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A-63-89
Minister of Employment and Immigration (Appellant)
v.
Surinder Kaur Narwal (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: CANADA (MINISTER OF EMPLOYMENT AND IMMIGRATION) V. NARWAL (CA.)
Court of Appeal, Marceau, Stone and MacGuigan JJ.A.—Vancouver, April 2 and 6, 1990.
Immigration — Application for landing — Sponsorship by spouse — Validity of marriage questioned — Choice of law — Validity of marriage governed by law of parties' intended matrimonial home.
Conflict of laws — Choice of law — Immigration — Sponsored landing — Woman getting divorce then marrying ex-husband's brother — Board erred in deciding validity of marriage governed by law of India — Capacity governed by law of parties' intended matrimonial home.
The respondent, a landed immigrant originally from India, divorced her husband and later married his brother, a citizen of India, in a civil ceremony in England. She then sponsored her new husband's application for landing. During an interview with an immigration officer, her husband denied that his brother had been in any way related to the respondent. The application was refused by an immigration officer. The Board allowed the appeal from that decision. It found that the mar riage was valid according to the laws of India, that the mar riage had not been entered into for the purpose of gaining admission to Canada as a member of the family class and that the denial of any relationship with his brother constituted a misrepresentation of a material fact justifying the immigration officer's decision to refuse the application. Nevertheless, the Board allowed the appeal on humanitarian grounds under paragraph 79(2)(b) of the Act.
This is an appeal from the Board's decision on the ground that the Board erred in finding that a valid marriage existed under the laws of India. If there was no valid marriage, the respondent's husband was not a member of the family class and the Board was therefore without jurisdiction to grant special relief on humanitarian grounds.
Held, the appeal should be dismissed.
Although the result is the same, the Board erred in deciding that the substantial validity of the marriage had to be deter mined by the laws of India rather than by the applicable laws in Canada which contained no bar to the marriage between the respondent and her divorced husband's brother. The theory that capacity is to be governed by the law of the intended matrimonial home of both parties, espoused by Cheshire in Private International Law, should be adopted. In this case there
was sufficient evidence to support the finding that the couple intended to establish their permanent residence in Canada. The respondent's husband was therefore a member of the family class and the Board possessed jurisdiction to grant the special relief pursuant to subsection 79(2) of the Act.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, 1955, Act No. 25 (India), s. 5(iv).
Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52, ss. 9(3),
79(1),(2) (as am. by S.C. 1986, c. 13, s. 6). Immigration Regulations, 1978, SOR/78-172, s. 4(1)(a)
(as am. by SOR/84-140, s. 1), (3) (as enacted idem).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Feiner v. Demkowicz (falsely called Feiner) (1973), 2 O.R. (2d) 121; 42 D.L.R. (3d) 165; 14 R.F.L. 27 (H.C.); Gill, Ravinder Kaur v. M.E.I., I.A.B. 82-6270, 6/5/86.
REFERRED TO:
Kenward v. Kenward, [1951] P. 124 (C.A.). AUTHORS CITED
Cheshire G. C. Private International Law, 9th ed. London: Butterworths, 1974.
COUNSEL:
Esta Resnick for appellant. Ujjal Dosanjh for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for appellant.
Dosanjh & Company, Vancouver, for respondent.
These are the reasons for judgment of the Court delivered orally in English by
STONE J.A.: The respondent landed in Canada in 1983 as the fiancee of Jagpal Singh Narwal. They were married in September of that year. The couple separated a year later and on April 1, 1986 were divorced. The husband became estranged from his father who, with his mother, were also residents of Canada.
The husband's parents took the respondent into their home and, after a time, she informed the father of a desire to remarry. She was shown a photograph of her former husband's brother, Sukhwantjit Singh Narwal, who was domiciled in India. Shortly afterward the respondent agreed to marry the brother and travelled to London, Eng- land where the intended husband was a visitor. They were married there in a civil ceremony on August 18, 1986 and lived together in England until September 9 of that year. During this period a child, born in Canada in May, 1987, was con ceived. The husband returned to India two months after the marriage and there filed on December 29, 1986 an application for permanent residence in Canada. The application was sponsored by the respondent. During an interview with the immigra tion program officer in connection with this application, he denied that Jagpal Singh Narwal had been in any way related to the respondent. In the meantime, the respondent maintained regular correspondence with Sukhwantjit Singh Narwal and, between April and July, 1988, visited him in India from where she returned so she could be present at her appeal before the Board.
The Board addressed three issues before finally disposing of the appeal in the respondent's favour pursuant to subsection 79(2) of the Immigration Act, 1976 [S.C. 1976-77, c. 52 (as am. by S.C. 1986, c. 13, s. 16)]. It decided by a majority that the validity of the marriage was governed by the law of India and that, as the evidence of the existence in that country of a custom permitting a woman to marry the brother of her former hus band was at least evenly balanced, the custom was to be taken as established because the appellant had failed to discharge the onus of proving that the custom did not exist. Secondly, the Board conclud ed that the marriage was not entered into by Sukhwantjit Singh Narwal primarily for the pur pose of gaining admission to Canada as a member of a family class but, rather, that "the marriage was entered into by the appellant with the inten-
tion of residing permanently with the applicant".' Finally, the Board found as a fact that Sukhwant- jit Singh Narwal had, indeed, denied that his brother Jagpal had been in any way related to the respondent (despite their previous marriage) and concluded that this denial constituted a misrepre sentation of a material fact relevant to the out come of the application for permanent residence and that it had precluded further investigation by the immigration officer.' The Board therefore con cluded that Sukhwantjit Singh Narwal could not be admitted into Canada. Nevertheless, the Board considered that there existed significant humani tarian or compassionate grounds under paragraph 79(2)(b) of the Act for granting special relief and proceeded to make an order allowing the appeal on that basis, thus clearing the way for his admission into Canada.
The appellant attacks this decision on the ground that the Board erred in finding that a valid marriage existed according to the law of India and, secondly, (because of that error) that Sukhwantjit Singh Narwal should have been found not to be "a member of the family class" with the result that there existed no jurisdiction in the Board for granting special relief under subsection 79(2) of the Act. The power to grant such relief depends upon the existence of a refusal of a landing application pursuant to subsection 79(1) which, in terms, is concerned with a sponsored application
' Reasons, Appeal Book, Vol. 2, at p. 133. The right under paragraph 4(1)(a) of the Immigration Regulations, 1978 [SOR/78-172 (as am. by SOR/84-140, s. 1)], of certain Canadian citizens and permanent residents to sponsor an application for landing made by a spouse is qualified by subsection 4(3) [as enacted idem]:
4....
(3) Paragraph (1)(a) does not apply to a spouse who entered into the marriage primarily for the purpose of gain ing admission to Canada as a member of the family class and not with the intention of residing permanently with the other spouse.
2 Subsection 9(3) of the Act provides:
9....
(3) Every person shall answer truthfully all questions put to that person by a visa officer and shall produce such documentation as may be required by the visa officer for the purpose of establishing that his admission would not be contrary to this Act or the regulations.
"made by a member of the family class". 3 Accord ingly, if we were to conclude that the Board erred in deciding that a valid marriage existed, it would follow that it then lacked jurisdiction to grant special relief under subsection 79(2) unless we were to find the marriage to be valid on a ground that was rejected by the Board.
The view I take of this case renders it unneces sary to decide whether the Board erred in finding that the appellant had failed to sustain the burden of proving that the marriage of August 18, 1986 was invalid on the ground that no custom existed in the law of India that permitted a valid marriage of the respondent to the brother of her former husband. As the Board points out, by the law of that country a marriage may be solemnized be tween any two Hindus if, inter alia, the parties are not within the degrees of "prohibited relationship" and that one may yet be solemnized even if they are so related if the custom or usage governing each of them permits a marriage between them. 4 It is also clear by that law that, because of the earlier marriage, the respondent was, vis-a-vis Sukhwantjit Singh Narwal, within the "prohibited relationship".
It is my view that the Board erred in deciding that the substantial validity of the marriage had to be determined by the law of India rather than by applicable law in Canada which, it seemed accept ed on both sides, contained no such bar to the marriage. The traditional view is that the law governing capacity to marry is that of the domicile of both parties at the time of the marriage. How ever, the respondent urged the Board to apply an alternative theory, namely, that capacity is to be governed by the law of the intended matrimonial home of both parties, a theory espoused in Che- shire, Private International Law, 9th ed., at pages 335-336 and discussed by the High Court of Jus-
3 Subsection 79(1) reads in part:
79. (1) Where a person has sponsored an application for landing made by a member of the family class, an immigra tion officer of visa officer, as the case may be, may refuse to approve the application ....
^ Clause 5(iv) of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 [1955, Act No. 25 (India)].
tice of Ontario in Feiner v. Demkowicz (falsely called Feiner) (1973), 2 O.R. (2d) 121, at page 126 where Van Camp J. said:
According to this theory, the basic presumption that capacity to marry is governed by the law of the pre-nupital [sic] domicile of the parties, is rebutted if it can be inferred that the parties at the time of the marriage intended to establish their home in a certain country and did in fact establish it there within a reasonable time.
This theory was, indeed, applied by the Board itself in Gill, Ravinder Kaur v. M.E.I. (I.A.B. 82-6270), May 1, 1986, and, I may add, seems to have been accepted by Denning L.J. in Kenward v. Kenward, [1951] P. 124 (C.A.), at pages 143-146.
While the Board in the present case found, in effect, the Feiner approach to be "eminently reasonable and fair to all concerned", 5 it neverthe less concluded that it was inapplicable to the case at bar. At page 9 6 it stated:
The Board has no difficulty in finding that the couple always had the mutual intention from the time of their marriage to establish their home in Canada. Unfortunately, while the appel lant is established here the same cannot be said for the appli cant. His application for permanent residence was refused. He has no legal right to come to Canada. He has never been to Canada. Therefore the Board is prepared to conclude that the laws of the prenuptial domiciles of the parties in this case must apply to the marriage. This case is distinguishable from Gill. In Gill, the couple had shown more than an intent to establish permanent residence in Canada. The principal applicant was allowed a work permit from the Immigration authorities and found work here. There were two children of the marriage both of whom were born in Canada. Their father left Canada after being advised to make application from abroad. His wife also visited him in India. Therefore, the Board in Gill was able to apply the intended matrimonial home doctrine to determine that Canada was the domicile of the couple.
With respect, I find this reasoning unconvincing and even somewhat rigid in that it appears to neglect the spirit of the intended matrimonial home theory. True enough, Sukhwantjit Singh Narwal is not established in Canada. On the other hand, as the majority found, both he and the respondent "always had the mutual intention from
5 Reasons, Appeal Book Vol. 2, at p. 127.
6 Appeal Book, Vol. 2, at p. 128.
the time of their marriage to establish their home in Canada". This was not, in my view, an intention that had no practical possibility of becoming a reality. There was, I think, a reasonable probabili ty at the time of the marriage that, with his wife already a resident of Canada, Sukhwantjit Singh Narwal would be landed here within a reasonable time and thus be able, with her, to establish a matrimonial home for themselves and their Canadian-born child. Moreover, as mentioned above, the record clearly shows that the couple acted in positive ways to realize their intention of establishing a home in this country. The respond ent returned immediately to Canada where she bore their child. After a short delay, Sukhwantjit Singh Narwal returned to India where he filed an application for permanent residence in Canada, thinking that this had to be done in his homeland. The respondent sponsored the application. In my view this evidence satisfies the objective element of the theory as summarized in Feiner. The fact that the couple has not yet established a home here is not due to any lack of interest or effort on their part but is, rather, due to their inability to con vince the Canadian authorities of the merit of the application. I am thus satisfied that the spirit of the intended matrimonial home theory is indeed met and, accordingly, that the August 18, 1986 marriage was valid according to that theory. To so decide is but to logically extend what the Board itself has decided in the Gill case.
Although the Board concluded that the mar riage was valid, it came to that conclusion by a different route. Nevertheless, in view of the con clusion I have just reached, Sukhwantjit Singh Narwal was "a member of the family class" and, accordingly, the Board did possess jurisdiction to grant the special relief pursuant to subsection 79(2) of the Act. I would, therefore, dismiss this appeal.
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