Docket: IMM-3660-16
Citation:
2017 FC 466
Ottawa, Ontario, May 9, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Heneghan
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BETWEEN:
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AADIL MAQBUL
SAJAN
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
Mr. Aadil Maqbul Sajan (the “Applicant”) seeks
judicial review of the decision of a Visa Office (the “Officer”) denying his
application for restoration of a visitor’s visa.
[2]
The Applicant, a citizen of Tanzania, claims
that he arrived in Canada on September 8, 2015, in possession of a visitor’s
visa issued by the Government of Canada. He submitted an application for a study
permit in March, 2016; that application was refused by letter dated April 1,
2016.
[3]
The Applicant’s request for restoration of his
visitor’s visa was refused by letter dated August 16, 2016, on the grounds that
he had not provided evidence of entry into Canada on September 8, 2015.
[4]
The Applicant filed an affidavit in support of
this application for judicial review in which he deposed as follows: “Included in my application for a restoration and a visitor’s
visa was proof that I had received a visitor’s visa on September 8, 2015 when I
entered Canada.”
[5]
Attached as an exhibit to his affidavit are
copies of pages from his passport showing various stamps, including an entry
stamp for Pearson International Airport on September 8, 2015.
[6]
The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration (the
“Respondent”) filed the affidavit of the Officer in response. At paragraph 4 of
the affidavit, the Officer deposed as follows:
The Applicant
failed to provide the relevant page(s) from his passport which established
proof of entry into Canada in September 2015 as alleged. Applicants seeking
restoration of status are required to submit copies of passport pages clearly
showing, among other things, the stamp made by Canadian authorities on their
most recent entry into Canada. The Applicant, however, provided a copy of
passport pages showing his (most recent) entry into Canada dated April 2014.
Attached hereto and marked as Exhibit “A” is a copy of the only Canadian entry
included in the Applicant’s application for restoration.
[7]
The dispositive question arising in this
application is whether the Officer committed a reviewable error.
[8]
The Applicant argues that the Officer committed
a breach of procedural fairness by failing to give him the opportunity to
answer any concerns about the documents he had submitted in support of his
application for restoration of his visitor’s visa. He also submits that the
Officer erred by failing to restore that visa.
[9]
For his part, the Respondent argues that the
Applicant did not meet his onus to provide the necessary documentation and that
there is no obligation upon the Officer to seek further information. He submits
that the Applicant did not provide a copy of his passport showing the entry
stamp of September 8, 2015.
[10]
Any issue of procedural fairness arising in this
application is reviewable on the standard of correctness; see the decision Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Khosa, [2009] 1 S.C.R. 339.
The Officer’s assessment of the evidence is reviewable on the standard of
reasonableness; see the decision in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, [2008] 1
S.C.R. 190.
[11]
According to the decision in Dunsmuir, supra
at paragraph 47, the “reasonableness” standard
requires that a decision be intelligible, transparent and justifiable, and fall
within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes.
[12]
In this case, each party has filed an affidavit.
Neither party cross-examined the deponent of the opposing party. The Certified
Tribunal Record does not contain a copy of the Applicant’s passport showing a
stamp for entry into Canada on September 8, 2015.
[13]
The situation then is one of competing claims.
The Applicant says that he submitted copies of his passport showing the
September 8, 2015 stamp; the Officer says the most recent visible entry stamp
was for April 2014.
[14]
There is no presumption of truth in favour of
the Respondent’s deponent. Sworn affidavits filled in an application for
judicial review are presumed true unless and until the contrary is shown; see
the decision in Maldonado v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),
[1980] 2 F.C. 302 (F.C.A.) at paragraph 5.
[15]
In his affidavit, as quoted above, the Applicant
does not specify exactly what he submitted with his application to restore his
visa. The Certified Tribunal Record does not contain the copy of the passport page
that is attached to the affidavit he filed in support of this application
for judicial review.
[16]
The Applicant bears the burden of submitting the
material necessary for obtaining the benefit sought; see subsection 11(1) of
the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (the “Act”).
[17]
I see no breach of procedural fairness resulting
from the fact that the Officer did not request clarification or further
information from the Applicant. The Applicant was responsible for submitting
the relevant and necessary information. In light of the evidence before the
Officer, the negative decision meets the applicable standard of reasonableness.
[18]
In the result, the application for judicial
review is dismissed. There is no question for certification arising.