Date: 20080313
Docket: IMM-2455-07
Citation: 2008 FC 342
Ottawa, Ontario, March 13,
2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
BETWEEN:
JADWIGA PALKA
PAULA PALKA
Applicants
and
THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY
AND EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
Jadwiga
and Paula Palka are a mother and daughter who seek to challenge the
decision of an enforcement officer not to defer their removal from Canada. After the
Palkas commenced their application for judicial review, a stay of removal was
granted by this Court. As a consequence, a preliminary issue arises as to
whether the application for judicial review is now moot.
[2]
For
the reasons that follow, I have concluded that the application for judicial
review is indeed moot. Moreover, I have decided not to exercise my discretion
to consider the application on its merits. As a consequence, the application
for judicial review will be dismissed.
I. BACKGROUND
[3]
The
Palkas came to Canada from Poland on April 28, 1999. They submitted an application for
refugee protection, which was subsequently refused. An application for leave
and judicial review the Board’s decision was dismissed by this Court on October
23, 2001.
[4]
Ms. Palka and her
daughter then submitted an application for a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment. On
January 26, 2007, that application was dismissed. Leave was granted to
judicially review that decision, and on February 14, 2008, the application for
judicial review was dismissed.
[5]
In the meantime, Ms.
Palka and her daughter were directed to report for removal on March 21,
2007. A deferral was granted on February 22, 2007 in order to permit Ms. Palka
to make travel arrangements for her return to Poland. Their removal was rescheduled for April 22, 2007. A second deferral was
granted on March 22, 2007 in order to permit Paula to complete her school year
in Canada. The applicants’ removal was once again
rescheduled for June 30, 2007.
[6]
On May 12, 2007, Ms.
Palka’s father suffered a stroke. This led her to request a third deferral of
removal on June 13, 2007, based on her father’s ill health and her role as his
primary caregiver. Ms. Palka also noted that she had submitted an H&C
application which remained outstanding. This request for deferral was
refused. It is this decision that underlies this application for judicial
review.
[7]
Before the applicants
were removed from Canada, however, on June 26, 2007, a judge of
this Court stayed their removal, pending the final determination of their
application for judicial review.
II. IS THE APPLICATION MOOT?
[8]
As
the Supreme Court of Canada noted in Borowski v. Canada (Attorney
General),
[1989]
1 S.C.R. 342, mootness is a policy or practice
that allows a court to decline to decide cases that do not involve a live
controversy between the parties, but raise instead hypothetical or abstract
questions.
[9]
According
to Borowski, the live controversy must
exist not only at the time that the application for judicial review is
commenced, but also at the time that the Court is called upon to reach a
decision. As a result, if intervening events extinguish the live controversy
between the parties after the application for judicial review is commenced, a
case will become moot.
[10]
However,
even if it is determined that a case is moot, it is open to the Court to
exercise its discretion to hear the matter.
[11]
There
is a body of recent jurisprudence from this Court to the effect that once a
stay has been granted, applications to judicially review decisions of
enforcement officers setting dates for removal become moot: see Higgins v.
Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), [2007]
F.C.J. No. 516, 2007 FC 377, Vu v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2007] F.C.J. No.1431, 2007 FC 1109, Surujdeo v. Canada
(Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness) [2008] F.C.J. No.
94, 2008 FC 76, Madani v. Canada
(Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness) [2007] F.C.J. No.
1519, 2007 FC 1168, Maruthalingam v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness) [2007] F.C.J. No. 1079, 2007 FC 823, Solmaz v.
Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness) [2007] F.C.J.
No. 819, 2007 FC 607, Kovacs v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety &
Emergency Preparedness), [2007] F.C.J. No. 1625 and Amsterdam v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2008] F.C.J. No. 244.
[12]
However,
in this case, both the Minister and the applicants say that the application is
not moot. The Minister has provided detailed written submissions on the issue,
which have essentially been adopted by the applicants.
[13]
While
seemingly agreeing with the reasoning of Justice Gibson in Higgins and Vu,
the Minister seeks to distinguish the decisions, submitting that the mootness
findings in those cases were fact-specific, and that the facts of this case are
materially different.
[14]
While
the Minister did concede in oral argument that this matter may be “logically,
technically moot”, it has also been submitted by the Minister that an
application for judicial review of a decision refusing to defer removal becomes
moot as a result of the granting of a stay in only two situations, neither of
which arises here.
[15]
According
to the Minister, the first of these situations is where the basis for the
deferral request has been resolved prior to the hearing of the application for
judicial review. An example of this would be where the request for deferral is
based upon a pending application for permanent residence, which has since been
decided. Another example would be the situation that arose in Surujdeo,
previously cited, where a deferral had been sought pending the birth of the
applicant’s child, and the child had since been born.
[16]
The
second situation where the Minister concedes an application for judicial review
of a refusal to defer would become moot as a result of a stay having been
granted would be in cases where the applicant had been removed prior to the
hearing of the application.
[17]
According
to the Minister, the decision in Higgins falls squarely within the first
category, in that the basis for the deferral request in that case was a
pending decision in relation to an application for permanent residence through
an in-Canada spousal sponsorship. By the time that the application for
judicial review was to be heard, a decision had been made in relation to that
application. The Minister argues that this factor figured prominently in the
Court’s finding that the application for judicial review had become moot.
[18]
Similarly,
the Minister says that in Vu, the basis for the deferral request was an
outstanding H&C application, which had since been decided, again rendering
the application for judicial review moot.
[19]
In
contrast, the Minister points out that the fundamental basis for the deferral
request in this case was that the applicants had an outstanding H&C
application. No decision has yet been rendered in relation to that
application.
[20]
According
to the Minister, a finding that an application to judicially review a refusal
to defer becomes moot merely by the passing of the scheduled removal date is
predicated on the characterization of the underlying controversy as being
merely whether the applicant should be removed from Canada on a given date. If
that is the correct characterization of the controversy, then the Minister
concedes that once that date has passed, and the applicant has not been
removed, the matter has become moot.
[21]
However,
the Minister argues that in cases where the issue is whether an applicant
should be removed before a specific event occurs (such as a decision in
relation to an outstanding application for permanent residence), then the
application for judicial review is not rendered moot, as long as no decision
has been made in relation to the outstanding application by the time that the
application for judicial review is heard.
[22]
Given
that the applicants’ request to defer removal in this case was based on their
outstanding H&C application, and that no decision has yet been made in
relation to that application, the Minister submits that there is still a live
controversy between the parties as to whether the applicants should be removed before
a decision has been rendered with respect to their H&C application.
[23]
The
Minister argues that subsequent decisions of this Court in cases such as Madani
and Maruthalingam have applied the reasoning in Higgins and Vu
in factual situations that go beyond cases where the issue is whether an
applicant should be removed before a specific event occurs. According to the
Minister, these cases were wrongly decided, and should not be followed.
III. ANALYSIS
[24]
The
difficulty with the Minister’s argument is that a close review of the Court’s
reasoning in Higgins and Vu does not support the Minister’s
interpretation of those decisions.
[25]
The
application for judicial review in Higgins originally raised two questions.
One was whether the enforcement officer’s decision not to defer
the applicant's removal pending a decision on his wife's spousal sponsorship
application was patently unreasonable. The second issue was whether the enforcement
officer properly considered the best interests of a child directly affected
by the applicant's removal.
[26]
If
the Minister’s interpretation of Higgins is correct, then the basis of
Justice Gibson’s finding that the application for judicial review was moot
should have been that the applicant’s application for landing based on his
wife's spousal sponsorship had since been rejected. That was not, however, the
basis for Justice Gibson’s decision.
[27]
Indeed,
it appears from paragraph 16 of the Higgins decision that counsel for
the applicant in that case withdrew the arguments based upon the pending
spousal sponsorship, in light of the fact that a decision had been rendered in
that regard.
[28]
As
a consequence, the only substantive issue left to be decided by Justice Gibson
was whether the
enforcement officer properly considered the best interests of a child directly
affected by the applicant's removal. That did not raise a question as to
whether the applicant should be removed prior to a specific event occurring.
Nor had the applicant been removed prior to the hearing of the application for
judicial review. Nevertheless, Justice Gibson found that the application for
judicial review had become moot.
[29]
In
coming to this conclusion, Justice Gibson explained that:
[20] Given the
foregoing, and given the principles of mootness recited above, the Court is
satisfied that consideration of this application for judicial review on its
merits would not have the effect of resolving any controversy affecting the
rights of the parties to this matter. The issue of the timeliness or
untimeliness of any arrangements made in the future to remove the Applicant
from Canada would continue to be a
live issue between the parties. It simply is not a live issue between the
parties at this time and in this context.
[21] This
application for judicial review is moot.
[30]
Similarly,
in Vu, the basis for Justice Gibson’s mootness finding was not that a
decision had subsequently been made in relation to an application that had been
pending at the time of the deferral request, but rather because:
[11] …The removal
arrangements scheduled for January of 2007 are clearly no longer relevant. No
removal arrangements in respect of the Applicant are currently in place. The
Applicant's three children, now all Canadian citizens, remain in Canada and their best interests have been
reviewed and remain open for further review if that is determined to be
appropriate. Finally, if a new removal date for the Applicants were scheduled,
it would again be open to him to apply for deferral of that removal, based upon
the situation that then exists not on the situation that existed when he
earlier applied for deferral of removal and was denied that deferral.
[31]
Thus
it is clear that the characterization of the controversy underlying both the Higgins
and Vu decisions was whether the removal of the applicants in those
cases should take place on the date set by the enforcement officer, or whether
a deferral should be granted. Given this characterization of the issue, it
followed logically that once the dates set for removal had passed without the
applicants being removed, as a result of stays having been granted, the cases
became moot.
[32]
It
should also be noted that Justice Gibson’s characterization of the underlying
issue in these cases is consistent with the role and responsibilities of
enforcement officers, and the limited scope of their discretion to defer
removal.
[33]
That
is, in light of the duty imposed by subsection 48(2) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act to enforce removal orders “as soon as is reasonably
practicable”, the discretion of enforcement officers is very limited. Indeed,
enforcement officers are confined to deciding the timing of when an individual
is to be removed, and not whether they should be removed: see, for example, Boniowski v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2004] F.C.J. No. 1397, at ¶11.
[34]
That
is, deferral is “a temporary measure necessary to obviate a serious, practical
impediment to immediate removal”: see Griffiths
v. Canada (Solicitor
General),
[2006] F.C.J. No. 182.
[35]
Such
impediments can include short-term logistical issues such as the need to make
child care arrangements, the completion of a school year (Simöes v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) [2000] F.C.J. 936) and the obtaining of travel
documents (Adviento v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
[2003] F.C.J. No. 1837, 2003 FC 1430).
[36]
As
Justice Strayer observed in the Amsterdam decision, previously cited, deferrals
of removal can be also be granted where there is some collateral
process under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act which might
render invalid the removal order: see e.g. Wang v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2001] 3 F.C. 682, and Benitez v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2001] F.C.J. No. 1802: Amsterdam, at ¶9.
[37]
In
light of the foregoing analysis, I cannot accept the Minister’s argument that
decisions in Higgins
and
Vu do not lead to the conclusion that this application for judicial
review is now moot as a consequence of the stay previously granted by the Court.
[38]
Nor
am I persuaded that the decisions of my colleagues in Higgins, Vu, Surujdeo, Madani, Maruthalingam,
Solmaz, Kovacs and Amsterdam are clearly wrong. As a result, comity dictates
that I find that this matter is now moot.
[39]
That
said, I agree with the Minister that a finding that applications for judicial
review of refusals to defer are rendered moot once a stay of removal has been
granted raises a host of practical problems. These will be addressed next.
IV. CONSEQUENCES OF THE MOOTNESS FINDING
[40]
There
are a number of concerns that arise from the finding that an application for
judicial review of a refusal to defer is rendered moot when the Court stays an
applicant’s removal. These include the following:
a) Final Disposition Without a Full
Consideration of the Merits of the Matter
[41]
Many motions for stays of
removal are brought on very short notice. Often the parties have little time
to assemble complete evidentiary records. Transcripts of underlying hearings
are usually unavailable. There is no time for cross-examination on affidavits,
and thus the evidence before the Court remains largely untested. The parties
frequently have limited time to meet with their clients, to obtain instructions,
and to prepare their submissions.
[42]
This
is particularly true for the Minister, who is often served with last minute
requests for stays, and must respond, sometimes with only a few hours notice.
[43]
Similarly,
the Court’s decisions in relation to motions for stays are frequently rendered
under significant time constraints, without the luxury of the opportunity for
additional research, consideration and deliberation.
[44]
Nevertheless,
if the granting of a stay renders the underlying application for judicial review
moot, there would never be a determination of the merits of the underlying
application for judicial review. In other words, the underlying application
for judicial review ends up being finally disposed of at the stay stage,
without ever being subjected to the full judicial scrutiny on the basis of a
complete evidentiary record at either the leave stage, or at a hearing of the
application itself.
[45]
This
result is problematic, and could potentially lead to injustices resulting in
certain cases.
[46]
There
may, however, be ways in which these concerns can be at least partially addressed.
For example, it may be appropriate for the Court in such circumstances to look
for a higher quality or standard of evidence on motions to stay decisions of
enforcement officers refusing to defer removals stay removals. As Justice
Strayer has observed, “This might mean, for example,
that the Court should not grant a stay without direct evidence instead of
hearsay in the form of letters and doctors’ notes simply attached to the Applicant’s
affidavit without even affirmation of a belief in the truth of the statements.
At the very least, it is open to the Court to draw an adverse inference if
direct evidence is not produced …”: see Amsterdam at ¶16.
b) The Potential for a “Revolving
Door” of Deferral Requests
[47]
If
the granting of a stay of a decision of an enforcement officer renders the
underlying application for judicial review moot, it follows that the matter
would then be remitted to the enforcement officer to set a new date for the
removal of the applicant.
[48]
This
would then provide the applicant with a fresh opportunity to request a further
deferral of removal. This, in turn, would result in a further decision in that
regard. In the event that the deferral is refused, the applicant would quickly
be back before this Court, seeking a further stay.
[49]
All
of this could occur within a short period of time. Moreover, in the event that
a further stay is granted, the process could start all over, yet again.
[50]
Not
only would this result in a drain on judicial resources, more importantly, it
would also have significant cost consequences for the parties, and would also
leave the lives of applicants in limbo, with all of the attendant stress and
anxiety that that would entail.
[51]
Moreover,
it is conceivable that, in the absence of any final determination of the
application for judicial review on its merits, enforcement officers would never
have the opportunity to benefit from directions from the Court, and could thus
commit the same error repeatedly in relation to the same applicants.
[52]
Cases
where stays of removal orders are denied often do not proceed to a full hearing
on the merits, as a result of the fact that the applicants have left the
country. If cases where stays have been granted also do not proceed to a full
hearing on their merits, this will limit the development of jurisprudential
guidance for other cases with respect to the ambit of the discretion afforded
to such officers.
c) The Stay/Leave Paradox
[53]
A
third concern arises in relation to the interplay of the test for obtaining a
stay of a decision of an enforcement officer and the test for granting leave.
[54]
While
it is ordinarily only necessary to meet a low threshold to establish the
existence of a serious issue for the purpose of obtaining a stay of removal,
the test is significantly more stringent where the underlying decision is that
of an enforcement officer.
[55]
As
Justice Pelletier found in Wang v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2001 FCT 148, [2001] F.C.J. No. 295, where the relief sought
on the motion for a stay is the same as that sought in the judicial review
application, the burden on the applicant is not merely to demonstrate that the underlying application
is neither vexatious nor frivolous. Rather, the judge hearing the motion
should closely examine the merits of the underlying application, and assess the
likelihood of the application’s success. This is because the
granting of a stay will effectively grant the relief sought in the underlying
application for judicial review.
[56]
This
then leads to a somewhat paradoxical result.
[57]
That
is, in order to have obtained a stay, a person seeking to judicially review a
decision of an enforcement officer has had to meet a higher standard in
relation to the “serious issue” component of the stay test than any other class
of applicants seeking similar relief.
[58]
However,
if the effect of the granting of the stay is to render the underlying
application moot, it follows that even though an applicant has been able to
meet the elevated threshold in order to get the stay, the applicant should then
be denied leave to judicially review the underlying decision. This result
would follow, even though the test at the stage involves a lower threshold,
merely requiring that applicants show that they have a fairly arguable case: see Bains
v. Canada (Minister of Employment
and Immigration),
(1990), 109 N.R. 239.
[59]
Although
this may appear to be a somewhat anomalous result, the alternative would be
that leave be granted in cases where no practical result would be served by
such a decision, other than to further delay the removals process.
d) The Irreparable Harm Paradox
[60]
The
final concern is the somewhat paradoxical consequences that could flow from a
finding that an application for judicial review of a refusal to defer is
rendered moot when the Court stays an applicant’s removal, in relation to the
issue of irreparable harm.
[61]
That
is, applicants frequently argue that they will suffer irreparable harm if a
stay is not granted, on the basis that their right to seek judicial review of
the underlying application for judicial review would be rendered nugatory, if
the stay were not granted.
[62]
If
that submission is accepted by the Court, and the applicant is also able to
demonstrate both the existence of a serious issue on the Wang standard,
and that the balance of convenience favours the granting of the stay, the stay
will then be granted.
[63]
However,
the ability of the applicant to pursue their application for judicial review
would then be extinguished by reason of the granting of the stay, with the
result that the applicant would then potentially suffer the very harm on which
the granting of the stay was based.
V. SHOULD THE COURT EXERCISE ITS
DISCRETION TO DECIDE THE MATTER EVEN THOUGH IT IS MOOT?
[64]
The
foregoing concerns have led to very careful consideration being given as to
whether the Court should exercise its discretion to decide this matter,
notwithstanding that it is moot. In particular, the Court has considered
whether a decision in relation to the merits of the application for judicial
review would have any practical utility.
[65]
In
the event that the application is dismissed on its merits, the matter would be
remitted to the enforcement officer to set a new date for the applicants’
removal. The applicants would then have an opportunity to present a fresh
request for a deferral, based upon current evidence relating to the status of
their outstanding H&C application, the health of both Ms. Palka and her
father, the current situation of the child, along with evidence regarding any
other considerations that may have arisen in the interim.
[66]
This
is precisely the same result as would occur if the Court declined to decide the
matter because it is moot.
[67]
If
the application for judicial review were allowed, the Court could decline to
remit the matter to the enforcement officer, on the basis that the date for
removal had passed, and new travel arrangements would have to be made: see, for
example, Samaroo v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2005] F.C.J. No. 1477, at ¶9. Once again, the consequences of this would
lead to the same result as would follow were the Court to decline to decide the
matter because it is moot.
[68]
If
the Court were to allow the application for judicial review and remit the
matter to the enforcement officer for consideration on the basis of the record,
any new decision would be based on dated information. This is not a desirable
result.
[69]
In
contrast, if the enforcement officer chose to seek updated information from the
applicants, once again, the applicants would be back in the same situation they
would be in if the Court declined to decide the matter on the basis that it had
become moot.
[70]
In
the circumstances, the Court declines to exercise its discretion in favour of
deciding the matter.
VI. CONCLUSION
[71]
For
the foregoing reasons, this application for judicial review is dismissed on the
grounds that it is moot.
VII. CERTIFICATION
[72]
The
respondent asks that the following question be certified:
Where an applicant has filed an
application for leave and judicial review challenging a refusal to defer
removal pending a decision on an outstanding application for landing, does the
fact that a decision on the underlying application for landing remains
outstanding at the date that the Court considers the application for judicial
review maintain a “live controversy” between the parties, or is the matter
mooted merely by the passing of the scheduled removal date?
[73]
I
am satisfied that the question raises a matter of general importance, and is
appropriate for certification, with certain minor amendments.
[74]
While
the question, as reformulated by the Court, is slightly different than the
questions that have been certified in the cases referred to in this decision,
the answer to this question would provide additional certainty to the law in
this area. As a consequence, the following question will be certified:
Where an applicant has filed an application for leave and
judicial review challenging a refusal to defer removal pending a decision on an
outstanding application for landing on humanitarian and compassionate grounds,
and a stay of removal is granted so that the person is not removed from Canada,
does the fact that a decision on the underlying application for landing remains
outstanding at the date that the Court considers the application for judicial
review maintain a “live controversy” between the parties, or is the matter rendered
moot merely by the passing of the scheduled removal date?
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1. This application for judicial
review is dismissed; and
2.
The following question of general importance is certified:
Where an applicant has filed an application for leave and
judicial review challenging a refusal to defer removal pending a decision on an
outstanding application for landing on humanitarian and compassionate grounds,
and a stay of removal is granted so that the person is not removed from Canada,
does the fact that a decision on the underlying application for landing remains
outstanding at the date that the Court considers the application for judicial
review maintain a “live controversy” between the parties, or is the matter rendered
moot merely by the passing of the scheduled removal date?
“Anne
Mactavish”