Docket: IMM-7208-13
Citation:
2014 FC 1040
Ottawa, Ontario, November 4, 2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice O'Reilly
BETWEEN:
|
THANH TAM TRAN
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY
AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
In 1989, Mr Than Tam Tran arrived in Canada from Vietnam and became a permanent resident. In 2013, a judge of the British Columbia
Provincial Court convicted Mr Tran on a charge of producing marijuana and imposed
a sentence of 12 months to be served in the community (ie a conditional
sentence). In turn, an officer of the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA) referred
Mr Tran’s file to the Immigration Division to decide whether Mr Tran should be
found to be inadmissible to Canada for having been convicted of an offence for
which a term of imprisonment greater than six months has been imposed, or an
offence punishable by a maximum term of imprisonment of at least 10 years (Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27, [IRPA] s 36(1)(a)). In
the exercise of his discretion whether to refer Mr Tran’s file, the officer
considered the following factors:
- Mr Tran’s age
when he arrived in Canada (19), the length of time he has been here (24
years), and his substantial family support in Canada;
- The poor living conditions
in Vietnam;
- Mr Tran’s
employment history and establishment in Canada;
- Mr Tran’s
criminal record, including a conviction for impaired driving and arrests
on various other charges;
- The circumstances
surrounding the triggering offence (production of marijuana), the maximum
sentence available (7 years’ imprisonment at the time, but subsequently
increased to 14 years), and the sentence actually imposed (a 12-month
conditional sentence);
- Mr Tran’s potential
for rehabilitation (fairly low); and
- The best
interests of Mr Tran’s five children.
[2]
Based on these considerations, the officer decided
to refer Mr Tran’s case to the Immigration Division to decide if Mr Tran is
inadmissible to Canada for serious criminality. That is the decision Mr Tran seeks
to challenge in this application for judicial review. He maintains that the
officer erred in three respects: (1) by finding that he had been convicted of
an offence for which a term of imprisonment greater than 6 months had been
imposed; (2) by concluding that he had been convicted of an offence punishable
by a maximum sentence of at least 10 years; and (3) by rendering an
unreasonable decision based on extraneous evidence, namely, arrests and charges
that did not result in convictions. He asks me to overturn the officer’s
decision and order another officer to reconsider the question of his
inadmissibility to Canada.
[3]
I agree with Mr Tran that the officer erred. In
my view, Mr Tran’s conditional sentence of 12 months did not represent a term
of imprisonment greater than 6 months; his offence was punishable by a maximum
of 7 years’ incarceration (not 10 or more); and the officer should not have
considered allegations that did not result in convictions. Therefore, I must
allow this application for judicial review and order another officer to
reconsider the question of Mr Tran’s inadmissibility.
[4]
There are three issues:
1.
Does a conditional sentence of 12 months
constitute a term of imprisonment greater than 6 months?
2.
Was Mr Tran convicted of an offence punishable
by maximum of at least 10 years’ imprisonment?
3.
Was the officer’s conclusion unreasonable?
II.
The Officer’s Decision
[5]
The officer found there were reasonable grounds
to believe that Mr Tran was inadmissible to Canada for having been convicted of
an offence punishable by a maximum of at least 10 years’ imprisonment or for
having received a sentence of more than 6 months’ imprisonment. In the exercise
of his discretion whether to refer Mr Tran’s case to the Immigration Division
for an admissibility hearing, the officer considered the various factors
outlined above.
[6]
In the end, the officer concluded that Mr Tran
had been involved in a serious offence and had been involved in other criminal
activity. Further, there were insufficient mitigating factors to cause the
officer not to refer the case for an inadmissibility hearing.
A.
Issue One – Does a conditional sentence of 12 months constitute a term of
imprisonment greater than 6 months?
[7]
The Minister argues that a conditional sentence
has been definitively characterized as a sentence of imprisonment and,
therefore, a conditional sentence of 12 months is obviously a term of
imprisonment greater than 6 months.
[8]
I disagree. In my view, the officer’s decision
was unreasonable.
[9]
The Minister correctly points out that the
Supreme Court of Canada characterized a conditional sentence as a term of
imprisonment in R v Proulx, 2000 SCC 5. However, in subsequent cases,
the Court has clarified that the question whether a particular statutory reference
to imprisonment includes a conditional sentence must be answered in context. In
some cases, a reference to a term of imprisonment will include conditional
sentences and, in others, it will refer solely to carceral sentences. For
example, the Supreme Court has held that the word “imprisonment”
“does not bear a uniform meaning for all purposes of the
Criminal Code” (R v Middleton, 2009 SCC 21, at para 14).
Obviously, then, if it does not bear a uniform meaning throughout the Criminal
Code, it cannot bear a uniform meaning across the whole of the federal
statute book. The fact that a conditional sentence is described as a sentence
of imprisonment in general terms in the Code does not necessarily mean it
should be considered to be a sentence of imprisonment in other statutes, such
as IRPA. Context matters.
[10]
In effect, s 36(1)(a) describes the
grounds on which a person can be found inadmissible for “serious criminality”.
Serious criminality encompasses both responsibility for a serious crime (one
punishable by a maximum of 10 years or more) and serious criminals (those
sentenced to more than 6 months of imprisonment). By contrast, courts impose
conditional sentences on persons who are not regarded as serious criminals. As
the Supreme Court stated in Proulx, a conditional sentence “is a meaningful alternative to incarceration for less serious
and non-dangerous offenders” (at para 21). To include conditional
sentences within s 36(1)(a) would appear to be at odds with the purpose
of that provision: to identify those coming within the concept of “serious
criminality”.
[11]
Further, in relation to s 36(1)(a) in
particular, the Supreme Court has stated that the reference to a term of
imprisonment in that provision relates to the period of time the person has
been sentenced to spend in prison, which would exclude conditional
sentences (Medovarkski v Canada (MCI), 2005 SCC 51, at para 11). The
Court said:
In keeping with these objectives, the IRPA
creates a new scheme whereby persons sentenced to more than six months in
prison are inadmissible: IRPA, s 36(1)(a). . . [T]he Act is clear: a
prison term of over six months will bar entry to Canada. (Emphasis added).
[12]
The Minister also relies on cases where there
was a question whether the reference to a sentence of imprisonment meant the
full term of the sentence imposed by the Court or just the amount of time the
offender actually spent in prison before being paroled. For example, where a
person was sentenced to 4 years’ imprisonment, but only spent 10 months in
prison before being paroled, was the person sentenced to a term of imprisonment
greater than 2 years (for purposes of s 64(2) of IRPA)? The answer is yes – it
is the sentence actually imposed that matters, not the amount of time actually spent
in custody. See Martin v Canada (MCI), 2005 FC 60, aff’d 2005 FCA 347; Cartwright
v Canada (MCI), 2003 FCT 792.
[13]
By analogy, the Minister contends that, even if a
sentence includes no time in prison, so long as the sentence exceeds 6 months,
it comes within s 36(1)(a). It is the duration that matters, according
to the Minister, not the amount of time actually spent in prison.
[14]
I disagree. In the cases cited by the Minister,
the persons were sentenced to terms of incarceration of 4 years and 3 years
respectively. Even though paroled early, their prison sentences remained in
place and the offenders were liable to re-incarceration in the event of any
parole violations. Here, no prison sentence was ever imposed on Mr Tran. In my
view, on that basis, the parole cases are entirely distinguishable.
[15]
Accordingly, I find that the officer’s
conclusion that Mr Tran’s 12-month conditional sentence amounted to a term of
imprisonment greater than 6 months was unreasonable.
B.
Issue Two – Was Mr Tran convicted of an offence punishable by maximum of at
least 10 years’ imprisonment?
[16]
The Minister argues that Mr Tran should be
considered to have been convicted of an offence punishable by a maximum of at
least 10 years’ imprisonment since Parliament recently, prior to the officer’s
decision, elevated the maximum from 7 to 14 years.
[17]
I cannot agree.
[18]
Section 36(1)(a) states that a person is
inadmissible to Canada on grounds of serious criminality for “having been convicted of an offence . . . punishable by a
maximum term of imprisonment of at least 10 years”.
[19]
I note that the Federal Court of Appeal recently
held that, for purposes of the exclusion clause in Article 1F(b) of the
Refugee Convention, the seriousness of a crime should be assessed according to
punishment available at the time it is reviewed for immigration purposes, not
when the accused was convicted (Sanchez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2014 FCA 157, at para 6). However, the Court’s ruling
does not mean the same is true under s 36(1)(a). The sole issue under
Article 1F(b) is whether the crime was “serious” without any specific
reference to the sentence that could have been imposed on the offender (but see
Febles v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 SCC 68 where the
Court suggested that punishment by a maximum sentence of ten years or more will
usually indicate that the crime is serious (at para 62)). By contrast, s 36(1)(a)
sets out a specific test: whether the person was convicted of a crime for which
he or she could be punished by a maximum of at least 10 years’ imprisonment. As
I read it, s 36(1)(a) refers to the maximum punishment available at the
time of conviction. There is no similar wording in Article 1F(b).
[20]
Here, Mr Tran was not convicted of a crime
punishable by at least 10 years’ imprisonment. The maximum sentence at the time
of his conviction was 7 years. While the maximum sentence was subsequently
raised to 14 years, Mr Tran was not punishable by a sentence of that duration. Therefore,
the offence of which he was convicted did not come within s 36(1)(a),
and the officer’s decision to the contrary was unreasonable.
C.
Issue Three –Was the officer’s conclusion unreasonable?
[21]
The Minister argues that the officer, in the
exercise of his discretion, was entitled to consider arrests and dropped
charges relating to Mr Tran.
[22]
The case law makes clear that arrests and
charges, in themselves, are not evidence of criminal conduct (Veerasingam v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC 1661, at para 5).
However, the evidence underlying arrests and charges, if reliable, can be
considered (at para 6).
[23]
Here, the officer treated arrests and charges as
being evidence of criminal behaviour. In particular, based on Mr Tran’s past
brushes with the law, he found that Mr Tran would likely “reoffend
because he has done so in the past”. However, those arrests and charges simply
did not amount to evidence that Mr Tran had re-offended, since they amounted merely
to allegations, not proof, of criminal conduct.
[24]
Similarly, the officer also relied on police
reports relating to conduct that did not give rise to arrests or charges.
Again, this evidence does not constitute proof of criminal conduct; it merely
records the allegations received by the police (Rajagopal v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2007 FC 523, at para 43; Younis
v Canada, 2008 FC 944, at para 55).
[25]
Accordingly, I find that the officer’s reliance
on unproved allegations – arrests, charges, and police reports – rendered the
officer’s conclusion that there were reasonable grounds to believe Mr Tran was inadmissible
for serious criminality unreasonable.
III.
Conclusion and Disposition
[26]
A CBSA officer found that Mr Tran – convicted of
an offence carrying a maximum of 7 years’ imprisonment and sentenced to a
12-month conditional sentence – came within s 36(1)(a) of IRPA, which
renders persons inadmissible to Canada if they have committed a crime
punishable by a maximum of at least 10 years or sentenced to more than 6
months’ imprisonment. In my view, in the circumstances, the officer’s decision was
unreasonable. Further, the officer unreasonably relied on unproved allegations
in exercising his discretion to refer Mr Tran for an inadmissibility hearing.
Therefore, I must allow this application for judicial review and order another
officer to reconsider Mr Tran’s file.
[27]
As the parties requested an opportunity to make
submissions regarding a question of general importance to be certified, I will
entertain any submissions received within 10 days of this judgment.