Docket: IMM-7729-14
Citation: 2016 FC 21
Toronto, Ontario,
January 8, 2016
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Diner
BETWEEN:
AEISHIA NOLA TAYLOR
BASIL MONTAGUE HAMILTON
Applicants
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
OVERVIEW
[1]
This judicial review, pursuant to subsection
72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the
Act], challenges the September 8, 2014 refusal of a Humanitarian and
Compassionate [H&C] application for permanent residence [the Decision] made
under subsection 25(1) of the Act. The Senior Immigration Officer [the Officer]
determined that the Applicants did not demonstrate unusual and undeserved or
disproportionate hardship in having to apply for residency from outside Canada.
I took this case under reserve and was preparing to issue a decision at the
time the Supreme Court of Canada [SCC] released Kanthasamy v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 61 (Kanthasamy SCC). That
case had an impact on issues surrounding the evaluation of hardship, including
best interests of the child [BIOC] and the consideration of psychological
reports in that regard, in the context of section 25(1) of the Act. Both
parties were provided an opportunity to comment on Kanthasamy SCC when
the hearing was resumed on December 18, 2015 for that purpose.
[2]
The Applicants are a married couple. They are
nationals of Jamaica, who came to Canada in October 2008. The couple had their
first and only child, their daughter Shalom, on August 13, 2009. At the time of
this judicial review, Shalom was five years old. As a Canadian citizen, she was
not part of the Applicants’ H&C application, although she was a focus of
the application and subsequent Decision.
[3]
Indeed, the Decision primarily focused on Shalom.
The Officer acknowledged that although she would be eligible to stay in Canada
given her Canadian citizenship, she would ultimately accompany her parents were
they to leave. The Officer reviewed material aspects of the H&C
application, excerpting key contents of the Applicants’ submissions which
addressed the realities Shalom would face in Jamaica, including inferior
educational, medical, security, social, and living conditions. After reviewing
the evidence regarding Shalom, the Officer found that, while conditions in
Jamaica would be less than favourable, returning there would neither compromise
her best interests nor would “her fundamental rights… be
denied” (Certified Tribunal Record [CTR], p 7).
[4]
The Officer, in coming to these conclusions, considered
the objective country condition evidence for Jamaica, including the ability for
Shalom to pursue an education there and her ability to ultimately pursue a
post-secondary education either in Jamaica or in Canada (CTR, p 5).
[5]
The Officer also reviewed evidence from an
optometrist and a psychologist and a letter from a teacher in Jamaica
describing how educational and societal problems there would negatively impact
Shalom. The Officer determined that Shalom neither appeared to be suffering
from any psychological conditions or health problems nor was she unable to
receive treatment for potential psychological or vision issues in Jamaica. As
for the teacher’s letter, it was found to be speculative and lacking in
objective evidence (CTR, pp 4-5).
[6]
The Officer then considered the risks associated
with a return to Jamaica in the context of hardship per the requirements of subsection
25(1.3) of the Act and noted that the onus remains on the Applicants to
demonstrate that these conditions would affect them directly and personally.
The Officer concluded that they would be subject to conditions faced by the
general populace, and those hardships associated with general country
conditions do not amount to “unusual and undeserved, or
disproportionate hardship” (CTR, pp 7-8).
[7]
Finally, the Officer considered the establishment
evidence of the Applicants, including their employment, volunteer, and
community service, noting their positive efforts to become established in
Canada. However, the Officer noted that they did not have a reasonable
expectation of being able to remain in Canada permanently and that they had not
remained in Canada due to circumstances beyond their control. The Officer ultimately
concluded that the Applicants could re-establish themselves in Jamaica with the
skills acquired in Canada and with family to help them resettle there (CTR, pp
8-9).
II.
ISSUES AND PARTIES’ SUBMISSIONS
[8]
The Applicants allege that the Officer made two errors:
first, in applying the incorrect legal test in assessing BIOC; and second, in assessing
the evidence in an unreasonable fashion.
[9]
Regarding BIOC, the Applicants argue that the
Officer conducted an assessment of the hardships Shalom would face if returned
to Jamaica, a focus that resulted in the following legal errors:
i.
concluding that Shalom would be at no greater
risk of gang violence than the rest of the population;
ii.
focusing on whether Shalom’s basic needs would
be met in Jamaica;
iii.
assessing whether Shalom’s fundamental rights
would be denied in moving to Jamaica (and concluding they would not);
iv.
assessing whether a “significant
negative impact” would result for Shalom from the relocation; and
v.
importing a state protection analysis to
conclude that the Jamaican government is making serious efforts to combat child
poverty.
[10]
The effect of all this, the Applicants assert,
is that they were expected to demonstrate that Shalom faced specific risks and
that her fundamental rights would be denied before the Officer would conclude
that the BIOC militated in favour of granting the H&C application. As
neither of these are appropriate considerations within the BIOC analysis, the
Officer made a fundamental error of law.
[11]
The Applicants, at the July hearing, primarily
argued that the correct test for a BIOC analysis was most recently
formulated by Justice Russell in Williams v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2012 FC 166 at para 63 [Williams]:
When assessing a child’s best interests an
Officer must establish first what is in the child’s best interest, second the
degree to which the child’s interests are compromised by one potential decision
over another, and then finally, in light of the foregoing assessment determine
the weight that this factor should play in the ultimate balancing of positive
and negative factors assessed in the application.
[12]
Although the Applicants admit that the Williams
test need not be strictly applied, the Court must look at whether the Officer
has engaged in a meaningful assessment respecting the substance of the test. In
other words, it is the substance, not the form, of the analysis that dictates
whether BIOC has been correctly considered. And here, they assert, the Officer
conducted none of the required analysis, relying instead on extrinsic factors
of risks, rights, and the possibility of state protection. No assessment of Shalom’s
best interests was done, no assessment of how those interests would be affected
by a decision in either direction, and no balancing of the factors.
[13]
The Respondent, in brief, counters that there is
no formulaic requirement to apply any given test (such as in Williams)
and contends the Officer undertook an adequate and reasonable BIOC analysis.
[14]
Regarding the second alleged error, the Applicants
argue that the Officer’s assessment of the evidence presented was unreasonable.
First, the Applicants submitted a report by a clinical psychologist which
stated that moving to Jamaica would have significant negative mental effects on
Shalom. The Officer, however, took issue with the report, as Shalom had no
actual psychological problems at the time of the assessment. The Officer further
concluded that the report overstated Shalom’s health problems in the absence of
any corroborating evidence. Second, the Applicant submitted a letter from a
teacher in Jamaica detailing the shortcomings of the Jamaican education system
and the adverse impact a move to Jamaica might have on Shalom. As with the
psychological report, the Officer concluded that the assertions in the letter
lacked corroborating evidence and were thus speculative. The Applicants submit
that both these documents went to the heart of a proper BIOC assessment and
were thus unreasonably ignored.
[15]
The Respondent counters that the Officer
undertook a reasonable and comprehensive analysis of the evidence and that the
Applicant’s arguments essentially amount to a request to reweigh the evidence.
III.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[16]
In Kanthasamy v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2014 FCA 113 [Kanthasamy FCA] at para 99, the Federal
Court of Appeal concluded that for the fact-finding component of subsection
25(1) matters, the deferential standard of reasonableness applies, and the
Supreme Court confirmed this approach (Kanthasamy SCC at para 44). A reasonableness
review asks whether the impugned decision “falls within
a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law” (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at para 47). This is a deferential
approach, and “as long as the process and the
outcome fit comfortably with the principles of justification, transparency and
intelligibility, it is not open to a reviewing court to substitute its own view
of a preferable outcome”
(Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at para 59).
[17]
The Applicants, however, argue that the Officer
both erred in assessing the evidence and in applying the right test to
the H&C analysis, and on that latter issue, the case law on standard of
review remains in flux. Justice Mosley addressed the uncertainty on standard of
review for H&C decisions in Gonzalez v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2015 FC 382 at paras 26-34. After a very extensive summary of
the leading case law up to Kanthasamy FCA and Lemus v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) 2014 FCA 114, Justice Mosley concluded that
the standard of correctness applies to the officer’s choice of a legal test.
[18]
Since there is nothing in the recent release of Kanthasamy
SCC that explicitly contradicts Justice Mosley that correctness should
apply for the choice of the legal test in an H&C assessment, and it is the
same standard recently used by Justice Gleeson in D’Aguiar-Juman v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 6 at para 6, I endorse this view.
IV.
ANALYSIS
[19]
The primary issue challenged by the Applicants
is that the decision-maker failed to correctly consider hardship, particularly
as it applies to BIOC (Kanthasamy FCA at paras 41-55). In a section 25
analysis, the decision-maker must be alert, alive and sensitive to the best
interests of the child (Baker v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817 para 75 [Baker]; Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration v Hawthorne, 2002 FCA 475, para 31 [Hawthorne]).
Kanthasamy SCC directs that an officer should not view hardship through
the limiting lens of the heretofore oft-applied descriptors “unusual and undeserved or disproportionate”:
[33] The words “unusual and undeserved
or disproportionate hardship” should therefore be treated as descriptive, not
as creating three new thresholds for relief separate and apart from the
humanitarian purpose of s. 25(1). As a result, what officers should not do, is
look at s. 25(1) through the lens of the three adjectives as discrete and high
thresholds, and use the language of “unusual and undeserved or disproportionate
hardship” in a way that limits their ability to consider and give weight to all relevant humanitarian and
compassionate considerations in a particular case. The three adjectives should
be seen as instructive but not determinative, allowing s. 25(1) to respond more
flexibly to the equitable goals of the provision.
[20]
The Supreme Court further states that it is
particularly important not to limit the hardship focus when a child is directly
affected:
[41 It is difficult to see how a child can
be more “directly affected” than where he or she is the applicant. In my
view, the status of the applicant as a child triggers not only the
requirement that the “best interests” be treated as a significant factor in the
analysis, it should also influence the manner in which the child’s other
circumstances are evaluated. And since “[c]hildren will rarely, if ever,
be deserving of any hardship”, the concept of “unusual or undeserved hardship”
is presumptively inapplicable to the assessment of the hardship invoked by a
child to support his or her application for humanitarian and compassionate
relief: Hawthorne, at
para. 9. Because children may experience greater hardship than adults
faced with a comparable situation, circumstances which may not warrant
humanitarian and compassionate relief when applied to an adult, may nonetheless
entitle a child to relief: see Kim v. Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), [2011] 2 F.C.R. 448
(F.C.), at para. 58; UNHCR, Guidelines on
International Protection No. 8: Child Asylum Claims under Articles 1(A)2 and
1(F) of the 1951 Convention and/or 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of
Refugees, HCR/GIP/09/08, December 22, 2009.
[21]
In this case, the Officer canvassed the matters
raised by the Applicants regarding their daughter, including medical,
educational, safety, and family components of a potential move to Jamaica. He
acknowledged attractive elements of life in Canada for both the Applicants and
Shalom. The Officer began from a starting point that presumes life in Canada is
better than life in the country of origin, which is indeed acknowledged and
accepted by the jurisprudence (see, for example, Hawthorne at para 5).
[22]
However, the Officer erred in looking at these
elements through the lens of unusual and undeserved or disproportionate
hardship, which Kanthasamy SCC now teaches us is the wrong focus when it
comes to a child. Having already acknowledged that daughter Shalom was
inseparable from her parents in any return to Jamaica, the Officer in this case
found that it would not be “unusual and undeserved, or disproportionate’
for the Applicants to re-adapt to life in Jamaica” (CTR, p 8). I would
note that beyond the legal error disclosed in that conclusion, the statement itself
is unreasonable, in my view, because Shalom had never adapted to life in
Jamaica in the first place: unlike her parents, she had spent her entire life
in Canada. Though she was not one of the H&C Applicants, the Officer was
clearly aware of her centrality to the analysis.
[23]
With respect to relatives and friends of the
child in Canada, the officer once again peered through the hardship lens of the
test that Kanthasamy SCC instructs us to avoid:
I have considered the letters of support
from the applicants’ relatives and friends; however, insufficient evidence has
been put forth to support that the aforementioned relationships are
characterized by a degree of interdependency and reliance to such an extent
that if separation were to occur it would amount to hardship that is unusual
and undeserved or disproportionate. Moreover, I am not satisfied that
separation from relatives or friends here in Canada would sever the bonds that
have been established. While separation from friends and other acquaintances
is difficult, I am not satisfied that in these circumstances it is an unusual
and undeserved or disproportionate hardship…. Relationships are not bound
by geographical location and the applicants can maintain contact with their
relatives and friends in Canada through the internet in the form of e-mails,
instant messaging, Skype or Facebook. If computers are not readily available,
telephone and letters are another viable option. (CTR, p 8; emphasis added).
[24]
While the Officer referred to the Applicants in
the quote above, it was also clear that any relocation would necessarily
include Shalom (CTR, p 6). The effects of relocation and separation, then,
should have been separately considered for her since, as we now know from Kanthasamy
SCC, it is incorrect to consider Shalom’s best interests in the context of
hardship, as was done here.
[25]
The Supreme Court in Kanthasamy SCC had
the following to say about relationships in Canada and the resulting BIOC
hardship analysis:
[58] Nowhere did the Officer ask
whether the effect of separating Jeyakannan Kanthasamy from the people he was
close to in Canada would be magnified by the fact that his relationships with
them developed when he was a teenager. This approach is inconsistent with how
hardship should be uniquely addressed for children.
[59] Moreover, by evaluating Jeyakannan
Kanthasamy’s best interests through the same literal approach she applied to
each of his other circumstances — whether the hardship was “unusual and
undeserved or disproportionate” — she misconstrued the best interests of the
child analysis, most crucially disregarding the guiding admonition that
“[c]hildren will rarely, if ever, be deserving of any hardship”: Hawthorne,
at para. 9. See also Williams v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2012 FC 166, at paras. 64-67.
[26]
In light of Kanthasamy SCC, it is clear
that the Officer erred in applying the “unusual,
undeserved, or disproportionate” requirement when considering Shalom’s
best interests: this constitutes a reviewable error in that it employed the
wrong test, given this new jurisprudence.
[27]
On the second issue raised by the Applicant
regarding assessing evidence in an unreasonable manner, I entirely agree with
the Respondent’s proposition that the role of this Court in a judicial review is
not to reweigh the evidence, and that BIOC is the central, but not the sole factor
to be considered in the section 25 analysis (Legault v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2002 FCA 125). As Baker articulated this principle
at para 75, “the decision-maker should consider
children’s best interests as an important factor, give them substantial weight,
and be alert, alive and sensitive to them. That is not to say that children’s
best interests must always outweigh other considerations”.
[28]
I find, however, that the Officer here failed to
adequately assess key evidence relating to Shalom’s best interests, including letters
relating to her education, living arrangements, financial insecurity, physical safety,
and health care (her eye condition, and ability to afford corrective treatment
in Jamaica).
[29]
To provide but one example, I will turn to the
Officer’s assessment of Shalom’s psychological report. The Officer found “[f]rom the information provided by Dr. Antczak, the
applicant’s [sic] daughter does not appear to be suffering from any
psychological conditions or problems necessitating the appointment with Dr.
Antczak. The report is absent any information regarding the reason for the
referral to Dr. Antczak or information about when the interview took place or
the length of the assessment” (CTR, p 5). The Officer’s assessment, in
my view, misses the psychologist’s point that the deleterious effects would
occur due to a relocation to Jamaica, rather than on account of any psychological
needs that already exist (CTR, p 72).
[30]
In Kanthasamy SCC, the Court said the
following about analogous findings by the H&C officer:
[48] Moreover, in her exclusive focus
on whether treatment was available in Sri Lanka, the Officer ignored what the
effect of removal from Canada would be on his mental health. As the Guidelines
indicate, health considerations in addition to medical inadequacies in
the country of origin, may be relevant: Inland Processing, s.
5.11. As a result, the very fact that Jeyakannan Kanthasamy’s mental health
would likely worsen if he were to be removed to Sri Lanka is a relevant
consideration that must be identified and weighed regardless of whether there
is treatment available in Sri Lanka to help treat his condition: Davis v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 96 Imm. L.R. (3rd)
267 (F.C.); Martinez v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
14 Imm. L.R. (4th) 66 (F.C.)
[31]
We know that, per Kanthasamy SCC, a child
affected by an H&C decision must be given the full and careful attention of
the decision-maker. This means a thorough assessment of the child’s interests –
assuming relevant evidence is provided – which includes education,
accommodation, personal safety, and health, and which takes into consideration
the full spectrum of consequences that may result from granting, or denying,
the H&C application. To do otherwise constitutes a reviewable error.
V.
CONCLUSION
[32]
In light of my above reasons, I am granting this
judicial review. I commend counsel for their excellent preparation, including
both oral and written submissions, both at the time of the hearing and at its
post-Kanthasamy SCC resumption. They served their respective clients
well.
VI.
QUESTION FOR CERTIFICATION
[33]
Counsel submitted the following question for
certification, which they argued transcends the interest of the immediate
parties and contemplates issues of broad significance or general application,
per Liyanagamage v Canada (Secretary of State), [1994] FCJ No 1637 (FCA):
In a best interests of the child analysis,
is an officer required first to explicitly establish what the child’s best
interests are, and then to establish the degree to which the child’s interests
are compromised by one potential decision over another, in order to show that
the officer has been alert, alive and sensitive to the best interests of the
child?
[34]
This question, which asks in essence whether the
Williams test for BIOC in the H&C context must be explicitly and
formally adhered to or not, has been certified twice already in the last year –
in Celise v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 642 [Celise]
and Bermudez v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 1270. While
Celise did not ultimately get appealed, it appears that, at least at
this point, the appeal in Bermudez is moving forward.
[35]
In this case, however, despite the request by
both parties to certify the question, I do not think it appropriate because I
ultimately disposed of the matter by the application of Kanthasamy,
rather than addressing any adherence to the Williams test (see Zhang
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FCA 168 at para 9, “the question must also have been raised and dealt with by
the court below”). Thus, while this Court has acknowledged that the
question above transcends the parties’ immediate interests, it cannot be said
to be dispositive of the appeal, and therefore, will not be certified. Having
said that, I have no doubt that when adjudicated, the Bermudez outcome,
if rendered, will be of importance to the reassessing officer in this matter.
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that:
1. The application for judicial review is allowed.
2. No question of general importance is certified.
3. No costs will be awarded.
"Alan S. Diner"