Docket:
IMM-11083-12
Citation: 2014 FC 262
Ottawa, Ontario, March 18, 2014
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Phelan
BETWEEN:
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Applicant
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and
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QUIZHEN CHEN
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I. INTRODUCTION
[1]
The Applicant Minister seeks judicial review of
a decision by the Immigration Appeal Division [IAD] accepting the appeal of
Quizhen Chen from a refusal by a visa officer [Officer] to grant a family class
visa to her daughter, Yingying Hong.
[2]
The Officer refused the daughter’s application
for permanent residence on the basis that she was excluded from the family
class because the mother failed to declare her daughter on her permanent
residence application.
II. RELEVANT
PROVISIONS
[3]
The key statute and regulation provisions are as
follows:
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA]
63. (1) A person who has filed in the
prescribed manner an application to sponsor a foreign national as a member of
the family class may appeal to the Immigration Appeal Division against a
decision not to issue the foreign national a permanent resident visa.
…
65. In an appeal under subsection 63(1)
or (2) respecting an application based on membership in the family class, the
Immigration Appeal Division may not consider humanitarian and compassionate
considerations unless it has decided that the foreign national is a member of
the family class and that their sponsor is a sponsor within the meaning of
the regulations.
…
67. (1) To allow an appeal, the
Immigration Appeal Division must be satisfied that, at the time that the
appeal is disposed of,
(a) the
decision appealed is wrong in law or fact or mixed law and fact;
(b) a
principle of natural justice has not been observed; or
(c) other
than in the case of an appeal by the Minister, taking into account the best
interests of a child directly affected by the decision, sufficient
humanitarian and compassionate considerations warrant special relief in light
of all the circumstances of the case.
(2) If the Immigration Appeal Division
allows the appeal, it shall set aside the original decision and substitute a
determination that, in its opinion, should have been made, including the
making of a removal order, or refer the matter to the appropriate
decision-maker for reconsideration.
|
63. (1) Quiconque a déposé, conformément
au règlement, une demande de parrainage au titre du regroupement familial
peut interjeter appel du refus de délivrer le visa de résident permanent.
…
65. Dans le cas de l’appel visé aux
paragraphes 63(1) ou (2) d’une décision portant sur une demande au titre du
regroupement familial, les motifs d’ordre humanitaire ne peuvent être pris en
considération que s’il a été statué que l’étranger fait bien partie de cette
catégorie et que le répondant a bien la qualité réglementaire.
…
67. (1) Il est fait droit à l’appel sur
preuve qu’au moment où il en est disposé :
a) la
décision attaquée est erronée en droit, en fait ou en droit et en fait;
b) il y a
eu manquement à un principe de justice naturelle;
c) sauf
dans le cas de l’appel du ministre, 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.
(2) La décision attaquée est cassée; y
est substituée celle, accompagnée, le cas échéant, d’une mesure de renvoi,
qui aurait dû être rendue, ou l’affaire est renvoyée devant l’instance
compétente.
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Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 [Regulations]
117. (9) A foreign national shall not be
considered a member of the family class by virtue of their relationship to a
sponsor if
…
(d)
subject to subsection (10), the sponsor previously made an application for
permanent residence and became a permanent resident and, at the time of that
application, the foreign national was a non-accompanying family member of the
sponsor and was not examined.
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117. (9) Ne sont pas considérées comme
appartenant à la catégorie du regroupement familial du fait de leur relation
avec le répondant les personnes suivantes :
…
d) sous
réserve du paragraphe (10), dans le cas où le répondant est devenu résident
permanent à la suite d’une demande à cet effet, l’étranger qui, à l’époque où
cette demande a été faite, était un membre de la famille du répondant
n’accompagnant pas ce dernier et n’a pas fait l’objet d’un contrôle.
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III. BACKGROUND
[4]
There is no issue that the Respondent did not declare her daughter on
her permanent residence application. The Respondent became a permanent resident
in April 2005, 10 years after her daughter’s birth in China where she has remained.
[5]
On December 29, 2010, the daughter applied for
permanent resident status on humanitarian and compassionate [H&C] grounds.
Her application was sponsored by her mother and the daughter was listed as a
dependent child.
[6]
The Officer denied the daughter’s application in
early 2012. The basis of the decision is two-fold; the daughter was excluded
from the family class by operation of paragraph 117(9)(d) of the
Regulations and there were insufficient H&C factors in the case to overcome
the daughter’s exclusion as a member of the family class.
[7]
On appeal to the IAD, the IAD held that the
daughter was not a member of the family class (a matter conceded at the IAD
hearing). Despite this conclusion, the IAD then went on to consider the H&C
finding and found that the Officer had not applied the correct test when
assessing the best interests of the child because the Officer did not specifically
identify the child’s best interests. The IAD allowed the appeal.
[8]
Despite the finding that the daughter was not a
member of the family class, the IAD found that it had jurisdiction under
paragraph 67(1)(a) of IRPA to determine whether a visa officer’s assessment
of H&C considerations was performed correctly.
IV. ANALYSIS
A. Standard
of Review
[9]
With respect to the IAD’s jurisdiction
conclusion, this issue belongs to the class of true jurisdictional questions
referred to in Alberta (Information and Privacy Commissioner) v Alberta
Teachers’ Association, 2011 SCC 61, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 654, as “narrow and
exceptional”. It brings into play the interpretation of a statute of broad
public interest and the matter of whether jurisdiction rests in the IAD or in
the Federal Court on judicial review. The standard of review on this issue is
correctness (Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Sidhu,
2011 FC 1056, 397 FTR 29).
[10]
Likewise the issue of whether the Officer
committed an error of law by applying the wrong test has been held to be
subject to the correctness standard of review (Sahota v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 739).
[11]
The Applicant raised the matter of the adequacy
of the reasons. To the extent that it is a relevant issue, it is not a
standalone issue but part of the reasonableness analysis in respect to the
decision (Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 708).
B. IAD
Jurisdiction
[12]
In my view, the IAD erred in assuming it had
jurisdiction over a non-family class H&C matter.
[13]
The IAD’s jurisdiction is set out in s 63. Section
63(1) gives the IAD jurisdiction over decisions not to issue a foreign national
a permanent residence visa in the family class category. The other grounds of
jurisdiction relate to applications by permanent residents, protected persons
or the Minister relating to admissibility hearings or residency obligations. The
IAD therefore has no jurisdiction over non-family class permanent residence
applications; these decisions are reviewable with leave by the Federal Court.
[14]
Section 65 restricts the IAD’s jurisdiction over
family class permanent residence applications. The IAD may not consider
humanitarian and compassionate considerations arising on an appeal from a
family class application unless it has decided that the foreign national is a
member of the family class and that their sponsor is a “sponsor” within the
meaning of the class. Absent these two conditions, s 65 precludes the IAD’s
jurisdiction to deal with H&C considerations. There is no alternate basis
for the IAD’s jurisdiction over H&C matters.
[15]
While the term “considerations” is not defined,
it is logically those matters in an H&C situation which must be considered.
It is a broad term and encompasses not just facts or factors but mixed fact and
law and law. It is intended to cover the full range of the H&C analysis.
[16]
Subsection 67(1) sets out the grounds on which
the IAD may allow an appeal. Paragraph 67(1)(a) which the IAD
relied on as a basis of jurisdiction sets out that the IAD can allow an appeal
where it is satisfied that the decision is wrong in law or fact or mixed law
and fact.
[17]
The IAD concluded that despite this “carve-out”
of its jurisdiction, s 67(1) gave it a “carve-in” to deal with matters, at
least, of law in a decision denying a foreign national a permanent resident
visa.
[18]
With great respect, I cannot read s 67(1) in the
way that the IAD has concluded. Section 67 does not confer jurisdiction but
rather sets out the standard of review. If the IAD had the jurisdiction to
examine a matter of law (in this case the applicable legal test) based on paragraph
67(1)(a), it would likewise have the jurisdiction (and responsibility)
to examine the factual and the mixed facts and law issues. Such an interpretation
would largely render the “carve-out” in s 65 meaningless. Under that
interpretation, H&C considerations would be precluded in the present case
by s 65 but all issues of law, fact and mixed fact and law would be brought back
into IAD jurisdiction by s 67(1)(a).
[19]
There was some effort to suggest that only if a
child was involved would the IAD have jurisdiction to engage in an H&C
analysis. However, that view would have the effect of making a non-family class
member a family class member if the person was a child.
[20]
The statutory intent of s 65 was to limit IAD jurisdiction
in the case of non-family member H&C considerations. Efforts to negate that
jurisdictional limitation are inconsistent with the intent of s 65.
Section
67 remains alive and vibrant in respect of family class member applicants. It
would lead to undue complexity to have the IAD in, then out, then back in again
on jurisdiction over the same subject matter.
[21]
Once the IAD determines that the foreign
national is a non-family member (or the sponsor is not a defined sponsor), that
ends its jurisdiction in respect of any claim for H&C consideration. The
route of review in those situations is to the Federal Court by way of leave for
judicial review.
[22]
Once the IAD concluded that the Respondent’s
daughter was a non-family member by reason of paragraph 117(9)(d), its
jurisdiction to consider the H&C claim was ended. The limited jurisdiction
over H&C matters set out in s 65 was not available.
[23]
The parties raised a number of decisions of this
Court which touched upon, if not dealing directly, with this jurisdictional
issue. The Respondent’s reliance on Nguyen v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2012 FC 331, 214 ACWS (3d) 574, is undercut by the
absence of any discussion in that case of the proper interpretation of s 65. I
do not take Justice O’Reilly as having dealt with the nature and effect of the
carve-out in s 65.
[24]
In my view, a case of closer relevance is Justice Shore’s decision in Bistayan v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2008 FC 139, 164 ACWS (3d) 683. His finding of absence of jurisdiction is
compatible with my conclusion.
[25]
Therefore, the IAD erred in concluding that it
had jurisdiction to review the Officer’s decision.
C. H&C
Analysis
[26]
Even if I am in error on this first issue, I
find that the IAD’s analysis of the Officer’s H&C consideration is in error
and unreasonable.
[27]
In Webb v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2012 FC 1060, 417 FTR 306 [Webb], Justice Mosley cut
through the issue of best interests of the child and H&C hardship matters
to hold that one must look at the realities of the decision to determine if the
best interests were considered and not to become lost in formulaic language
(para 11 of Webb).
[28]
Having reviewed the Officer’s decision, he was
“alert, alive and sensitive to the child’s best interests” (also formulaic
language) in that he addressed the major points of “best interests” and reached
a reasonable conclusion on the facts.
[29]
On this ground as well, the IAD’s decision is in
error.
D. Adequacy
of Reasons
[30]
Nothing more need be said on this point as the
Officer’s line of reasoning was clear; the parties knew the basis for the
decision and it was reasonable in all the circumstances.
V. CONCLUSION
[31]
For all these reasons, this judicial review will
be granted. The IAD decision will be quashed and the Visa Officer’s decision
restored.
[32]
The Respondent proposed a certified question and
the Applicant made extensive submissions opposing certification. The test for
certification was laid out in Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Liyanagamage, [1994] FCJ No 1637 (FCA), 176 NR 4.
[33]
The question posed by the Respondent dealt with
provisions and issues not argued and there is not a proper question for certification.
[34]
While the issue of IAD jurisdiction under s 65
may well transcend the interests of the parties, it is not sufficient by
disposition of this particular judicial review as presented because of the
finding of correctness and reasonableness in respect to the H&C
consideration.
[35]
Therefore, no question will be certified.