Docket: IMM-573-16
Citation:
2016 FC 952
Ottawa, Ontario, August 19, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Gascon
BETWEEN:
|
IMAN DANDACHI
|
ABDULRAZAK
EZEDEEN
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
The applicants, Mrs. Iman Dandachi and her son
Mr. Abdulrazak Ezedeen, are citizens of Syria. Since they did not comply with
their residency obligations as permanent residents under section 28 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA], the Minister’s
delegate issued departure orders against them in July 2013, as well as against
Mrs. Dandachi’s daughter, Ms. Tala Ezeddin. On January 19, 2016, the
Immigration Appeal Division [IAD] of the Immigration and Refugee Board of
Canada dismissed their appeal of the departure orders. The IAD found that Mrs.
Dandachi and her son did not prove sufficient humanitarian and compassionate
[H&C] grounds pursuant to paragraph 67(1)(c) of IRPA to overcome their
inadmissibility to Canada for failure to comply with their residency
requirements [the Decision]. In the Decision, the IAD however concluded that
Ms. Ezeddin had provided sufficient H&C considerations to justify the
granting of special relief in her case.
[2]
The IAD recognized the difficulties that Mrs.
Dandachi and her son would encounter if their appeals were dismissed and noted
the temporary suspension of removals to Syria since March 2012. However, the
IAD determined that Mrs. Dandachi and her children did not come directly from
Syria but had rather lived in Qatar for 14 years since 1999. Further to its
review of the various H&C considerations identified by Mrs. Dandachi and
her son and the circumstances of their case, the IAD concluded that the
negative factors were more important than the positive ones.
[3]
Mrs. Dandachi and her son are seeking judicial
review of the IAD Decision. They submit that, in its Decision, the IAD did not
properly consider the question of the hardship they would face if they were
deported from Canada, and that this is sufficient to render the Decision
unreasonable. They ask this Court to quash the IAD Decision and to order that a
different panel reconsider their appeal of the departure orders issued against
them.
[4]
The sole issue to be determined is whether the
IAD Decision is reasonable. For the reasons that follow, I conclude that the
IAD Decision does not fall within the range of possible, acceptable outcomes
based on the facts and the law as, in its assessment and weighing of the
various factors at stake, the IAD clearly failed to properly consider the
hardship that Mrs. Dandachi and her son would encounter if removed from
Canada. This application for judicial review must therefore be allowed.
II.
The IAD Decision
[5]
In its Decision, the IAD laid out the analytical
framework for its appeal function under paragraph 67(1)(c) of IRPA, and
specifically listed the various criteria elaborated by the Courts to guide the
IAD in the exercise of its discretion in residency obligation appeals. The IAD
identified those as being the importance of legal impediment, the duration and the
degree of establishment of Mrs. Dandachi and her children in Canada, the impact
of the dismissal of the appeals on their family, the reasons for leaving Canada
and whether they returned at the first reasonable opportunity, the best
interests of the children affected, their integration in Canadian society, and
the hardship Mrs. Dandachi and her children would face if deported to their
country of citizenship.
[6]
I pause to note that these factors are known as
the Ribic factors, first outlined in Ribic v Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration), [1985] IABD 4 (QL) and endorsed by the Supreme
Court of Canada in Chieu v Canada (Minister of Citizenship &
Immigration), 2002 SCC 3 [Chieu] at paras 40-41 and 77 (Canada
(Minister of Citizenship & Immigration) v Wright, 2015 FC 3 at paras
75-78).
[7]
The IAD then reviewed the evidence on each of
these factors. Since Mrs. Dandachi and her son strictly raise issues with
respect to the treatment of hardship by the IAD, only this factor will be
discussed.
[8]
With respect to hardship, the IAD recognized the
difficulties that Mrs. Dandachi and her son would encounter if their appeals
were to be dismissed, noting that the temporary suspension of removals to Syria
was “a sign that the situation in Syria is extremely
difficult and that it would be an undue hardship if the appellants were sent
back to Syria”. However, the IAD found that “the
evidence is to the effect that the three appellants did not come from Syria”
but have rather lived in Qatar for 14 years, from 1999 to 2013.
[9]
The IAD noted that, according to the Qatar
country documentation, “the husband or father can
sponsor his unmarried daughter, his wife and his son who is 25 or younger”,
and that Mrs. Dandachi and her children could thus benefit from the father’s
work to get visas to live in Qatar with him. The IAD therefore concluded that
if Mrs. Dandachi and her children were dismissed from Canada, it is likely they
would obtain temporary visas for Qatar, even though, in the case of Mr.
Ezedeen, it would cease when he would reach 26.
[10]
Regarding “undue
hardship”, the IAD stated that, in its view, it was not likely that
Mrs. Dandachi and her children “would go back to
Syria at present” and added that the “hardship
of uncertainty is important but it is not the same as undue hardship of going
back to Syria”. The IAD went on to indicate that this factor “is a positive factor but it is not as important as it would
be if the appellants had to go back to Syria”.
[11]
In its conclusions, the IAD then relied on the
following elements to support its finding of insufficient H&C grounds and
to decline to exercise its discretion in favour of Mrs. Dandachi and her
children. The factors found to be positive were: the presence of distant family
in Canada, the growth of their establishment and their integration into
Canadian society since 2013, a very limited positive effect of the best
interests of the little girl which Mrs. Dandachi babysat since her birth, and
their continuous residency in Canada since 2013. Conversely, the following
criteria were found to be negative, or against Mrs. Dandachi and her children:
the importance of the legal impediment, the fact that they did not have
imperative reasons to stay away from Canada, their failure to return to Canada
at the first opportunity, and the fact that the refusal of the appeal would not
cause the dislocation of the family as the father has lived separately from the
mother and children since 2013.
[12]
The IAD concluded that the negative factors
outweighed the positive factors in the case of Mrs. Dandachi and her son.
III.
Standard of Review
[13]
It is established case law that the applicable
standard of review is reasonableness. In Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 [Khosa], the Supreme Court
specifically determined that the standard of review of the IAD’s decisions
based on H&C considerations and the exercise of its equitable discretion
under paragraph 67(1)(c) of IRPA is reasonableness (Khosa at paras
57-59, 64 and 67). I add that the determination of the residency obligation
under IRPA involves the interpretation by the IAD of its constituent statute
with which it has particular familiarity. Since Alberta (Information and
Privacy Commissioner) v Alberta Teachers’ Association, 2011 SCC 61 [Alberta
Teachers], the Supreme Court has repeatedly stated that “when an administrative tribunal interprets or applies its
home statute, there is a presumption that the standard of review applicable to
its decision is reasonableness” (Commission scolaire de Laval v
Syndicat de l’enseignement de la région de Laval, 2016 SCC 8 at para 32).
This is the case here.
[14]
When reviewing a decision on the standard of
reasonableness, the analysis is concerned with the existence of justification,
transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making process, and the
decision-maker’s findings should not be disturbed if the 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 [Dunsmuir] at para 47). Under a reasonableness
standard, as long as the process and the outcome fit comfortably with the
principles of justification, transparency and intelligibility, and the decision
is supported by acceptable evidence that can be justified in fact and in law, a
reviewing court should not substitute its own view of a preferable outcome (Newfoundland
and Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board),
2011 SCC 62 [Newfoundland Nurses] at paras 16-17).
IV.
Analysis
[15]
Mrs. Dandachi and her son challenge the IAD
Decision solely on its treatment of hardship. They claim that, while the IAD
looked at the risk they faced in Syria, it did not address the risk in Qatar,
with respect to the political context and their uncertain situation. Mrs.
Dandachi and her son further argue that, in stating that they could obtain
status in Qatar, the IAD speculated and made findings without adequate regard
for the record before it. They plead that the IAD failed to analyze the
likelihood that they could obtain any kind of semi-permanent status in Qatar.
Furthermore, Mrs. Dandachi and her son argue that the IAD omitted to consider
the impact of its own admission that they would suffer undue hardship if they
were sent back in Syria. As a result, they argue that the IAD erroneously found
that the hardship they would face by returning at first in Qatar, and not going
back to Syria “at present”, cannot be “as important as it would be” if they had to go back
directly to Syria. They more specifically point to the fact that the son, Mr.
Ezedeen, would not be eligible to stay in Qatar on his father’s sponsorship
once he turns 26. Similarly, considering that her husband is about to retire,
Mrs. Dandachi submits that she might also find herself without a visa in Qatar
in a short timeline.
[16]
It is true that the IAD did acknowledge the
documentary evidence to the effect that Mr. Ezedeen’s sponsorship would
cease when he would be 26 years old. However, I am not satisfied that the IAD
considered what could likely happen if Mrs. Dandachi and her son were deported
to Qatar and the potential cascading effect of their removal. Given that Mr.
Ezedeen could face deportation to Syria as soon as 2019 because of his age, and
given the potential retirement of Mrs. Dandachi’s husband, without evidence
that the situation in Syria is about to change, the IAD had to assess not only
the hardship of uncertainty but also the impact of a potential removal to Syria
subsequent to a return of Mrs. Dandachi and her son to Qatar. I agree with Mrs.
Dandachi and her son that, in these circumstances, concluding to an absence of
likelihood of removal to Syria (and of undue hardship in that respect) does not
sound reasonable. In the context of Canadian immigration and citizenship laws,
the assessment of hardship is a forward-looking exercise. As a result, the IAD
could not reasonably restrict its analysis to the hardship Mrs. Dandachi and
her son might encounter at present, but needed to take full account of all the
relevant factors of the case, namely that a future removal from Qatar to Syria
was probable. I am not persuaded that, in the circumstances of this case and in
light of the evidence before the IAD, finding no undue hardship of going back
to Syria “at present”, and only acknowledging a “hardship of uncertainty”, falls within the range of
possible, acceptable outcomes.
[17]
But there is a more fundamental problem with the
IAD Decision.
[18]
In the Decision, after having discussed the
various factors and the evidence relating to each of them, including hardship,
the IAD proceeded in the “Conclusion” portion of
its reasons to its assessment and balancing of the various factors, qualifying
each of them as negative or positive. It then determined that the negative
factors surpassed and exceeded the positive ones.
[19]
The problem is that nowhere in the IAD’s “Conclusion” is there any reference to “hardship” even though that element was clearly
identified earlier in the Decision as a “positive
factor” favouring Mrs. Dandachi and her son. Nor is there any indication
of any weight given to it in the IAD’s assessment of “all
the combined factors”, despite the fact that the “hardship of uncertainty” was specifically identified
by the IAD as a positive factor. While it was described as “not as important” as “undue
hardship of going back to Syria” would be, there is no doubt that such
hardship was distinctly singled out as a factor to consider in the case of Mrs.
Dandachi and her son.
[20]
At the hearing, counsel for the Minister indeed
acknowledged that there was no reference to the “hardship”
factor in the “Conclusion” section of the IAD
Decision, where the IAD carried out its balancing exercise of the H&C
grounds. I am thus left with a decision where, on its face, the IAD does not
appear to have even considered its own finding of hardship in the balancing
exercise it conducted. This omission is sufficient to render the Decision
unreasonable and to put it well outside the “range of
possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and
law” (Dunsmuir at para 47). As the Supreme Court restated in Kanthasamy
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 61 at para 25, immigration
officers making H&C determinations “must
substantively consider and weigh all the relevant facts and factors
before them”.
[21]
I acknowledge that a decision-maker is not required to refer to each and every detail supporting his or her
conclusion. It is sufficient if the reasons permit the Court to understand why
the decision was made and determine whether the conclusion falls within the
range of possible, acceptable outcomes (Newfoundland Nurses at para 16).
Under the reasonableness standard, the reasons are to
be read as a whole, in conjunction with the record, in order to determine
whether the reasons provide the justification, transparency and intelligibility
required of a reasonable decision (Dunsmuir at para 47; Agraira v Canada (Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness), 2013 SCC 36 at paras 51-53). Similarly, it is not
this Court’s role to re-assess the evidence or the weight given to a particular
element by a decision-maker in the exercise of its discretion.
[22]
The IAD is even free to give
no weight whatsoever to any of the Ribic factors. But when it has
identified one factor as being relevant, as it did here with respect to
hardship, it cannot ignore it in its balancing analysis.
[23]
Under a reasonableness
review, the Court’s role is limited to “finding irrationality or arbitrariness of the sort that implicates
our rule of law jurisdiction”,
such as the presence of illogic or irrationality in the fact-finding process or
in the analysis, or the making of factual findings without any acceptable basis
whatsoever (Kanthasamy v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2014 FCA 113 at para 99). But the standard of reasonableness requires that the findings and overall
conclusion of a decision-maker withstand a somewhat probing examination. Where
parts of the evidence are not considered or are misapprehended and where the
findings do not follow from the evidence, a decision will not withstand the
probing examination. This is the situation here.
[24]
The IAD specifically acknowledged that the “hardship of uncertainty” is “not
as important as it would be if the appellants had to go back to Syria”.
Yet, it did not even factor this less important hardship in its analysis of the
positive and negative factors. The IAD had to consider the degree of hardship
that would be caused to Mrs. Dandachi and her son by a return to their country
of nationality, or country of removal, and had to take it into account. As the
Supreme Court stated in Chieu, the IAD “must
consider, first, whether there is a likely country of removal and, if so,
whether any hardships the appellant could potentially face in that country are
sufficient to alter the previous balance of relevant factors and thereby permit
the appellant to remain in Canada” (Chieu at para 91). It failed
to do so.
[25]
As they stand, the conclusions of the IAD do not
allow the parties or the Court to know how the hardship factor was considered
and to appreciate why the Decision was made. In fact, the conclusions of the
IAD rather indicate that this factor, which was far from being a peripheral
point in the IAD analysis but instead stood at the very heart of the weighing
exercise it had to conduct, was totally ignored by the decision-maker in its
balancing of the positive and negative factors in order to determine if special
relief should be granted to Mrs. Dandachi and her children. No matter what hardship may have been concerned, whether it is the hardship
of uncertainty or the undue hardship of a potential removal to Syria, the IAD’s
conclusions are totally silent on this factor.
[26]
I do not agree with the Minister that this is
simply a disagreement as to the weight given to the evidence. It is rather a
case where the decision-maker remained totally blind to a factor it had
identified as relevant and which suddenly vanished from the ultimate balancing
analysis leading to its conclusion that Mrs. Dandachi and her son had provided
insufficient H&C grounds to be granted special relief under paragraph
67(1)(c) of IRPA. Such an erroneous analysis calls for the Court’s
intervention.
[27]
It has been suggested that since Newfoundland
Nurses, the Courts must show deference to the
reasons of a decision-maker and that an alleged insufficiency of reasons is no longer a stand-alone basis
for granting judicial review. However, Newfoundland Nurses and its
progeny is not an invitation to the Courts to provide reasons that were not
given, nor is it a licence to guess what findings might have been made or to
speculate as to what a decision-maker might have been thinking (Komolafe v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 431 at para 11).
Showing deference and giving respectful attention to the reasons offered in
support of a decision of an administrative tribunal does not amount to a “‘carte blanche’ to reformulate a tribunal’s
decision in a way that casts aside an unreasonable chain of analysis in favour
of the court’s own rationale for the result” (Alberta
Teachers at para 54, citing Petro-Canada v British Columbia (Workers’
Compensation Board), 2009 BCCA 396 at para 56).
[28]
In the circumstances of this case, I am not
satisfied that the reasons of the IAD provide the justification, transparency and intelligibility required
of a reasonable decision. Upon reading the IAD’s
conclusions, I have no way of knowing whether, when including the “positive” factor of hardship – even the somehow
diminished one of “hardship of uncertainty” –,
the IAD would have weighed the positive and negative factors differently, or
whether the inclusion of the hardship element might have altered the balance of
relevant factors and tilted it in favour of Mrs. Dandachi and her son.
[29]
I am mindful of the fact that, by returning this
matter to the IAD, the outcome of the balancing exercise could be the same
after a new review is conducted and takes into account the hardship faced by
Mrs. Dandachi and her son if removed from Canada. However, this is an
assessment and a weighing exercise that the IAD, not the Court, has to conduct,
and to which Mrs. Dandachi and her son are entitled in the decision regarding
their appeal of the departure orders. Informed by these reasons of both the
error committed by the IAD and the necessity to properly consider the issue of
hardship, another panel might come to a different conclusion. I cannot say that
the case leans so heavily against granting the appeals of Mrs. Dandachi and her
son that sending the case back to IAD would serve no useful purpose (Lemus v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FCA 114 at para 38). Quite the
contrary. The hardship factor could well play a pivotal role in the balancing
analysis of the IAD in this case.
V.
Conclusion
[30]
For the reasons detailed above, the application
for judicial review filed by Mrs. Dandachi and her son must be allowed as the
IAD Decision is unreasonable and does not represent a possible, acceptable
outcome based on the law and the evidence presented before the IAD.
[31]
Neither party has proposed a question of general
importance for me to certify.