Date: 20140915
Docket: IMM-2357-13
Citation: 2014 FC 872
Ottawa, Ontario, September 15, 2014
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Roy
BETWEEN: |
ANTON VULEVIC |
Applicant |
and |
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION |
Respondent |
ORDER AND REASONS
[1] UPON an application for judicial review of a decision of an Immigration Officer denying the application for an exemption on humanitarian and compassionate grounds for the requirement to apply for permanent residence from outside Canada [H&C decision];
[2] AND UPON reviewing the record and receiving the representations of counsel;
[3] For the reasons that follow, the application for judicial review is granted.
[4] The applicant alleges that the record on which the H&C decision was made was incomplete. The Certified Tribunal Record [CTR] produced in this case has barely 50 pages. The applicant alleges that the Application Record was much more extensive than the CTR. Indeed, counsel for the respondent did not dispute before this Court that such was the case.
[5] It will suffice, for the purpose of this application, to reckon that an incomplete file ended up before the Respondent in the face of an absence of explanation for the incomplete record. In the best tradition of the bar, counsel for the respondent chose to avoid arguing that which should not be argued without a strong evidentiary basis. There was no attempt, and appropriately so, to show that the more than 100 pages missing from the CTR carried little weight. In the circumstances of this case, the Court can only come to the conclusion that a significantly incomplete record was presented to the decision-maker.
[6] As a result, the application for judicial review, made pursuant to section 72 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27, is granted. At its most basic, procedural fairness requires that an applicant be heard (audi alteram partem). When the complete application is not before the decision-maker, it can hardly be argued that the party has been heard (Nicholson v Haldimand-Norfolk Regional Police Commissioners, [1979] 1 SCR 311). The five factors of Baker v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 SCR 817 which are used to determine the content of the duty of fairness leave the Court closer to the judicial end of the spectrum than the political or legislative end. The standard of review on procedural fairness in most cases is correctness (see generally Brown and Evans, in Judicial Review of Administrative Action in Canada (Toronto, On: Carswell, 2013) at 7:1620) and, in this case, the process of adjudication followed was deficient in that the applicant was not heard if the full application was not before the decision-maker. Those who decide must hear. As a result, the matter is sent back to a different officer who will conduct a complete redetermination.
ORDER
THIS COURT ORDERS that the application for judicial review is granted and the matter is sent back to a different officer for redetermination.
"Yvan Roy"
Judge
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: |
IMM-2357-13
|
STYLE OF CAUSE: |
ANTON VULEVIC v THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
PLACE OF HEARING: |
Toronto, Ontario
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DATE OF HEARING: |
September 9, 2014
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ORDER AND REASONS: |
ROY J.
|
DATED: |
September 15, 2014
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APPEARANCES:
Joseph R. Young
|
For The Applicant
|
Brad Gotkin
|
For The Respondent
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SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Barrister and Solicitor Toronto, Ontario
|
For The Applicant
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William F. Pentney Deputy Attorney General of Canada Toronto, Ontario
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For The Respondent
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