?
IV. Applicable legislation
[10]
The
applicable provisions of the IRPA read as follows:
Application
before entering Canada
11.
(1) A foreign national must, before entering Canada, apply to an officer for a visa or for
any other document required by the regulations. The visa or document shall be
issued if, following an examination, the officer is satisfied that the
foreign national is not inadmissible and meets the requirements of this Act.
Obligation
— answer truthfully
16.
(1) A person who makes an application must answer truthfully all questions
put to them for the purpose of the examination and must produce a visa and
all relevant evidence and documents that the officer reasonably requires.
Obligation
— relevant evidence
(2)
In the case of a foreign national,
(a) the relevant evidence referred to
in subsection (1) includes photographic and fingerprint evidence; and
(b) the foreign national must submit to
a medical examination on request.
Evidence
relating to identity
(3)
An officer may require or obtain from a permanent resident or a foreign
national who is arrested, detained or subject to a removal order, any
evidence — photographic, fingerprint or otherwise — that may be used to
establish their identity or compliance with this Act.
|
Visa
et documents
11.
(1) L’étranger doit, préalablement à son entrée au Canada, demander à l’agent
les visa et autres documents requis par règlement, lesquels sont délivrés sur
preuve, à la suite d’un contrôle, qu’il n’est pas interdit de territoire et
se conforme à la présente loi.
Obligation
du demandeur
16.
(1) L’auteur d’une demande au titre de la présente loi doit répondre
véridiquement aux questions qui lui sont posées lors du contrôle, donner les
renseignements et tous éléments de preuve pertinents et présenter les visa et
documents requis.
Éléments
de preuve
(2)
S’agissant de l’étranger, les éléments de preuve pertinents visent notamment
la photographie et la dactyloscopie et il est tenu de se soumettre, sur
demande, à une visite médicale.
Établissement
de l’identité
(3)
L’agent peut exiger ou obtenir du résident permanent ou de l’étranger qui
fait l’objet d’une arrestation, d’une mise en détention, d’un contrôle ou
d’une mesure de renvoi tous éléments, dont la photographie et la
dactyloscopie, en vue d’établir son identité et vérifier s’il se conforme à
la présente loi.
|
V. Analysis
[11]
The
parties disagreed as to the applicable standard of review. While the applicant
maintained that the issue was a mixed question of fact and law which required
application of the standard of reasonableness simpliciter, the
respondent maintained that the visa officer’s decision should be reviewed only
if it was patently unreasonable.
[12]
What the
visa officer had to determine in this case was whether the applicant was admissible
based on the record and the evidence that was before her. It seems to the Court
that this was a purely factual question in the determination of which the Court
should not intervene unless it can be shown that it was based on an erroneous
finding of fact made in a perverse or capricious manner or without regard for
the material before her: Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7, s.
18.1(4)(d).
[13]
It is true
that in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 (Dunsmuir), the high court rejected the
distinction between the reasonableness standard and that of patent
unreasonableness on the ground that the difference between the two concepts was
difficult to apply and essentially illusory. In so doing, the Court was careful
to note that the reasonableness standard reflected deference to Parliament, and
it required “respect for the legislative choices to leave some matters in the
hands of administration decision makers, for the processes and determinations
that draw on particular expertise and experiences, and for the different roles
of the courts and administrative bodies within the Canadian constitutional
system” (at para. 49). Consequently, courts should
avoid intervening when the impugned decision is one of the “possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law” (at
para. 47).
[14]
Of course, the
situation is different regarding procedural fairness. In this area, there can be no question of
applying a pragmatic and functional analysis: the visa officer was not entitled
to make a mistake and had to comply with the requirements of the rules of
natural justice and fairness.
[15]
On the
first issue, the applicant did not dispute that it was the federal government’s
function to determine the admissibility of an applicant in medical, security
and criminal terms once the latter had been selected by Quebec pursuant to the Agreement
made between that province and the Canadian authorities. It is also true to say
that the officer did not conclude that the applicant was inadmissible, but
simply said she was unable to make a decision on the point.
[16]
That said,
could she nevertheless dismiss the permanent residence application on the
ground that she could not carry out her duty of assessing Ms. Belkacem’s admissibility
simply because she was not satisfied with the evidence submitted by the latter
of her employment from 2001 to 2006? In her affidavit, the visa officer stated
that she was satisfied that the applicant and the members of her family were
not inadmissible under sections 36 (criminal record) and 38 (medical reasons)
of the IRPA. That left only checks on security, breaches of human or
international rights and activities of organized crime.
[17]
It is true
that as provided in sections 11 and 16 of the IRPA, foreign nationals must show
that they are not inadmissible in order to obtain a visa or any other document
required by regulation, and to do this must “answer truthfully all questions
put to them for the purpose of the examination and must produce a visa and all
relevant evidence and documents that the officer reasonably requires”. However,
is employment evidence information or evidence relevant to determining whether
the applicant has engaged in terrorist activities, organized crime or breaches
of human rights?
[18]
In her
affidavit the visa officer stated that she had to deny Ms. Belkacem’s
application once she could not determine what her activities were during
2001-2006, as she was not satisfied that she met the admissibility criteria and
other requirements laid down in the IRPA. This reasoning appears to the Court
to be fallacious. Even assuming that Ms. Belkacem had not worked for the DMW
firm during those five years (a question to which I will return in answering
the second point at issue), that would not be a basis for drawing any
inferences regarding her admissibility to Canada. She could have worked for some other
business, could have been self-employed or could simply have left the labour
market without in so doing engaging in illegal activities. Conversely, having
actually worked for the DMW firm would not prove anything as to her admissibility
under sections 34, 35 and 37 of the IRPA.
[19]
In her
examination on affidavit the visa officer confirmed that the information for
determining whether a candidate was involved in an activity covered by sections
34, 35 and 37 of the IRPA ordinarily came from the Canadian authorities. The
ENF 1 Manual of the Department of Citizenship and Immigration on exclusion
describes the evidence on which a visa officer may rely for purposes of
implementing this legislation. It mentions in particular police reports or
secret reports, statements on oath and other documentary evidence such as press
articles, learned publications or expert evidence, all things which have
nothing to do with evidence of an employment relationship.
[20]
In this
context, therefore, it seems to the Court that the visa officer erred in
terminating the security investigation and dismissing Ms. Belkacem’s case even
before the Canadian services were able to complete their investigations. The
existence or absence of an employment relationship proved nothing in this
regard and so it was premature to reject the permanent residence application on
the ground that the applicant’s admissibility could not be checked. An
employment relationship may be relevant in showing that a candidate is part of the
“skilled workers” class (s. 76 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Regulations, SOR/2002-227), for example; but it is at most of marginal
utility in determining whether a person has committed terrorist acts or has
participated in the activities of organized crime or breaches of human rights.
In short, this conclusion was not one of the “possible, acceptable outcomes which
are defensible in respect of the facts and law”, to repeat the language of
Bastarache and LeBel JJ. in Dunsmuir.
[21]
This error
by itself is sufficient to dispose of the application for judicial review at
bar; but there is more. It appeared from the evidence in the record that the
requests made by the visa officer at the meeting of April 2, 2007 created some
confusion for the applicant. The latter, thinking that the officer’s concerns
were solely as to the existence of the DMW company, provided on April 19, 2007, through her consultant, a
series of documents showing that the company did in fact exist and was still operating.
The officer considered that this new documentation did not establish an employment
relationship by the applicant with the DMW company and so dismissed her
application.
[22]
It seems
reasonable to think that the two parties may have had a different understanding
of the additional information required of the applicant following the April 2,
2007 interview. It should be borne in mind that the interview was very short
(between 5 and 15 minutes, depending on whether one accepts the version of the
applicant or the respondent), and the request for additional information was
not made in any written communication before or after the interview. As to the CAIPS
computerized notes, these are to say the least ambiguous as indicated by the
entry made on the day of the interview:
[TRANSLATION]
I confronted RQ about the pay slips and work
certification. RQ assured me this was a genuine company and said she would show
me among other things the business register, which was proof of its affiliation
with CNSS. The pay slips submitted indicated that there were deductions for CNSS
and yet RQ was not reported and this employment was not shown on the CNSS
background material.
I asked RQ what she had been doing since
2001 and she assured me she had been working for DMW.
I gave RQ 30 days to provide further
docs.
[23]
The
consultant’s letter accompanying the further documentation supplied by the
applicant after this interview appears to corroborate the applicant’s story
that the officer only asked her for clarifications regarding the existence of the
DMW company. Inter alia the consultant wrote:
[TRANSLATION]
Our client had to present evidence that
her former employer, the company Distribution and Marketing Work, hereinafter
referred to by the abbreviation D.M.W., still existed.
…
We now feel that if you had doubts as to
the previous or present existence of the DMW company, these several documents
should resolve them.
(Panel’s record, pp. 18-19)
[24]
In her
affidavit the visa officer argued, on the contrary, that the thirty-day period
given to the applicant was to allow her to present additional documents in
order to establish two things: (1) the existence of the DMW company, and (2)
her employment relationship with that company for the entire period from
January 2001 to December 2006 (affidavit of Karine Roy-Tremblay, para. 30).
Nevertheless, at paragraph 28 of that affidavit she stated that she had
indicated to the applicant concerns that she had [TRANSLATION] “regarding the
existence of the DMW company and thereby her employment with that
company” (emphasis added), which rather tends to support Ms. Belkacem’s
version.
[25]
It should
further be noted that this affidavit was prepared over six months after the
interview, namely on October
24, 2007. The
officer had thus done many other interviews in the meantime, according to her
at the rate of 5 or 15 a day. Without questioning the officer’s good faith, it
may well be that her memory of the exact language she used to clarify the
nature of the documents Ms. Belkacem had to give her could have been deficient.
In such circumstances, the CAIPS notes seem to the Court to be more reliable
since they were contemporaneous with the interview, and this Court’s earlier
decisions have consistently held that less weight should be given to the
subsequent affidavit: see inter alia Kalra v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2003 FC 941; Alam v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC 182; Abdullah v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 1185.
[26]
I am well
aware that in his follow-up letter of June 4, 2007 the consultant provided some
support for the respondent’s argument. He wrote, in fact:
[TRANSLATION]
We would like to know whether the problem
which arose in our client’s security interview (the fact that our client had indeed
worked for the employer she said she had) has been resolved based on the
evidence filed by us to corroborate our client’s statements.
(Panel’s record, p. 17)
[27]
All things
considered, however, I feel that this letter if possible only increases the confusion
surrounding the exact requests made by the visa officer. It certainly could not
by itself suffice to resolve the two contradictory versions of the applicant
and the respondent as to what was really said at the April 2, 2007 interview.
[28]
In this Court
the applicant filed new evidence (bank statements and credit notices) to
establish her credibility. She submitted it would be illogical to think she
would not have submitted these documents if she had known she had to establish
not only the existence of the DMW company but also her employment relationship
with the company.
[29]
The
respondent of course objected to the introduction of this new evidence on the
ground that reviewing the merits of a decision which is the subject of judicial
review must be based on the evidence that was in fact submitted to the
administrative decision-maker at the time he or she made the decision. I have
to agree with the respondent on this point. The case law is clear that this
Court cannot consider evidence which was not before the visa officer: see for
example Gitxsan Treaty Society v. Hospital Employees’ Union, [2000] 1 F.C.
135 (F.C.A.); Noor v. Canada (Human Resources Development), [2000] F.C.J. No. 574 (C.A.) (QL), at
para. 6; Zolotareva v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2003 FC 1274, at para. 36. In any case, I would take the
liberty of adding that the new evidence submitted by the applicant did not
suffice to establish her employment relationship with the DMW company for the
entire period between 2001 and 2006.
[30]
In view of
the apparent communication difficulty between the applicant and the visa
officer, I feel that in all fairness the latter should have given Ms. Belkacem
another chance to resolve her concerns by further clarifying what she wanted to
see. I have come to this conclusion considering first the cooperation and the promptness
demonstrated by Ms. Belkacem throughout the proceeding. Second, the importance
of the decision made by the visa officer to the applicant certainly should not
be underestimated. It is true that she could always make another application to
the Canadian authorities, but three years have already elapsed since the filing
of her initial application and the requirement of making another application
would entail further delay. What is more, it cannot be assumed that Ms.
Belkacem would be again qualified for selection with the Government of Quebec.
[31]
In view of
the consequences for the applicant of the visa officer’s refusal and the
importance which the opportunity to come and settle in Canada had for the
applicant and her family, some effort should at least have been made to contact
Ms. Belkacem to obtain the desired information, as her consultant suggested in
the letter of June 4, 2007. As the Supreme Court wrote in Baker v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration),
[1999] 2 S.C.R. 817, at para. 28:
The values underlying the duty of
procedural fairness relate to the principle that the individual or individuals
affected should have the opportunity to present their case fully and fairly,
and have decisions affecting their rights, interests, or privileges made using
a fair, impartial and open process, appropriate to the statutory, institutional
and social context of the decision.
[32]
In short,
I feel that the visa officer did not discharge her duty of procedural fairness
when she made her decision without allowing the applicant to clarify the
doubtful areas that still existed in her case, since it was clear that the
missing information might have resulted from a communication problem at the
interview of April 2, 2007. This is therefore a second reason for allowing the
application for judicial review.
[33]
The visa
officer’s decision must accordingly be set aside and the matter referred back
to another visa officer for the latter to hold a new interview and make a new
decision on the matter consistent with these reasons.
JUDGMENT
THE COURT ORDERS that the application for judicial
review be allowed.
“Yves
de Montigny”
Certified
true translation
Brian
McCordick, Translator