Docket: IMM-8039-13
Citation:
2015 FC 382
Ottawa, Ontario, March 26, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Mosley
BETWEEN:
|
ANGELA
MARIA MEJIA GONZALEZ
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is an application for judicial review
pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA]. Mrs Gonzalez challenges the decision of a Senior
Immigration Officer rejecting her application for permanent residence on
humanitarian and compassionate [H&C] grounds.
[2]
For the reasons given below, this application is
granted.
I.
Background
[3]
Mrs Gonzalez is a citizen of Colombia. Her husband, Mr Fidel Perez Modesto, is a citizen of Mexico. They met and married
in the United States. They attempted to enter Canada on December 31, 2009. Mrs
Gonzalez entered the country and filed a claim for refugee protection that same
day. Mr Modesto was detained by the immigration authorities and sent back. He
finally entered Canada on January 13, 2011. His claim for refugee protection
was joined to that of Mrs Gonzalez.
[4]
On January 6, 2012, the applicant gave birth to
a daughter named Mariangel in Toronto. The child is a Canadian citizen by
birth.
[5]
On April 10, 2012, the Refugee Protection
Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada [the Board] denied the
refugee claims of Mrs Gonzalez and Mr Modesto. An application for leave and
judicial review was filed at this Court but never perfected.
[6]
Mrs Gonzalez and Mr Modesto submitted an H&C
application for permanent residence on June 24, 2012, with an update submitted
on July 12, 2012. The application was returned as incomplete. On October 5,
2012, Mrs Gonzalez and Mr Modesto sent updated submissions.
[7]
On February 26, 2013, the Canada Border Services
Agency [CBSA] directed Mrs Gonzalez and Mr Modesto to report for removal. Mrs
Gonzalez was scheduled to be removed to Colombia on March 12, 2013. Mr Modesto
was scheduled to be removed to Mexico the next day. Mr Modesto voluntarily left
for Mexico. Mrs Gonzalez refused to comply and remained in Canada with Mariangel.
[8]
The Officer rejected the H&C application by
decision dated September 17, 2013. The decision and reasons were communicated
to Mrs Gonzalez on December 3, 2013, after her counsel had made a written
request.
[9]
The Officer begins by canvassing the allegations
made by Mrs Gonzalez and her spouse. Mrs Gonzalez alleged that she is at risk
in Colombia due to a history of run-ins with the Colombian Revolutionary Armed
Forces [FARC]. She does not know whether her spouse will be allowed to live
with her in Colombia. She will have difficulty raising her daughter in a
country “that has been at war for more than forty years”.
[10]
Mr Modesto alleged that he is at risk in Mexico due to a history of run-ins with criminal gang members, who assaulted and nearly
killed him in 2001. In his opinion, Mexico is still gripped by serious
violence, which makes it difficult to raise a child there.
[11]
The Officer observes that subsection 25(1.3) of
the IRPA prevents her from considering factors that pertain to sections
96 and 97. As such, any risk from the FARC in Colombia or criminal elements in Mexico cannot be assessed in the H&C application.
[12]
The Officer will assess hardships. She notes
that “the onus remains on the applicants to demonstrate
that these country conditions would affect them directly, and personally”.
She finds that they failed to establish “that they
would be subjected to conditions not face by the general populace”. Other
than the female applicant’s statements, there is no evidence that she was ever
targeted by the FARC in Colombia or that her spouse was targeted by criminals
in Mexico. Although the conditions in Colombia and Mexico are “less than favourable”, the applicants have not
established that they would suffer unusual and undeserved or disproportionate
hardship.
[13]
Moreover, the documentary evidence shows that
the Colombian government continues to fight the FARC in order to eliminate its
criminal activities. Likewise, the Mexican government continues to address
crime and corruption. According to the Officer, if the applicants encounter
problems in either Colombia or Mexico, there would be avenues of recourse
available to them.
[14]
The Officer dismisses Mrs Gonzalez’s concerns
that her spouse may not be allowed to live in Colombia, and also her
allegations that it will be very difficult to find employment in either Colombia or Mexico.
[15]
The Officer considers the applicants’
establishment in Canada. She is satisfied that they speak English as a second
language. She is satisfied that they participated in numerous church and choir
activities. She further observes that Mrs Gonzalez volunteered extensively. Mr
Modesto was gainfully employed. The Officer recognizes that “the applicants have been proactive in terms of integrating
into Canadian society”.
[16]
Yet the Officer concludes that the degree of
establishment is “of a level that was naturally
expected of them”. They have not proven that severing their employment
and community ties in Canada would amount to hardship that is unusual and
undeserved or disproportionate.
[17]
The Officer moves on to the best interests of
the child [BIOC]. The child has lived in Canada for its one and half years of
existence. Considering her young age, “it is reasonable
that she lacks the awareness to distinguish and/or decipher her surroundings
whether it be [sic] Canada, Colombia or Mexico”. At such a young age,
children are “resilient and adaptable to changing
situations”. She has not yet entered the school system or established
friendships in Canada that would be severed by removal. Outside Canada, the child will continue to benefit from the support of her parents. Moreover, she
has a grandfather and two uncles who reside in Colombia. Should the child move
to Colombia with her mother, it is reasonable to expect that she will also have
the support of these family members. The Officer is satisfied that “the best interests of the child would be met if she
continued to benefit from the personal care and support of her family”.
[18]
The Officer notes that there is insufficient
objective evidence to the effect that the family will not be able to reunite in
either Colombia or Mexico. Moreover, the child is a Canadian citizen.
Regardless of where she resides, she will retain her citizenship and the
privileges associated thereto.
[19]
The Officer addresses Mrs Gonzalez’s arguments
that it will be difficult to raise her daughter in either Colombia or Mexico due to the social conditions there. Insufficient objective evidence was adduced
in support of these statements. Moreover, the issues identified by Mrs Gonzalez
are generalized and “faced by the entire population of
both countries”. Mrs Gonzalez failed to demonstrate that her daughter
would be “personally and directly affected by the
adverse social conditions.
[20]
Having considered all the information and
evidence, the Officer concludes that H&C considerations do not justify
granting an exemption.
[21]
Upon receiving this decision, Mrs Gonzalez
applied for leave and judicial review.
II.
Issue
[22]
This application for judicial review raises a
single issue: Did the Officer err in her analysis of generalized hardship?
III.
Standard of Review
[23]
The parties vigorously debated the standard of
review. Although I do not believe that this question is determinative, I will answer
it given the quality of their submissions.
[24]
Counsel for the applicant argued that the
Officer applied the wrong legal test for hardship under subsection 25(1) of the
IRPA. According to him, this is a pure error of law which the Federal
Court has long reviewed on the standard of correctness. Notably, he points to
my previous decision in BL v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012
FC 538 at para 11.
[25]
In contrast, counsel for the Minister submitted
that the Federal Court of Appeal recently decided that the standard of
reasonableness applies, in Kanthasamy v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FCA 113 at paras 30-36 [Kanthasamy FCA]. In his submission, this
coheres with the Supreme Court decision in Agraira v Canada (Public Safety
and Emergency Preparedness), 2013 SCC 36 at para 50. That case applied the
standard of reasonableness to a decision rendered under subsection 34(2) of the
IRPA, a since-repealed provision which also conferred a discretionary
power to the Minister.
[26]
The law is somewhat in a state of flux on this
issue although, as noted above, I do not believe it makes a significant
difference in this case. Before Kanthasamy FCA, the dominant position in
the jurisprudence was that the standard of correctness applies to the selection
of a legal test by an H&C Officer: see e.g. BL, above, at para 11; Rodriguez
Zambrano v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 481 at para 30.
Despite this, some judges of this Court applied the standard of reasonableness:
see e.g. Ramsawak v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 636 at
paras 12-13; Saporsantos Leobrera v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2010 FC 587 at paras 28-29.
[27]
The Federal Court of Appeal pronounced in favour
of correctness in the H&C context in Toussaint v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2011 FCA 146 at para 29.
[28]
In Diabate v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2013 FC 129 at paras 10-17, Justice Gleason opined that the
standard of correctness sits uneasily with Supreme Court authorities which
suggest that decision-makers deserve deference when interpreting their home
statutes. Justice Gleason did not make a decision on the standard of review
because she found the impugned decision to be both incorrect and unreasonable.
[29]
In Vuktilaj v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FC 188, Justice O’Keefe explained that he shared the concerns expressed in
Diabate. He also noted that Agraira reviewed a discretionary
ministerial decision on reasonableness, albeit not an H&C decision.
However, Justice O’Keefe concluded that he was bound by Toussaint to
apply the standard of correctness. In particular, he stated at para 30:
… although Dunsmuir allows courts to
revisit the standard of review when previous analysis was unsatisfactory, it
does not override the hierarchy of courts. Toussaint remains a binding
decision of the Court of Appeal that is directly on point. It was decided after
Dunsmuir and assumedly considered the presumption. I am also not
satisfied that it has been overtaken by later cases. Agraira only
applied the law from Dunsmuir; it did not change it… As such, I am bound
by [Toussaint] and will apply the correctness standard.
[30]
I believe that Vuktilaj was correctly
decided. The question is whether the Federal Court of Appeal overturned Toussaint
in Kanthasamy FCA and its companion case, Lemus v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2014 FCA 114. This idea has certainly found favour at
this Court: see e.g. Charles v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FC 772.
[31]
Yet it is not clear to me that Kanthasamy FCA
has overtaken Toussaint. At the applications stage, 2013 FC 802 [Kanthasamy
FC], Justice Kane applied the standard of reasonableness, yet she wrote at
para 39: “In the present case, the Officer applied the proper
test and his factual determinations are reasonable” [emphasis added]. As such, she can
be understood to have reviewed the choice of test on correctness and the
factual determinations on reasonableness, in line with the dominant
jurisprudence. The fact that the Court of Appeal upheld her decision, without
more, does not mean that it endorsed the standard of reasonableness for all
aspects of an H&C decision.
[32]
What
did the Court of Appeal actually say in Kanthasamy FCA? It never clearly affirmed that the entire decision was reviewed on
reasonableness, as opposed to its factual component alone. Indeed, at para 86,
Justice Stratas said: “The Officer charged herself correctly
on the law” [emphasis added]. This suggests that the Officer’s choice of
test remains reviewable on correctness, whereas her factual determinations
attract deference.
[33]
Lemus does not
point in the opposite direction. At the applications stage, 2012 FC 1274 at
para 14, Justice Near (then a member of this Court) explained that “the appropriate standard of review for the questions of
mixed fact and law relating to H&C decisions is that of reasonableness”. He did not comment on the standard of review
for the choice of legal test. The Court of Appeal affirmed his decision.
For this reason, I respectfully
disagree with my colleague Justice Russell’s suggestion in Charles,
above, at para 22, that this means that the standard of reasonableness applies
to “the test or legal principles to be applied
in making H&C decisions”. Lemus only involved mixed questions
of fact and law. Neither the applications judge nor the Court of Appeal
provided any obiter on the standard of review for legal principles.
[34]
For these reasons, I follow Toussaint and
conclude that the standard of correctness applies to the Officer’s choice of
legal test. At the same time, I agree with Justice Russell that the standard of
review makes little difference to the outcome: Charles, above, at para
23.
[35]
As a final point, the parties do not dispute
that the standard of reasonableness applies to the Officer’s application of any
legal test to the facts before her.
IV.
Submissions of the Parties
[36]
The parties provided thoughtful submissions
which I will summarize.
A.
Applicant’s Submissions
[37]
H&C applications are not limited to hardship
which is specific to the applicant only. Hardship which is also experienced by
other people in the country of removal is cognizable under, and often highly
relevant to, a section 25 analysis. Indeed, the fact that someone may be
returned to a country where war or natural disaster is widespread should favour
the exercise of H&C discretion: Shah v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2011 FC 1269 at paras 71-73; Diabate, above, at para
36.
[38]
As Justice Gleason explained in Diabate,
removing generalized hardship from consideration at the H&C stage transplants
the requirement of subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) of the IRPA, which relates
to protected person status. Doing this ignores the intent of Parliament, which explicitly
included this limiting language in section 97 but omitted it from section 25.
In fact, the recent amendments to section 25 have not imposed a generalized
hardship bar to H&C applications. Parliament has not directed that such a
bar should apply.
[39]
The Officer committed a reviewable error in
refusing to consider evidence of generalized hardship. When rejecting the
applicant’s refugee claim, the Board accepted that she had served as a flight
attendant on military transport planes in Colombia and had been held hostage by
the FARC in 1994. It also accepted that her sister had been sexually assaulted
a few years later. The applicant repeated these experiences in her H&C
application. She also explained the hardship faced personally by her husband in
Mexico before he moved to Canada. She further raised concerns about the
hardships her daughter would face if she had to move to Colombia or Mexico.
[40]
The documentary evidence before the Officer
amply substantiated the adverse country conditions alleged by the applicant.
The case law imposes a low standard for showing a personal connection to
generalized hardship. All that is needed is a credible connection between the
general country conditions and the applicant’s personal circumstances. In the
case at bar, the applicant provided a credible explanation that was
unreasonably disregarded.
[41]
The Officer dismissed the idea that the
applicant and her husband had been personally abducted and assaulted,
respectively, on the basis that there was insufficient objective evidence to
that effect. Yet the jurisprudence is clear that the sworn testimony of an
H&C applicant is entitled to a presumption of truthfulness: Westmore v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 1023 at paras 44-45; Chekroun v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 737 at paras 64-65. It is a reviewable
error to dismiss sworn testimony simply due to the absence of corroborating
evidence, without explaining why it is not credible.
[42]
Moreover, the Officer erred in excluding the
hardship flowing from the country conditions simply because it is also “faced by the general populace”. War, political
instability and criminal violence do not pose any less hardship on an
individual applicant merely because they also impose hardship on the larger
population.
[43]
Ignoring generalized hardship is even more
disturbing in the case of a child. The plain language of section 25, supported
by the jurisprudence, calls for specialized treatment of children in H&C
applications. If H&C Officers are required to consider evidence of
generalized hardship for adult applicants, they certainly must do the same for
children.
[44]
Ignoring or excluding evidence critical to the
assessment of a child’s best interests is a reviewable error: Baker v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817 at para 75.
[45]
Given these errors, the decision must be
quashed. It is not possible to predict the outcome that would have obtained if
the Officer had applied the proper legal test, since “hardship
is determined as a result of a global assessment of H&C considerations”:
Chekroun, above, at para 98. The Court should not speculate as to the
outcome which may have resulted had generalized hardship been considered: Alberta (Information and Privacy Commissioner) v Alberta Teachers’ Association,
2011 SCC 61 at para 54; Pathmanathan v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2013 FC 353 at para 28.
B.
Respondent’s Submissions
[46]
The Officer did not err in requiring the
applicant to demonstrate that removal would cause particular hardship to her or
her family. The jurisprudence establishes that generalized conditions in the
country of removal must be shown to affect the person concerned in order to
warrant H&C relief: see e.g. Lalane v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2009 FC 6 at paras 1 and 38; Piard v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2013 FC 170 at para 19; Kanthasamy FC; Berthoumieux
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 1200 at para 14.
[47]
The comment in Shah, followed in Diabate,
was obiter. The Court had found the underlying decision to be
unreasonable on other grounds: Shah, above, at paras 51-66. Subsequent
cases citing Shah and Diabate have not ratified this suggestion
made in obiter.
[48]
The structure of the H&C process suggests
that relief must be given on individual circumstances, not general country
conditions. H&C relief is exceptional and discretionary. Granting it on the
basis of general country conditions that potentially apply to millions of
people would be inconsistent with its very nature.
[49]
The applicant cannot fault the Officer for not
conducting a more detailed analysis of generalized hardship when she led very
little evidence on the matter. Her evidence is limited to the sworn testimony,
which the Officer characterized as “basic”. The
applicant did not even adduce documentary evidence on the countries of removal.
The Officer took documentary evidence into account on her own initiative.
[50]
H&C applicants bear the onus of adducing
evidence supporting the factors on which they rely: Owusu v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FCA 348 at para 5. Generalized
country conditions can only be considered when the applicant explains how they
will affect her in particular: Kanthasamy FC, above, at para 37. She did
not do so in this case.
[51]
Kanthasamy FCA
elucidated the proper interpretation of section 25. The Court of Appeal made
the following findings of note.
- To obtain H&C relief, an applicant must demonstrate
something more than the usual consequences of leaving Canada and having to
apply through the normal process. Undue, undeserved or disproportionate
hardship must be established.
- Undue, undeserved or disproportionate hardship must affect the
applicant personally and directly.
- The H&C
process must not duplicate the risk assessment undertaken under sections
96 and 97 of the IRPA. The facts underlying such risk must be
considered through the lens of undue, undeserved or disproportionate
hardship.
[52]
The applicant cannot rely on Shah and Diabate.
The primary reviewable error identified in those cases was that the H&C
Officer applied the section 97 test for risk, instead of assessing the risk
factors through the lens of hardship: see Shah, above, at para 73. Any
suggestion in those cases that an H&C applicant can rely on factors which
do not affect her directly has been overtaken by the determination to the
contrary in Kanthasamy FCA.
[53]
Before BIOC factors can be assessed, they must
be properly elucidated in submissions and supported by evidence: Owusu,
above, at para 5. The applicant failed to adduce evidence that her daughter
would suffer hardship in Mexico or Colombia. Moreover, BIOC factors do not
guarantee success. In Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Hawthorne, 2002 FCA 475 at para 6 [Hawthorne], the
Court of Appeal held that BIOC considerations must be weighed against other
factors in an H&C application.
[54]
Further, the applicant’s arguments with respect
to the BIOC analysis cannot succeed. For instance, the applicant presumes that
generalized hardship must be assessed differently for children, yet Kanthasamy
FCA draws no distinction between minors and adults. Moreover, the applicant
presumes that BIOC considerations will favour H&C relief when the country
conditions are particularly difficult. This contradicts the Supreme Court’s
instructions in Baker that BIOC considerations do not outweigh other
factors in an H&C application. Finally, the Officer’s assessment of the
BIOC was proportional to the deficient submissions she received from the
applicant.
V.
Analysis
A.
The Law
[55]
In my view, both parties correctly presented the
test for assessing generalized hardship in the context of an H&C
application – although, quite understandably, each emphasized the dimension
which is most favourable to its case. Put briefly, an H&C applicant may
raise hardship that is also faced by others in the country of removal. She need
not prove that the hardship she will face differs from that faced by anyone
else. Yet the applicant must prove that there is a link between her personal
circumstances and the hardship she alleges.
[56]
This position is sound because it reconciles the
individualized nature of an H&C assessment with the clear intention of
Parliament that an Officer’s exercise of discretion should not be fettered by
any other provision of the IRPA, including the bar on generalized risk
found at subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii).
[57]
Although Kanthasamy FCA is the most
recent appellate authority on this issue, I will begin by addressing the prior
cases which the parties have so thoroughly discussed.
[58]
In Shah, Justice Mandamin overturned a
negative H&C decision for a host of reasons. The Officer had ignored a
personalized risk of suicide (para 58), a personalized disability (para 62) and
personalized evidence of social isolation in the country of removal (para 65). With
respect to the analysis of generalized risk, I agree with counsel for the
Minister that Kanthasamy FCA has overtaken any suggestion that risk
which is not individualized merits consideration.
[59]
In Diabate, above, at para 33, Justice
Gleason explained that excluding risks which the applicant may face, just
because they are also faced by the majority of the population, “strips section 25 of its function” by importing a
requirement from section 97. At para 36, she concluded:
It is both incorrect and unreasonable to
require, as part of [the H&C] analysis, that an applicant establish that
the circumstances he or she will face are not generally faced by others in
their country of origin.
Importantly, Justice Gleason never suggested
that an H&C applicant does not have to establish any connection at all
between generalized risks and her particular circumstances.
[60]
I now turn to some of the cases cited by the
Minister. In Lalane, above, at para 1, Justice Shore explained that
The allegation of risks made in an
application for permanent residence on humanitarian and compassionate grounds
(H&C) must relate to a particular risk that is personal to the applicant.
The applicant has the burden of establishing a link between that evidence and
his personal situation. Otherwise, every H&C application made by a national
of a country with problems would have to be assessed positively, regardless of
the individual’s personal situation, and this is not the aim and objective of
an H&C application.
[61]
In Piard, above, at para 19, Justice
Boivin reiterated that
…individuals seeking an exemption from a
requirement of the Act may not simply present the general situation prevailing
in their country of origin, but must also demonstrate how this would lead to
unusual and undeserved or disproportionate hardship for them personally.
[62]
Finally, in Berthoumieux, above, at para
16, Justice Roy stated:
I would certainly have entertained an
argument to the effect that the fact that the general population suffers in
dire circumstances does not prevent an H&C application on the basis that
the applicant would be returned to the generalized conditions in the country.
But such is not the case here. The applicant carries the burden of showing that
she will suffer disproportionate hardship, not merely that the country
situation is difficult. There is a gap between the evidence of the general
country situation and disproportionate hardship that must be filled by the
evidence presented by an applicant about his or her particular circumstances.
[Emphasis added]
[63]
With this background in mind, I turn to the
Court of Appeal’s recent pronouncements in Kanthasamy FCA. The Court
left no doubt that the bare assertion of general adverse conditions in the
country of removal is not enough. At para 41, Justice Stratas stated:
The Federal Court has repeatedly interpreted
subsection 25(1) as requiring proof that the applicant will personally
suffer unusual and undeserved, or disproportionate hardship arising from
the application of what I have called the normal rule…
[Emphasis added]
[64]
At para 48, he continued:
The Federal Court’s cases underscore that
unusual and undeserved, or disproportionate hardship must affect the
applicant personally and directly. Applicants under subsection 25(1) must show
a link between the evidence of hardship and their individual situations. It
is not enough just to point to hardship without establishing that link…
[Emphasis added]
[65]
Justice Stratas then discussed the role of subsection
25(1.3), which excludes the factors that are taken into account under sections
96 and 97. At paras 69-71, he explained:
Subsection 25(1.3) provides, in effect, that
a humanitarian and compassionate relief application must not duplicate the
processes under sections 96 and 97 of the Act, i.e., assess the risk
factors for the purposes of sections 96 and 97 of the Act.
But this is not to say that the facts that
were adduced in proceedings under sections 96 and 97 of the Act are irrelevant
to a humanitarian and compassionate relief application. Far from it.
While the facts may not have given the
applicant relief under sections 96 or 97, they may nevertheless form part of a
constellation of facts that give rise to humanitarian and compassionate grounds
warranting relief under subsection 25(1).
[66]
At para 74, Justice Stratas used the language of
examining the facts relevant to the risk allegations through “a lens of hardship”.
B.
Application to the Facts
[67]
I have come to the conclusion that the Officer
erred in assessing hardship and that her decision must be quashed.
[68]
Strictly speaking, the problem is not that the
Officer misunderstood the test for generalized hardship. Rather, she
misunderstood the operation of subsection 25(1.3) of the IRPA. Due to
this error, she did not seriously consider the evidence which could establish a
link between the applicant and the risks she raised.
[69]
At the outset of her decision, the Officer
invoked subsection 25(1.3) and stated:
Given that the risk factors raised by the
applicants in this application pertain to…their fear of FARC in Colombia and
criminal elements in Mexico, I find that the assessment of these factors is
beyond the scope of a humanitarian and compassionate application as defined by
the IRPA.
[70]
This interpretation of subsection 25(1.3) cannot
stand in light of Kanthasamy FCA, above, at paras 69-74. The Officer was
required to take into account the risk factors relating to the FARC and Mexican
gangs and assess them through the lens of hardship.
[71]
Although the Officer’s reasons are not perfectly
consistent, she appears to have understood how generalized hardship should be
assessed, as she stated: “the onus remains on the
applicants to demonstrate that these country conditions would affect them
directly, and personally”.
[72]
Yet by discounting the applicant’s past
experiences with the FARC, and her husband’s experiences with criminal gangs
(which are relevant to the applicant because she might have to move to Mexico
with her daughter to live with her spouse), the Officer could not reasonably
assess whether the adverse conditions in Colombia and Mexico would affect the
applicant or her child directly and personally.
[73]
Due to her error, the Officer treated the FARC
and criminal gangs as background threats to every citizen of Colombia and Mexico. She speculated that, if the applicant or her family experienced problems with
the FARC or gangs, they could seek help from the government. Although this
might be true, she did not ask whether the applicant would suffer undue,
undeserved or disproportionate hardship if she were to return with her young
daughter to a country where she had already been targeted by the FARC, or to a
country where her husband had already been harassed and assaulted by criminals.
[74]
Due to the Officer’s determinative legal error,
I do not think it necessary to express an opinion on her assessment of the
evidence before her. I only observe that the Board decision – which deemed only
part of the applicant’s story credible, without addressing the allegations made
by her spouse with respect to Mexico – had no binding effect on the Officer,
who did not even have it before her due to the applicant’s oversight. This
being said, the Officer did not articulate a clear reason for either questioning
the credibility of the applicant’s evidence or minimizing its probative value.
[75]
I conclude by noting that the parties agree that
the BIOC are an important but non-determinative factor in an H&C
application. They must be weighed against the other factors at play: Baker,
above, at para 75; Hawthorne, above, at para 6; Kisana v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FCA 189 at paras 24 and 38.
[76]
In the case at bar, the Officer’s error of
statutory interpretation precluded a reasonable assessment of the BIOC. This is
because she did not turn her mind to evidence that the child’s parents may have
been threatened and assaulted in the countries where the child would live
following a negative H&C decision. It cannot be disputed that potential
harm or death to a parent affects the BIOC. The Officer should have taken this
into account when determining what is in the child’s best interests and then
weighed those best interests against the other factors at play.
[77]
The application for judicial review is granted
without costs. The parties agreed that the Court should not certify any
question if it reached this outcome.
[78]
The Court wishes to make clear that this
application for judicial review only challenged the Officer’s refusal of Mrs
Gonzalez’s H&C application. The refusal of her husband’s application is a
separate decision beyond the scope of this judicial review, even though the
Officer issued one set of reasons for both decisions. This judgment only
requires the respondent to reconsider Mrs Gonzalez’s application. If Mr Modesto
would like for his application to be reconsidered, he is free to make a request
to that effect to the respondent.