Docket: IMM-2367-15
Citation:
2016 FC 440
Ottawa, Ontario, April 20, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn
BETWEEN:
|
CAN HUI LIU
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The applicant is a 30 year-old citizen of
China. He arrived in Vancouver, Canada, in September 2009. In 2010, he moved
to Toronto and began to study accounting at Seneca College, earning a diploma
in 2011. In February 2014, he made an application for permanent residence. In
it, he lists his current and intended occupation as “welder.”
In particular, he states that he worked as an apprentice welder at Bethel
Welding Ltd. in Toronto from October 2012 to December 2013. His application
includes a letter, dated December 23, 2013, from his supervisor at Bethel
Welding Ltd., Aaron Gao. In the letter, Mr. Gao states, among other things,
that the applicant (referred to as “Canhui (Derek) Liu”)
currently works as a welder apprentice and is employed full-time (44 hours per
week) as a fixed-term employee.
[2]
On November 5, 2014, an officer sent the
applicant a procedural fairness letter by email expressing “serious concern(s)”
about his application, particularly his claim to have worked as a Welder:
On November 5, 2014 we contacted Mr. Aaron Gao at Bethel Welding
Ltd. Mr. Gao confirmed that you were originally employed as a bookkeeper but
requested training as a welder. After 2-3 months as a Welder Apprentice, Mr.
Gao was informed by the company foreman that you lacked the necessary skills to
continue as a welder. Mr. Gao further stated that you then returned to the
company office and continued employment as a bookkeeper. Based on this
information, I am not satisfied that you have the experience as a Welder, NOC
7237.
[3]
On the same day that the letter was sent, the
following note was made in the respondent’s Global Case Management System
[GCMS]:
***FILE SENT FOR
INVESTIGATION. DO NOT REVEAL THIS INFORMATION TO CLIENT AT THIS TIME*** Spoke
to Aaron Gao, Operations Manager, signatory on LOE. Mr. Gao could not remember
the exact dates the PA was hired but said it was in 2012 and that he worked for
around 1 year. I asked him about the company. He said that right now he has
2-4 employees because it is slow but last year he had 5-10 and then 2-4. I
asked him how many apprentices he has. Mr. Goa seemed to struggle with the
concept of apprentice. Mr. Gao then stated that he Derek had been hired as a
bookkeeper but asked to be trained as a welder. After 2-3 months the foreman told
Mr. Gao that the PAs welding skills were not good enough. PA was then returned
to the office as a bookkeeper. I asked again how long PA worked as a welder.
Mr. Gao said 2-3 months. PA has since left the company.
[4]
The applicant responded to the officer’s email
of November 5, 2015, including a second letter from Mr. Gao, as well as
paycheques and several photos. In the letter, Mr. Gao states that he received
a call from an immigration officer while he was driving and said that it would
be better if the officer called back at another time. However, the officer
continued the conversation and asked about the applicant’s work history. Mr.
Gao states that he was driving and responded to the officer’s questions quickly
and inaccurately. Mr. Gao further states that, after the telephone call, and
after being told by the applicant that he had provided incorrect information,
he checked his records and “realized that I had
mistakenly mixed the Derek Liu’s job history with another employee whose name
is Derek due to the distracted driving as well as the company’s high employment
turnover; furthermore our company had several employees named Derek, so under
the driving condition, I could barely distinguish them.”
[5]
Mr. Gao concludes that “I
would like to correct my previous mistakes and certify that Canhui (Derek) Liu
was a full time Welder Apprentice at Bethel Welding Ltd from October 2012 to
December 2013. During his working period, he worked for 44 hours per week, and
his wage was $15 per hour.”
[6]
On May 1, 2015, the applicant was sent a letter
rejecting his application for permanent residence. In the letter the officer
stated that he or she was “not satisfied that you meet
the skilled work experience requirements” for the Canadian Experience
Class. The officer explains that:
I note that a phone call was placed to your
employer on 05NOV2014 to confirm details of your employment. Mr. Aaron Gao the
signatory of your employment reference letter and Operations Manager of Bethel
Welding responded to questions regarding your employment. He stated that you
were hired as a Bookkeeper and only work 2-3 months in the position as a
Welder. I do note that in response to these concerns, you provided an
additional employment reference letter from Mr. Gao which states that he had
confused you with another employee also named Derek and that he was also
distracted because he was driving. Although I acknowledge that your
employer may have been contacted at an inconvenient time, I find it
inconceivable that he provided me with incorrect details pertaining to your
employment. [emphasis added]
The officer
concluded that he was not satisfied that the applicant had the necessary
experience as a welder to meet the requirement for the Canadian Experience
Class program and refused his application.
Issues
[7]
The applicant raises two issues. Firstly, he
claims that the officer breached procedural fairness by failing to provide him
with details of his or her conversation with Mr. Gao, and by failing to
interview him about the inconsistencies between his own account of his
employment and that provided by Mr. Gao to the officer during their
conversation. Secondly, he claims that the officer erred in concluding that he
did not have one year of skilled work experience based on the telephone call
with Mr. Gao.
[8]
The first issue is to be reviewed on a standard
of correctness, while the second issue is to be reviewed on a standard of
reasonableness: Mehfooz v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC
165, 263 ACWS (3d) 458 at paras 9-11.
Analysis
A.
Procedural Fairness
[9]
The procedural fairness letter did not disclose
all of the details of the officer’s conversation with Mr. Gao. Details of this
conversation that are in the GCMS notes but not the letter include the number
of employees that Mr. Gao said he had at various times, and that Mr. Gao seemed
to struggle with the concept of an “apprentice.”
The GCMS notes make no mention of some of the details attested to by Mr. Gao in
his second letter, including that he was driving during the conversation and
asked the officer to call back at another time.
[10]
The applicant claims that it was unfair for the
officer to ask the applicant to respond to information gleaned from his or her
conversation with Mr. Gao, without providing more details of that
conversation. Specifically, the applicant writes that:
CIC has not provided anything in writing
with regard to the actual conversation held with the applicant’s
Canadian employer. The applicant is “left in the dark” with regard to this
critical conversation, questions posed, full answers provided, his employer’s
proficiency in English, etc. [emphasis in original]
[11]
The officer was obliged to keep a complete record
of the “questions posed” and “full answers provided.” Although the officer did not
disclose all of the details contained within the GCMS notes, the officer did
disclose the only important and relevant detail: namely, that Mr. Gao said that
the applicant had only worked 2-3 months as a welder, and was then transferred
back to his bookkeeping job. A position, the respondent notes, that is more in
keeping with the applicant’s training.
[12]
Similar to the situation of the applicant in Sidhu
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 419, 453 FTR 297 [Sidhu]
at para 15, the applicant here does not establish what additional submissions
he would have made had he been told about the details in the GCMS notes that
were not mentioned in the letter. The applicant was not “left in the dark,” but rather was given a reasonable
opportunity to respond to the case against him, one that he took full advantage
of. As found in Sidhu, there was no breach of procedural fairness on
this basis.
[13]
The applicant also claims that the officer acted
unfairly by failing to interview him about the inconsistency between his own
account of his employment and that provided during the officer’s conversation
with Mr. Gao. The applicant submits that an interview was required because an
issue of credibility had been raised regarding the applicant’s claim that he
had worked as a welder for a year. In oral submissions, counsel forcefully
argued that the officer owed him a duty to “grill”
him about the differences in accounts.
[14]
Again, I disagree. It is true that, in a broad
sense, the officer’s conversation with Mr. Gao raised issues about the
applicant’s credibility. It did so in the same way that any evidence that
contradicted the applicant’s account would have put his credibility into play.
However, if, as the applicant submits, the applicant’s account is right and Mr.
Gao’s account is wrong, then it is difficult to see what the applicant could
have said, in an interview, that would have shed light on why Mr. Gao made the
mistake that he did. The best evidence that the applicant could have provided
was the evidence which he did provide; namely, a statement from Mr. Gao
explaining the inconsistency between his letter and what he said over the
phone.
[15]
The facts in this case are similar to those in Bhamra
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 239, 239 ACWS
(3d) 169 [Bhamra], cited by the respondent. In that case, a visa
applicant provided a supporting statement that purported to be from an
employer. An officer called a telephone number listed on the statement, and
spoke to a person claiming to be the employer. The employer denied that the
applicant had ever worked for him. The officer sent a procedural fairness
letter detailing the concerns arising from the telephone call. In response,
the applicant provided a further supporting statement from the employer,
attempting to explain the inconsistency. This explanation was rejected and the
visa was denied. On judicial review, the applicant claimed that that his
credibility had been put in issue.
[16]
This submission was rejected by the Court, which
found at paragraph 42 that:
The Applicant was provided with a fairness
letter and given every opportunity to resolve the misrepresentation issue in
his own favour. What he offered was contradictory letters and an unbelievable
and entirely unsubstantiated reason for the contradiction. As Justice Mandamin
pointed out in [Chen Guo Hui v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 10 December 2010, IMM-2357-10 (FC)], quoting Justice Zinn in [Ni
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 162] [Ni], at
para 18:
I agree with the applicant that a
high degree of fairness is required in misrepresentation determinations. This
is why the officer sent the applicant a procedural fairness letter expressly
raising his concerns and permitting the applicant to file a response. This is
what fairness required in the circumstances and the officer met that burden.
It does not require that the officer blindly accept the response to the
fairness letter without question. The officer is required to assess whether
the response satisfies and alleviates his concerns. That decision is reviewed,
as stated, on the reasonableness standard.
It is the fairness letter that, in this
context, provides the Applicant with a meaningful opportunity to respond and
present his case fully in accordance with Baker principles. The
Applicant has not shown me that he could not have presented any response he
wished to the fairness letter.
[17]
The reasoning in Bhamra applies to the
present case.
B.
Reasonableness of Decision
[18]
The applicant claims that the officer’s decision
was unreasonable because he or she failed to provide any reason for preferring
the evidence from the telephone conversation with Mr. Gao to Mr. Gao’s
subsequent letter, in which he explained that he had made a mistake.
[19]
The issue before the officer was whether the
applicant had acquired “at least one year of full-time
work experience” pursuant to section 87.1(2)(b) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227. The officer was faced
with evidence from a telephone conversation with Mr. Gao, in which he clearly
stated that the applicant only had 2-3 months of relevant experience. The
officer was also faced with a subsequent letter from Mr. Gao, in which he
explained that his earlier statement was in error. In deciding to prefer the
evidence from the telephone conversation, the officer stated that “[a]lthough [Mr. Gao] may have been contacted at an
inconvenient time, I find it inconceivable that he provided me with incorrect
details pertaining to your employment.” In other words, the officer acknowledged
Mr. Gao’s subsequent explanation but did not accept it as a sufficient
explanation.
[20]
It is the officer’s job to weigh the evidence
and it was open to the officer to prefer the evidence from the telephone
conversation to the subsequent explanation. It may have been preferable for
the officer to have explained this preference in more detail. However, the
officer’s failure to do so is not a free-standing basis for judicial review: Newfoundland
and Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board),
2011 SCC 62, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 708 at para 14. Nor does it undermine the
justification, transparency, and intelligibility of the officer’s decision so as
to render it unreasonable.
[21]
It is not the function of this reviewing court
to reweigh the evidence: Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v
Khosa, 2009 SCC 12, [2009] 1 S.C.R. 339 at para 61, and that, effectively, is
what the applicant asks me to do.
[22]
No question for certification was proposed.