Date: 20131220
Docket: T-2292-12
Citation: 2013
FC 1274
Ottawa, Ontario,
December 20, 2013
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
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|
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Applicant
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and
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YASMIN RAHMAN
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This
is an appeal under subsection 14(5) of the Citizenship Act, RSC 1985,
C-29 [Citizenship Act] and section 21 of the Federal Courts Act, RSC
1985, c F-7 [Federal Courts Act] of a decision of a Citizenship Judge dated 8
November 2012 [Decision] approving the Respondent’s citizenship application
under subsection 5(1) of the Citizenship Act.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The
Respondent is a citizen of Bangladesh who first came to Canada as a Permanent Resident in August 2006. She applied for Canadian citizenship, along
with two of her children, on 30 August 2010. This appeal relates only to the
Decision on the Respondent’s citizenship application, and not to that of her
children.
[3]
As
part of the citizenship process, the Respondent was asked in November 2011 to
submit a traveller history for herself and her children from Canada Border
Services Agency (ICES Traveller History), photocopies of all pages of all
passports covering the relevant period, and certain other documents relating to
taxation, schooling and domicile, and to complete a Residence Questionnaire. On
5 October 2012, she was asked to submit ministry of health claims from 30
August 2006 to 30 August
2010 [Review Period], a record of her entry and exit from Bangladesh during the Review Period, and a letter from the proper authorities in Bangladesh indicating all passports ever issued to her, with issue and expiry dates.
[4]
The
Respondent provided the record of entry and exit from Bangladesh on a single sheet of paper, which she attests was self-generated based on the date stamps
in her passports and was never represented to be anything else. The Respondent
suggested that this record “purports to be from the Bangladesh Minister of the
Interior,” but this contention does not appear to be central to the appeal.
[5]
The
list of the Respondent’s passports provided by the Department of Immigration
and Passports of Bangladesh indicates that she held two passports from that
country for part of the Review Period - specifically from 30 August 2006 to 12
October 2007. The Respondent’s explanation was that she had exhausted the pages
for stamps prior to the expiration of the first passport (R0476041), and
therefore applied for and obtained a new one (Z0326827). The Applicant says the
Citizenship Judge overlooked the overlapping passports, and this was a
reviewable error.
[6]
Along
with her own application, the Respondent submitted citizenship applications for
two of her children. However, these children were attending school in
Bangladesh during most of the Review Period, and the Respondent now
acknowledges that it was a “mistake” to apply for their citizenship as there
was no way they could have met the residency requirement. She states that it
was an “error on [her] part” to list only their first extended absence from
Canada during the Review Period, when in fact they were rarely in Canada during
this time.
DECISION UNDER
REVIEW
[7]
The
Decision of the Citizenship Judge was entered on the usual form, indicating
that the requirements under subsection 5(1) of the Act had been met. The
handwritten reasons provided in support of the Decision read, in their
entirety:
Careful review of all documents now on file indicate
that applicant on the balance of probabilities meets residence. Specifically,
ICES confirms declared entries into Canada. As per letter from Bangladeshi passport
authority, it appears that applicant was not in possession of second passport
for review period. Concern why children schooled in Bangladesh, according to
applicant children were enrolled in American “Ivy League” type school not
available to them in Canada at that time. Absences also confirmed by relevant
ppt.
ISSUES
[8]
The
Applicant submits that there are two issues on this appeal:
1.
Did
the Citizenship Judge err when he concluded that the Respondent had satisfied
the residency requirement under paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Citizenship Act?;
and
2.
Were
the Citizenship Judge’s reasons inadequate?
[9]
In
Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador
(Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62 [Newfoundland Nurses], the Supreme
Court of Canada held at para 14 that the adequacy of reasons is not a
stand-alone basis for quashing a decision. Rather, “the reasons must be read
together with the outcome and serve the purpose of showing whether the result
falls within a range of possible outcomes.” Given my conclusion below that
reasonableness is the appropriate standard of review in this case, any issue
that may arise as to the adequacy of reasons will be considered in the context
of the reasonableness of the Decision.
[10]
As
such, the only issue on this appeal is whether the Citizenship Judge applied
the residency requirement under paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Citizenship Act
in a manner that made the Decision unreasonable.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[11]
While
this is a statutory appeal from a decision of a Citizenship Judge and not a
judicial review, case law has established that it is the administrative law
principles governing the standard of review that apply: see Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration) v Takla, 2009 FC 1120 at paras 16-39 [Takla].
[12]
The
Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 [Dunsmuir]
held that a standard of review analysis need not be conducted in every
instance. Instead, where the standard of review applicable to a particular
question before the court is settled in a satisfactory manner by past
jurisprudence, the reviewing court may adopt that standard of review. Only
where this search proves fruitless, or where the relevant precedents appear to
be inconsistent with new developments in the common law principles of judicial
review, must the reviewing court undertake a consideration of the four factors
comprising the standard of review analysis: Agraira v Canada (Public Safety
and Emergency Preparedness), 2013 SCC 36 at para 48 [Agraira].
[13]
The
Applicant argued that reasonableness is the appropriate standard of review in
this case, citing Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Jeizan,
2010 FC 323 at para 12 [Jeizan], and while not addressing the issue
directly, it is clear from the Respondent’s arguments that she takes the same
view. I agree with my colleague Justice Gagné’s observation that “[i]t is
generally accepted in the case law that a citizenship judge’s application of
evidence to a specific test for residency under paragraph 5(1)(c) of the
Act raises questions of mixed fact and law and is thus reviewable on a standard
of reasonableness”: Saad v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2013 FC 570 at para 18.
[14]
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.” See Dunsmuir, above, at
para 47, and Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v
Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at para 59 [Khosa]. Put another way, the Court
should intervene only 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.”
STATUTORY
PROVISIONS
[15]
The
following provisions of the Citizenship Act are applicable in these
proceedings:
Grant
of citizenship
5.
(1) The Minister shall grant citizenship to any person who
(a) makes application
for citizenship;
(b) is eighteen years
of age or over;
(c) is a permanent
resident within the meaning of subsection 2(1) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, and has, within the four years immediately
preceding the date of his or her application, accumulated at least three
years of residence in Canada calculated in the following manner:
(i) for every day during which
the person was resident in Canada before his lawful admission to Canada for
permanent residence the person shall be deemed to have accumulated one-half
of a day of residence, and
(ii) for every day during which
the person was resident in Canada after his lawful admission to Canada for
permanent residence the person shall be deemed to have accumulated one day of
residence;
(d) has an adequate
knowledge of one of the official languages of Canada;
(e) has an adequate
knowledge of Canada and of the responsibilities and privileges of
citizenship; and
(f) is not under a
removal order and is not the subject of a declaration by the Governor in
Council made pursuant to section 20.
[…]
14
[…]
Appeal
(5)
The Minister or the applicant may appeal to the Court from the decision of
the citizenship judge under subsection (2) by filing a notice of appeal in
the Registry of the Court within sixty days after the day on which
(a) the citizenship
judge approved the application under subsection (2); or
(b) notice was mailed
or otherwise given under subsection (3) with respect to the application.
(6)
A decision of the Court pursuant to an appeal made under subsection (5) is,
subject to section 20, final and, notwithstanding any other Act of Parliament,
no appeal lies therefrom.
|
Attribution de la citoyenneté
5. (1) Le ministre attribue la citoyenneté à toute
personne qui, à la fois :
a) en fait la demande;
b) est âgée d’au moins dix-huit ans;
c) est un résident permanent au sens du paragraphe 2(1) de
la Loi sur l’immigration et la protection des réfugiés et a, dans les
quatre ans qui ont précédé la date de sa demande, résidé au Canada pendant au
moins trois ans en tout, la durée de sa résidence étant calculée de la manière
suivante:
(i) un demi-jour
pour chaque jour de résidence au Canada avant son admission à titre de
résident permanent,
(ii) un jour
pour chaque jour de résidence au Canada après son admission à titre de
résident permanent;
d) a une connaissance suffisante de l’une des langues
officielles du Canada;
e) a une connaissance suffisante du Canada et des
responsabilités et avantages conférés par la citoyenneté;
f) n’est pas sous le coup d’une mesure de renvoi et n’est
pas visée par une déclaration du gouverneur en conseil faite en application
de l’article 20.
[…]
14 […]
Appel
(5) Le ministre et le demandeur peuvent interjeter appel
de la décision du juge de la citoyenneté en déposant un avis d’appel au
greffe de la Cour dans les soixante jours suivant la date, selon le cas :
a) de l’approbation de la demande;
b) de la communication, par courrier ou tout autre moyen,
de la décision de rejet.
(6) La décision de la Cour rendue sur l’appel prévu au
paragraphe (5) est, sous réserve de l’article 20, définitive et, par dérogation
à toute autre loi fédérale, non susceptible d’appel.
|
[16]
The
following provision of the Federal Courts Act is applicable in these
proceedings:
Citizenship
appeals
21.
The Federal Court has exclusive jurisdiction to hear and determine all
appeals that may be brought under subsection 14(5) of the Citizenship Act.
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Appels en matière de citoyenneté
21. La Cour fédérale a compétence exclusive en matière
d’appels interjetés au titre du paragraphe 14(5) de la Loi sur la
citoyenneté.
|
ARGUMENT
Applicant
[17]
The
Applicant argues that the Citizenship Judge erred in finding that the
Respondent met the residency requirement for citizenship, without a proper
analysis of the evidence and without stating which residency test he applied.
[18]
It
is not clear from the reasons which test of residency the Citizenship Judge
applied. The Applicant argues that this alone makes the Decision unreasonable. The
Citizenship Act does not define “residence” or “resident,” and the
jurisprudence of this Court is split as to the legal test to be applied, with
three different tests emerging: Zhao v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2006 FC 1536 at paras 50-51. These include a test based on
the quality of the applicant’s attachment to Canada (see Re Papadogiorgakis,
[1978] 2 FC 208, 88 DLR (3d) 243 at paras 15-17), a test based on physical
presence in Canada for the requisite number of days (see Re Pourghasemi
(1993), 62 FTR 122; 19 Imm LR (2d) 259), and a third test combining elements of
both of the aforementioned tests, focusing on where the applicant “regularly,
normally or customarily lives” or has “centralized his or her mode of
existence” (see Re Koo, [1993] 1 FC 286, 19 Imm LR (2d) 1 at para 10).
The Applicant argues that while a Citizenship Judge has discretion to apply any
one of the residency tests noted above, they must clearly state which test they
have applied (Cardin v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2011 FC 29 at paras 12, 18 [Cardin]; Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration) v Saad, 2011 FC 1508 at paras 14, 18, 19, 21; Jeizan,
above at para 18), and that the Citizenship Judge failed to do so in this case.
[19]
In
addition, the Applicant argues that a citizenship applicant must provide
sufficient objective evidence to demonstrate that they have satisfied the residency
requirement, irrespective of the test eventually applied by the Citizenship
Judge (Vega v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC
1079 at para 13; Farrokhyar v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2007 FC 697 at para 17; Rizvi v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 1641 at para 21; Abbas v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 145 at paras 8-9, 11), and that
the Citizenship Judge in this case erred in finding that the residency
requirement was met in the absence of such evidence.
[20]
Specifically,
the Applicant argues that the Citizenship Judge made a material factual error
when he found, based on the letter provided by the Bangladesh passport
authorities, that the “applicant was not in possession of [a] second passport
for [the] review period.” On the contrary, the Respondent had two valid
Bangladeshi passports (Z0326827 and R0476041) for 407 days of the Review Period
(30 August 2006 to 12 October 2007), and her residency cannot be properly
assessed in the absence of the second passport. If these 407 days are deducted
from the residency period in addition to the Respondent’s declared absences,
the Applicant says that the Respondent would only have 697 days of residency
during the Review Period, which is far short of the required 1095 days.
[21]
The
Citizenship Judge also erred, the Applicant argues, by relying upon an
unauthenticated and unreferenced record of entry and exit from Bangladesh. There were also inconsistencies in the Respondent’s own evidence relating to
her residency in June and July 2007 that the Citizenship Judge failed to deal
with, and the Respondent’s representations regarding the residency of her two
accompanying children, which showed only one absence from Canada greater than
six months, were inconsistent with the fact that they were being schooled in
Bangladesh.
[22]
Finally,
the Applicant argues that the Citizenship Judge’s reasons lacked sufficient
clarity, precision and intelligibility. While acknowledging that this is no
longer a stand-alone ground of review, the Applicant says the reasons provided
here hinder any assessment of the reasonableness of the Decision: Newfoundland
Nurses, above, at para 14; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Al-Showaiter, 2012 FC 12 at para 21-23 [Al-Showaiter];
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v El-Koussa, 2012 FC 13
at paras 22-24. Specifically, the reasons do not sufficiently explain the
grounds on which the application was approved, or engage in a meaningful
analysis of how the Respondent met the residency requirement under paragraph
5(1)(c) of the Act. As such, the reasons do not allow a reviewing court to
understand why the Citizenship Judge made his Decision, or to determine whether
the conclusion is within the range of reasonable outcomes: Newfoundland
Nurses, above, at para 16.
Respondent
[23]
The
Respondent argues that the Applicant has failed to demonstrate any error in the
Decision that warrants judicial intervention.
[24]
The
Respondent reiterates that the adequacy of reasons is not a stand-alone basis
for quashing a decision (Newfoundland Nurses, above; Hannoush
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 945 at
para 6 [Hannoush]), and argues that the brevity of reasons is not in
itself a sufficient ground to impugn the Decision of the Citizenship Judge.
Rather, the requirement is to provide a sufficient basis for a court sitting in
review to understand why the Decision was made and to assess its
reasonableness: Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v
Lee, 2013 FC 270 at para 37 [Lee]; SRI Homes Inc v Canada, 2012 FCA 208 [SRI Homes].
[25]
Here,
the Citizenship Judge identified the basis for the Decision and the evidence
relied upon when he wrote: “Specifically, ICES confirms declared entries into Canada.” This is similar to Lee, where the reasons were also brief but made it clear
that the decision was based mainly on the ICES report showing entries into
Canada (Lee, above, at paras 34, 38). It is distinguishable from other
cases where appeals were allowed on the basis that no reasons were given (see Hannoush,
above; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Elzubair,
2010 FC 298 [Elzubair]; Salim v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2010 FC 975 at para 23 [Salim]; Al-Showaiter,
above, at para 17).
[26]
In
Lee, above, the Court found that while the ICES report did not in itself
establish residency, it did at least corroborate the Respondent’s statements
and did not cast doubt on her evidence or declarations. The Respondent argues
that the same applies here, as the dates from the ICES report are consistent
with those provided by the Respondent in the documents supporting her
application, and do not cast doubt on any of her evidence or declarations. Furthermore,
the Court in Lee observed that the Citizenship Act does not require
corroboration, and it is up to the original decision-maker to determine the
extent and nature of the evidence required, taking the context into
consideration: Lee, above at para 38. Deference is owed to the
decision-maker’s choices in weighing the evidence, and the fact that the
Citizenship Judge here chose to focus on the ICES report is not a reviewable
error: Khosa, above, at paras 25, 61; Lee, above at para 48.
[27]
The
Respondent says it is now trite law that a Citizenship Judge is not obliged to
expressly identify the test being applied. Rather, if the record shows that the
Applicant has been in Canada for the requisite period of time and there is no
qualitative assessment, it is reasonable to infer that the Citizenship Judge
applied the physical presence or “quantitative” test, which is the most
stringent of the three tests: Hannoush, above, at para 13; Lee,
above, at para 30; SRI Homes, above, at paras 13-15; Elzubair,
above, at para 14; Salim, above, at para 10; Imran v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 756 at para 22. Here, given that
the Citizenship Judge made a clear reference to the ICES report and the Respondent’s
passports and made no assessment of any of the qualitative assessment criteria,
it is more than reasonable to infer that the “quantitative” test was applied.
Moreover, the rationale for the application of one test or another can be
inferred from the facts of the case (Cardin, above, at para 18), and in
this case, the rationale for applying the “quantitative” test is present in the
facts shown in evidence.
[28]
The
Respondent submits that the only factual inconsistency in her evidence
regarding her residency in Canada arose from a typographical error, which
listed her as being in Bangladesh from 14 August 2006 to 21 July 2007, when the
latter date should have read 21 June 2007. This resolves the apparent conflict
with her evidence that she was in the United States from 28 June 2007 to 8 July
2007. She submits that based on all of the evidence provided in support of her
application, and taking the above clarification into account, she spent 1,131
days in Canada during the review period, exceeding the required 1095 days under
the quantitative test.
[29]
As
noted above, the Respondent acknowledges that her children could not have met
the residency requirements, and that it was a mistake to apply for their
citizenship, but she argues that this should not impact her own citizenship
application, as she meets the residency requirement.
[30]
Also
as noted above, the Respondent submits that her reason for holding two
Bangladeshi passports at the same time was that she exhausted the stamp pages
in the first before it expired. She argues that no improper purpose could have
been served by the second passport vis-à-vis her citizenship application, as
she had reported herself to be in Bangladesh for most of the time of the
overlap (i.e. from 14 August 2006 to 21 June 2007), and did not purport to be
in Canada.
[31]
As
such, the Respondent argues that none of the factual errors alleged by the
Applicant were material to the Citizenship Judge’s overall determination that
the Respondent met the residency requirement under paragraph 5(1)(c) of
the Citizenship Act, and the appeal should be denied.
ANALYSIS
[32]
The
inadequacy of reasons is not a stand-alone basis for review in this type of
case (see Newfoundland Nurses, above, at para 22, and Hannoush,
above, at para 6) and the issue is whether the reasons allow the Court to
understand why the Citizenship Judge made the Decision and permit it to
understand whether the conclusion falls within the range of acceptable outcomes
as established in Dunsmuir at para 47. See Lee, above, at para
37.
[33]
The
Respondent places a heavy reliance on Lee, above, where the decision of
the citizenship judge relied mainly on the ICES report. As Justice Strickland
pointed out in Lee at paras 34 and 38:
34 In his reasons, the Citizenship Judge stated
that "after very careful consideration of all of the documentary evidence
along with the verbal evidence presented at the hearing", he was
"satisfied that [the] applicant, on the balance of probabilities, meets
the requirements of 5(1)(c)" of the Citizenship Act. The
Citizenship Judge also stated that he based his decision "mostly on the
strength of the ICES report that shows no entries into Canada during [the] review period." Taken together, the extent and nature of this evidence
satisfied him that the Respondent met the residency requirements.
[…]
38 Here, the ICES report appears to have formed
the main basis for the Decision. The Applicant asserts that in and of itself
the ICES report does not establish the Respondent's residency during the
relevant four-year period. Although this may be correct, the report at least
corroborates the Respondent's statement that she has not left Canada during the relevant period. Further, it does not cast doubt on any of her evidence
or declarations (Tanveer, above, at para 11). As this Court stated
in El Bousserghini, above, at para 19, the Citizenship Act
"does not require corroboration. It is the responsibility of the original
decision-maker, taking the context into consideration, to determine the extent
and nature of the evidence required".
[34]
The
Respondent acknowledges that her children could not have met the residency
requirement for their citizenship applications, but she says that their
ineligibility should not impact her own citizenship application. I agree, and I
do not think this was a consideration in the Decision. The Citizenship Judge
appears to have accepted that the fact of the children being in Bangladesh attending an “Ivy League” school was no reason to question the Respondent’s period of
residence in Canada.
[35]
In
my view, the only problematic aspect of the reasons is the reference to the
Bangladeshi letter which, contrary to the reasons, reveals that the Respondent
was in possession of a second passport that does overlap with part of the Review
Period.
[36]
The
Respondent has explained to the Court as part of this review application that
the reason she held two passports between August 30, 2006 and October 12, 2007
was that her passport (R0476041) was valid until October 12, 2007, but she had
exhausted the stamp pages prior to the expiry date and so applied for and
obtained a new passport (Z0326827). In other words she concedes that she had
two “valid” passports.
[37]
She
also says that the second passport is not material because she reported herself
that she was in Bangladesh for most of the time covered by the second passport (specifically
from August 14, 2006 to June 21, 2007) and she did not purport to be in
Canada.
[38]
However,
we do not know how much of the time covered by the second passport the
Respondent spent in Bangladesh, or elsewhere outside of Canada. If it was the whole period covered, this would mean an additional 100 days of
absence. When this is subtracted from the 1,131 days the Respondent says
she spent in Canada, this results in 1,031 days of residency within the
applicable period, and this falls below the 1,095 quantitative threshold which
she says the Citizenship Judge applied in this case.
[39]
If
the Respondent says that she spent most of the overlap period in Bangladesh, then she has not demonstrated to the Court that she meets the 1,095 day
residency requirement.
[40]
The
Respondent was required to submit copies of all pages of all passports covering
the period from August 30, 2006 to the date of the request. The requirement is
clear and unequivocal. The Respondent was required to provide a “letter from
the proper authorities in Bangladesh indicating all passports ever issued to
you with issue and expiry dates.” The letter from the Bangladesh Department of
Immigration and Passports revealed that two passports had been issued for the
relevant period:
R0476041 - 13
October 2002 – 12 October 2007
Z0326827 - 10
April 2006 – 12 October 2012
[41]
The
Relevant Period for her citizenship application was August 30, 2006 to August
30, 2010. This means that from August 30, 2006 to October 12, 2007 the Respondent
had two passports that were relevant to the Decision.
[42]
In
oral argument before me, Respondent’s counsel said that the passport overlap of
three months does not relate to the Review Period, the Citizenship Judge was
fully aware that there were two passports, and the second passport was not
material. These assertions are not tenable. The overlap does relate to the Review
Period. Clearly, then, the Citizenship Judge was wrong when he said that:
As per letter from Bangladesh authority, it appears
that applicant was not in possession of second passport for review period.
[43]
The
Respondent attempts to overcome this problem by pointing out that the October
20, 2012 letter from the Bangladesh Department of Immigration and Passports
says that the passports listed have been issued “from this office as per govt.
rules and regulation.” This means, says the Respondent, that the second
passport must have been issued because the first passport was “exhausted.” I do
not think this addresses the mistake.
[44]
The
problem is how to make sense of the Citizenship Judge’s words that the letter
from the Bangladesh authority reveals that the Respondent was not in possession
of a second passport for the Review Period (clearly wrong), and whether or not
this mistake is material to the Decision.
[45]
As
per instructions, the Respondent was obliged to provide copies of all pages
from relevant passports. See Applicant’s Record at page 172. The Respondent
only provided copies from passport No. Z0326827. The stamps in this passport
and the report from the ICES that the Respondent was required to request and
submit reveal the following absences from Canada:
August
30, 2006 – June 21, 2007
|
Bangladesh
|
|
296
days
|
June
28, 2007 – July 7, 2007
|
United
States
|
|
10
days
|
February
22, 2008 – March 6, 2008
|
Bangladesh
|
|
14
days
|
August
16, 2009 – August 27, 2009
|
Bangladesh
|
|
12
days
|
May
30, 2010 – June 10, 2010
|
Bangladesh
|
|
12
days
|
[46]
Copies
of the second passport, No. R0476041, were not provided to the Citizenship
Judge by the Respondent and are not part of the record before me. We simply do
not know what, if anything, this passport shows regarding the Respondent’s
presence in or absence from Canada during the review period.
[47]
Had
the Citizenship Judge been aware of both passports, it is not possible to tell
what his Decision would have been. Passports are clearly important for
calculating the residence requirement, and the Citizenship Judge obviously
concluded that there was only one passport of relevance.
[48]
The
question turns on the Respondent’s whereabouts during two periods of time: June
22, 2007 to June 27, 2007 (6 days); and July 9, 2007 to October 12, 2007 (95
days). The reason this is so can be understood from the chart below:
Dates
|
Location
|
Days in Canada
|
Days Outside Canada
|
Days When
Location Uncertain
|
Notes
|
August
30, 2006 – June 21, 2007
|
Bangladesh
|
|
296
|
|
Respondent
declared this absence and ICES confirms re-entry on June 22, 2007.
|
June
22, 2007 – June 27, 2007
|
Unknown
|
|
|
6
|
This
is during the period that Respondent had two valid passports.
|
June
28, 2007 – July 7, 2007
|
United
States
|
|
10
|
|
Respondent
declared this absence and ICES confirms re-entry on July 8, 2007.
|
July
8, 2007 – July 9, 2007
|
Canada
|
1
|
|
|
ICES
confirms Respondent entered Canada from the United States on July 8, 2007,
and the record shows she attended a doctor’s appointment on July 9, 2007.
|
July
10, 2007 – October 12, 2007
|
Unknown
|
|
|
94
|
This
is during the period that Respondent had two valid passports.
|
October
13, 2007 – February 21, 2008
|
Canada
|
132
|
|
|
Respondent
had only one valid passport during this period. The latest she could have
re-entered Canada on the previous passport was October 12, 2007.
|
February
22, 2008 – March 6, 2008
|
Bangladesh
|
|
14
|
|
Respondent
declared this absence and ICES shows re-entry on March 7, 2008.
|
March
7, 2008 – August 15, 2009
|
Canada
|
527
|
|
|
Respondent
had only one valid passport, which shows no departures or re-entry during
this period.
|
August
16, 2009 – August 27, 2009
|
Bangladesh
|
|
12
|
|
Respondent
declared this absence and ICES shows re-entry on August 28, 2009.
|
August
28, 2009 – May 29, 2010
|
Canada
|
275
|
|
|
Respondent
had only one valid passport, which shows no departures or re-entry during
this period.
|
May
30, 2010 – June 10, 2010
|
Bangladesh
|
|
12
|
|
Respondent
declared this absence and ICES shows re-entry on June 11, 2010.
|
June
11, 2010 – August 30, 2010
|
Canada
|
81
|
|
|
Respondent
had only one valid passport, which shows no departures or re-entry during
this period.
|
|
|
1,016
|
344
|
100
|
Total
= 1460
|
[49]
While
the parties’ post-hearing submissions continue to discuss earlier discrepancies
and inaccuracies (apparently in an effort to impugn and defend credibility,
respectively), I do not think there is any serious dispute at this stage about
the dates listed above. The only dispute is about what inferences can and
should be drawn from the evidence about the Respondent’s whereabouts on the
approximately 100 days when she claims she was in Canada, but had access to a
second valid passport that was not placed in evidence before the Citizenship
Judge.
[50]
As
the chart above makes apparent, if the additional 100 days are added to the
days of residency, the total would be 1,116, exceeding the minimum requirement
of 1095. If these 100 days are added to the days of absences, the Respondent
falls short of meeting the numerical test for residency.
[51]
The
Applicant argues that the Respondent’s whereabouts during these 100 days (in
their view, 102 days) cannot be known because only one of the two passports was
in evidence before the Citizenship Judge. The Respondent says that it is
unreasonable speculation to say that she could have been out of the country
during these days, since there is no evidence to that effect. In my view, it
was the Respondent’s responsibility to place evidence before the Citizenship
Judge showing that she met the test for residency (Vega at para 13; Farrokhyar
at para 17; Rizvi at para 21; Abbas at paras 8-9, all above).
Based on the analysis that follows, I do not think she discharged that burden.
[52]
My
review of the record suggests the following:
a. Passport
R0476041 was valid from October 13, 2002 to October 12, 2007. The portion of
the Review Period during which this passport was valid was August 30, 2006 to
October 12, 2007. Copies of the pages of this passport were not provided to the
Citizenship Judge, and are therefore not part of the CTR or the record before me.
We simply do not know what if anything this passport shows in terms of the
Respondent’s presence or absence from the country during the disputed periods
of time. I will call this passport #1, because it was chronologically the first
to be issued;
b. Copies
of the pages in passport ZO326827 were provided to the Citizenship Judge. This
passport was valid throughout the Review Period (it was valid from April 10,
2006 to October 12, 2012). I will call this passport #2, because it was
chronologically the second to be issued;
c. The
Respondent argues that, according to the laws and regulations of Bangladesh, a
new passport can only be issued if the previous passport is lost, full or
expired, and the letter from the Bangladeshi Department of Immigration and
Passports states that the listed passports were issued as per government rules
and regulations (see copy in Respondent’s Record at page 31). Thus, there is no
way she would have been issued passport #2 if passport #1 was still in a usable
state. However, the Applicant points out that the letter does not state that a
new passport can only be issued if the previous one is lost, full or expired,
and that there is no evidence before me about the Bangladeshi government’s
rules and regulations for issuing passports. I agree with the Applicant. The
Respondent would need to prove this as a matter of foreign law (i.e. as a
matter of fact), and this has not been done. The Court cannot take judicial
notice of the laws and regulations of Bangladesh;
d. The
Respondent was directed (see page 172 of Applicant’s Record) to provide copies
of all passports covering the Review Period. The letter of November 15, 2011
from V. Huang, Citizenship Officer to the Respondent states in relevant part
[all emphasis in original]:
…After further review of your application and
accompanying documentation, we require a photocopy of the
following before a decision can be rendered on your application…
Please ensure that you provide CLEAR
and LEGIBLE photocopies.
[…]
2. All pages, including blank pages, of all
passports and/or travel documents (valid, expired and cancelled passports)
covering the period from 2006 to PRESENT. This request applies to yourself and
your children.
The Respondent argued in post-hearing
submissions that she disclosed the existence of both relevant passports, since
they were listed in the letter from the government of Bangladesh. Counsel acknowledged that the Respondent “did not provide a copy of [passport #1]” to
the Citizenship Judge, and stated that she “did so for a good reason: she did
not utilize said passport during the review period, because it had become full
prior to August 30, 2006 and was therefore unusable for travelling purposes.”
I do not agree that the Respondent had a good reason for not providing copies
of passport #1 to the Citizenship Judge. The instructions quoted above seem
clear and unequivocal, and the Respondent failed to comply with them. I agree
with the Applicant that there is no evidence on the record that the Respondent
“did not utilize said passport during the review period, because it had become
full prior to August 30, 2006 and was thus unusable for travelling purposes.”
Passport #1 may very well reveal exactly what the Respondent claims, but the
Citizenship Judge could not have known this, nor can the Court, because it was
not and is not in evidence.
e. The
Applicant states that the ICES only records entries involving air travel, while
passports track all entries and exits from Canada (Applicant’s Post-Hearing
Reply Submissions at para 20). This
is not the kind of easily verifiable information of which I can take judicial
notice (i.e. a question on which easily accessible information of undisputed
reliability can be found). I do not have direct evidence on these points, but
it may be possible to draw certain inferences from the evidence I do have;
f. With
respect to the latter statement (that passports track all entries and exits
from Canada), the record seems to indicate that Canada does not track exits (or
at least does not provide exit stamps in passports), so this claim would be
reliant on the fact that other countries will always stamp passports on entry
(see Applicant’s Record at 48, which summarizes the stamps in the passport that
the Respondent did provide: for many countries we see both entry and exit
stamps, but for Canada, the “exit” column is always blank);
g. With
respect to the former statement (that the ICES only captures air travel), the Respondent
does not appear to dispute this. Rather, her argument is that it is irrational
to argue that the Respondent could have avoided entries in the ICES system for
the 100 days in dispute by using a different passport, when in fact she could
have done so at any time during the four year Review Period by making land
crossings to and from the U.S. and flying from there. As such, the Respondent
argues that it is “declared” absences and not “possible” absences that must
form the basis of citizenship decisions. I think this argument misses the
point. The Applicant’s argument is not simply that the undisclosed passport
(passport #1) could have enabled the Respondent to avoid further entries under
passport #2 in the ICES system, but rather that the passports themselves
provide important evidence of entry and exit that the Respondent was required
to submit;
h. The
ICES system seems to capture some land crossings. The request form provided to
the Respondent with the November 15, 2011 letter from CIC, to enable her to
request the ICES records from CBSA, includes the following pre-checked selections
(Applicant’s Record at page
174):
I would like my ICES Traveller History for the
period 2006 to PRESENT.
I would like my ICES Traveller History Records to be
released in their entirety.
If you have Land Border crossings to/from the United
States, include additional proof of return AND departure.
All
of the entries listed for the Respondent were by air (see Applicant’s Record at
page 37);
i. CBSA’s
response, dated March 13, 2012 (see Applicant’s Record at 35) lists only the
disclosed passport Z0326827 (passport #2) and not passport #1 as a basis for
the records search. The response reads in relevant part:
This letter is in response to your request under the
Privacy Act. Your request reads:
Traveller’s history report
including land border crossings from 2006 to present pertaining to RAHMAN,
Yasmin; DOB: Feb. 06-1965; FOSS ID: 5631-4623; Passport: ZO326827…
The processing of your request is now complete.
Please note that the records are being released in their entirety.
Please note that when travelling by coach, passenger
travel documents are not always scanned in the Canada Border Services Agency’s
Integrated Customs Enforcement System.
Without knowing more about this system
(and I appear to have no evidence in this regard), it seems impossible to know
whether, based on the other fields included (i.e. date of birth, FOSS ID), this
report would have also picked up entries and exits for which passport #1 was
used.
[53]
Considering
all of the evidence, I do not think there is sufficient information to say that
the Respondent was in Canada during the 100 days in dispute, or that she was
not in Canada. What is clear is that: a) the burden of proof was the
Respondent’s to meet; and b) she was instructed to submit copies of “all
passports and/or travel documents (valid, expired and cancelled passports)”
covering the Review Period, and failed to do so. She did not argue that this
passport was lost or somehow inaccessible to her, but simply that she had a
“good reason” for not providing it. In these circumstances, I think it is
appropriate to find that the Respondent has not met the numerical test of
residency.
[54]
In
my view, Lee, above, cited by the Respondent, is distinguishable. In
that case, the Court found that the fact that the Citizenship Judge relied
mainly on the ICES, and that the latter did not in and of itself establish the
Respondent’s residency during the relevant four-year period, was not a
sufficient reason to overturn the decision (see Lee at para 38). The
Court quoted Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v El
Bousserghini, 2012 FC 88 at para 19 for the proposition that the
Citizenship Act “does not require corroboration. It is the responsibility of
the original decision-maker, taking the context into consideration, to
determine the extent and nature of the evidence required.” Had the Citizenship
Judge properly considered the evidence in this case and decided that it was
sufficient to render a positive decision, I would agree that the Court should
not intervene. However, what is at issue here is an error in considering the
evidence. It is not the Court’s role to say what conclusion the Citizenship
Judge would have reached had he or she properly considered the evidence.
[55]
In
my view, the Citizenship Judge made an error in assessing the evidence, and that
error was material to the Decision. It cannot be said that the outcome would
not have been different if the error had not been made, because the Respondent
has not shown that she met the numerical test of residency in order to qualify
for citizenship.
[56]
It
is not possible to say what the result would have been had the Citizenship
Judge been aware of the second passport and its contents. In my view, then, the
Decision lacks transparency and intelligibility and must be returned for
reconsideration.
[57]
The
Applicant also argues that it is not clear from the reasons which residency
test the Citizenship Judge applied. As the Respondent points out, however,
Justice Harrington found in Hannoush, above, at para 13, that if the
record shows that the physical presence requirement of 1,095 has been met and
the citizenship judge did not carry out a qualitative analysis, the inference
can be made that the physical presence test was applied:
13 However, basing myself on the decision of
the Supreme Court in Newfoundland Nurses, above, and the very recent
decision of the Federal Court of Appeal in SRI Homes, above, if the record
shows that the applicant claims to have been present here at least 1,095 days,
and no analysis has been done along the lines of the applicant's heart being
here although his body was elsewhere, it is reasonable to infer that the
physical presence test, the most stringent one, was applied. It has been held
on a number of occasions that once it is established that an applicant has been
here for 1,095 days, it is not necessary to consider the other tests (Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Elzubair, 2010 FC 298, [2010]
F.C.J. No. 330; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration v. Salim,
2010 FC 975, [2010] F.C.J. No. 1219 (QL) and Imran v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 756).
[58]
As
Justice Harrington also pointed out in Imran, above, at para 22:
22 In Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Salim, 2010 FC 975, [2010] FCJ No 1219 (QL), I agreed with
Mr. Justice Mainville's decision in Takla adding, as did Mr. Justice
Zinn in Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Elzubair,
2010 FC 298, [2010] FCJ No 330 (QL), that if the applicant had been physically
present for at least 1,095 days during the relevant period, the residency test
had been established, without the need for further inquiry.
[59]
In
the present case, the Citizenship Judge does not indicate how the Respondent
established a minimum of 1,095 days of physical residence in Canada. As set out above, my own review of the record suggests that there is insufficient evidence
to support a minimum of 1,095 days. This being the case, the Respondent cannot
rely upon Hannonsh, above, and Imran, above. It is not clear upon
which basis the Citizenship Judge concluded that residency had been
established. Once again, the Decision lacks transparency and intelligibility on
this issue.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT’S JUDGMENT is that the application is allowed. The
Decision is quashed and the matter is returned for reconsideration by a
different citizenship judge.
"James
Russell"