Supreme Court of Canada
Samejima v. The King, [1932] S.C.R.
640
Date: 1932-06-15
Munetaka
Samejima Appellant;
and
His Majesty
The King Respondent.
1932: April 27; 1932: June
15.
Present: Anglin C.J.C. and
Duff, Lamont, Smith and Cannon JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF
APPEAL FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA
Immigration law—Alien—Entry
in Canada—Alleged misrepresentation—Deportation order not stating reasons—Habeas
corpus—Order quashed—Same order amended to conform with statute—New order not
valid—Immigration Act, R.S.C., 1927, c. 93 ss. 23, 33 (5) and (7), 40, 41, 42.
The appellant, a Japanese
subject, entered Canada at the port of Vancouver on September 29, 1928, as a
domestic servant, but, though permitted to land, was unable to obtain that kind
of work. On January 28, 1931, under an order issued by the Deputy Minister of
Immigration he was detained for examination upon a complaint of violation of
the Immigration Act. Neither the complaint, nor a copy thereof was
forwarded to the Board of Inquiry, or served on the appellant who was brought
before the Board on April 29, 1931. Finding the appellant had entered Canada by
misrepresentation, the Board served on the appellant a deportation order
stating that he was rejected because "in Canada contrary to the provisions
of the Immigration Act and effected entry contrary to the provisions of
s. 33 (7) of said Act." An appeal to the Minister having been dismissed,
the appellant obtained a writ of habeas corpus and succesfully applied for
discharge thereunder to Fisher J. on July 8, 1931,
on the ground that the order was not in accordance with the provisions of the
Act, in that it did not specify with sufficient particularity the reason for
his deportation. On September 23, 1931, the appellant was re-arrested on the original
order of April 29, 1931, which, however, had been amended by adding to it
the reasons for his deportation so as to make it conform to the requirements of
the statute. He again sued out a writ of habeas corpus and applied to
quash the amended order. Murphy J. refused the application holding that, though
deficient, the first order could be remedied by issuing the amended order, and
he held the new order valid. His judgment was affirmed on appeal.
Id, Anglin C.J.C. and Smith J. dissenting, that the
amended deportation order issued by the Board of Inquiry should have been
quashed and the appellant discharged from custody. The Board of Inquiry when a
deportation order is found defective on its face, has the right to recall it
and substitute therefor an order in proper form, so long as the defective order
had not been acted upon. Even after it has been served on the person in custody
and constitutes the return made to a writ of habeas corpus, it may still
by leave of the court or judge, be amended, or another order substituted for
it, so as to make it conform to the finding of the Board. But after a
deportation order
[Page 641]
which is not in accordance
with the Act has been quashed by a court having jurisdiction, it cannot be
amended for there is nothing to amend, the order of the Board no longer
existing.
Anglin C.J.C. and Smith J.
dissenting.—The order made by Fisher J. contravened the prohibition of s. 23 of
the Immigration Act and was, therefore, invalid and ultra vires,
since it amounted to a "reviewing, quashing, reversing, restraining, or
otherwise interfering with," an order of the Minister, or of the Board of
Inquiry, the appellant being, admittedly, neither a Canadian citizen, nor a
person having Canadian domicile. That being so, the order of the Board remained
effective, as it clearly dealt with matter declared by s. 23 to be outside the
authority of any "court or judge or officer thereof" to interfere
with. Moreover, this defect in the jurisdiction of Fisher J. who made the order
was obvious on the face of it and, therefore, could be taken advantage of by
the respondent; the order of Fisher J. being a nullity the order of the Board,
which it purported to set aside, was still valid and was legally amended so as
to make it conform to the intention of the Board in making it.
APPEAL from the decision of
the Court of Appeal for British Columbia, affirming a judgment of Murphy J. and dismissing
the application of the appellant for a writ of habeas corpus.
The material facts of the case
and the questions at issue are stated in the above head-note and in the
judgments now reported.
C. H. O'Halloran for the
appellant.
W. N. Tilley K.C. and E.
Miall for the respondent.
DUFF J.—I concur with my brother
Lamont.
The chief question I desire to
discuss is the effect of section 23 of the Immigration Act. The words,
had, made or given under the
authority and in accordance with the provisions of this Act relating to the
detention or deportation of any rejected immigrant, passenger or other person,
upon any ground whatsoever, unless such person is a Canadian citizen or has
Canadian domicile.
are an essential part of this
section; and its disqualifying provisions obviously can only take effect where
the conditions expressed in these words are fulfilled. In particular, the
phrase "in accordance with the provisions of this Act" cannot be
neglected; their meaning is plain. The "order" returned as justifying
the detention must be "in accordance with the provisions of this
Act." It must not, that is to say, be essentially an order made in disregard
of some substantive condition laid down by the Act. This applies to the order
of the Minister, as well as to the order of the Board of Inquiry. The order of
the Minister must
[Page 642]
be an order directing the
investigation of facts alleged in a complaint made to him; and such facts,
unless the enactment is to be reduced to the merest parade of words, must be
alleged, of course, in such a manner as to make the allegation reasonably
intelligible to the person against whom the investigation is directed. The
jurisdiction of the Board, as an investigating body, is limited to the
investigation of the facts alleged, a condition, again, implying
intelligibility of allegation. Indeed, unless the person concerned is to have a
reasonable opportunity of knowing the nature of the allegations, what is the
purpose of requiring his presence? The deportation order must fully state the
reasons for the decision, in respect of the allegations. The spirit, as well as
the frame, of the whole statute, evinces the intention that these provisions
are mandatory.
I gravely fear that too often the
fact that these enactments are, in practice, most frequently brought to bear
upon Orientals of a certain class, has led to the generation of an atmosphere
which has obscured their true effect. They are, it is needless to say, equally
applicable to Scotsmen. I admit I am horrified at the thought that the personal
liberty of a British subject should be exposed to the hugger-nugger which,
under the name of legal proceedings, is exemplified by some of the records that
have incidentally been brought to our attention.
Courts, of course, must often
draw the distinction between what is merely irregular and what is of such a
character that the law does not permit it in substance. I have no difficulty in
giving a construction to section 23, which does not deprive British subjects,
who are not Canadians, of all redress, in respect of arbitrary and unauthorized
acts committed under the pretence of exercising the powers of the Act.
I do not find it necessary to
decide whether or not the deportation order was one which fell under the
protection of section 23. It is sufficient for me that Mr. Justice Fisher had
jurisdiction to decide that it did not; and that the learned judge having done
so and set it aside, the chairman of the Board had no authority to issue
another.
The appeal should be allowed.
[Page 643]
The judgments of Lamont and
Cannon JJ. were delivered by
LAMONT J.—This is an appeal from
the judgment of the Court of Appeal of British
Columbia dismissing by an equal
division of the court an appeal by the appellant from a judgment of Mr. Justice
Murphy in which he refused the appellant's application under a writ of habeas
corpus, for his discharge from custody.
The appellant (a Japanese
subject) entered Canada at the port
of Vancouver on September 29, 1928. His passport and the ship's
manifest shewed that he was entering Canada for the purpose of being employed as a domestic
servant by one J. Uneo of Nanaimo, B.C. He was permitted to land and, according to his
story, he went directly to Nanaimo where he found that Uneo had failed in business,
closed his store and, therefore, did not require a domestic servant. He says
that although he tried he could not get work as a domestic servant, and had to
take what he could get.
On January 28, 1931, the Deputy
Minister of Immigration and Colonization directed an order "to any
constable, peace officer or immigration officer in Canada"
in which he recited that a complaint had been received to the effect that Munetaka
Samejima (the appellant)
was in Canada
contrary to the provisions of the Immigration Act, and had effected
entrance contrary to the provisions of s. 33, ss. 7 of the said Act,
and he ordered that the appellant
be taken into custody and detained for examination and an investigation into
the facts alleged in the said complaint.
The examination was to be made by
the Board of Inquiry or an officer acting as such. Neither the complaint itself
nor a copy thereof was forwarded to the Board or served upon the appellant who
was taken into custody and brought before the Board on April 29, 1931. On
being questioned he admitted that he had not worked as a domestic servant since
he landed in Canada, giving as a reason his inability to obtain that
kind of work. The Board found that he had entered Canada by
misrepresentation, and a resolution for his deportation was passed. On the same
day a deportation order was drawn up and served upon the appellant. The order
read as follows:—
[Page 644]
This is to certify that the
rejected person above named, a person who entered Canada at B.C. ex. Empress
of Asia from Yokohama, Japan, which arrived at the said port on September
29, 1928, at o'clock M., has this day been examined by the Board of Inquiry at
this port, and has been rejected for the following reasons: In that he is in
Canada contrary to the provisions of the Immigration Act and effected
entry contrary to the provisions of section 33, subsection (7) of said Act.
And the said rejected person
is hereby ordered to be deported to the place from whence he came to Canada ***.
Dated at Victoria,
B.C., this 29th day of April, 1931.
J. A. ANDERSON,
Chairman of the Board of Inquiry.
The appellant appealed to the
Minister but his appeal was dismissed. He then obtained a writ of habeas
corpus, and an application for his discharge thereunder was made to Mr.
Justice Fisher who, on July 8, 1931, discharged him from custody and quashed
the deportation order, on the ground that the order was not in accordance with
the provisions of the Act, in that it did not specify with sufficient
particularity the reason for his deportation. On September 23, 1931, the
appellant was re-arrested on what purported to be an order for his deportation
signed by the Chairman of the Board of Inquiry, and bearing date April 29, 1931, the
date of the original order. This new order will hereafter be referred to as the
"amended order." This amended order was in form sufficient to satisfy
the requirements of the statute. After his re-arrest the appellant was not again
brought before the Board, or examined by it, or given an opportunity to offer a
defence to this arrest. He, however, again sued out a writ of habeas corpus
and applied to Mr. Justice Murphy to quash the amended order under which alone,
according to the return made to the writ, the appellant was held in custody.
Mr. Justice Murphy refused to set aside the order holding that although the
first order was deficient the deficiency could be remedied by issuing a new
order, and he held the new order valid. Whether or not he was right in so
holding we have now to determine.
Sections 40 and 41 of the Immigration
Act (R.S.C., 1927, c. 93) provides that where a person belonging to the
prohibited or undesirable class, as specified therein, other than a Canadian
citizen or person having a Canadian domicile, is found in Canada
it shall be the duty of any
officer cognizant thereof and the duty of the clerk, secretary or other
official of any municipality in Canada wherein such person may be to forthwith
send a written complaint thereof to the Minister giving full particulars.
[Page 645]
Included in the prohibited class
is a person who enters or remains in Canada contrary to any provision of the Act.
Then s. 42 reads:—
Upon receiving a complaint
from any officer, or from any clerk or secretary or other official of a
municipality against any person alleged to belong to any prohibited or
undesirable class, the Minister or the Deputy Minister may order such person to
be taken into custody and detained at an immigrant station for examination and
an investigation of the facts alleged in the said complaint to be made by a
Board of Inquiry or by an officer acting as such.
****
3. If upon investigation of
the facts such Board of Inquiry or examing officer is satisfied that such person
belongs to any of the prohibited or undesirable classes mentioned in the two
last preceding sections of this Act, such person shall be deported forthwith,
subject, however, to such right of appeal as he may have to the Minister.
Counsel for the appellant
contended that jurisdiction to order the arrest of the appellant under this
section depended upon the existence of the conditions precedent required by the
statute, that is to say upon the receipt of a complaint from an officer under
the Act or from a municipal official, and that in either case the complainant
must give particulars of the act or omission which placed the immigrant in the
prohibited or undesirable class; that there was no evidence that the complaint
in this case had been received from any person specified in the section; that
the order of the Deputy Minister would indicate that no particulars other than
those contained in his order had been given, and, therefore, no jurisdiction on
the part of the Deputy Minister to order the appellant's arrest had been shewn,
and jurisdiction would not be presumed. He further contended that as there was
no jurisdiction to issue the order which set these proceedings in motion, every
step taken subsequent to the order was invalid.
The objection here taken is, to
my mind, a very serious one, for the jurisdiction of a Minister or his Deputy,
under s. 42, to take an immigrant into custody is conditioned upon a complaint
being received from one of the persons specified therein. Parliament has not
authorized the exercise of this jurisdiction on the complaint of an unknown
person who might be an enemy or competitor or business rival of the immigrant,
desirous of harrassing him. It is given only on the complaint of an officer or
official, whose official position it may have been thought would warrant
[Page 646]
the inference that the complaint
would not be made without knowledge, nor inspired by any but proper motives. It
is established law that jurisdiction on the part of an official will not be
presumed. Where jurisdiction is conditioned upon the existence of certain
things, their existence must be clearly established before jurisdiction can be
exercised. Failure to establish the right to arrest would ordinarily vitiate
all subsequent proceedings following directly as a result of the arrest.
Whether this principle would apply to a second arrest I do not find it
necessary to determine, for, assuming that it would not, the order in question
must, in my opinion, be set aside on another ground, namely, that the amended order
itself was wholly invalid.
Section 33 (5) provides that the
order of deportation may be made in Form C in the schedule to the Act, which
form requires the reasons for the rejection to be "stated in full,"
and a copy of the order to be forthwith delivered to the rejected person. The
statute, therefore, contemplates that the order will shew the reason for the
deportation. The only reason for the deportation of the appellant, as found by
the Board of Inquiry, was that he had entered Canada by misrepresentation.
That reason was not stated in the deportation order which formed the return
made to the writ of habeas corpus before Mr. Justice Fisher. Because of
the Board's failure to state in the order the particular offence found against
the appellant Mr. Justice Fisher quashed the order and set the appellant at
liberty. Had he jurisdiction to do so?
It was contended that s. 23
deprived him of any jurisdiction to interfere. That section reads:—
23. No court, and no judge
or officer thereof, shall have jurisdiction to review, quash, reverse, restrain
or otherwise interfere with any proceeding, decision or order of the Minister
or of any Board of Inquiry, or officer in charge, had, made or given under the
authority and in accordance with the provisions of this Act relating to the
detention or deportation of any rejected immigrant, passenger or other person,
upon any ground whatsoever, unless such person is a Canadian citizen or has
Canadian domicile.
It will be observed that the
prohibition against interference by a court or judge applies only to
any proceeding, decision or
order had, made or given under the authority and in accordance with the
provisions of this Act.
[Page 647]
It follows, therefore, that if
the proceeding, decision or order has not been had, made or given in accordance
with the provisions of the Act, no restriction is placed upon interference
therewith by the court, and the immigrant is at liberty to appeal to a court or
judge for any remedy to which he may be found entitled.
In this case the original
deportation order was not in accordance with the provisions of the Act. Mr.
Justice Fisher had, therefore, jurisdiction to quash it, which he did, on July 8, 1931. His
order, having been made with jurisdiction, was a valid order and could only be
reversed on appeal, if an appeal lay therefrom.
The Crown does not contend that
the original order of the Board of Inquiry was valid, but it does contend that
where a slip has been made in the drawing up of an order, a new order in proper
form may be substituted. Up to a certain point I entirely agree with this
contention. If the Board of Inquiry made a deportation order defective on its
face, it could, in my opinion, recall it and substitute therefor an order in
proper form, so long as the defective order had not been acted upon. Even after
it has been served on the person in custody and constitutes the return made to
a writ of habeas corpus, it may still, in my opinion, by leave of the
court or judge, be amended, or another order substituted for it, so as to make
it conform to the finding of the Board. Leonard Watson's Case
; In re Clarke
. But after a deportation order which is not in accordance with the Act has
been quashed by a court having jurisdiction, it cannot be amended for there is
nothing to amend. The order of the Board no longer exists—it is a thing of
naught.
What was attempted to be done in
this case was to amend the order of April 29, after it had been quashed, by
adding to it the reasons for the appellant's deportation so as to make it
conform to the requirements of the statute. There is no evidence that the
amended order ever was before the Board. The only order made by the Board of
Inquiry of which we have any record is the one that was quashed by Mr. Justice
Fisher.
[Page 648]
In the statute ample provision is
made for rectifying the situation which arose through the quashing of the
original order, and all the Board of Inquiry had to do was to follow the
statute. In s. 33 (7) which sets out the various offences constituting a cause
for deportation, it is provided that
any person suspected of an
offence under this section may be arrested and detained, without a warrant, by
any officer, for examination as provided under this section, and if found not
to be a Canadian citizen or not to have a Canadian domicile,
may be ordered to be deported.
Every member of the Board of Inquiry is an officer under the Act.
After the Board's deportation
order had been quashed, any member thereof could have caused the appellant to
be re-arrested and held for examination, for, having found, on April 29, 1931,
that he entered Canada by misrepresentation, his presence at large
thereafter would justify the suspicion that he was in Canada in
violation of the Act. If, on re-examination the Board still found that his
entry into Canada had been secured by misrepresentation, a new
deportation order could have been made based upon the re-examination and, if it
was in proper form, no court or judge would have jurisdiction to quash or
reverse it. This re-examination, however, would have entitled the appellant to
meet the charge with such evidence as he might be able to put before the Board.
How important that right would have been for the appellant is disclosed in his
evidence. He says that when the Immigration Officer came to Chemainus where he
was working on April 28, 1931, and took him to Victoria, that the officer told
him that he might return to Chemainus next day, so, when he was taken before
the Board of Inquiry for examination and was asked if he wanted a lawyer he
answered "No," because he says he did not anticipate getting into any
trouble. The record of his examination before the Board shews that the
proceedings were opened by the Chairman stating to him that he was to be
examined as to his right to remain in Canada, and did he wish to have counsel. The Chairman then
referred to the complaint set out in the warrant of the Deputy Minister, in the
language of the complaint. Up to that time the appellant had not been informed
that he was to be charged with entering Canada by misrepresentation. Then he was questioned as to
his age, place of birth, re-
[Page 649]
ligion, relatives in Japan and in
Canada, statements appearing in his passport, his object in coming to Canada,
his movements after he landed and where and for whom he expected to work when
he came here. To all of these questions the appellant answered apparently in a
straightforward manner, informing the Board that his destination was Nanaimo
and that he expected to work for Mr. J. Uneo as a domestic servant but, that
when he got to Nanaimo he found that Mr. Uneo had failed in business, his store
was closed and he himself was working in the mill; that after trying in vain
for two weeks to get work as a domestic servant in Nanaimo, he went to
Vancouver and tried there, but was equally unsuccessful, and he had to take
whatever kind of work he could get. Then he was asked:—
Q. When you got back to
Vancouver, did you report to the Canadian Immigration Office and report to them
that your employer was closed up and could not employ you as a domestic?—A. No.
I didn't.
Q. You know that you were
permitted to land in Canada for the purpose of being employed as a domestic
servant and that you were going to work for Mr. Unyeo; why did you not report
that this man was not in a position to employ you when you found he was closed
up?—A. I didn't know that I should report to the Immigration what to do.
He was then questioned as to his
subsequent employment; the names and addresses of his employers; the rate of
wages he received, etc.
Then, practically at the close of
his examination, we have the following:—
Q. And when you were
questioned by the Immigration Officer, did you not state that you were going to
be a domestic servant?—A. I told the officer at Vancouver I was going to be a
domestic servant.
Q. After you arrived you
made no attempt to be a domestic servant?—A. I tried several times to have
domestic work in Vancouver but could not find any.
Q. You have never been in
domestic servant work in Canada?—A. No, I have not.
Q. Then you realize that you
have entered Canada by misrepresentation, do you?—A. No. I don't know
that. Because I try to get work but I could not help it.
Q. But the fact that you
have not taken domestic work shows you entered Canada by misrepresentation?—A.
I don't know.
This was the first time so far as
the material before us discloses that he was made aware that the charge against
him was entering Canada by misrepresentation. Had he known that he had to
face that charge he could have had the evidence before the Board of Inquiry
which he subsequently placed before Mr. Justice Murphy on the habeas
[Page 650]
corpus proceedings, namely, that of Mr. J. Uneo, who had
carried on business in Nanaimo for twenty-five years and who, in his affidavit,
stated not only that the appellant was to be employed by him as a domestic
servant, but that more than a year before the landing of the appellant, he
(Uneo) had applied to the Japanese Consul at Vancouver for a permit for the
appellant's entry into Canada as his domestic servant. This was corroborated by
the affidavit of K. Ishii, the appellant's uncle, who for forty years had been
a merchant in Victoria, B.C., and, for many years, held office as head of the
Victoria Japanese Association, and who swore that he knew of his own personal
knowledge that Mr. J. Uneo had, in the latter part of 1926, applied to the
Japanese Consul for a permit for the entry of the appellant as Uneo's domestic
servant. This evidence although tendered before Mr. Justice Murphy, could not
be considered by that learned judge because he had no jurisdiction to review
the finding of fact made by the Board of Inquiry. If the evidence of these
witnesses had been placed before the Board when the appellant was examined by
it, it is possible that the Board might not have found as a fact that the
appellant entered Canada by misrepresentation. Had the appellant known that
he had to meet the charge of misrepresentation before he announced that he did
not want a lawyer, I think it highly probable that he would have had counsel
and that the evidence of Uneo and Ishii would have been placed before the
Board. I, therefore, find myself entirely in accord with the language used by
Martin J.A., in the court below, where his lordship said:—
even if the proceedings upon
the Board's amended Order could be invoked at all they contain the incurable
defect that after the re-arrest there was no re-investigation of the accused on
the definite charge that was for the first time then laid against him.
The amended order, being simply
an amendment of an order which had been quashed instead of a new order based
upon a re-examination, had no validity whatever, and should also have been
quashed.
For the Crown it was contended
that, even if the order was invalid, Mr. Justice Murphy was right in refusing
to set the appellant at liberty, and cited, among others, the
[Page 651]
case of Rex v. Governor
of Brixton Prison
. That was an entirely different case and, in my opinion, goes no further than
to hold that it does not necessarily follow in every case where some
irregularity is shewn to have taken place in the procedure under which a person
has been placed in custody that he should be set at liberty. But it is only in
cases where the court is satisfied that a prima facie case has been made
against such person, and that it is in the interests of justice that he should
be tried for the offence charged, that he will be detained under an irregular
commitment. In the present case the commitment under which the appellant was
held was not simply tainted with an irregularity in procedure, but was wholly
bad.
The appeal should be allowed with
costs; the order of the Board of Inquiry quashed, and the appellant discharged.
The judgments of Anglin C.J.C.
and Smith J. (dissenting) were delivered by
ANGLIN C.J.C.—I have had the
advantage of reading the carefully prepared opinion of my brother Lamont in
this case and regret to find myself unable to agree with his conclusion.
Unless, to employ a familiar saying, the crossing of every "t" and
dotting of every "i" in all the proceedings taken in this matter is
essential to the Crown's success, I do not see how this appeal can be
maintained.
Two main questions are open for
consideration, (a) whether the order of Fisher J. for the discharge of
the appellant will sustain a claim of res judicata herein; and (b)
whether, if that order does not stand in the way, or can be gone behind, the
action of Murphy J. in refusing to discharge the appellant on habeas corpus
was justified. As I read the judgment of Lamont J., that learned judge holds (a)
that the order of Fisher J. amounts to res judicata in this matter; (b)
that that order cannot be gone behind or be ignored; and (c) that the
order of Murphy J., refusing to discharge the appellant on habeas corpus
after his re-arrest under the amended order of the Board, was nugatory, on the
ground that Fisher J. had definitely set aside the original order of the Board
and there was, therefore, nothing left to amend.
[Page 652]
It is true that the Court of
Appeal for British Columbia has a jurisdiction conferred on it by statute
(R.S.B.C., 1924, c. 52, s. 6), so far as I am aware, peculiar to that province,
whereby that court is obliged to entertain an appeal from, inter alia,
"every judgment, order or decree made by the Supreme Court or a judge thereof,"
no exception being made to the generality of the jurisdiction thus conferred
which would exclude a right of appeal by the Crown against the order of a judge
who has under habeas corpus discharged a person brought before him. The
respondent maintains the right to ignore the order of Fisher J., treating it as
made without jurisdiction, because of the presence in The Immigration Act
of s. 23, and, instead of appealing therefrom, to proceed under the order of
the Board, either as originally made or amended.
That it is competent for any
court to amend its own order as issued so as to make it conform to the
intention of the Court making it (especially where, as here, the Board in
announcing its decision, had declared in terms, in the presence of the appellant,
the order it proposed to make, those terms corresponding with the amendment so
made), is a proposition which scarcely requires authority to support it.
But, it is said that the power of
the Board to amend ceased with the existence of its order, and that that order
ceased to exist when Fisher J. made his order quashing it. We are thus driven
back again to the question of the validity of the order made by Fisher J.,
i.e., not whether that order was proper on the merits, but whether the learned
judge had jurisdiction to make it. Ordinarily no doubt, this question of the
validity of the order would have been raised on appeal from it, but it does not
at all follow that that is the only manner in which the question of
jurisdiction can be raised. On the contrary, if a party affected by an order of
the Board, or the Board itself, chooses to treat a subsequent order, purporting
to set it aside, as a nullity, he or it may do so at his or its peril. Here,
the Board adopted the latter course, by ignoring the order of Fisher J. and
proceeding to amend its previous order so as to make it conform to the terms in
which it had intended to pronounce such order,—terms which were announced at
the conclusion of the hearing in the presence of the appellant.
[Page 653]
Without at all questioning the
propriety on the merits of the order of Fisher J., and confining my
observations solely to the jurisdiction of that learned judge, I am of the
opinion that the order made by him contravened the prohibition of s. 23 of the Immigration
Act and was, therefore, invalid and ultra vires, since it amounted
to a "reviewing, quashing, reversing, restraining, or otherwise
interfering with," an order of the Minister, or of the Board of Inquiry,
the appellant being, admittedly, neither a Canadian citizen, nor a person
having Canadian domicile. That being so, and the order of Fisher J. being,
accordingly, invalid and ultra vires, the order of the Board remained
effective. It clearly dealt with matter declared by s. 23 to be outside the
authority of any "court or judge or officer thereof" to interfere
with.
Moreover, this defect in the
jurisdiction of the learned judge who made the order is obvious on the face of
it. It, therefore, could, in my opinion, be taken advantage of by the
respondent; and I agree with Murphy J. in his view that the order of Fisher J.
was a nullity and that the order of the Board, which it purported to set aside,
still stands and was validly amended by the Court so as to make it conform to
the intention of the Board in making it.
I also agree with Murphy J. that,
having before him such amended order of the Board, he had abundant ground for
refusing to interfere with the provision therein contained for detention of the
appellant for deportation,—it not being open to that learned judge, or on
appeal from him to the Court of Appeal, or to us, to consider the credibility,
or weight, or value of the testimony upon which the Board had proceeded, which
was reviewable only by the Minister on appeal to him under ss. 18 and 19,—an
appeal which was duly taken by the appellant and which proved unsuccessful.
It is satisfactory to have
reached a conclusion which seems to me to be in conformity with the
requirements of justice, since the appellant was fully aware of the purpose of
the inquiry of the Board and of the substance of the charge against him, i.e.,
that he had procured entrance into Canada by misrepresentation contrary to the
provisions of s. 33 (7) of The Immigration Act, which, I have no doubt
at all, was stated as a basis of the inquiry into the complaint made to the
Minister under s. 42 (1). To the absence
[Page 654]
of any formality in the complaint
the presumption omnia rite esse acta, affords an answer, 13 Hals. par.
no. 538.
It must be perfectly apparent to
everyone reading the proceedings that this was so. For instance we find the
following in the course of the examination of the appellant by the Board:
Q. Then you realize that you
have entered Canada by misrepresentation, do you?—A. No, I don't know
that. Because I try to get work but I could not help it.
Q. But the fact that you
have not taken domestic work shows you entered Canada by misrepresentation?—A.
I don't know.
And, at the conclusion of the
inquiry, we find the following:
CHAIRMAN: Who told you to
say, or to state, that you were coming here as a domestic servant when
apparently you have never followed that occupation?—A. My uncle in Nanaimo told
me to come as a domestic servant for Mr. Uyeno.
Q. Is he the same man that
came across with you on the boat?—A. Yes.
Q. And he it was who told
you to say you were coming to work as a domestic servant for Mr. Uyeno at Nanaimo?—A.
Yes; I understand I am coming to work as a domestic servant for Mr. Uyeno.
Decision of the Board.
Mr. JONES: Whereas the said
Munetaka Samejima, having been found not to be a Canadian citizen or a person
having Canadian domicile, and a complaint having been received under Section 40
of The Immigration Act to the effect that the said Munetaka Samejima is
in Canada contrary to the provisions of The Immigration Act, namely
Section 33, subsection 7, in that he entered Canada by misrepresentation:
therefore, pursuant to the provisions of section 33, subsection 7 of The
Immigration Act, I move that the said Munetaka Samejima be deported.
Mr. SPEED: I second the motion.
CHAIRMAN: Mr. Samejima, a
motion has been duly moved and seconded and I declare it carried unanimously
that you be deported under the provisions of Section 33, subsection 7 of the Immigration
Act. You have the right to appeal to the Minister of Immigration and
colonization. Do you wish to appeal?—A. I am going to appeal.
How a man can, after being so
notified, contend before this Court that he had not been informed of the
substance of the charge against him, as the appellant does in his affidavit I
do not understand. To say that he had no notice that the substance of the
accusation against him was obtaining entry into Canada by misrepresentation, to
put it mildly, strikes me as dishonest. No injustice whatever on this score has
been done to the appellant and to require that the circumstances of his entry
should be again the subject of investigation after his re-arrest would seem to
be to impose procedure that is entirely superfluous in view of the fact that
the original order of the Board providing for his deportation still stands.
[Page 655]
In conclusion, therefore, I am of
the opinion that Murphy J was right in declining to interfere, under s. 23 of The
Immigration Act, with the detention of the appellant for deportation, that
his order must be sustained and that this appeal, accordingly, should be
dismissed with costs.
Appeal allowed with
costs.
Solicitors for the
appellant: O'Halloran & Harvey.
Solicitor for the
respondent: John L. Clay.