Date:
20130410
Docket:
IMM-8565-12
Citation:
2013 FC 360
Ottawa, Ontario,
April 10, 2013
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Scott
BETWEEN:
|
RYANN EDWARD CARAAN
|
|
|
Applicant
|
and
|
|
THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY
AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
|
|
|
Respondent
|
|
|
|
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I. Introduction
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of a decision rendered by the Immigration
Appeal Division [IAD] of the Immigration Refugee Board dated July 13, 2012,
finding that the Stay Order granted by the IAD on April 23, 2009 (the “Stay
Order”) to Mr. Ryann Edward Caraan (the “Applicant”) was cancelled and
that the Applicant’s appeal from his removal order was terminated, by operation
of the law, pursuant to subsection 68(4) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA].
[2]
For
the reasons that follow this application is dismissed.
II. The facts
[3]
The
Applicant is a citizen of the Philippines. He obtained permanent residence in Canada on May 29, 2003.
[4]
On
September 1, 2006, the Applicant was convicted of several offences relating to
forged documents, theft under, possession of property obtained by crime and
failure to attend court which took place in incidents in June, July and August
2006. The Applicant received a suspended sentence for these convictions with
various terms and conditions.
[5]
On
May 1, 2007, the Applicant was charged with uttering a forged document contrary
to section 368 of the Criminal Code, RSC 1985, c C-46 [Criminal Code].
This offence related to an allegation that on September 8, 2006, the Applicant
forged a cheque in the amount of $946.86. On October 8, 2008, a warrant for the
Applicant’s arrest was issued by a Justice of the Peace.
[6]
On
November 23, 2006, the Applicant was arrested and charged with breach of
probation and theft under. He was subsequently convicted of theft and the
breach of probation charge was stayed.
[7]
On
April 1, 2008, a Canada Border Services Agency [CBSA] enforcement Officer
prepared a report pursuant to subsection 44(1) of the IRPA for
inadmissibility based on serious criminality under paragraph 36(1)(a) of
the IRPA for one of the convictions dated September 6, 2006 of uttering
a forged document contrary to section 368 of the Criminal Code. The
Officer recommended that the Applicant be issued a warning and that the matter
not be referred to an admissibility hearing.
[8]
On
May 13, 2008, a Minister’s delegate reviewed the subsection 44(1) report and
determined that the allegation of serious criminality be referred to the Immigration
Division [ID] for an admissibility hearing. The Minister’s delegate noted that
the Applicant had 14 convictions as well as an outstanding criminal charge. Due
to the number of charges for which the Applicant received a 2 year suspended
sentence, the Minister’s delegate did not concur with the recommendation of a
warning letter.
[9]
On
November 7, 2008, an admissibility hearing was held before the ID. The ID
determined that the Applicant was inadmissible to Canada due to serious
criminality and issued a Deportation order (the “Deportation order”). The
Applicant was present and represented by an unpaid family friend (who is
neither a lawyer or authorized legal consultant). During the hearing, the
Applicant confirmed that he received the Minister’s disclosure for the
admissibility hearing and raised a concern regarding the Minister’s delegate’s
refusal to accept the Officer’s recommendation in the subsection 44(1) report.
[10]
The
Applicant appealed the Deportation order to the IAD. On January 29, 2009, the Minister’s
representative submitted a disclosure package of information to the Applicant,
his representative and to the IAD which included the subsection 44(1) report
and the Minister’s delegate’s referral and reasons for referral to an
admissibility hearing.
[11]
On
April 23, 2009, counsel for the Minister and the Applicant made joint
recommendations to the IAD to stay the deportation for a period of 24 months
and signed a Summary of Agreement pursuant to an Alternative Dispute Resolution
[ADR]) process (the “Summary”). In the Summary, the Minister’s representative
acknowledged that there were sufficient humanitarian and compassionate
considerations [H&C] to warrant special relief. The Summary also noted that
the Applicant had the support of his family and had taken positive and
meaningful measures to rehabilitate himself and become established in Canada. On the basis of the Agreement, the IAD ordered the stay of the Deportation order,
and specified that it would reconsider the case in the first week of April 2011
or at such other date it determined.
[12]
In
late 2010, the Applicant visited the Winnipeg Police Safety Building for a “Background Check” necessary for his school and employment search. He was there
advised that a warrant for his arrest was outstanding since 2008, respecting a
charge brought in May 2007 “Uttering” offence which he allegedly committed on
September 8, 2006.
[13]
On
December 2, 2010, the Applicant, who was represented by legal counsel, pleaded
guilty to the charge brought in May 2007 and received a sentence of one day’s
incarceration, 18 months probation and restitution.
[14]
On
November 3, 2011, the Minister’s representative made an application to the IAD
to cancel the Stay Order pursuant to subsection 68(4) of the IRPA
because the Applicant had been convicted of an offence on December 2, 2010, for
uttering a forged document contrary to section 368 of the Criminal Code.
III. Impugned
decision
[15]
On
July 13, 2012, the IAD cancelled the stay of the Deportation order and the
appeal was terminated by operation of the law under subsection 68(4) of the IRPA.
In its Reasons, the IAD noted that the conditions for the automatic application
of subsection 68(4) were met, namely: 1) the Applicant was convicted of a crime
referred to in subsection 36(1) of the IRPA and; 2) the conviction was
entered during the period of the stay of the Deportation order.
[16]
Citing
the decisions in Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Malarski,
2006 FC 1007 [Malarski] and Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Bui, 2012 FC 457 [Bui], the IAD noted that
“subsection 68(4) applied to cancel a stay and terminate an appeal even where
the acts giving rise to the convictions occurred prior to the stay being
issued” (IAD Reasons, para 9).
[17]
The
IAD noted that, unlike in Malarski, above, there was no condition
included in the IAD’s stay excluding the application of subsection 68(4) for
charges based on acts occurring before it. The IAD remarked that this was “not
surprising given that there was not awareness of the outstanding charge at the
time of the [initial IAD] appeal” (IAD Reasons, para 10).
IV. Legislation
[18]
Section
68 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA]
provides as follows:
Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27
|
Loi
sur l'immigration et la protection des réfugiés, LC 2001, c 27
|
Removal
order stayed
|
Sursis
|
68.
(1) To stay a removal order, the Immigration Appeal Division must be
satisfied, taking into account the best interests of a child directly
affected by the decision, that sufficient humanitarian and compassionate
considerations warrant special relief in light of all the circumstances of
the case.
|
68.
(1) Il est sursis à la mesure de renvoi sur preuve qu’il y a — compte tenu de
l’intérêt supérieur de l’enfant directement touché — des motifs d’ordre
humanitaire justifiant, vu les autres circonstances de l’affaire, la prise de
mesures spéciales.
|
Effect
|
Effet
|
(2)
Where the Immigration Appeal Division stays the removal order
|
(2)
La section impose les conditions prévues par règlement et celles qu’elle
estime indiquées, celles imposées par la Section de l’immigration étant alors
annulées; les conditions non réglementaires peuvent être modifiées ou levées;
le sursis est révocable d’office ou sur demande.
|
(a) it shall impose any
condition that is prescribed and may impose any condition that it considers
necessary;
|
|
(b) all conditions
imposed by the Immigration Division are cancelled;
|
|
(c) it may vary or
cancel any non-prescribed condition imposed under paragraph (a); and
|
|
(d) it may cancel the
stay, on application or on its own initiative.
|
|
Reconsideration
|
Suivi
|
(3)
If the Immigration Appeal Division has stayed a removal order, it may at any
time, on application or on its own initiative, reconsider the appeal under
this Division.
|
(3)
Par la suite, l’appel peut, sur demande ou d’office, être repris et il en est
disposé au titre de la présente section.
|
Termination
and cancellation
|
Classement
et annulation
|
(4)
If the Immigration Appeal Division has stayed a removal order against a
permanent resident or a foreign national who was found inadmissible on
grounds of serious criminality or criminality, and they are convicted of
another offence referred to in subsection 36(1), the stay is cancelled by operation
of law and the appeal is terminated.
|
(4)
Le sursis de la mesure de renvoi pour interdiction de territoire pour grande
criminalité ou criminalité est révoqué de plein droit si le résident
permanent ou l’étranger est reconnu coupable d’une autre infraction
mentionnée au paragraphe 36(1), l’appel étant dès lors classé.
|
V. Issues
and standard of review
A. Issues
1.
Did the IAD err in not finding the
application of subsection 68(4) of the IRPA constituted an abuse of process
and/or a breach of the duty of fairness in the circumstances?
2.
Did the IAD err in not finding an
implied condition in the Stay Order excluding the application of subsection
68(4) of the IRPA to the conviction arising from the offence committed on
September 8, 2006?
3.
Did the IAD err in its application of
the case law on the interpretation of subsection 68(4) of the IRPA?
B. Standard
of review
[19]
No
deference is due on the first issue. The Court must verify whether the
requirements of procedural fairness have been followed (see Lawal v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 861 at para 15). Regarding
the Applicant’s allegation that the Minister’s application to cancel the Stay
Order pursuant to subsection 68(4) constitutes an abuse of process, the
appropriate standard of review is correctness (see Blake v Canada (Minister
of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2008 FC 572, [2009] 1 FCR
179; and Smith v Canada (Chief of Defence Staff), 2010 FC 321, [2010]
FCJ No 371).
[20]
Whether
the IAD erred in not finding an implied condition in the Stay Order is a
question related to its appreciation of the facts and subject to review on the
standard of reasonableness (see Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9
(CanLII), [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 at para 53 [Dunsmuir]).
[21]
The
IAD’s application of the case law on subsection 68(4) to the facts of this case
is a question of mixed fact and law and should be reviewed on a standard of
reasonableness (Dunsmuir, cited above, at para 53).
VI. Parties’
submissions
A. Applicant’s
submissions
[22]
The
Applicant submits that if the Minister intended that a future conviction would
trigger the application of subsection 68(4) and terminate the ADR Stay Order,
then accordingly he had a duty to clearly disclose this underlying intention to
the Applicant. He additionally claims that the Board Member, in the course of
the joint recommendation for the Stay Order, also had a duty to inform the
Applicant accordingly. The Applicant finally asserts that the failure to do so
constitutes an abuse of process and a breach of the duty of fairness to which
he is entitled.
[23]
The
Applicant also states that the following factors support his allegation of an
abuse of process and/or a breach of the duty of fairness by the Minister: 1)
the context of the ADR stay; 2) the Applicant’s effective lack of legal
representation; 3) the ambiguity of subsection 68(4); and 4) the fact that had
he known the Minister’s intention, he could have foregone the Stay Order at the
time and resolved the outstanding charge before proceeding further with his appeal.
[24]
The
Applicant submits that the context of the ADR stay led him to believe that in
order to remain in Canada, his only obligation was to refrain from committing
any further criminal offences. The Minister signed the Stay Order because it
was satisfied that: 1) the Applicant provided credible information on his
criminal past and on his efforts at rehabilitation; 2) the Applicant had made
important changes in his personal life including disassociating with previous
associates; 3) the Applicant had taken positive and meaningful measures towards
establishing himself in Canada such as finding employment and gaining the
support of his family; and 4) there existed sufficient H&C considerations
to warrant the Stay Order.
[25]
The
Applicant argues that the Minister committed an abuse of process by supporting
the stay on grounds that the Applicant had improved his life but then reversing
that decision and asking to have it cancelled for acts committed prior to those
improvements.
[26]
The
Applicant posits that even though the Summary Agreement he signed clearly
indicated that his stay would be cancelled by operation of law under subsection
68(4) if he was convicted of another offence referred to subsection 36(1) of
the IRPA, the duty of fairness required the Minister to inform him on
the implications of these provisions of the IRPA to his case. The
Applicant was not represented by legal counsel and could not have reasonably
been expected to understand that a conviction for the offence he committed on
September 8, 2006 would automatically cancel his stay and terminate his appeal.
The Applicant insists that this is all the more true in light of the current
debate over the correct interpretation of the phrase “convicted of another
offence” in subsection 68(4); a question that was complex enough to have been
certified by Justice Martineau in Bui, above.
[27]
The
Applicant also claims that had he fully grasped the meaning of subsection
68(4), he would have asked for an adjournment of his appeal and dealt with his
outstanding charge first. He alleges to have effectively lost his chance to an
appeal (cf subsection 64(2) of the IRPA) due to the Minister’s breach of
the duty of fairness.
[28]
If
the Minister did not want, for a conviction on the Applicant’s outstanding
charge, to cancel the stay through subsection 68(4), then the Applicant
contends that he must have intended an implied exception be included in the
terms of the ADR Stay Order. The implied exception would be similar to the
explicit one that was included by the Minister in Malarski. In that
case, the Minister included an express term in the Stay Order which specified
that the condition that Malarski “not commit any criminal offences” would not
be broken by a conviction on certain outstanding charges. The Court held that
the express exception was sufficient to prevent the operation of subsection
68(4) from cancelling the stay.
[29]
The
Applicant submits that “the underlying rationale in Malarski was that the
Minister’s intentions in consenting to stay orders should be binding and not
subsequently reversed by strict operation of law” (Applicant’s Memorandum, para
17). He also contends that the same “rationale is applicable to the facts of
this case and that the Minister’s conduct in the ADR proceedings is consistent
with there being no intention that a subsequent conviction for the September 8,
2006 offence altering the Minister’s consent to the stay order” (Applicant’s
Memorandum, para 17).
[30]
According
to the Applicant, the IAD’s failure to recognize this implied exclusion in the stay
constitutes both an error of law and fact. The error can be partially
attributed to the IAD’s incorrect appreciation of the facts when it stated that
the Minister did not know about the Applicant’s outstanding charge at the time.
[31]
Alternatively,
the Applicant submits that the Minister’s ADR disclosure of the outstanding
charge together with its recommendation to resolve the matter by means of a
stay order created a legitimate and reasonable expectation for the Applicant
“that his subsequent conviction for an “old” offence had no bearing on his Stay
Order or appeal from deportation” (Applicant’s Memorandum, para 17).
[32]
The
Applicant’s final argument addresses the IAD’s determination that Federal Court
case law bound it to hold the Applicant’s conviction for the outstanding
offence activated subsection 68(4) and cancelled his Stay Order. The Applicant
claims that this finding by the IAD constitutes an error in law. The IAD
incorrectly held that the decision in Malarski, above, stands for the
principle that subsection 68(4) finds application when there is a post-stay
conviction for a pre-stay charge.
[33]
As
for the IAD’s reliance on Bui, above, the Applicant concedes that
Justice Martineau did determine that subsection 68(4) was triggered when there
is a post-stay conviction for a pre-stay charge but notes that a question was
certified.
[34]
The
Applicant also argues that another court might reasonably disagree with several
of the key reasons offered in Bui, above, to justify its interpretation
and find, inter alia, that:
1)
contrary
to the reason provided at paragraph 46 of Bui, subsection 68(4) does
serve a practical purpose even when limited to offences committed after the
stay, namely, “the mandatory cancellation of a stay and termination of appeal
when a person under stay subsequently commits a subsection 36(1) offence,
rather than leaving it [to] the discretion of the Appeal Division in
reconsideration, as is the case when the person commits a non-subsection 36(1)
offence” (Applicant’s Memorandum, para 20(iii)); and
2)
“where
a strict interpretation of the literal language in ss. 68(4) leads to a
consequence that serves no legitimate criminal purpose and no legitimate
immigration enforcement purpose of ensuring safety and security of the
residents in Canada […] an alternate interpretation of the language [of the
subsection is preferable]” (Applicant’s Memorandum, para 20(iii)).
[35]
It
was finally submitted by the Applicant that the facts in Bui, above,
were distinct from those in the case at hand on several important facts,
namely: 1) there is no indication that Mr. Bui was not represented by legal
counsel; 2) the Stay Order was not issued by the IAD in circumstances of a
Minister’s recommendation in ADR but after hearing, Mr. Bui’s testimony in the
Appeal proceedings; and 3) the Minister in Bui, above, did not have
knowledge of the outstanding offence and charges at the time of the Stay Order.
B. Respondent’s
submissions
[36]
The
Respondent submits that there was no abuse of process or breach of procedural
fairness in the case at hand because the Applicant was made aware of the
outstanding criminal charge against him in both the admissibility hearing and
the IAD appeal. The Summary Agreement executed by the Applicant clearly
indicates at paragraph 5 that his stay will be cancelled and appeal terminated
pursuant to subsection 68(4) if he is convicted of another offence referred to
in subsection 36(1).
[37]
The
Respondent insists that the Applicant’s failure to deal with his outstanding
criminal charge before the IAD’s ADR proceedings cannot be imputed on the
Minister and that this was his responsibility. The Applicant’s excuse that he
was represented by a family friend and could, therefore, not have known that
his post-stay conviction for a pre-stay charge would cancel the stay is invalid.
The Respondent maintains the case law is clear that a party must suffer the
consequences of his counsel.
[38]
On
the implied exclusion condition, the Respondent notes that the IAD considered
the argument and found that there were no conditions (implied or express) in
the Stay Order. Regardless of whether or not there were any exclusion
conditions, the Respondent maintains that the Minister is not permitted to
exclude the application of subsection 68(4) through conditions in a stay order.
The Respondent argues that the situation in Malarski, above, is
distinguishable from the case at bar in that Malarski involved the
application of section 197 of the IRPA. Section 197 provides that “if an
appellant who has been granted a stay under the former Act breaches a condition
of the stay, the appellant shall be subject to the provisions of section 64 and
subsection 68(4) of this Act”. The Applicant submits that under the IRPA,
a breach of a condition of a stay order does not trigger subsection 68(4) but
may lead to the application of subsection 68(2). The only event that activates
subsection 68(4) is a post-stay conviction under subsection 36(1).
VII. Analysis
A. Abuse
of process/breach of the duty of procedural fairness
[39]
The
Applicant submits that if the Minister intended that a post-stay conviction on
the pre-stay charge would trigger subsection 68(4) and cancel the ADR Stay
Order then this constitutes an abuse of process on its part and/or a breach of
the duty of fairness. More specifically, it was an abuse of process and breach
of procedural fairness for the Minister to have encouraged the Applicant to
enter into the Stay Order without first resolving a known outstanding charge.
[40]
The
case law is clear that establishing an abuse of process “requires overwhelming
evidence that the proceedings under scrutiny are unfair to the point that they
are contrary to the interest of justice” (R. v Power, [1994] 1 S.C.R. 601
at para 17 [Power]). More specifically, there must be “conspicuous
evidence of improper motives or of bad faith or of an act so wrong that it
violates the conscience of the community, such that it would genuinely be
unfair and indecent to proceed” (Power, above, at para 17). Establishing
an abuse of process in this case, therefore, requires overwhelming evidence
that the Minister had improper motives or was acting in bad faith. The Court
does not find that the Applicant adduced sufficient evidence to establish an
abuse of process by the Minister. The Applicant offers but circumstantial
evidence that the Minister intended to mislead the Applicant into entering into
the stay knowing that it would be cancelled by operation of law if the
Applicant was convicted of his pre-stay charge.
[41]
While
the Minister may have known that subsection 68(4) would be triggered if the
Applicant was subsequently convicted of his outstanding charge, the Applicant
was clearly made aware of this fact at paragraph 5 of the Summary Agreement.
Neither the Minister nor the ADR Member were the Applicant’s legal counsel and
they had no obligation to explain the law to him. The Court also notes that the
wording of paragraph 5 was unambiguous.
[42]
The
jurisprudence of this Court is clear that the duty of procedural fairness does
not increase when a party is self-represented. In Agri v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 349 at para 13, Justice Harrington
explained that “one has no right to expect, by not retaining counsel, that the
Board will act both as a decision-maker and as advocate for the applicant”. In Ngyuen
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 1001, [2005]
FCJ No 1244 at para 17, Justice Teitelbaum reasoned:
“It is not the obligation of the Board to act as the
attorney for a claimant who refuses to retain counsel. It is not the obligation
of the Board to tell the claimant that he may ask for an adjournment of the
hearing and it is not the obligation of the Board to "teach" the
Applicant the law on a particular matter involving his or her claim.”
[43]
The
Court also underlines the fact that at the time of the ADR proceedings, the
Applicant was presumed innocent of his outstanding charge. There is no evidence
on file to establish that the Minister recommended the stay assuming the
Applicant was guilty or that he would be pleading guilty. Furthermore, when the
Applicant subsequently pleaded guilty on his outstanding charge, he was
represented by counsel. Given of all of the above, the Court concludes that
there was neither an abuse of process nor a breach of procedural fairness.
B. Implied
condition
[44]
The
Court also finds that there is no evidence that either the Minister or the ADR
Member intended to include an implied condition excluding the activation of
subsection 68(4) for a post-stay conviction of the outstanding charge. As the
Court reviewed the wording of the Summary Agreement executed by the Applicant,
there is no possible interpretation or inference leading to the existence of an
implied condition excluding the application of subsection 68(4). Paragraph 5 of
the Summary Agreement is quite clear on a potential application of subsection
68(4).
C. Did
the IAD err in applying the decisions in Malarski and Bui above?
[45]
The
IAD did not err in either relying on or applying the decisions in Malarski and
Bui, above. The Applicant submits that, contrary to what the IAD found,
the Court in Malarski did not hold that post-stay convictions for
pre-stay charges triggered subsection 68(4) of the IRPA. The Court
disagrees. At paragraph 18 of Malarski, above, Justice Simpson found
that the Respondent’s post-stay conviction for his pre-stay charges did not
trigger subsection 68(4) because there was an explicit exclusion in the stay
order preventing just that:
“The Cancellation refers only to the Conviction and,
in view of the Exception, the Conviction did not breach the Second Condition of
the Stay. Accordingly, subsection 68(4) of the IRPA did not, in fact, cancel
the Stay by operation of law based on a breach of the Stay. For this reason,
the Cancellation is of no force and effect.”
[46]
The
IAD correctly concluded that Malarski, above, supported the principle
that, but for an explicit exclusionary term in the stay order, post-stay
convictions for pre-stay charges trigger the operation of subsection 68(4).
[47]
The
Court finds that subsection 68(4) of the IRPA was enacted to remove the
discretionary power normally held by the IAD to grant a stay of a removal order
when a person who has already benefited from a positive decision of the IAD
commits another serious offence, as defined in subsection 36(1) of the IRPA,
thereby demonstrating that he is not rehabilitated. It automatically cancels
their stay and their appeal is terminated.
[48]
Contrary
to the Applicant’s claim, there are decisions of the Federal Court supporting
the triggering of subsection 68(4) in the event of a post-stay conviction for a
pre-stay charge namely Bui and Malarski, above. The IAD was
justified in relying on those decisions in arriving at its conclusions.
[49]
The
Applicant’s other argument that the IAD erred in failing to distinguish the
facts in Bui from the case at hand is correct but not determinative for
the following reason. While it is true that the IAD member failed to appreciate
that, in contrast to the situation in Bui, the Minister in the present
case was aware of the specific charge pending against the Applicant before the
ADR proceedings, it was nonetheless justified in relying on the interpretation
of subsection 68(4) reaffirmed by that decision. The facts distinguishing Bui
from the case at bar are relevant to the Applicant’s abuse of process and procedural
fairness arguments. Given the Court’s findings on the abuse of process and
breach of procedural fairness claims, the IAD’s error is not fatal.
[50]
The
words of the statute are clear and they must be assigned their ordinary
meaning. The word convicted as used in subsection 68(4) of the IRPA
means a finding of guilt or a conviction. Parliament was well aware of the
presumption of innocence- hence the use of the words “and they are convicted of
another offence” (see Sullivan in Driedger on the Construction of Statutes,
3rd ed., Toronto: Butterworths, 1994, at 7).
[51]
The
Court rejects the Applicant’s argument that subsection 68(4) should not be
interpreted as cancelling the stay of the Applicant’s removal order for a
post-stay conviction of a pre-stay charge on the basis that the interpretation
of subsection 68(4) in Bui, above, leads to an absurd conclusion in that
different persons would be receiving different treatment for inadequate reasons
(see Sullivan in Driedger on the Construction of Statutes, 4th ed.,
Toronto: Butterworths, 2002, pages 235-257). The interpretation outlined by
Justice Martineau in Bui, above, is correct and this Court finds no
valid reason to depart from it. If persons are treated differently, it is not
due to the interpretation of subsection 68(4) as limiting the jurisdiction of
the IAD but rather, as in the case at bar, because of the Applicant’s failure
to properly deal with his outstanding charges.
[52]
Counsel
for the Applicant has underlined before the Court the injustice that would
result from a dismissal of this application. The Court espouses the following
paragraphs from Bui, cited above, inasmuch as they are applicable to the
present case.
[53] If the rule of law is of primordial
importance, justice also requires that the respondent be treated with fairness
by the Minister. On this point, the respondent is not without any recourse
today. Thus, he may continue to remain in Canada if a temporary resident permit
is issued to him by an immigration officer in accordance with section 24 of the
IRPA. We are talking about, of course, discretionary power, the exercise of
which is governed by departmental policy, IP1, Temporary Resident Permits
(CIC). Even though the officer is not bound by this, we can nevertheless expect
the officer to take the Minister’s directives into account.
[54] However, a temporary resident permit
may be issued to a person who is inadmissible on grounds of criminality who is
the subject of a removal order when, for example, the need to remain in Canada
is compelling and sufficient to outweigh the risk. Without opining on the
issue, at first glance, it seems that, in the respondent’s case, the risk to
Canadians or to the Canadian society is minimal, especially since the offence
for which the respondent was convicted, i.e. that which resulted in the closure
of his appeal file, was committed before the IAD issued a stay based on
humanitarian and compassionate grounds. The respondent was therefore very
engaged in the rehabilitation process when he was convicted a second time for
the same type of non-violent offence as the first time, with the result that it
cannot be assumed in advance that a temporary resident permit application would
automatically be refused here. To the contrary, the officer cannot act in a
perverse or capricious manner, and must be able to provide reasons for his or
her decision to refuse or grant a temporary resident permit, which is
reviewable by the Court in principle.
[53]
The
Applicant also has the option of making a section 25 claim for H&C
considerations.
VIII. Certification
[54]
When
canvassed on the possibility of certifying a question of general importance,
the parties jointly suggested that the following question be certified:
“Does
subsection 68(4) of the IRPA apply only to convictions, during a stay of
removal order, for offences committed after the beginning of the stay?”
[55]
The
Court believes the question is better phrased as follows:
“During
a stay of removal order, does subsection 68(4) of the IRPA only apply to
convictions for subsection 36(1) offences committed after the beginning of the
stay?”
[56]
This
question is quite similar to the question certified by Justice Martineau in Bui,
above. Unfortunately, that case failed to proceed before the Federal Court of
Appeal.
[57]
In
order for a question to be certified, it must be a serious question of general
importance that is dispositive of an appeal (see Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) v Zazai, 2004 FCA 89 at para 11). A serious
question of general importance is one that transcends the particular factual
context in which it arose and the answer to which it leads should be of general
application (see Boni v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2006 FCA 68 at para 10).
[58]
In
this case, the requirements are met and the Court will, therefore, certify a
question.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT’S JUDGMENT is that the application is dismissed. The
following question of general importance is certified:
“During
a stay of removal order, does subsection 68(4) of the IRPA only apply to
convictions for subsection 36(1) offences committed after the beginning of the
stay?”
"André F.J.
Scott"