Docket: IMM-2161-17
Citation:
2017 FC 1005
Ottawa, Ontario, November 07, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice McDonald
BETWEEN:
|
KELLY PAOLA
GIRALDO ZULUAGA
|
ARIEL ANTONIO
GANDULLA SARRIA
|
SEBASTIAN
PATINO
|
GABRIEL
GANDULLA GIRALDO
|
DANIEL GANDULLA
GIRALDO
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION and THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS
|
Respondents
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The Applicants are a family of five, holding
citizenship in three separate countries: Colombia, Cuba, and the United States
[US]. This is a judicial review of a decision of a Senior Immigration Officer
[the Officer] dated April 5, 2017 denying their application under s.25 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act [IRPA] for permanent residence based on
humanitarian and compassionate grounds [H&C]. For the reasons that follow,
this judicial review is allowed as the Officer erred in the best interests of
the children [BIOC] analysis.
I.
Background
[2]
The male Applicant, Ariel Gandulla [PA] became a
US permanent resident in 1995. The female Applicant, Kelly Giraldo Zuluaga [FA]
became a US permanent resident in 2008. The three minor Applicants [MAs] were
born in the US. Sebastian [12], is the son by the FA’s former husband. Gabriel
[7] and Daniel [6] are the sons of the PA and FA. In 2004, the PA was convicted
of possession of cocaine in the US. In 2011, he was charged with
marijuana-related offences and battery on law enforcement. The PA alleges that in
connection with these charges, a gang organization known as the Latin Kings
began threatening the family.
[3]
In June 2012, with the US criminal charges
pending against the PA, the Applicants came to Canada. In December 2014, their
refugee claims were denied and in May 2015, their H&C application was also denied.
[4]
In August 2015, the Applicants were advised that
the PA could not be removed to either the US or Cuba, his country of origin,
because neither country would authorize his re-entry. In September 2015, the
Applicants submitted a request for a reconsideration of their H&C
application based on the PA’s inability to be removed and the assumption that
the FA lost status in the US. This reconsideration request was refused, and the
Applicants filed an application for judicial review of the reconsideration
refusal.
[5]
By agreement, the judicial review application was
discontinued and the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration agreed to
reconsider the H&C application.
[6]
On April 5, 2017 the reconsideration of the
H&C application was denied.
II.
Decision Under Review
[7]
The Officer outlined the test for H&C relief
from Kanthasamy v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 61[Kanthasamy].
[8]
With respect to establishment, the Officer noted
positive factors for the Applicants, including the PA’s training and work as a
welder, and the FA’s establishment of a new business. The Officer also noted
their involvement in their local church. The Officer noted the lack of recent
notices of assessment or bank account statements.
[9]
Regarding the FA’s status in the US, the Officer
determined that the legal opinion from a US lawyer which stated that the FA was
likely to lose her status was not conclusive, and that there was no evidence
from US authorities that they would take action to revoke her status. Further, the
Officer was satisfied that US immigration procedure provides that the FA would
have the opportunity to appear before an immigration judge before her status
was officially revoked. As such, the Officer chose not to conduct hardship
analyses of either Cuba or Colombia because there was no evidence that any of
the Applicants would be deported to those countries.
[10]
On the issue of family separation, the Officer
noted that while it was accepted the family would experience some temporary
hardship, as the PA was not removable to the US, this hardship was one factor
in the overall analysis to be weighed in relation to the rest. The Officer
reasoned that any hardship would be mitigated because the PA could be removed
in the future, and the FA and MAs could visit the PA in Canada.
[11]
The Officer then assessed hardship in the United
States. The Officer reviewed the history of the PA’s alleged involvement with
the Latin Kings, concluding that the cited evidence is the same as what was
before the RPD, and the PA did not have sufficient subjective fear of any
reprisal by the Latin Kings. Further, there was no evidence of any
discrimination against the children because of their Afro-Colombian heritage in
the US.
[12]
Notably, the Officer extensively reviewed the
history of the PA’s criminality in the US, and assigned negative weight to the
fact that the PA has outstanding criminal charges in the US. He reasoned that
Canadian immigration processes should not provide a safe haven for individuals
who are fugitives from justice, such as the PA.
[13]
The Officer considered the BIOC for each of the
three children, including the children’s health issues, possibility of
treatment in the US, and support letters from schools. The Officer concluded
that the BIOC could be upheld in the US, and that there would be opportunities
for the FA and MAs to visit the PA in Canada.
[14]
As noted above, the Officer did not consider the
BIOC as it related to a possible removal of the children to Colombia with the
FA. In any event, the Officer concluded that upon removal to the US, there
would be support for the FA and MAs in from the FA’s family, even in the absence
of the PA.
III.
Issues
[15]
The Applicants raise a number of issues with the
decision. However, the Officer’s assessment of the BIOC is dispositive of this
application.
IV.
Analysis
A.
Standard of Review
[16]
The parties agree that the standard of review
for an H&C application is reasonableness (Kisana v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2009 FCA 189 at para
18 [Kisana]).
B.
BIOC
[17]
Kanthasamy, at
paras 33-39 requires that the Officer be “alert, alive,
and sensitive” to the BIOC and clearly examine them by giving weight to
all relevant H&C considerations which arise on the evidence. In my view,
the Officer failed to do so, and erred in two regards: first, he did not
consider the possible removal of the children to Colombia, and second, he failed
to explain why the PA’s criminality outweighed the BIOC.
(1)
Possible Removal of Children to Colombia
[18]
The assessment of hardship in Canadian immigration
and citizenship law is a “forward-looking exercise”
(Dandachi v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 952 at para
16). In a BIOC analysis, the Court must consider the “full
spectrum of consequences” that may result from granting or denying the
H&C application (Taylor v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2016
FC 21 at para 31). This includes the assessment of consequences of deportation to
a third country for the children, as here.
[19]
The Applicants argue that the Officer’s BIOC
analysis is flawed because it assumes that the FA still has legal status in the
US. The Applicants argue that the Officer should have considered the BIOC from
the possibility of deportation to Colombia, the FA’s country of origin.
[20]
I agree that while the Officer considered the
test from Kanthasamy, he applied it incorrectly. By failing to consider
the consequences of removal to Colombia, the Officer did not consider all
relevant factors as required by Kanthasamy and unreasonably narrowed the
BIOC considerations.
[21]
Further, the Applicants provided a legal opinion
from an American lawyer who states that the FA is likely to be deemed to have “abandoned” her permanent resident status because of
her request to be granted refugee status in Canada. This letter supported other
corroborative evidence in the record about abandonment at US law. If the FA was
deemed to have abandoned her American permanent status, she would be
inadmissible to the US and would be sent back to Colombia.
[22]
In the refugee context, this Court has held that
an applicant need not establish conclusively that they have lost their
permanent residency status in the US as a result of the abandonment provisions
(Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Tajdini, 2007 FC 227 at para
37). Rather, if there is a possibility that the US authorities would
consider the status abandoned, it should be taken into account (Mahdi v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1995] FCJ No 1623 (FCA)
at para 12). In my view, there is no reason to treat H&C applications
differently, especially in light of the fact that the children are applicants,
whose best interests are a “significant factor”
in the H&C analysis (Kanthasamy, at para 41).
[23]
Here, the letter from American counsel is
sufficient to demonstrate a possibility of removal to Colombia. The Officer did
not consider the real risk that the FA would be found to have abandoned her US
status. Consequently, the Officer failed to consider the potentially adverse
consequences to the BIOC in the likely scenario of a finding of abandonment.
(2)
Failure to Explain How the PA’s Criminality
Outweighed the BIOC
[24]
It is unclear from the Officer’s analysis why
the “negative inference” drawn from the PA’s
criminality outweighed the BIOC and other positive factors in the application.
[25]
The PA’s criminality was the only expressly
negative inference drawn in the application, but the Officer did not justify
why this factor outweighed the BIOC. Nonetheless, the Officer relied
exclusively upon the criminality of the PA, who cannot be removed, as the basis
to justify the refusal of H&C relief for the other Applicants.
[26]
Based on this reliance, the Officer failed to
consider the possibility that separation of the MAs and PA may be permanent.
There was no evidence that the MAs could visit the PA in Canada. The Officer
fails to assess how the BIOC would be impacted in a case of permanent
separation. Given the Officer’s conclusion that “it is
in the best interests of every child…to have the constant love and support of
their parents…” it cannot be said that the Officer examined the BIOC
with a “great deal of attention” if he did not
consider the possibility of permanent separation (Kanthasamy, at para
39).
[27]
H&C decisions must be justified, transparent
and intelligible in order to be reasonable (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9 at para 47). In this case, the decision is not justified,
transparent, or intelligible because the Officer failed to provide reasons why
the PA’s criminality, which will not impact the MAs H&C claim, outweighed
the BIOC.
[28]
While it is true that the weight assigned to
various factors in the discretionary H&C process cannot be reweighed on
judicial review (Kisana, at para 24), the error in this case lies in the
Officer’s inability to explain how the factors were weighed in the first
place (Gonzalez v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2017 FC 448 at
para 24).
[29]
As such, the decision is unreasonable.