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A-671-75
Juan Jose Fourment Lugano and dependent chil dren Nancy Judith Lugano, Juan Jr. and Danilo Lugano (Applicants)
v.
Minister of Manpower and Immigration (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Urie and Ryan JJ. and MacKay D.J.—Toronto, April 8; Ottawa, April 30, 1976.
Immigration—Judicial review—Applicants ordered deport- ed—Claiming refugee status—Immigration Appeal Board refusing appeal—Applications to extend time for granting leave to appeal and for judicial review heard simultaneously— Immigration Appeal Board Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-3, ss. 11, 15(1), 23 as am. S.C. 1973-74, c. 27, s. 5—Federal Court Act, ss. 28, 29—Canadian Bill of Rights, S.C. 1960, c. 44, ss. 1, 2(e).
Applicants appealed a deportation order, claiming refugee status. By virtue of section 11(3) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act, the Board refused to allow their appeal. Applicants applied to extend the time for granting leave to appeal the Board's decision, and, by order of the Court, a section 28 application to review the decision was heard at the same time. Applicants argued (1) that the correct procedure for review of a Board decision is by way of section 28 of the Federal Court Act and an application for leave to appeal under section 23 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act; (2) that section 11(3) of the Act must be interpreted so as to require the Board to allow an appeal unless the claim to refugee status is patently frivol ous; and (3) even if an appeal can succeed only if the Board refused to exercise its discretion or failed to exercise its section 15 discretion properly, such a principle must be interpreted in light of section 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights.
Held, both applications are dismissed. (1) Section 29 of the Federal Court Act prohibits a section 28 application against a decision of the Board affirming a deportation order, and the proper procedure is to enter an appeal under section 23 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act. The same procedure is to be followed in respect of an order of the Board under section 11(3), since, following its refusal, the Board is required to direct the execution of the order, and thus effectively deter mines the appeal at that stage. It, thus, appears to be a decision "on appeal" within the meaning of section 23. If an applicant satisfies the Court that there is a question of law involved, then a right of appeal lies to this Court under section 23. (2) The wording of section 11(3) goes farther than merely determining whether the claim is frivolous or not. It requires an assessment of the evidence then before the quorum of the Board, and a
determination of whether there exist reasonable grounds for believing it is more likely than not, on a balance of probabili ties, that the applicant can prove his status at a full hearing. Nor was it intended that the Court, in determining whether it would interfere with an order of the Board under section 11(3), would employ a different standard than that which is normally applicable in the review of an exercise of statutory discretion. There is nothing here which would amount to an error of law, and the Board's assessment ought not to be interfered with. (3) Parliament has expressly provided the method by which an applicant is to have a right of appeal where he claims to be a refugee. He knows the case he must establish and is afforded an opportunity to provide a summary of the facts and evidence. He has not been deprived, under section 11(3), of the right to a fair hearing, nor does a reading of sections 1 and 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights, together with section 11(3) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act require the interpretation of section 11(3) in a lenient way. There has been no violation of the Canadian Bill of Rights.
Boulis v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration [1974] S.C.R..875; Armstrong v. Wisconsin [ 1973] F.C. 457; Prata v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration (1975) 52 D.L.R. (3d) 383, applied. Minister of Manpower and Immigration v. Fuentes [ 1974] 2 F.C. 331; Hidalgo v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration (not reported, A-71-75), considered.
JUDICIAL review. COUNSEL:
R. J. Gathercole for applicants. G. R. Garton for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
c/o Student's Legal Aid Service, Toronto, for applicants.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
URIE J.: This is an application for an extension of time for granting leave to appeal from a judg ment of the Immigration Appeal Board dated the 13th day of November 1975. By order of the Court an application made pursuant to section 28 of the Federal Court Act to review and set aside the same judgment was directed to be heard, and was in fact heard, at the same time.
The applicants, who had been ordered deported following a special inquiry on October 23, 1975,
filed a notice of appeal from the deportation order to the Immigration Appeal Board (hereinafter referred to as the Board) on October 24, 1975. The notice of appeal was accompanied by a declaration under oath made pursuant to section 11(2) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act (hereinafter some times referred to as the Act) in which the adult applicant claimed to be a refugee protected by the United Nations Convention and Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees. On November 13, 1975 the Immigration Appeal Board by virtue of section 11(3) of the Act refused to allow the appeal to proceed and directed that the deportation order be executed as soon as practicable. It is in respect of this judgment that the present applications are brought.
Since in large part the applications involve an interpretation of the effect of a determination made under section 11, that section is set out in full hereunder:
11. (1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3), a person against whom an order of deportation is made under the Immigration Act may appeal to the Board on any ground of appeal that involves a question of law or fact or mixed law and fact, if, at the time that the order of deportation is made against him, he is
(a) a permanent resident;
(b) a person seeking admission to Canada as an immigrant or non-immigrant (other than a person who is deemed by subsection 7(3) of the Immigration Act to be seeking admis sion to Canada) who at the time that the report with respect to him was made by an immigration officer pursuant to section 22 of the Immigration Act was in possession of a valid immigrant visa or non-immigrant visa, as the case may be, issued to him outside Canada by an immigration officer;
(c) a person who claims he is a refugee protected by the Convention; or
(d) a person who claims that he is a Canadian citizen.
(2) Where an appeal is made to the Board pursuant to subsection (1) and the right of appeal is based on a claim described in paragraph (1)(c) or (d), the notice of appeal to the Board shall contain or be accompanied by a declaration under oath setting out
(a) the nature of the claim;
(b) a statement in reasonable detail of the facts on which the claim is based;
(c) a summary in reasonable detail of the information and evidence intended to be offered in support of the claim upon the hearing of the appeal; and
(d) such other representations as the appellant deems rele vant to the claim.
(3) Notwithstanding any provision of this Act, where the Board receives a notice of appeal and the appeal is based on a claim described in paragraph (1)(c) or (d), a quorum of the Board shall forthwith consider the declaration referred to in subsection (2) and, if on the basis of such consideration the Board is of the opinion that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the claim could, upon the hearing of an appeal, be established, it shall allow the appeal to proceed, and in any other case it shall refuse to allow the appeal to proceed and shall thereupon direct that the order of deportation be executed as soon as practicable.
(4) The Governor in Council may make regulations defining the expressions "immigrant visa" and "non-immigrant visa" for the purpose of paragraph (1) (b).
Counsel for the applicants first argued that the correct procedure for reviewing a decision of the Board is by way of a section 28 application and by way of an application for leave to appeal under section 23 of the Act. He submitted that section 29 of the Federal Court Act does not preclude an application under section 28. This Court has already held in A-102-75, Lubin v. The Minister of Manpower and Immigration, an unreported decision dated May 15, 1975, that section 29 of the Federal Court Act prohibits an application under section 28 directed against a decision of the Board affirming a deportation order. It was held in that case that if an applicant desired to have that decision modified, he should have proceeded under section 23 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act, and entered an appeal.
Is the same procedure required to be followed in respect of an order of the Board made pursuant to section 11(3) refusing to allow an appeal to pro ceed? In my view it does since, following its refus al, the section requires the Board to direct that the order of deportation be executed as soon as practi cable and thus effectively determines the appeal at that stage. Thus, it appears to be a decision "on an appeal" within the meaning of section 23 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act and is therefore capable of being the subject matter of an appeal to this Court, if the other requirements of section 23 are met. This construction of the subsection accords with the reasoning of Laskin J., as he then was, in his judgment in the case of Roulis v. The
Minister of Manpower and Immigration' where, at page 880, in discussing whether or not an appeal lay to that Court at that time from the refusal of the Board to stay the execution of an order of deportation pursuant to section 15(1)(b)(î), he found as follows:
The decision of the Board, after dismissing an appeal from a deportation order, on the application of s. 15(1) is as much a decision "on an appeal" as its affirmation of a deportation order. I see no reason to read the words "on an appeal" as if they included by extension the words "from a deportation order" or "from the refusal to make a deportation order". The words "on an appeal" are more easily susceptible of being read to mean "in the course of an appeal" or "on the hearing of an appeal", and point as much to the entire course of proceedings as to the narrower issue of the competency of a deportation order per se. I prefer the wider view which does not exclude this Court from the scheme of review of which it is a part by its leave, limited only by the requirements that there be a question of law, including a question of jurisdiction, involved.
This reasoning, as it seems to me, is wholly applicable to a decision on a claim under section 11(3) and, if an appellant satisfies the Court that there is a question of law involved, then a right of appeal lies to this Court under section 23 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act. Accordingly, by reason of section 29 of the Federal Court Act, no right of review exists under section 28.
Counsel for the applicants next argued that section 11(3) of the Act must be interpreted in such a way as to require the Board to allow an appeal unless the claim to refugee status is patent ly frivolous. To support this proposition he referred to two decisions of this Court. In Minister of Manpower and Immigration v. Fuentes 2 , Pratte J. at page 334 in reference to the right of appeal of persons referred to in section 11(1) (c) and (d), pointed out that such right was subject to two conditions. At page 334 he stated:
Accordingly, a person claiming to be a Canadian citizen or refugee must first—this is the first condition imposed on his right of appeal—append to his notice of appeal a declaration under oath setting out the essential aspects of his claim and the facts on which it is based. This declaration must then, and this
' [1974] S.C.R. 875. 2 [1974] 2 F.C. 331.
is the second condition, be considered by a "quorum of the Board". If, after considering the declaration, the Board con cludes that the claim is not a serious one, it must direct that the deportation order be executed as soon as practicable; the right of appeal is then lost. If, however, consideration of the declara tion indicates to the Board that the claim is a serious one, "it shall allow the appeal to proceed". [The emphasis is mine.]
In further support of his proposition counsel referred to the unreported decision in Hidalgo v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration' wherein, in referring back to the Board the applicants' application for relief under section 15 of the Act, it was stated that:
... that the condition to its jurisdiction to grant relief under the said section 15 contained in the words "the existence of reason able grounds for believing that the person concerned is a refugee protected by the Convention" is satisfied if the balance of probability on such evidence is that reasonable grounds exist for believing that the appellant is such a refugee even if the balance of probability on such evidence is that the appellant is not such a refugee.
In considering the validity of the applicant's submission that these cases buttress his argument that the Board need only determine at the section 11 stage of the proceedings whether or not the claim is serious or, to put it in the way espoused by the applicants, is not frivolous, the wording of subsection 3 is, in my view, ignored. The pertinent words are
... a quorum of the Board shall forthwith consider the declara tion ... and, if on the basis of such consideration the Board is of the opinion that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the claim could ... be established, it shall allow the appeal to proceed....
This goes farther than merely determining whether or not the claim is frivolous.
It requires, as I see it, an assessment of the evidence then before the quorum of the Board (limited as it is by the requirements of section 11(2) as to the contents of the declaration) and a determination, on that evidence, of whether there exist reasonable grounds to believe that it is more likely than not that, on a balance of probabilities, the applicant can prove his status as a refugee at a full hearing of the Board. I do not read the judg-
3 F.C.A. No. A-71-75 dated May 26, 1975. [Reasons for judgment not circulated—Ed.]
1 ments in either the Fuentes or Hidalgo cases as putting the duty imposed on the Board at any lower a standard than that.
Moreover, I do not believe that in either of those decisions it was intended to imply that the Court in determining whether or not it would interfere with an order of the Board made under section 11(3) would depart from, or employ a different standard than that which is normally applicable in the review of an exercise of a statutory discretion. Abbott J. in the Boulis case (supra) dealt with the principles applicable in an appeal from such a decision at page 877, where he said:
In my opinion however, such an appeal can succeed only if it be shown that the Board (a) has refused to exercise its discre tion or, (b) has failed to exercise the discretion given under s. 15 in accordance with well established legal principles. As to those principles Lord Macmillan speaking for the Judicial Committee said in D. R. Fraser and Co. Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue ([1949] A.C. 24) at p. 36:
The criteria by which the exercise of a statutory discretion must be judged have been defined in many authoritative cases, and it is well settled that if the discretion has been exercised bona fide, uninfluenced by irrelevant considerations and not arbitrarily or illegally, no court is entitled to inter fere even if the court, had the discretion been theirs, might have exercised it otherwise.
I do not see any error in the Board's assessment of the declaration which would amount to an error of law, in its refusal to permit the applicants to continue with their appeal and therefore, in my opinion, we ought not to interfere with that deci sion on the basis of the test for which applicants' counsel contended.
Applicants' counsel further argued that even if the principle propounded by Abbott J. (supra) is accepted and is applicable in considering the test to be applied by the Board under section 11(3), it must be interpreted in the light of section 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights, which reads as follows:
2. Every law of Canada shall, unless it is expressly declared by an Act of the Parliament of Canada that it shall operate notwithstanding the Canadian Bill of Rights, be so construed and applied as not to abrogate, abridge or infringe or to authorize the abrogation, abridgment or infringement of any of the rights or freedoms herein recognized and declared, and in particular, no law of Canada shall be construed or applied so as to
(e) deprive a person of the right to a fair hearing in accord ance with the principles of fundamental justice for the deter mination of his rights and obligations.
This contention can be answered simply, in my opinion, by pointing out that Parliament has made express provision as to the method by which an applicant is to have a right of appeal where he claims to be a refugee. He knows the case which he must establish to enable the Board to allow his appeal to proceed and is afforded an opportunity of providing a detailed summary of the facts and evidence upon which he relies and of making sub missions with respect thereto. Thus it does not appear that Parliament in this enactment has deprived him of a right to a fair hearing.'
Nor, in my opinion, does a reading of sections 1 and 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights, together with section 11(3) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act, require that the latter section be inter preted in such a way as to lean toward leniency to the applicants which was the restrictive interpreta tion urged by applicants' counsel. None of the human rights or fundamental freedoms referred to in section 1 have been discriminated against, nor does section 11(3) as construed in these reasons abrogate, abridge or infringe any of those rights and freedoms.
Accordingly, for all of the above reasons the application for an extension of time for granting leave to appeal and the section 28 application should be dismissed.
* * *
RYAN J.: I concur.
* * *
MACKAY D.J.: I agree.
° See Armstrong v. The State of Wisconsin [1973] F.C. 437 and see also Prata v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration (1975) 52 D.L.R. (3d) 383.
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