Docket: IMM-1655-15
Citation:
2015 FC 720
Ottawa, Ontario, June 8, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Gagné
BETWEEN:
|
ZHENHUA WANG
and
CHUNXIANG YAN
|
Applicants
|
and
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THE MINISTER OF
PUBLIC SAFETY AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
|
Defendant
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The applicants seek judicial review of a
decision dated April 2, 2015, whereby a Member of the Immigration Division [ID]
of the Immigration and Refugee Board ordered their continued detention on the
ground that they are unlikely to appear for removal pursuant to subsection 58(1)
of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [Act] and
section 245 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations,
SOR/2002-227 [Regulations]. The Member further found that the factors
enumerated in section 248 of the Regulations favoured detention.
[2]
This is the second application for judicial
review submitted by the applicants in the matter of their continued detention.
The first decision was quashed and remitted to a different ID Member by Justice
Phelan. The applicants argue the impugned decision presently before me is
tainted with the same errors committed by the first Member, which are: i) his failure
to consider the likelihood to appear at the next proceedings; and ii) his failure
to properly consider the release plan as an alternative to detention.
[3]
I am of the view that the application should be granted
on the grounds of the first issue raised by the applicants; the Member did not consider
the applicants’ refugee hearing as an important consideration in analyzing
whether there were alternatives to detention that could attenuate their flight
risk.
I.
Background
[4]
The applicants are wealthy citizens of China and the Dominican Republic. They are currently under conditional removal orders and have been
detained since March 7, 2014. The ID has continued their detention in what
amounts to a total of six detention reviews.
[5]
The applicants first entered Canada under temporary resident visas and subsequently applied for and were issued visitor
extensions. They have intended to seek permanent residence status through the
Provincial Nominee Program. However, the Canada Border Services Agency [CBSA]
arrested the applicants after receiving information that they were wanted in
China for operating an investment company which defrauded thousands of people
of approximately RMB1 billion - equivalent to $180 million Canadian dollars.
[6]
The applicants were first detained pursuant to
section 55 of the Act on the basis that they would not appear for an inadmissibility
hearing under paragraphs 58(1)(b) and (c) of the Act, for allegations
of criminality.
[7]
On March 23, 2014, the Minister issued reports
under section 44 of the Act alleging they were inadmissible for
misrepresentation. The reports were subsequently referred for an admissibility
hearing.
[8]
In June 2014, the applicants made claims for
refugee protection. The Minister then requested that the admissibility hearing
be withdrawn.
[9]
In July 2014, conditional departure orders were
issued on the ground that the applicants did not comply with the requirements
of the Act. The only reason for detention remained flight risk under paragraph 58(1)(b)
of the Act.
[10]
In January 2015, the refugee hearings commenced
and are still ongoing; the Minister has intervened in the case. The applicants
and respondent do not anticipate the hearings will conclude until June 2015.
[11]
The applicants were granted judicial review on
January 21, 2015 of a decision dated December 11, 2014 whereby Justice Phelan
quashed and remitted the ID’s decision to continue detention; Wang v Canada
(Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2015 FC 79 [Wang].
[12]
Justice Phelan found the ID made errors with
respect to three issues, two of which resurface in the present application. The
first is the Member’s refusal to consider the likelihood to appear at the next
proceeding (the continuation of their refugee hearings) and to instead, only
consider the likelihood to appear for removal. The second is the Member’s
rejection of the release plan proposed by the applicants.
II.
Statutory Framework
[13]
As a question of statutory application is raised
in this case, a brief discussion of the applicable provisions is useful. When
faced with the present case, a Member of the ID must employ the following
analytical framework in a detention review. It consists of generally two parts.
[14]
First, the Member must determine whether there
are grounds for detention. Subsection 58(1) of the Act provides that the ID shall
order the release of a detained person unless it is satisfied that one of the grounds
enumerated in paragraphs (a) to (e) of the same provision exists.
Relevant to the applicants’ continued detention is paragraph (b) which
considers whether a person is unlikely to appear for examination, an
admissibility hearing, removal from Canada or a proceeding that could lead to
the making of a removal order:
Release —
Immigration
Division
|
Mise en liberté
par la Section
de
l’immigration
|
58. (1) The Immigration Division shall
order the release of a permanent resident or a foreign national unless it is
satisfied, taking into account prescribed factors, that
|
58. (1)
La section prononce la mise en liberté du résident permanent ou de
l’étranger, sauf sur preuve, compte tenu des critères réglementaires,
de tel des faits suivants :
|
. . .
|
[…]
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(b) they are unlikely to appear for examination, an
admissibility hearing, removal from Canada, or at a proceeding that could
lead to the making of a removal order by the Minister under subsection
44(2); [Emphasis added]
|
(b) le résident permanent ou l’étranger se soustraira
vraisemblablement au contrôle, à l’enquête ou au renvoi, ou à la procédure
pouvant mener à la prise par le ministre d’une mesure de renvoi en vertu
du paragraphe 44(2); [Mon soulignement]
|
[15]
In determining whether a person is unlikely to
appear—in other words, are a flight risk in any of the types of proceedings
contemplated under paragraph (b), the ID must consider the factors
enumerated under sections 244 and 245 of the Regulations:
Factors to be considered
|
Critères
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244. For the purposes of Division 6 of
Part 1 of the Act, the factors set out in this Part shall be taken into
consideration when assessing whether a person
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244. Pour
l’application de la section 6 de la partie 1 de la Loi, les critères prévus à
la présente partie doivent être pris en compte lors de l’appréciation :
|
(a) is unlikely to appear for examination, an admissibility
hearing, removal from Canada, or at a proceeding that could lead to the
making of a removal order by the Minister under subsection 44(2) of the
Act; [Emphasis added]
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a) du risque que l’intéressé se soustraie vraisemblablement au
contrôle, à l’enquête, au renvoi ou à une procédure pouvant mener à la
prise, par le ministre, d’une mesure de renvoi en vertu du paragraphe
44(2) de la Loi; [Mon soulignement]
|
. . .
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[…]
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Flight risk
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Risque de fuite
|
245. For the purposes of paragraph 244(a),
the factors are the following:
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245. Pour
l’application de l’alinéa 244a), les critères sont les suivants :
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(a) being
a fugitive from justice in a foreign jurisdiction in relation to an offence
that, if committed in Canada, would constitute an offence under an Act of
Parliament;
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a) la qualité de fugitif à l’égard de la
justice d’un pays étranger quant à une infraction qui, si elle était commise
au Canada, constituerait une infraction à une loi fédérale;
|
(b)
voluntary compliance with any previous departure order;
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b) le fait de s’être conformé librement à une
mesure d’interdiction de séjour;
|
(c)
voluntary compliance with any previously required appearance at an immigration
or criminal proceeding;
|
c) le fait de s’être conformé librement à
l’obligation de comparaître lors d’une instance en immigration ou d’une
instance criminelle;
|
(d)
previous compliance with any conditions imposed in respect of entry, release
or a stay of removal;
|
d) le fait de s’être conformé aux conditions
imposées à l’égard de son entrée, de sa mise en liberté ou du sursis à son
renvoi;
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(e) any
previous avoidance of examination or escape from custody, or any previous
attempt to do so;
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e) le fait de s’être dérobé au contrôle ou de
s’être évadé d’un lieu de détention, ou toute tentative à cet égard;
|
(f) involvement
with a people smuggling or trafficking in persons operation that would likely
lead the person to not appear for a measure referred to in paragraph 244(a)
or to be vulnerable to being influenced or coerced by an organization involved
in such an operation to not appear for such a measure; and
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f) l’implication dans des opérations de
passage de clandestins ou de trafic de personnes qui mènerait
vraisemblablement l’intéressé à se soustraire aux mesures visées à l’alinéa
244a) ou le rendrait susceptible d’être incité ou forcé de s’y
soustraire par une organisation se livrant à de telles opérations;
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(g) the existence of strong ties to a community in Canada.
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g)
l’appartenance réelle à une collectivité au Canada.
|
[16]
Second, where the ID determines grounds exist
for the detention, under subsection 58(1) of the Act, the second part of the
analytical framework requires a Member of the ID to consider other
factors—those listed under section 248 of the Regulations, before making a
decision:
Other factors
|
Autres critères
|
248. If it is determined that there
are grounds for detention, the following factors shall be considered before a
decision is made on detention or release:
|
248. S’il
est constaté qu’il existe des motifs de détention, les critères ci-après
doivent être pris en compte avant qu’une décision ne soit prise quant à la
détention ou la mise en liberté :
|
(a) the
reason for detention;
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a) le motif de la détention;
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(b) the
length of time in detention;
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b) la durée de la détention;
|
(c)
whether there are any elements that can assist in determining the length of
time that detention is likely to continue and, if so, that length of time;
|
c) l’existence d’éléments permettant
l’évaluation de la durée probable de la détention et, dans l’affirmative,
cette période de temps;
|
(d) any
unexplained delays or unexplained lack of diligence caused by the Department
or the person concerned; and
|
d) les retards inexpliqués ou le manque
inexpliqué de diligence de la part du ministère ou de l’intéressé;
|
(e) the existence of alternatives to detention. [Emphasis
added]
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e) l’existence
de solutions de rechange à la détention. [Mon soulignement]
|
III.
Impugned Decision
[17]
The Member ordered the continued detention of
the applicants on the ground that they were unlikely to appear for removal. Taking
into account the detention review history, the position of the parties and the
background of the case, the Member stated as follows:
- The
applicants did not want to make arguments on the issue of being a flight risk
and that the question was conceded; they wanted the ID to focus on the proposed
alternative to detention;
- That
“[i]n any case”, the Member “considered as required what ha[d] been put forward
at this and previous detention reviews, as well as previous decisions, other
than the most recent one quashed by the Federal Court”;
- That
the applicants were in the midst of their hearing before the RPD and that the
parties indicated the first question which will be determined is the issue of
exclusion - dispositive of their case;
- That
the applicants were under conditional departure orders.
[18]
The Member then turned her mind to the first
part of the paragraph 58(1)(b) analysis, noting the conditional
departure orders depended on the outcome of the refugee hearings. The Member
recognized how the applicants previously argued that the ID should consider
whether they were unlikely to appear for their refugee hearings.
[19]
However, she did “not find
this persuasive”. She wrote as follows under the heading “Appearance for removal vs. refugee hearing”:
[14] This provision requires the
Immigration Division to consider whether a person is unlikely to appear for one
of four things, none of which are a refugee hearing. It would be improper then to
determine under 58(1)(b) whether Mr. Wang and Ms. Yan are unlikely to
appear for their refugee hearing.
[15] Mr. Wang and Ms. Yan relied on the
Federal Court decisions in Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v. B157
and (Citizenship and Immigration) v B188 (the latter followed B157).
In B157 the court clarified that “the Member is not obliged to consider
each of the different types of immigration proceedings that are mentioned in
that section [58(1)(b)], but rather that a consideration of which
immigration proceeding is relevant to the circumstances is sufficient.” These
cases do not interpret paragraph 58(1)(b) to include refugee hearings.
[16] Mr. Wang and Ms. Yan are under
removal orders and I have therefore considered whether they are unlikely to
appear for removal from Canada.
[20]
After going through the factors in section 245
of the Regulations, the Member then considered section 248 factors. In
considering the reason for detention (section 248(a) of the Regulations),
the Member considered the unlikelihood to appear for removal as the reason for which
the applicants were detained. She concluded as follows at paragraph 67:
If they are found to be excluded from refugee
protection on this basis, ensuring that they appear for removal is consistent
with the objective in paragraph 3(2)(h) of the IRPA which is “to
promote international justice and security by denying access to Canadian
territory to persons, including refugee claimants, who are security risks or
serious criminals.” The factor weighs in favour of detention.
[21]
In analyzing the release plan under factor (b)
of section 248, the Member then summarized the essential features which the
applicants would purchase: (i) electronic monitoring services; (ii) video
surveillance for the exterior of the home; and (iii) an alarm system monitored
by a company called Investigative Solutions Network Inc. [ISN] This company
would put in place two security guards who would accompany the applicants on
outings. There would also be consent of physical force by the applicants and a
personal bond of $10,000 deposited by the CEO of ISN.
[22]
The Member then reasoned:
[69] I do not believe that this
alternative to detention adequately ensures that Mr. Wang and Ms. Yan will
appear for removal as directed. To be clear, what it means for someone to
appear for removal involves that person taking a number of positive steps. They
must organize themselves to travel to the airport, arrive there on time in
order to check whatever luggage they might have, confirm their departure with
CBSA and catch their scheduled flight. They must board the plane without
incident. Anything less does not constitute appearing for removal. It requires
good faith on the part of the person being removed.
[23]
The analysis continues by employing the concept
of a bondsperson:
[70] This is why meaningful bonds are an
effective alternative to detention. The bond actually gives the bonded person a
desire to act in good faith. When a person with a close and trusting
relationship with the bonded person posts a significant deposit or guarantee,
the bonded person feels a desire not to jeopardize that relationship, a desire
to honour the trust the bondsperson has placed in them, and they do not wish
the bondsperson to incur painful financial loss. Even though the bonded person
may hate to leave Canada, the bond in fact ultimately makes them prefer to
appear for removal.
[71] Mr. Wang and Ms. Yan do not have any
desire to act in good faith for all of the reasons I already set out above.
Nothing in the proposed alternative alters their motivations. The $10,000 bond
from Mr. Wretham is meaningless to them. They have no personal relationship
with him that would motivate them to comply with conditions.
[24]
The Member then found electronic monitoring and outdoor
camera surveillance and alarms on the window and doors as “passive means of tracking and observation” particularly
in light of the applicants’ disregard for the law and Ms. Yan’s suicidal
intentions (she stated that she preferred to commit suicide rather than return
to China).
[25]
Finally, the Member was uncomfortable with the
idea that the consent to the use of force could be revoked. Counsel for the
applicants suggested a condition preventing withdrawal, which would amount to a
breach, but the Member found it would be completely inappropriate to prohibit
someone from choosing that they no longer wished to be physically assaulted;
and thus, the consent to use of force was without real effect.
IV.
Preliminary Remarks
Mootness
[26]
At the close of the hearing, the Respondent
mentioned that unless this decision is rendered by May 12, 2015, the
application will be moot in view of the next scheduled detention review
hearing. However, it seemed generally agreed that this Court can exercise its
discretion to determine the application notwithstanding that it may become
moot.
[27]
The Respondent mentioned a recent case released
by the Federal Court of Appeal, Sherman v Pfizer Canada Inc, 2015 FCA
107 [Sherman], which dealt with the question of discretion to hear an
appeal from a Prothonotary notwithstanding mootness. It is clear that the
proper approach is to consider each of the factors enumerated by the Supreme
Court of Canada in Borowski v Canada (Attorney General), [1989] 1 SCR
342 [Borowski] (see paras 7 and 15 of Sherman, above). This
echoes in Justice Mosley’s most recent decision in Kippax v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 429:
[7] This application
for judicial review concerns the detention review decision made on December 19,
2013. Since then, there have been several other review hearings and orders for
continued detention. This matter is, therefore, moot as the decision being
reviewed is spent. However, the parties are agreed that the Court should
exercise its discretion to decide the application as the applicant is
unlikely to be deported in the near future and the issues raised in the present
application will continue to be live issues in his ongoing detention reviews.
In arriving at the conclusion that I should hear the matter notwithstanding its
mootness I have considered the principles set out in Borowski v Canada
(Attorney General), [1989] 1 S.C.R. 342 at 353. [Emphasis added]
[28]
In the case at bar, the
Court should exercise its discretion notwithstanding mootness. The issues
raised will continue as live issues in ongoing detention reviews, particularly in
light of the release plan, which was insignificantly changed, prior to and
after re-determination of the matter by Justice Phelan. Further, the question
of considering “likelihood
to appear at a proceeding” seems
largely unsettled since the Member in the impugned decision explicitly rejected
Justice Phelan’s direction. Nevertheless, for a more critical discussion of the
issue, where both parties disagreed over the question of mootness, in the context
of a detention review, see Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
v B046, 2011 FC 877 at para 24, and for a thorough application of
the Borowski
factors in an immigration context, see Alfred v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship & Immigration), 2005 FC 1134 at para 19.
Justice
Phelan’s Decision and Judicial Comity
[29]
At the hearing, it became clear that the applicants
are seeking judicial review by raising some of the same issues already
discussed in their previous judicial review before Justice Phelan. It was
agreed that the principle of judicial comity ought to be considered, but that Justice
Phelan’s decision was not a directed verdict (Ali v Canada (Minister of
Employment & Immigration), [1994] 3 FC 73; Xie v Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration), [1994] FCJ No 286 at para 18).
[30]
The applicants assert that no new evidence was
heard at the re-determination hearing, except some documentary evidence was
entered onto the record. At the hearing before me, they admitted that there
were some differences in the proposed release plan. The applicants therefore
assert that I should grant their application by simply relying on Justice
Phelan’s reasons.
[31]
On the other hand, the respondent submits that
this is a fresh judicial review application and that I should only be concerned
with determining if the decision demonstrates “justification,
transparency and intelligibility”.
[32]
On the notion of judicial comity, in Alyafi v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 952, Justice
Martineau recently discussed the purpose of the principle and reviewed some
authorities on its meaning:
[45] I repeat: the principle of judicial
comity aims therefore to prevent the creation of conflicting lines of
jurisprudence and to encourage certainty in the law. Generally, a judge
should follow a decision on the same question of one of his or her
colleagues, unless the previous decision differs in the facts,
a different question is asked, the decision is clearly wrong or
the application of the decision would create an injustice. Judicial
comity requires much humility and mutual respect. If the rule of law does not
tolerate arbitrariness, judicial comity, its loyal companion, relies on reason
and the good judgement of each person. Failing a final judgment from the highest
court, respect for the other’s opinion can speak volumes. In short, judicial
comity is elegance incarnate in the person of the magistrate who respects the
value of precedents. [Emphasis added]
[33]
At paragraph 15 of Alfred v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 1134 , this Court relies
on Hansard Spruce Mills Ltd., Re, [1954] BCJ No 136, the leading
authority cited in Ziyadah v Canada (Minister of Citizenship &
Immigration), [1999] 4 FCR 152, aff’d [2000] FCJ No 1073, whereby Justice Pelletier
was faced with a case rendered by his own Court, which could not be
distinguished on the facts—he stated, “[w]ere I deciding
this at first instance, I might not have come to the same conclusion as my
learned colleague” (at para 6). Implicitly endorsed by the Federal Court
of Appeal, Justice Pelletier adopted the approach articulated by Justice Wilson
in Hansard Spruce Mills Ltd., listing the circumstances a trial judge
will depart from his colleague’s decision in respect of judicial comity:
But, as I said in the Cairney case, I
think the power or rather the proper discretionary duty, of a trial judge is
more limited. The Court of Appeal, by overriding itself in Bell v. Klein,
has settled the law. But I have no power to override a brother judge, I can
only differ from him, and the effect of my doing so is not to settle but rather
to unsettle the law, because, following such a difference of opinion, the
unhappy litigant is confronted with conflicting opinions emanating from the
same court and therefore of the same legal weight. That is the state of affairs
which cannot develop in the Court of Appeal.
Therefore, to epitomize what I have already
written in the Cairney case, I say this: I will only go against a
judgment of another judge of this court if:
(a) Subsequent
decisions have affected the validity of the impugned judgment;
(b) It is
demonstrated that some binding authority in case law or some relevant statute
was not considered;
(c) The Judgment
was unconsidered, a nisi prius judgment given in circumstances familiar
with all trial judges, where the exigencies of the trial require an immediate
decision without opportunity to fully consult authority.
If none of these situations exists, I think a
trial judge should follow the decisions of his brother judges.
V.
Issues and Standard of Review
[34]
The applicants submit the following issues for
consideration:
1.
Did the Member err in considering only the
likelihood to appear for removal and not the likelihood to appear for the continuation
of their refugee hearings?
2.
Did the Member err by failing to properly
consider the alternatives to detention proposed by the applicants?
[35]
Both parties have agreed that the standard of
review applicable is reasonableness, the same applied in the previous judicial
review which had raised the same issues (Wang at para 15).
[36]
These are questions of mixed fact and law and
attract a reasonableness standard (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick (Board of
Management), 2008 SCC 9).
[37]
As I find there is a fatal reviewable error on
the first issue raised, I do not find it necessary to consider whether the
Member committed a reviewable error in her assessment of the release plan.
Incidentally, I see no reasons to depart from Justice Phelan’s reasons with
respect to that first issue.
[38]
As to the second issue raised by the applicants,
the ID will have to reassess the proposed alternative to detention (step 2 of
its analysis contemplated in paragraph 16 above), in light of its findings on
flight risk (step 1 of the analysis foreseen in paragraphs 14 and 15 above).
VI.
Analysis
Likelihood to
appear for the next proceeding under paragraph 58(1)(b) of the Act and section
248 of the Regulations
[39]
The applicants submit that the Member erred in
making no finding in relation to the sustained interest the applicants have in
appearing for their refugee hearings. If the Minister is unsuccessful on the
question of exclusion, the applicants will thereafter have a refugee claim
which could be heard on its merits. Subsequently, if unsuccessful on that
claim, the applicants will have a right to appeal to the Refugee Appeal
Division. In the alternative, should exclusion be successful, the applicants
will have a right to a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment. The applicants argue that
the Member “[paid] no heed to Justice Phelan’s clear
instruction to consider the Applicants’ likelihood of appearing at their
refugee hearings.”
[40]
The respondent argues that the applicants
conceded the issue of flight risk at the detention review hearing and therefore
are precluded from raising the issue on judicial review.
[41]
In their reply, the applicants submit that the
argument fails to appreciate when a tribunal determines a person is a flight
risk, legislation and jurisprudence requires the Member to consider whether or
not there are alternatives to detention that can attenuate that risk. For
example, if the flight risk exists in connection to the attendance of a refugee
hearing, then the Member must assess whether or not the proposed plan will
ensure attendance at the hearing. In short, “[l]ogically
when considering whether or not the proposed alternative is reasonable, the
tribunal must also consider what proceeding the [a]pplicant is required to
appear at”; they rely on Wang, at paras 17-19 and 23-24; Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v B157 [B157], 2010 FC
1314 at paras 44 - 45; and Sittampalam v Canada (Minister of Public Safety
and Emergency Preparedness), 2006 FC 1118 at para 22.
[42]
Therefore, the applicants argue that the error
in the first part of the analysis is crucial because it also had an impact on
the Member’s decision on the question of whether the alternative to detention
proposed was adequate. She was required to evaluate whether the release plan
could ensure the applicants’ appearance for not just removal, but also for
their refugee hearings.
[43]
I agree with the applicants.
[44]
First, I am not fully convinced that the
applicants even made a “real concession” in the sense advanced by the
respondent and asserted by the Member. At pages 98 to 100 of the transcript of
the hearing, the applicants’ counsel explains why he will not be making
submissions on flight risk. The Member then said as follows (Applicants’
Record, at p 99):
. . . so I just want you to know that I am.. I
am required to go through a complete analysis in coming to a decision on
detention or release.
. . .
. . . I am not saying that you should or should
not make submissions on flight risk, I am just making absolutely clear to you
that that is something that I will be required by law to do in coming to my
overall decision and so there is not any misunderstanding about what we are
doing here today, this is a detention review.
[45]
This passage resonates in the decision under
review. If the Member is required by law to consider the question of flight
risk and if the Member had before her the specific fact that the applicants’
were in the midst of refugee hearings, she was required to explain why, or why
not, she did not see them as having a considerable interest in the proceedings in
such a way that it would affect her assessment of flight risk. Concession or
not, the Member explicitly said she was going to consider a full flight risk
analysis and the applicants had a reasonable expectation that she would do so.
[46]
The transcript shows a discussion of Justice
Phelan’s decision and the errors of the previous Member, and there is mention
of B157 (Applicants’ Record at p 64). The reasons do not show an
intelligible consideration of the jurisprudence:
[15] Mr. Wang and Ms. Yan relied on the
Federal Court decisions in Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v. B157
and (Citizenship and Immigration) v B188 (the latter followed B157). In B157
the court clarified that “the Member is not obliged to consider each of the
different types of immigration proceedings that are mentioned in that section
[58(1)(b)], but rather that a consideration of which immigration
proceeding is relevant to the circumstances is sufficient.” These cases do
not interpret paragraph 58(1)(b) to include refugee hearings.
[16] Mr. Wang and Ms. Yan are under
removal orders and I have therefore considered whether they are unlikely to
appear for removal from Canada. [Emphasis added]
[47]
I find it unreasonable that the Member did not
explain why the applicants’ refugee hearings were not relevant to the
circumstances particularly in light of her factual finding and acknowledgment
that the applicants’ were under conditional removal orders; the logic is
unclear. The Member then quotes from paragraph 44 of B157 but in the
next paragraph she states that “there were good reasons
for the Member to focus on the next immigration proceeding rather than removal”;
in the case at bar, the Member did not explain why there was no good reason to
consider the “next immigration proceeding”, the
refugee hearing.
[48]
I further note there is a remarkable similarity
between the impugned paragraph before Justice Phelan (Wang, at para 20) and
that before this Court. It is arguable, with the record before me, whether or
not the jurisprudence was meaningfully considered.
[49]
If the nature of a flight risk varies with the
facts and circumstances of a case, it logically includes the type of proceeding
the applicant is required to appear at. The ongoing RPD hearings were an
important feature of the circumstances of the applicants in detention,
including their detention history. The Member acknowledged it. It was open to her
to conclude that the proceeding in this case had little weight in view of other
facts and circumstances particular to the applicants in their risk assessment
(e.g. their lack of respect for the law), but she was required to at least
consider it in the analysis. I find that her failure to consider the RPD
proceeding, jointly in assessing flight risk and in assessing alternatives to
detention which can attenuate that risk, in any part of her statutory analysis
whatsoever, fatal.
VII.
Conclusion
[50]
For the foregoing reasons, I find that the
application should be granted and that the matter be remitted for
re-determination before a different member of the ID.