Docket: IMM-1155-15
Citation:
2015 FC 1109
Québec, Quebec, September 23, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Martineau
BETWEEN:
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ARTURO RANSANZ
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
PUBLIC SAFETY AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The applicant challenges the legality of the
decision of a Citizenship and Immigration Canada officer [Officer] in Los
Angeles, dated December 23, 2014, denying his application for a permanent
resident visa as an investor in the Economic Immigration class destined for the
Province of Quebec.
[2]
The applicant is a Mexican citizen. He has a
wife and three children who are also citizens of Mexico. Since August 2009, the
applicant has resided in Vancouver on a series of visitor visas, along with his
family. On August 27, 2010, he applied for a Certificat de sélection du
Québec [CSQ], which was issued to him on September 10, 2012. On November 7,
2012, he applied for a permanent resident visa in the Quebec Selected Investor
category. Upon initial review of the application, a visa officer noted that the
applicant’s children were studying in Vancouver, stating that “it does not show intention to live in Quebec when entire
family is in BC”. This officer noted that an interview would be required
once further documents were received.
[3]
An interview took place on December 22, 2014 in
Los Angeles at a local visa office. During the course of the interview, the
Officer indicated that he had concerns about the applicant’s intention to
reside in Quebec, considering his family’s strong ties to Vancouver. In
response, the applicant showed the Officer an unsigned contract (a finder’s
agreement) with a business consulting firm in Montreal, and stated that his
wife had recently been to Montreal to visit schools and properties. The Officer
remained unsatisfied that the applicant intended to reside in Quebec, and
concluded that he therefore did not meet the criteria for permanent residence
as an investor in the Economic Immigration class. Accordingly, the Officer
refused the applicant’s application, leading to the present judicial review.
[4]
The applicant raises a number of issues, which I
have rephrased as follows:
1.
Considering that the Officer was not satisfied
that the applicant intended to reside in Quebec, and absent a finding of inadmissibility,
did the Officer lack jurisdiction to refuse the application?
2.
Did the Officer commit a breach of procedural
fairness or otherwise render an unreasonable decision in refusing to consider
or in discarding relevant evidence of the applicant’s intention to move with
his family from Vancouver and reside in Quebec?
[5]
With respect to the first issue, the appropriate
standard of review in determining whether in this case the Officer lacked
jurisdiction to refuse the applicant’s application is correctness (Koroghli
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 1067 (CanLII) at para 20; Chen
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 41 (CanLII) at
para 10). This is different from cases where a specialized tribunal has
been called to interpret its home statute or regulations (Alberta
(Information and Privacy Commissioner) v Alberta Teachers’ Association,
2011 SCC 61 (CanLII) at para 30; Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, [2008] 1 SCR
190, 2008 SCC 9 (CanLII) at para 54; Canadian National Railway Co v Canada
(Attorney General), 2014 SCC 40 at para 55). Here, the Officer acted on the
assumption that he had the legal duty to verify whether a person is
inadmissible and whether all the requirements of the IRPA and the Regulations
are satisfied.
[6]
With respect to the second issue, in submitting
that the Officer’s failure to consider evidence presented by the applicant
constituted a breach of procedural fairness, the applicant states that the
appropriate standard of review is that of correctness (Ijaz v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 920 (CanLII) at para 13-15; Jahazi
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 242 (CanLII) at para
41). In contrast, the respondent treats this question as one related to the
sufficiency of the evidence, thus subject to a standard of reasonableness.
[7]
The jurisprudence relating to the standard of
review appropriate for questions of procedural fairness is currently unsettled
(Bergeron v Canada (Attorney General), 2015 FCA 160 (CanLII) [Bergeron]
at paras 67-69). Indeed, while the Courts have at times upheld a standard of
correctness for questions of procedural fairness (e.g. Air Canada v.
Canadian Transportation Agency, 2014 FCA 288, 468 N.R. 184 (F.C.A.) at para
26), they have also applied a more deferential standard (e.g. Re: Sound v.
Fitness Industry Council of Canada, 2014 FCA 48 at para 42). Stratas J.A.
has also pointed out the unsettled and (and potentially contradictory) nature
of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in this regard in Khela v Mission
Institution, 2014 SCC 24 at paras 79 and 89 (Bergeron at para 67).
[8]
Furthermore, as Stratas J.A. states in Bergeron,
at para 70:
As was the case in Forest Ethics,
above, the line between a procedural concern and a substantive concern can be a
blurry one. As this Court explained in Forest Ethics, there is much to
be said for the view that the same standard of review—reasonableness with
variable margins of appreciation depending on the circumstances (as described
earlier in these reasons)—should govern all administrative decisions.
[9]
In the case at hand, this blurry line is
apparent, as the question of whether the Officer provided the applicant with a
meaningful opportunity to respond to his concerns is heavily grounded in fact.
It hinges not so much on whether the applicant was given notice of the
Officer’s concerns about his intention to reside in Quebec – both parties
concede that notice was indeed given – but rather on whether the Officer took
sufficient account of the answers given and the evidence produced by the
applicant with respect to the steps taken to buy a house, acquire a business,
and find a school for the children in Montreal, all of which raises further
credibility concerns. Be that as it may, I don’t believe that the standard of
review applicable to the second issue (as reframed above) is determinative of
the present judicial application. Whatever the applicable standard, I would
come to the same result.
[10]
For the reasons that follow, I find that the
Officer had jurisdiction to refuse the application on the basis that he was not
satisfied that the applicant intended to reside in Quebec. Nevertheless, the
Officer breached procedural fairness or otherwise rendered an unreasonable
decision in refusing to consider or in discarding relevant evidence of the
applicant’s intention to move with his family from Vancouver and reside in
Quebec.
Considering that the Officer was not satisfied that the
applicant intended to reside in Quebec and absent a finding of inadmissibility,
did the Officer lack jurisdiction to refuse the application?
[11]
The applicant’s application for permanent
residence as an investor in the Economic Immigration class destined for the
province of Quebec was made pursuant to subsection 12(2) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c. 27 [IRPA], and
subsections 88(1) and 90(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Regulations, SOR/2002-227 [Regulations], which read as follows:
88. (1) The
definitions in this subsection apply in this Division.
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88. (1) Les
définitions qui suivent s’appliquent à la présente section.
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“investor
selected by a province” means an investor who
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« investisseur
sélectionné par une province »
Investisseur qui,
à la fois :
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(a) intends to
reside in a province the government of which has, under subsection 8(1) of
the Act, entered into an agreement referred to in subsection 9(1) of the Act
with the Minister whereby the province has sole responsibility for the
selection of investors; and
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a) cherche à
s’établir dans une province ayant conclu avec le ministre, en vertu du
paragraphe 8(1) de la Loi, un accord visé au paragraphe 9(1) de la Loi selon
lequel elle assume la responsabilité exclusive de la sélection des
investisseurs;
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(b) is named in a
selection certificate issued to them by that province.
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b) est visé par
un certificat de sélection délivré par cette province.
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[…]
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[…]
|
90. (1) For the
purposes of subsection 12(2) of the Act, the investor class is hereby
prescribed as a class of persons who may become permanent residents on the
basis of their ability to become economically established in Canada and who
are investors within the meaning of subsection 88(1).
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90. (1) Pour
l’application du paragraphe 12(2) de la Loi, la catégorie des investisseurs
est une catégorie réglementaire de personnes qui peuvent devenir résidents
permanents du fait de leur capacité à réussir leur établissement économique
au Canada et qui sont des investisseurs au sens du paragraphe 88(1).
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(2) If a foreign
national who makes an application as a member of the investor class is not an
investor within the meaning of subsection 88(1), the application shall be
refused and no further assessment is required.
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(2) Si le
demandeur au titre de la catégorie des investisseurs n’est pas un
investisseur au sens du paragraphe 88(1), l’agent met fin à l’examen de la
demande et la rejette.
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[12]
Plainly stated, the Officer was not satisfied
that the first requirement mentioned in subsection 88(1)(a) was met by the
applicant. However, the applicant submits that the Officer lacked jurisdiction
to refuse the applicant’s permanent residency application, in light of the fact
that he had already been selected by Quebec as an investor in the Economic
Immigration class, and had not been found otherwise inadmissible.
[13]
The applicant points to subsection 9(1) of the IRPA,
which states:
9. (1) Where a
province has, under a federal-provincial agreement, sole responsibility for
the selection of a foreign national who intends to reside in that province
as a permanent resident, the following provisions apply to that foreign
national, unless the agreement provides otherwise:
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9. (1) Lorsqu’une
province a, sous le régime d’un accord, la responsabilité exclusive de
sélection de l’étranger qui cherche à s’y établir comme résident permanent,
les règles suivantes s’appliquent à celui-ci sauf stipulation contraire de
l’accord :
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(a) the foreign
national, unless inadmissible under this Act, shall be granted
permanent resident status if the foreign national meets the province’s
selection criteria;
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a) le statut de
résident permanent est octroyé à l’étranger qui répond aux critères de
sélection de la province et n’est pas interdit de territoire;
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[Emphasis added]
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[Soulignements
ajoutés]
|
[14]
The applicant asserts that the Canada-Quebec
Accord relating to Immigration and Temporary Admission of Aliens [Canada-Quebec
Accord] grants exclusive jurisdiction to Quebec for the selection of immigrant
investors to that province. More particularly, the applicant relies on section
12, which states:
12. Subject to
sections 13 to 20,
|
12. Sous réserve des
articles 13 à 20 :
|
(a) Québec has
sole responsibility for the selection of immigrants destined to that province
and Canada has sole responsibility for the admission of immigrants to that
province.
|
(a) Le Québec est
seul responsable de la sélection des immigrants à destination de cette
province et le Canada est seul responsable de l’admission des immigrants dans
cette province.
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(b) Canada shall
admit any immigrant destined to Québec who meets Québec’s selection criteria,
if the immigrant is not in an inadmissible class under the law of Canada.
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(b) Le Canada
doit admettre tout immigrant à destination du Québec qui satisfait aux
critères de sélection du Québec, si cet immigrant n’appartient pas à une
catégorie inadmissible selon la loi fédérale.
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[15]
The applicant also relies on paragraph 3(d) of
the Act Respecting Immigration to Quebec, RSQ, c 102, which
states that the selection of foreign nationals wishing to settle in Quebec is
intended to “favour the coming, among foreign nationals
who apply therefor, of persons who will be able to become successfully
established in Quebec”. The applicant further notes that Annex 1 of the
Canada-Quebec Accord provides:
14. Québec is
responsible for the selection of immigrants destined to that province.
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14. Le Québec effectue
la sélection des candidats à l’immigration se destinant à cette province.
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15. Immigrants
selected by Québec shall be referred to federal authorities for assessment
relating to the admission and the issuance of visas.
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15. Les candidats
sélectionnés par le Québec sont référés aux autorités canadiennes pour fins
d’évaluation en fonction des exigences reliées à l’émission des visas et à
l’admission.
|
16. Canada will
determine whether an immigrant is admissible and, in appropriate cases,
confer permanent resident status.
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16. Le Canada
vérifie l’admissibilité des immigrants et, s’il y a lieu, leur accorde le
droit d’établissement.
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[16]
The applicant also submits that under Annex D of
the Canada-Quebec Accord, parties must undertake appropriate consultations if
difficulties arise in interpreting the definitions mentioned in section 3(a) of
the Accord – including the definition of investors. The applicant states that
there is a duty to consult with officials in the nominating province under the
Provincial Nominee Program when a visa officer forms an intention to substitute
his opinion for that of the province with respect to the likelihood that an
applicant will be able to become economically established (Kikeshian v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 658 (CanLII) at para 13).
[17]
In addition, the applicant asserts that the
intention to reside in Quebec was already a necessary condition or prerequisite
for his receipt of a CSQ. The applicant cites the Canada Citizenship and
Immigration Overseas Processing Manual OP 9 [OP 9] at section 7.1, which
provides: “Investors in Quebec’s IIP [Immigrant
Investor Program] must intend to settle in the province of Quebec and must
obtain a Certificat de sélection (CSQ) as proof of their selection by Quebec.” Therefore,
as the applicant had already received a CSQ, he submits that his intention to
reside in Quebec had been established, and the Officer overstepped his
jurisdiction by deciding otherwise. In any event, the applicant submits that
the Overseas Processing Manual OP 7b, Article 7.8, mentions that an
officer is obliged to consult with an official of the nominating province and
obtain a concurring opinion when contemplating a refusal, including in cases
where an officer has reason to believe that the applicant does not intend to
live in the nominating province.
[18]
During the course of the hearing of this
judicial review application, counsel for the respondent mentioned that the
Minister was concerned about Quebec serving as a gateway for immigrants flowing
into Canada, absent a “veto” power on the part of Canada that would enable the
federal government to exclude applicants for reasons beyond findings of
inadmissibility. It is exclusively for the province to determine based on
subsection 9(1) of the IRPA whether the applicant would be economically
successful in Quebec. Since the applicant was granted a CSQ, he satisfied the
requirement found in the first part of subsection 90(1) – his “ability to become economically established”.
Nevertheless, the Officer still had jurisdiction to determine whether or not
the applicant met the criteria under subsection 88(1) of the Regulations,
according to which the applicant must intend in the first place to reside in
the province (and be named in a selection certificate).
[19]
The respondent further argues that different
requirements apply for applicants falling within the Provincial Nominee Class
as a class of skilled workers, and for those who are selected by the province
as investors. Section 87 sets out provisions pertaining to the Provincial
Nominee Class, including the requirements referred to by the applicant relating
to consultation and the need for a concurring decision at subsections 87(3) and
87(4). Subsection 87(2) provides that a foreign national is a member of the
provincial nominee class if:
(a) subject to
subsection (5), they are named in a nomination certificate issued by the
government of a province under a provincial nomination agreement between that
province and the Minister; and
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(a) sous réserve
du paragraphe (5), il est visé par un certificat de désignation délivré par
le gouvernement provincial concerné conformément à l’accord concernant les
candidats des provinces que la province en cause a conclu avec le ministre;
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(b) they intend
to reside in the province that has nominated them.
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(b) il cherche à
s’établir dans la province qui a délivré le certificat de désignation.
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[20]
The respondent also refers to section 96 of the
Regulations which goes on to specify that if a foreign national selected by a
province is an investor (as in the case of the applicant), that
individual shall not be assessed according to the selection grid set out at
section 102, which is used to determine whether an applicant is likely to
become economically established in Canada. The respondent points out that these
requirements are not used to assess individuals in the provincial investor
class, as such a requirement is removed once a CSQ is granted – something that
is made explicit as an exception at section 96. In contrast to the provincial
investor class, the respondent points out that those provincial nominees who
are skilled workers are evaluated on their ability to become economically
established in Canada, as per subsection 87(1), and it is on this aspect of the
evaluation of the applicant that the requirements for consultation and
concurrence specifically apply.
[21]
In addition, the respondent submits that the
applicant’s argument on the obligation to consult based on Annex D of the
Canada-Quebec Accord is also erroneous. Section 3(b) of the Accord states that
the parties agree to undertake appropriate consultations only with respect to
problems arising from the interpretation of the definitions provided for in
section 3(a) – namely, the definition of investors in the Quebec regulations.
The respondent submits that these provisions are not applicable in the case at
hand because the Officer’s decision was not related to whether or not the
applicant met the provincial selection criteria, but rather to his intention to
reside in Quebec.
[22]
I substantially agree with the interpretation of
the impugned provisions proposed by the respondent in his written submissions
and reasserted at the hearing before the Court. The arguments made above by the
applicant fail to account for the plain words used by Parliament in the impugned
provisions and the economy of the IRPA is clear and the Regulations. [Note: the
second half of this sentence is unclear] Subsection 11(1) of the IRPA is clear
and prescribes that a visa officer shall only issue a permanent resident visa
if the applicant “is not inadmissible and meets the
requirements of this Act”. These are conjunctive conditions (Lhamo v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 692 (CanLII) at para 38).
[23]
Indeed, the second criterion of “meeting the
requirements of the Act” (ie. IRPA) is also found in paragraphs 70(1)(d) and
(e) of the Regulations – which has to be read with paragraph 70(3) for a
foreign national who intends to reside in the province of Quebec – and in paragraph
108(1)(a) of the Regulations:
70. (1) An
officer shall issue a permanent resident visa to a foreign national if,
following an examination, it is established that
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70. (1) L’agent
délivre un visa de résident permanent à l’étranger si, à l’issue d’un
contrôle, les éléments suivants sont établis :
|
(a) the foreign
national has applied in accordance with these Regulations for a permanent
resident visa as a member of a class referred to in subsection (2);
|
a) l’étranger en
a fait, conformément au présent règlement, la demande au titre d’une des
catégories prévues au paragraphe (2);
|
(b) the foreign
national is coming to Canada to establish permanent residence;
|
b) il vient au
Canada pour s’y établir en permanence;
|
(c) the foreign
national is a member of that class;
|
c) il appartient
à la catégorie au titre de laquelle il a fait la demande;
|
(d) the foreign
national meets the selection criteria and other requirements
applicable to that class; and
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d) il se conforme
aux critères de sélection et autres exigences applicables à
cette catégorie;
|
(e) the
foreign national and their family members, whether accompanying or not, are
not inadmissible.
|
e) ni lui ni les membres de sa
famille, qu’ils l’accompagnent ou non, ne sont interdits de territoire.
|
[…]
|
[…]
|
(3) For the
purposes of paragraph (1)(d), the selection criterion
for a foreign national who intends to reside in the Province of Quebec as a
permanent resident and is not a member of the family class is met by
evidence that the competent authority of that Province is of the
opinion that the foreign national complies with the provincial selection
criteria.
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(3) Pour
l’application de l’alinéa (1)d), la sélection de l’étranger qui cherche à
s’établir dans la province de Québec comme résident permanent et qui
n’appartient pas à la catégorie du regroupement familial s’effectue sur
preuve que les autorités compétentes de la province sont d’avis que
l’intéressé répond aux critères de sélection de celle-ci.
|
[…]
|
[…]
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108. (1) Subject
to subsection (5), if a foreign national makes an application as a member of
the investor class, the entrepreneur class or the self-employed persons class
for a permanent resident visa, an officer shall issue the visa to the foreign
national and their accompanying family members if
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108. (1) Sous
réserve du paragraphe (5), si l’étranger présente, au titre de la catégorie
des investisseurs, de la catégorie des entrepreneurs ou de la catégorie des
travailleurs autonomes, une demande de visa de résident permanent, l’agent
lui en délivre un ainsi qu’à tout membre de sa famille qui l’accompagne si les
conditions suivantes sont réunies :
|
(a) the foreign
national and their family members, whether accompanying or not, are not
inadmissible and meet the requirements of the Act and these
Regulations;
|
a) ni l’étranger
ni aucun membre de sa famille ne sont interdits de territoire et
tous satisfont aux exigences de la Loi et du présent règlement;
|
[…]
|
[…]
|
[Emphasis added]
|
[Soulignements
ajoutés]
|
[24]
By analogy, the “intention to reside” criterion
of subsection 88 of the Regulations is also found in the Provincial Nominee
Class under paragraph 87(2)(b) of the Regulations, which provides that:
(2) A foreign
national is a member of the provincial nominee class if
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(2) Fait partie
de la catégorie des candidats des provinces l’étranger qui satisfait aux
critères suivants :
|
(a) subject to
subsection (5), they are named in a nomination certificate issued by the
government of a province under a provincial nomination agreement between that
province and the Minister; and
|
(a) sous réserve
du paragraphe (5), il est visé par un certificat de désignation délivré par
le gouvernement provincial concerné conformément à l’accord concernant les
candidats des provinces que la province en cause a conclu avec le ministre;
|
(b) they intend
to reside in the province that has nominated them.
|
(b) il cherche à
s’établir dans la province qui a délivré le certificat de désignation.
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[25]
Subsection 87(3) of the Regulations specifically
grants federal officials the discretion to substitute their evaluation of an
applicant’s ability to become economically established in Canada, provided that
they consult with the province that has nominated the individual, and that they
have obtained the concurrence of a second officer (subsections 87(3) and
87(4)). Crucially, however, these requirements for consultation and concurrence
apply specifically to the first condition under subsection 87(2) only – namely,
to considerations relating to the likelihood of the applicant’s ability to
become established in Canada, as per the criteria of the provincial nomination
certificate at subsection 87(2)(a). An applicant’s intention to reside in the
province that has nominated him or her (subsection 87(2)(b)) is a separate
requirement – one that is not subject to the requirements for consultation and
concurrence, and which is additional to the issuance of a certificate of
selection or a provincial nomination.
[26]
In relation to the applicant’s submission that
Article 7.8 of OP 7b requires that an officer consult and confer when
contemplating a refusal, I do not believe that this guideline is applicable
under the circumstances, as it refers to applicants falling within the PNC as a
class of skilled workers, rather than those who are selected by the province as
investors. Finally, the requirement to consult regarding the definition of
investors in section 3(b) of Annex D of the Canada-Quebec Accord relates to the
definition of investors in the Quebec regulations, and is therefore not
applicable in this case, as the Officer accepted that the applicant met the
provincial requirements for the issuance of a CSQ.
[27]
To summarize, under the IRPA, it is the federal
government who has the final authority to grant permanent resident visas to
foreign nationals. In this case, the Officer found that the applicant did not
meet the admissibility criteria provided for under the Regulations and the IRPA,
and thus denied his application according to subsection 90(2) of the
Regulations. As a result, the Officer did not commit a reviewable error in
refusing the applicant’s application, in spite of the fact that the province of
Quebec had issued a CSQ. Accordingly, the Officer did not have to find that the
applicant was inadmissible, as per sections 33 to 43 of the IRPA, in order to
refuse his application for a permanent resident visa (Qing v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 1224 (CanLII) at para 7).
Did the Officer’s failure to provide the applicant with a
meaningful opportunity to respond to the concerns about his intent to reside in
Quebec constitute a breach of procedural fairness?
[28]
The Computer Assisted Immigration Processing System
notes [CAIPS notes] from the in-person interview conducted with the applicant
reveal the following:
Asked p/a [applicant] why he decided to live
in BC since 2009 if their intention is to settle in PQ, why not live in PQ to
start with. Stated it isn’t so much that they decided to live in BC, it’s just
that they decided to live there for 2 yrs only. […]
Informed p/a that he indicated in his appln
nil French language skills, his children have been attending BC schools because
he wants to become fluent in English, the whole family have resided in BC since
2009, and that he owns properties in BC. Why would he then want to settle in PQ
and not BC, when it would appear that he is already settled in BC.
Informed p/a that I still have concerns
about his intention to settle in PQ. […] Overall, most of what has transpired
with him and his family in Canada, is actions, i.e. where they’ve live in
Canada, bought properties in BC, bank accounts in BC, kids attending school in
BC, very limited time spent in PQ, do not give any indication that he intends
to settle in PQ. Gave p/a chance to respond to my concerns.
[29]
The applicant submits that he should have been
given a meaningful opportunity to respond to the Officer’s concerns about his
intention to reside in Quebec, including the opportunity to produce evidence to
refute such concerns (Khwaja v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) 2006
FC 522 at para 17). The applicant concedes that the Officer did indicate his
concern during the interview about the applicant’s intention to reside in
Quebec, raising the specific grounds of this concern (including the amount of time
the applicant and his family had spent in Vancouver and the fact that the
applicant had purchased properties in British Columbia, rather than Quebec). In
response to these concerns, the applicant showed the Officer the unsigned
finder’s agreement with a business consulting firm in Montreal, whereby the
applicant would retain the firm to identify target pharmaceutical companies
available for purchase in Montreal. He also explained to the Officer at the
interview that his wife had recently visited Montreal to look at properties,
and had visited schools where they were considering enrolling their children.
He stated that Mexico is not a safe place for his children, and that they would
have the chance of a better life in another environment.
[30]
However, the applicant states in his affidavit
that the Officer only “briefly glanced” at the finder’s agreement, and “refused to read it when he saw that it had not yet been
signed.” The applicant submits that the Officer should have weighed this
agreement as a demonstration of his intention to reside in Quebec. Similarly,
the applicant notes that the Officer clearly “refused to look at” and “refused
to acknowledge” other pieces of evidence that he produced to counter the
Officer’s concerns, including plane tickets that showed travel to Montreal
prior to the interview, email correspondences between the applicant’s wife and
admissions personnel at two Montreal schools, and email correspondences between
the applicant’s wife and a Montreal real estate agent. The applicant states
that it was impossible for the Officer to have adequately taken cognizance of
these documents because he refused to look at them or arbitrarily discarded
them in his final analysis. Therefore, the applicant states that this disregard
for the evidence constituted a breach of procedural fairness or otherwise
rendered his decision unreasonable.
[31]
On the other hand, the respondent submits that
there has been no breach of procedural fairness and that there is no obligation
on the part of the deciding officer to refer in his or her decision to all the
evidence produced during an interview. Furthermore, the respondent notes that
the Officer did indeed take note of the unsigned agreement and also explicitly
mentioned the applicant’s wife’s visit to Montreal. Thus, even if the Officer
did not specifically mention the email exchanges in his notes, he did take
cognizance of these factors in his decision-making process. The respondent also
points out that the applicant’s wife’s recent visit to Montreal to look at
residential property and schools for the children was only undertaken prior to
the in-person interview, and after the applicant had been made aware that such
an interview would be necessary.
[32]
I am satisfied that a reviewable error has been
made by the Officer. While the Officer acknowledged the existence of the
unsigned agreement, the CAIPS notes do not indicate what weight (if any) he
accorded to this highly relevant and uncontradicted evidence. The Officer also
made note of the applicant’s wife’s recent trip to Montreal (erroneously
stating that the applicant had also accompanied her), but the CAIPS notes do
not refer to any of the documentation presented as supporting evidence by the
applicant pertaining to this trip, including the email correspondence with the admissions
personnel and the real estate agent. Indeed, in his affidavit, the applicant
notes that the Officer “refused to review any of these documents.” As Justice
Evans noted in Cepeda-Gutierrez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 1998 CanLII 8667 (FC) at para 17 [Cepeda-Gutierrez]:
the more important the evidence that is not
mentioned specifically and analyzed in the agency’s reasons, the more willing a
court may be to infer from the silence that the agency made an erroneous
finding of fact “without regard to the evidence”.
[33]
Given the potential importance of this evidence
to the Officer’s finding of fact on the applicant’s intention to reside in
Quebec, and in the absence of reasons by the Officer indicating the probative
value he accorded it, it would appear that the Officer rendered his decision
without proper regard to the evidence, and thus committed a reviewable error. In
addition, while I accept that a visa officer is under no obligation to refer to
all the evidence produced during an interview, “a
blanket statement that the agency has considered all the evidence will not
suffice when the evidence omitted from any discussion in the reasons appears to
squarely contradict the agency’s finding of fact” (Cepeda-Gutierrez,
above, at para 17). In this case, it appears that in spite of the
explanations and corroborating evidence provided by the applicant to address
the concerns raised in the interview, the Officer had already made up his mind regarding
the applicant’s intention to reside in Quebec. Moreover, the Officer appears to
have arrived at this conclusion unreasonably, based on inferences drawn from his
assessment of the applicant’s degree of establishment in Vancouver, which
should not – in and of itself, and in the face of evidence to the contrary –
have been taken as determinative of the applicant’s intentions.
[34]
Finally, I find that a credibility issue was
raised with respect to the suggestion by the respondent’s counsel that the
research into real estate and schools in Montreal was only undertaken in
anticipation of the in-person interview. If the Officer suspected that the
applicant’s wife’s recent trip to Montreal had only taken place because the
applicant was aware of his upcoming interview, as the respondent implies before
this Court, the Officer should have raised this concern and given the applicant
an opportunity to respond during the interview, as this issue directly went to
the applicant’s credibility (Moradi v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2013 FC 1186 (CanLII) at paras 17-18).
Conclusion
[35]
For the foregoing reasons, I conclude that the
Officer did not lack the jurisdiction to refuse the applicant’s application, in
light of the fact that he had already been selected as an investor in the
Economic Immigration class destined to the Province of Quebec and had not been
found inadmissible. I also conclude that the Officer did not have a duty to
consult the province of Quebec or to obtain a concurring decision from a
different officer prior to refusing the applicant’s permanent residency
application. I do find, however, that the Officer breached procedural fairness
or ignored relevant evidence, or otherwise failed to provide the applicant with
a meaningful opportunity during his in-person interview to respond to the
credibility concerns he may have had with respect to the evidence related to
the travel to Montreal prior to the interview and the documentary evidence in
this regard.
[36]
The parties have both proposed questions of law
for certification but it is not necessary to certify these questions as none
would be determinative of an appeal made in this case by the respondent.