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T-2597-86
Hawabibi Fatehbhai Mahida (Applicant) v.
Minister of Employment & Immigration and Secretary of State for External Affairs (Respon- dents)
INDEXED AS: MAHIDA V. CANADA (MINISTER OF EMPLOY MENT & IMMIGRATION)
Trial Division, Joyal J.—Toronto, March 9; Ottawa, June 9, 1987.
Immigration — Practice — Application for certiorari to quash decision applicant's brother no longer eligible for immi grant visa as accompanying family member under s. 6(1 )(a) of Regulations, and for mandamus compelling respondents to process application — Applicant's brother turning 21 after undertaking of assistance filed but before application proc essed — Delay due to factors beyond control of parties — Neither party aware of brother's impending inadmissibility — Application for immigrant visa made when process leading to issue or refusal duly initiated — "And" in definition of "dependant" given disjunctive meaning to interpret s. 2(1) in light of administrative requirements — Depending on circum stances of case, effective date to determine admissibility date of immigration application or date of undertaking of assist ance — Process of securing immigrant visa duly initiated when undertaking of assistance filed and approved.
Judicial review — Prerogative writs — Certiorari — Man- damus — Immigration — Applicant's brother turning 21 after undertaking of assistance filed but before application proc essed — Visa officer deciding no longer eligible as accompan ying family member under Immigration Regulations, 1978, s. 6(1 )(a) — Decision on inadmissibility reviewable, but discre tionary decision whether humanitarian grounds for granting application not reviewable.
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This is an application for certiorari to quash a visa officer's decision in respect of certain sponsored immigrants and man- damus directed to the respondents to process their application. The applicant executed an undertaking of assistance prior to her brother's twenty-first birthday. Due to factors beyond the control of the immigration authorities or the proposed immi grants, the necessary forms were not completed until after the brother turned 21. Neither the applicant nor the immigration authorities seemed aware of the brother's impending inadmissi- bility. The applicant's brother was found to be no longer eligible for an immigrant visa as an accompanying family member under paragraph 6(1)(a) of the Immigration Regula tions, 1978. Paragraph 6(1)(a) provides for applications by
members of the family class and accompanying dependants. Subsection 2(1) defines "dependant" as an "unmarried son ... who is less than 21 ... at the time that person applies for an immigrant visa and where applicable, at the time a person gives the required undertaking." The issues are whether the refusal to issue a visa to the applicant's brother is reviewable under section 18, and whether the effective date to determine admissi bility is the date of the undertaking of assistance or the date when the immigration applications are completed?
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Held, the application should be allowed.
A visa officer's discretion to issue or to refuse an immigrant visa is quite extensive. Administrative policy guidelines indicate that family class applications made abroad are to be dealt with as expeditiously as possible, particularly those concerning potentially overage dependants. Cases where a dependant becomes inadmissible during processing due to age are to be carefully reviewed with respect compassionate and humani tarian considerations. There were two parts to the visa officer's decision herein: first, that the brother was inadmissible under the Regulations and the second, a failure to go beyond the statutory impediment by finding the necessary humanitarian or compassionate grounds to exercise his discretion to admit him. The second part of that decision is not reviewable.
The decision was based on subsection 2(1) and paragraphs 6(1)(a) and (b) of the Regulations. On the face of those provisions, the brother came within a non-admissible class as he was beyond his 21st birthday when the immigration application was received by the visa officer. The question then arose as to whether the clock stops running against â dependant when an immigration application is made or when a sponsorship applica tion is filed and approved. In Wong v. Minister of Employment and Immigration (1986), 64 N.R. 309 (F.C.A.), it was held that an application for an immigrant visa is made when it initiates the process leading to the issue or refusal of the visa. Subsection 2(1) of the Regulations must therefore be interpret ed in light of the administrative requirements whenever the case involves sponsored immigrants. In this case, the "and" in subsection 2(1) must be given a disjunctive meaning. Depend ing on the particular circumstances of a case, it would be the date of an undertaking of assistance which would stop the clock.
The process of securing an immigrant visa was initiated when the undertaking of assistance was filed and approved. As the delays were beyond the control of the parties, the prior initia tion date should prevail to determine the brother's admissibili ty. This case involves a particular and exceptional set of circumstances. In any other case, it might be a question of fact or credibility as to whether or not a delay was caused by the
fault, inadvertence or neglect of either party. The terminal 23-year rule in paragraph 2(1)(a) of the Regulations provides the necessary curb to infinite delays.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 18. Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52.
Immigration Regulations, 1978, SOR/78-172, ss. 2(1) (as am. by SOR/84-850, s. 1), 4(1)(b)(î) (as am. by SOR/82-702, s. 1; 84-140, s. 1), 6(1)(a) (as am. by SOR/83-675, s. 2), (b) (as am. by SOR/79-167, s. 2).
CASE JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Wong v. Minister of Employment and Immigration (1986), 64 N.R. 309 (F.C.A.).
COUNSEL:
Gary Segal for applicant.
Debra M. McAllister for respondents.
SOLICITORS:
Gary L. Segal, Toronto, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondents.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by `-
JOYAL J.: The applicant prays this Court to issue an order of certiorari and an order of man- damus directed to the respondents to quash a visa officer's decision in respect of certain sponsored immigrants in India and to duly process their application according to law.
THE FACTS
The facts behind the application are not serious ly in dispute. On May 10, 1984, the applicant executed an undertaking of assistance with the immigration office in Toronto to sponsor her father and mother and her two brothers for perma nent visas to Canada.
The practice of the immigration office in such circumstances is to forward a copy of the under taking to the Canadian visa officer in New Delhi.
This was received in New Delhi on May 24, 1984. From there, on June 27, 1984, the visa officer forwarded to the proposed immigrants the neces sary application forms for permanent residence.
For some reason or other, the proposed immi grants did not receive the forms or else failed to complete them and return them to New Delhi.
Some months later, in February and March 1985, the Canadian sponsor began making enqui ries at the local immigration office in Toronto as to the status of the case, her family members in India having yet to hear from New Delhi. Enqui ries were instituted, a second set of visa application forms were forwarded to the proposed immigrants on March 26, 1985 and a third set on April 12, 1985. Finally, on May 10, 1985, the forms were completed and duly returned to New Delhi.
It was noted, however, that one of the proposed immigrants, namely Yusufbhai Mahida, a brother of the sponsor, had reached the age of 21 years on February 10, 1985. He was therefore considered to be no longer eligible for an immigrant visa as an accompanying family member under paragraph 6(1)(a) of the Immigration Regulations, 1978 [SOR/78-172 (as am. by SOR/83-675, s. 2)].
After some exchange of correspondence between New Delhi and the proposed immigrants, the spon sor was asked on July 14, 1986 to remove the name of her brother, Yusufbhai, from the list and this she refused to do. The officers of the respon dents took no further action and on December 21, 1986, the sponsor applied to this Court for pre rogative relief.
THE ISSUE
The chronology of the events I have described makes it clear that had it not been for the failure of the proposed immigrants to receive or of their failure to return, the application forms, the application with respect to the son Yusufbhai would have been treated in the same manner as the others and an immigrant visa would ostensibly have been issued to him. The issue therefore is two-fold:
1. Is the refusal by the visa officer in New Delhi to issue an immigrant visa to the son Yusufbhai reviewable under a section 18 application or concurrently,
2. Is the effective date to determine the admissibil ity of Yusufbhai the date of the undertaking of assistance or the date when the immigration applications are duly completed?
Of interest in this respect is that in the form letter forwarded by New Delhi to the proposed immigrants, the latter are informed as follows:
According to the Canadian Immigration Regulations, your dependants, if any, include any unmarried son or daughter who if [sic] less than:
(i) twenty-one years of age at the time your application for an immigrant visa is received at this office, and
(ii) twenty-three years of age at the time an immigrant visa is issued to you.
Reference to this part of the form raises the question not only as to when does the clock start to run but as to when does it stop.
There is no doubt that if public policy with respect to certain age qualifications for proposed immigrants is to be carried out, some statutory check points must be made. It only takes one tick of the clock to turn a legally incompetent minor into a perfectly competent grown-up. One day less or one day more than a 21st birthday makes a proposed immigrant admissible or inadmissible as a family member under the Regulations and I should presume that in most cases, a determina tion as to any individual applicant can be clearly and easily made. Sometimes, however, through a peculiar set of circumstances, the determination is made much more difficult.
THE FINDINGS
For purposes of the application before me, I must find that the undertaking of assistance filed by the applicant on May 10, 1984 was duly for warded to New Delhi and in turn, on June 27, 1984, New Delhi forwarded the visa application
forms to the proposed immigrants. I must further find, however, that these forms did not reach their intended recipients. There is no evidence as to why the forms went astray and indeed, an enquiry into this would be patently futile. One may only specu late that, as is the case for postal services any where, letters and parcels do get lost with some of them resurfacing months or years later.
I should further find that the time frame in processing the application from May 10, 1984 to May 24, 1984 when it was forwarded to New Delhi and to June 27, 1984 when New Delhi acted on it is evidence that the administrative process, probably due to sheer volume of work, must natu rally follow its gentle course over a longer span.
It must have been some time before February 25, 1985 that the applicant was alerted by her parents that nothing seemed to have happened over the intervening several months. It was on that date that the applicant wrote a letter to the immi gration office and sent a copy of it to her Member of Parliament. Departmental action resulted in a further letter from New Delhi to the proposed immigrants on March 26, 1985 and another one on April 12, 1985. There is evidence that the recipi ents received the April 12, 1985 letter before they received the earlier March 26, 1985 letter but nothing very much flows from this occurrence. It might only be a further indication that postal services anywhere are on par with postal services everywhere.
The applicant's letter to the immigration office on February 25, 1985, impresses me as a con sidered letter politely enquiring as to reasons for the several months' delay in processing the application. The tenor of it does not indicate any critical concern that the application with respect to her continually aging brother who by this time is over 21 years of age, could be prejudiced by the delay. More than this, however, the letter indicates a mutual state of mind between the applicant and her family as to action having been taken by New Delhi and which explains away the delay on her part to alert the immigration office.
As a matter of fact, even as late as June 6, 1985, when the responsible minister replied to the Member of Parliament's earlier letter, it was assumed that nothing more serious than mere delay had crept into the file. I take note in that respect that the undertaking of assistance original ly filed by the applicant indicated her brother's age and it was apparent at the time the minister's staff was looking into it that the brother was now well over the age of 21 years. It is perhaps perplex ing that whoever originated the Minister's reply did not note the element of creeping inadmissibili- ty as it is specifically referred to in departmental guidelines to which I will later refer. On the consideration I propose to make of the case, how ever, nothing flows from it. It only suggests that neither the applicant was aware that the inadmiss- ibility of Yusufbhai was becoming critical and neither the immigration service was aware that Yusufbhai had technically become inadmissible.
I must in all circumstances of the case conclude that the failure of the sponsored family members to submit their visa application in a timely fashion and for the respondents to process it was due to circumstances beyond the control of either the applicant or of the respondents. I must also con clude that no laches may be found against the applicant in not alerting the respondents sooner.
THE LAW
Paragraphs 6(1)(a) and 6(1)(b) [as am. by SOR/79-167, s. 2] of the Immigration Regula tions, 1978 provide that:
6. (1) Where a member of the family class makes an application for an immigrant visa, a visa officer may issue an immigrant visa to him and his accompanying dependants if
(a) he and his dependants, whether accompanying depend ants or not, are not members of any inadmissible class and otherwise meet the requirements of the Act and these Regulations;
(b) the sponsor
(i) has given an undertaking,
In subsection 2(1) of the Regulations, there is included in the definition of a "dependant" [as am. by SOR/84-850, s. 1] any unmarried son or
daughter who is less than 21 years of age at the time that person applies for an immigrant visa and where applicable, at the time a person gives the required undertaking.
The wording of that definition appears at first blush to stop the clock on the 21-year-old rule when both the date of an immigrant's visa applica tion and the date of the undertaking are prior to a dependant's 21st birthday. It will be noted that the conjunctive word "and" is used in the defini tion and the usual effect of this would impose both tests on the terminal date. I note also that the wording in subparagraph 4(1) (b) (i) [as am. by SOR/82-702, s. 1; 84-140, s. 1] has the same connotation.
It is clear from the position taken by the visa officer in New Delhi in its request to the applicant on June 5, 1986 and in his letter to the immigrant of July 30, 1986 that such was the interpretation given by him. The visa officer clearly stated that the son Yusufbhai was "ineligible for an immi grant visa as an accompanying family member under paragraph 6(1)(a) of the Immigration Regulations, 1978".
What disturbs me in applying paragraph 6(1)(a) is that it raises a chicken and egg situation or otherwise puts qualifying dependants in a dilemma. Assuming that a person with a qualify ing dependant in a distant country like India cannot apply as an immigrant without a prior undertaking of assistance being filed by a sponsor in Canada and approved by immigration authori ties in Canada, how could the status of the qualify ing dependant be affected by any delays between the prior acceptance and the later communication of it to the immigrant? What are the consequences on the qualifying dependant if, by inadvertence, or clerical error, or otherwise, the undertaking is not forwarded to a visa officer abroad or is lost in the shuffle, or like in the case before me, is lost in the mail?
This hypothesis brings me back to the first of the two questions at issue which I have earlier framed, namely, is the visa officer's decision reviewable?
It is admitted by both parties that a visa offi cer's discretion to issue or to refuse an immigrant visa is quite extensive. The Immigration Act, 1976 [S.C. 1976-77, c. 52] and its Regulations provide statutory definitions of admissible and inadmiss ible persons and in most cases, the visa officer's decision to refuse a visa to a clearly inadmissible person is relatively easy to make. There exists nevertheless a wide range of cases where a visa officer's discretion might be exercised one way or the other.
I have in mind in this connection a document entitled IS2 which contains administrative policy guidelines of the immigration service and which was filed at the hearing. This document deals among others with the processing of family class applications abroad.
Such applications are not only given priority treatment but, according to the document, must also be dealt with as expeditiously as possible particularly if it concerns a potentially overage dependant "so as not to cause refusal of a visa due to what may be viewed as administrative delays of our own creation".
IS2 also suggests that a dependant becoming inadmissible during processing time due to age might be admissible as an Assisted Relative. All such cases, the document observes, should be care fully reviewed in terms of "discretionary authority, the existence of humanitarian and compassionate consideration and the reunification of families provisions". [My emphasis.]
Finally, IS2 provides guidelines in particular cases for the admission to Canada under an Order in Council.
The visa officer's decision in the case before me contains essentially two concurrent decisions. One
decision was to the effect that the son Yusufbhai was inadmissible under subsection 2(1) and para graphs 6(1)(a) and 6(1)(b) of the Immigration Regulations, 1978. The other decision was that the visa officer failed to find the necessary humani tarian or compassionate grounds to go beyond what he considered to be the statutory impediment and exercise his residual discretion in a manner more favourable to the applicant.
Although I should not find that his second deci sion is one which would otherwise be reviewable, I should nevertheless consider if the first decision is correct in law.
The visa officer's decision in that respect is based on the rule laid down in subsection 2(1) and paragraphs 6(1)(a) and 6(1)(b) of the Immigra tion Regulations, 1978. On the face of these provi sions, the son Yusufbhai had reached well beyond his 21st birthday when the immigration applica tion was received by the visa officer. The son clearly came within the non-admissible class.
This brings me to the second question I framed earlier, namely whether the clock stops running against a dependant when an immigration applica tion is made or when a sponsorship application is filed and approved. As I have understood the representations made before me, the procedure adopted with respect to sponsored family members imposes clearance of an undertaking of assistance in Canada before any immigration application is filed abroad. This undertaking is a sine qua non to the consideration of any immigration application. The Court of Appeal was called upon to consider a similar situation in Wong v. Minister of Employ ment and Immigration (1986), 64 N.R. 309 (F.C.A.). It involved a Canadian sponsor who, with respect to sponsoring family class members from China, delivered an undertaking to the immi gration office together with a partially completed visa application form. Concurrently, the sponsor had to secure a "family composition certificate" from the Chinese authorities. It was several months later that this certificate was delivered and forwarded, together with the undertaking and the partially completed immigration application to the Hong Kong visa officer. By that time, one of the proposed immigrants, Ming Biu Wong, had
reached age 21 years and the visa officer declared him inadmissible.
In speaking for the Court and in ruling that the proposed immigrant was admissible under the Immigration Regulations, 1978, Mr. Justice Mahoney stated at page 311:
It does seem to me, however, that an application for an immigrant visa is made when it duly initiates the process leading to the issue or refusal of the visa and not only when that processing is committed to the particular official authorized to dispose of the application.
I would understand Mr. Justice Mahoney's find ing to mean that subsection 2(1) of the Immigra tion Regulations, 1978 must be read and interpret ed in the light of administrative requirements whenever the case involves sponsored immigrants. This would mean that in the situation before him, as in the one before me, the word "and" as found in subsection 2(1) must be given a disjunctive meaning. In other words, subsection 2(1) must be given that meaning which is more consonant with the administrative procedures adopted by the immigration authorities for the better administra tion of immigration policy and more in keeping with the general tenor of the statutory framework within which it is expressed. This would mean that depending on the particular circumstances of a case, it would be the date of an immigration application or the date of an undertaking of assist ance which would stop the clock.
If such should be the view of the Federal Court of Appeal, I should subscribe to it and make it applicable to the case before me. I must find on the facts that the process of securing an immigrant visa was duly initiated when the undertaking of assistance was filed and approved in Toronto. That process was in due course committed to a particu lar official who in turn committed it to the mail. The delays were beyond the control of both the immigration services and the proposed immigrants. There was no active or passive conduct by either of the parties to break the processing and it per petuated itself throughout. The prior initiation date should therefore prevail to determine the son Yusufbhai's admissibility as a dependant.
The case before me is admittedly one which involves a particular and exceptional set of circum stances the findings on which are not always easily made. In any other case, it might be a matter of fact or credibility as to whether or not a delay in filing a timely application for permanent landing or conversely in filing a timely undertaking of assistance were attributable to circumstances beyond the control of the parties involved in the process or were owing to the fault, neglect or inadvertence of either of them. Apart from the opinion expressed by the Federal Court of Appeal and to which, for purposes of this case and perhaps of this case only, I should subscribe, I should hesitate to comment any further.
I mentioned earlier in these reasons the need to interpret or apply certain provisions of the statute and of the Regulations in a manner which would not open the door to abusive applications or to legitimize untoward and self-induced delays. Although my finding herein might ostensibly be viewed as inducing such an effect, I am comforted by the provisions of paragraph 2(1)(a) of the Immigration Regulations, 1978 where the termi nal 23 -year rule provides the necessary curb to infinite delays.
The decision of the visa officer is quashed. The respondents are directed to refer the case of the named dependant herein back to the visa officer to reconsider the application on the basis that the dependant, subject to his admissibility in accord ance with the Act and its Regulations, is not otherwise inadmissible under paragraph 6(1)(a) of the Immigration Regulations, 1978.
The applicant is also entitled to her costs.
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