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A-80-81
Tieng Nei Ng (Applicant) v.
Minister of Employment and Immigration (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Heald and Urie JJ. and Kelly D.J.—Toronto, July 20 and 22, 1981.
Judicial review — Immigration — Application to set aside deportation order — Applicant was convicted of theft of over $200 — Deportation order was issued pursuant to subs. 32(6) of Immigration Act, 1976 because applicant was a person described in paras. 27(2)(a) and (d) of the Act — Issue of deportation order is mandatory if applicant is found to be a person described in para. 27(2)(a) by virtue of the fact that he is a person described in para. 19(1)(c) and such a person is specifically excluded from the benefits accruing to persons within the purview of subs. 32(6) — No such exclusion from the rights accruing under subs. 32(6) applies to persons described in para. 27(2)(d) — Whether Adjudicator improper ly declined to exercise her jurisdiction in failing to specify which of the two paragraphs of s. 27 she relied on in making the deportation order — Application allowed — Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52, ss. 19(1)(c), 27(2)(a),(d), 32(6) — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28.
APPLICATION for judicial review. COUNSEL:
Anne Barrett for applicant. Graham Garton for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Anne Barrett, Toronto, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
URIE J.: This is a section 28 application to review and set aside a deportation order made by an Adjudicator on February 12, 1981.
The only relevant facts are these. The applicant entered Canada at Vancouver on January 9, 1974 as a student. He has had numerous extensions of his visitor's status the last of which expires on September 29, 1981. On November 12, 1980, fol lowing a guilty plea, he was convicted of theft of a cassette tape recorder having a value of over $200.
As a result, an inquiry was convened resulting in the deportation order sought to be set aside, the material portion of which order reads as follows:
On the basis of the evidence adduced at the inquiry held under the provisions of the Immigration Act, 1976, I hereby order you to be deported pursuant to
32(6)
of that Act because you are a person described in
paragraphs 27(2)(a) and 27(2)(d) of the Immigration Act, 1976.
You are a person in Canada other than a Canadian citizen or a permanent resident who, if you were applying for entry, would not be granted entry by reason of being a member of the inadmissible class described in paragraph 19(1)(c) of the Act, in that you have been convicted of an offence that may be punishable under an Act of Parliament and for which a max imum term of imprisonment of ten years or more may be imposed, namely "theft over two hundred dollars" on Novem- ber 12, 1980, in Scarborough, Ontario; and who has been convicted of an offence under the Criminal Code, namely "theft over two hundred dollars" on November 12, 1980, in Scarborough, Ontario.
Paragraphs 27(2)(a), 27(2)(d) and paragraph 19(1)(c) of the Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976- 77, c. 52, read as follows:
27....
(2) Where an immigration officer or peace officer has in his possession information indicating that a person in Canada, other than a Canadian citizen or a permanent resident, is a person who
(a) if he were applying for entry, would not or might not be granted entry by reason of his being a member of an inadmissible class other than an inadmissible class described in paragraph 19(1)(h) or 19(2)(c),
(d) has been convicted of an offence under the Criminal Code or of an offence that may be punishable by way of indictment under any Act of Parliament other than the Criminal Code or this Act,
19. (1) No person shall be granted admission if he is a member of any of the following classes:
(c) persons who have been convicted of an offence that, if committed in Canada, constitutes or, if committed outside Canada, would constitute an offence that may be punishable under any Act of Parliament and for which a maximum term of imprisonment of ten years or more may be imposed, except persons who have satisfied the Governor in Council that they have rehabilitated themselves and that at least five years have elapsed since the termination of the sentence imposed for the offence;
It was argued that the Adjudicator in failing to specify which of the two paragraphs of section 27 she relied on in making the deportation order improperly declined to exercise her jurisdiction. The importance of making such a specification arises by virtue of subsection 32(6) reading as follows:
32....
(6) Where an adjudicator decides that a person who is the subject of an inquiry is a person described in subsection 27(2), he shall, subject to subsections 45(1) and 47(3), make a deportation order against the person unless, in the case of a person other than a person described in paragraph 19(1)(c), (d), (e), (f) or (g) or 27(2)(c), (h) or (i), he is satisfied that
(a) having regard to all the circumstances of the case, a deportation order ought not to be made against the person, and
(b) the person will leave Canada on or before a date specified by the adjudicator,
in which case he shall issue a departure notice to the person specifying therein the date on or before which the person is required to leave Canada.
It will be seen that if an applicant for entry is found to be a person described in paragraph 27(2)(a) the making of a deportation order is mandatory by virtue of the fact that he is a person described in paragraph 19(1)(c) of the Act and such a person is specifically excluded from the benefits accruing to persons within the purview of subsection 32(6). On the other hand no such exclu sion from the rights accruing under subsection 32(6) applies to persons described in paragraph 27(2)(d).
Counsel for the applicant argued both before the Adjudicator and this Court that the Direction for the Inquiry from the Senior Immigration Officer referred to the section 27 report as stating that the applicant was a person described in paragraphs 27(2)(a) and (d) of the Act which had the effect of giving to the Adjudicator a choice as to which section, if either, was applicable in the circum stances disclosed at the Inquiry. In her submission, the Adjudicator could not find that both applied because the applicant, depending on the facts, fell within the contemplation of either of the para graphs or perhaps, neither of them.
In my view, her objections to the manner in which the deportation order was framed are valid.
It is further my opinion that on the facts of this case it is unnecessary to decide in what circum stances paragraph 27(2)(a) applies and in what circumstances paragraph 27(2)(d) applies. Suffice it to say that the Adjudicator having found, as previously observed, that the applicant was a person described in both paragraphs, took the position that by virtue of the exclusion of persons falling within paragraph 19(1) (c) from the ben efits accruing under subsection 32(6), it was man datory for her to issue a deportation order and thus she did not consider applying the provisions of that subsection. In this I think she erred for two reasons:
1. One reason is illustrated in the following example as one of several possibilities under subsection 27(2). A person who has been found to have overstayed his visitor's visa and to have accepted unauthorized employment, is in breach of two different paragraphs of subsection 27(2). Those breaches arise out of two quite distinct and different sets of circumstances. Thus a deportation order quite properly could be made in respect of the two breaches of the Act. In this case, on the other hand, there has been only one circumstance, namely, a conviction under the Criminal Code of the applicant while in Canada. On the assumption that Parliament could not have intended that more than one paragraph in one subsection would apply to one circumstance, it seems to me, the Adjudicator is required_ to decide, on the facts elicited at the Inquiry, of which paragraph of subsection 27(2) the applicant has been in breach. Whether the applicant is entitled to seek the issuance of a departure notice pursuant to subsection 32(6) will depend on that decision.
2. The second reason is that having decided that both paragraphs applied one of which, viz para graph 27(2)(d), fell within the ambit of subsec tion 32(6), she was, in my view, obliged to comply therewith and thus to consider the ques tion of whether or not a departure notice should issue rather than a deportation order. To find that a departure notice should issue would be an exercise in futility in light of the mandatory deportation order required by paragraph 27(2)(a) which she found also to apply to the applicant. Such a result graphically illustrates
the necessity for the Adjudicator determining the paragraph applicable on the facts of the case. To permit an order rendering one of the rights to which the applicant is entitled mean ingless is not a construction which, in my view, should be permitted to prevail.
For all of the above reasons I would set aside the deportation order and refer the matter back to the Adjudicator to determine which paragraph of sub section 27(2) is applicable in the circumstances and to make such order as may be required follow ing such determination.
* * *
HEALD J.: I agree.
* * * KELLY D.J.: I agree.
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