Date: 20161221
Docket: IMM-2284-16
Citation:
2016 FC 1401
Ottawa, Ontario, December 21, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Annis
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BETWEEN:
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SEMRET KASA
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is a judicial review, pursuant to
subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001,
c 27 [the Act], of a May 13, 2016 decision [the Decision] of the Immigration
Appeal Division [IAD or the Panel] of the Immigration and Refugee Board
dismissing the Applicant’s appeal of an immigration officer’s decision not to
issue a permanent resident visa to her husband, Mr. Woldergabere [the
Appellant], on the basis that their marriage is not genuine and was entered
into primarily for the purpose of acquiring status or privilege under the Act.
[2]
The Applicant was born in Eritrea but is now a
citizen of Canada. When the Applicant came to Canada, she made an unsuccessful
refugee claim. She was subsequently sponsored by her first husband. She then
married her second husband in or around December 2005 and sponsored him. She
subsequently divorced him because she said that he did not wish to have
children.
[3]
On October 14, 2011, the Applicant and the
Appellant married in Uganda. He was also born in Eritrea, but he now lives in
Uganda. He was previously married, from 2002 to 2010, and has two sons, of whom
his ex-wife has custody. In 2012, the Applicant applied to sponsor the
Appellant as her spouse. The Applicant has one child, of whom the Appellant is
allegedly the father, born in Canada in May 2015. She claims that she conceived
the child during the month of August 2014 while visiting with the Appellant in
Uganda.
[4]
By a letter dated April 22, 2014, an immigration
officer refused the Appellant’s application for permanent residence, finding
that, pursuant to section 4(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Regulations, SOR/2002-227, he was excluded from being considered a spouse
under the Act. On May 8, 2014, the Applicant filed an appeal of this decision before
the IAD.
[5]
On May 13, 2016 the IAD dismissed the appeal and
concluded that the Applicant had not proven on a balance of probabilities that
the marriage is genuine and was not entered into primarily for the purpose of
acquiring status or privilege under the Act. The IAD based this conclusion on a
number of inconsistencies in the Applicant’s evidence, a significant one being
that the Appellant is not the father of the child, but rather the child is that
of her second husband.
[6]
The Applicant raises two issues. The first relates
to submissions contesting the reasonableness of the Panel’s assessment of the
evidence concerning the genuineness of the marriage. The second pertains to an
allegation of incompetence by her Counsel in failing to introduce the Applicant’s
itinerary in support of her claim of being in Uganda with the her husband during
the month of August 2014, the agreed upon month of the child’s conception. However,
during the course of the hearing it became apparent, based on the Applicant’s
passport that the Panel erred in concluding that the Applicant was not in
Uganda in August 2014. As a result, the decision must be set aside for the
purpose of conducting a new hearing.
[7]
The Applicant first testified that she arrived
in Uganda in September 2014. When it was pointed out by the Panel member that
this would mean that the child was not conceived in Uganda, where the Appellant
resides, she testified that she was mistaken and had arrived in Uganda on June
11, 2014 and returned to Canada in October 2014. There is no disagreement on
this return date. She also indicated during the hearing that she could supply
the Panel with an itinerary supporting the June 11, 2014 entry date, or that
she could obtain a copy of the ticket to the same effect. The Panel ignored the
request to present further evidence. Instead it found that Counsel could point
to no place in the materials where an itinerary could be confirmed and would
show that she was in Uganda in August 2014.
[8]
The Panel then examined the Applicant’s Canadian
passport, which it had been provided. It contained an ambiguous Ugandan entry
stamp on page 7, in the middle of the page, surrounded by four other stamps and
with some hand written notes regarding a two month extension. The entry stamp
was unclear because it was missing the last numeral of the year, as follows: “11 June 201[missing or unclear number]”. In place of
the missing number identifying the exact year was an equally illegible hand
written character in the shape of the letter “L”, which if intended to
represent the numeral “4”, was missing the down stroke (or it was covered over
–only photocopies of the passport were before the Court).
[9]
The Panel rejected the Applicant’s evidence of
her presence in Uganda, concluding that it was “impossible
to discern whether [the Applicant] arrived in Uganda in 2014, or whether she
was there at the probable time of conception”. The Panel concluded that,
given the absence of any information on the father on the Statement of Live
Birth, it was “more likely than not that the father of
the baby is the ex [husband of the Applicant] not [the Appellant].”
[10]
During the hearing, Counsel for the Respondent
referred the Court to a different version of page 7 of the Applicant's passport
on which the ambiguous entry of “11 June 201[?]”
was totally absent, as were the hand written notes extending the visa. It was
at this time that the Court understood that there were two photocopies of the Applicant’s
passport taken on different dates, something the Panel had apparently not been
aware of when it rendered its decision.
[11]
The version without the ambiguous entry
stamp had been filed by the Minister on May 8, 2014, i.e. before June
11, 2014, as part of the Appeal Record, while the second was filed on April 28,
2016, as part of the Applicant’s disclosure. When corroborated by the
Applicant’s testimony and the other entry and exit stamps on the passport,
including the two-month handwritten extension, I find there is no doubt that the
ambiguous stamp was applied on June 11, 2014, placing the Applicant in Uganda
at the time of conception of the child.
[12]
This finding contradicts the IAD’s central
conclusion that, in all likelihood, the Applicant’s second husband was most
likely the father of her child. Rather, it would appear that the Appellant is
most likely the father of the child conceived in Uganda while the Applicant was
there. Besides undermining the negative credibility finding against the
Applicant, this finding would also corroborate her narrative that she divorced
her second husband because he did not want to have a child. This renders the
evidence that the Appellant was prepared to have a family with her more
plausible. In addition, the fact that the child appears most likely to be that
of the Appellant adds to the evidence supporting the genuineness of the
marriage.
[13]
As a further remark, the Court has some concern
over the Panel’s refusal to accept the Applicant’s request to provide
additional documentation, being her itinerary or a copy of her ticket to
establish her presence in Uganda. The Applicant immediately recognized her
mistake and offered to provide evidence to support her testimony that she was
in Uganda in August 2014. I note that the Panel mentioned in its decision that
no itinerary was provided to support her evidence, which leads the Court to
surmise that her offers may not have registered with the Member. The preferred
objective evidence would be that of the Airline confirming her travel to
Uganda, but this aside, when a matter such as the Applicant’s presence in
another country can be readily corroborated with little delay, it is probably
incumbent on the Panel to allow her to do so, unless there are good reasons not
to, none of which were present here.
[14]
While the Court recognizes that the Panel relied
upon other evidence in reaching its conclusion, the fact nevertheless remains
that it placed considerable reliance on the issue of the child’s parentage in
arriving at its decision, both in respect of its factual and credibility
findings. The Decision must therefore, be set aside to be heard by a different
panel.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT’S JUDGMENT is that the application is granted;
the decision is set aside and remitted to a differently constituted panel. No question
is certified for appeal.
"Peter Annis"