Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-776-83
Frankie Hak Wo Lau (Applicant) v.
Minister of Employment and Immigration (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Mahoney and Marceau JJ.—Vancouver, February 7 and 9, 1984.
Immigration — Deport/depart decision — Foreign student overstaying and working though not authorized — Adjudica tor ordering deportation rather than issuing departure notice — Good reputation outweighed by deliberate and wilful con duct — Deportation order set aside on s. 28 application — Wilful nature of conduct insufficient in itself to justify depor tation — All circumstances to be taken into account — Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52, ss. 27(2)(b),(e), 32(6) — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28.
Evidence — Immigration — Deport/depart hearing — Adjudicator admitting into evidence memorandum containing unsubstantiated, prejudicial allegations — Attaching "little weight" thereto — Should have attached no weight — Depor tation order set aside.
A citizen of Hong Kong came to Canada on a student visa in December, 1976. It was valid until June 30, 1981 and employ ment was not authorized. When the applicant completed his university studies in the spring of 1981, he went to work for a travel agency and maintained that employment until his arrest, under section 104 of the Immigration Act, 1976 in May of 1983. The Adjudicator decided that a deportation order should be issued. In so deciding, thé Adjudicator acknowledged that the applicant had earned the respect of his business associates but concluded that this did not excuse the applicant's "deliber- ate and wilful" conduct and "exhibition of keeping bad faith with the authorities" in seeking employment when not author ized to do so. A further ground for deportation was that the applicant had remained in Canada after he had ceased to be a visitor, contrary to paragraph 27(2)(e) of the Act. A section 28 application was made to the Federal Court of Appeal. It was not the Adjudicator's findings that the applicant was a member of the prohibited classes described in paragraphs 27(2)(b) and 27(2)(e) of the Act that were attacked but rather the determi nation to issue a deportation order instead of a departure notice.
Held, the application should be allowed. The deportation order is set aside and the matter referred back to the Adjudica tor for a proper determination.
The Adjudicator's reasoning, that the applicant's "deliberate and wilful" actions were sufficient to outweigh the favourable circumstances, could not be accepted. In most cases, an appli cant's conduct will have been deliberate in that he has con sciously overstayed or accepted employment. If the wilful
nature of the conduct was in itself enough to entitle an adjudicator to refuse to issue a departure notice, it would be hard to imagine a case where a departure notice would issue. By subsection 32(6), the Adjudicator was to take all of the circumstances into account in reaching a deport/depart deci sion. Parliament had given the Adjudicator a discretion to exercise, breaches of the Act notwithstanding.
There was a further error by the Adjudicator which con stituted a second reason why the deportation order had to be set aside. There had been admitted into evidence a memorandum containing allegations that the applicant had gotten into Canada by false information. These unsubstantiated allegations were prejudicial and while the Adjudicator indicated that he attached very little weight to them, he should have given them no weight at all.
COUNSEL:
R. Cantillon for applicant. M. Taylor for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Cantillon & McKenzie, Vancouver, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.: This section 28 [of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10] application attacks a deportation order made against the applicant based on the Adjudicator's findings first ly, that the applicant was a person described in paragraph 27(2)(e) of the Immigration Act, 1976 [S.C. 1976-77, c. 52], in that he had entered Canada as a visitor and had remained therein after he had ceased to be a visitor; and secondly, that the applicant was also a person described in para graph 27(2)(b) of the Act, in that he had engaged in employment in Canada without a valid and subsisting employment authorization, contrary to subsection 18(1) of the Immigration Regulations, 1978 [SOR/78-172]. Counsel for the applicant at the hearing before us (who was also the applicant's counsel at the inquiry) did not, either at the inqui ry or before us, seriously question the Adjudica tor's findings that, on the evidence adduced, the applicant was a member of the prohibited classes described in paragraphs 27(2)(b) and 27(2)(e) of the Act. His submissions were directed, rather, to
the Adjudicator's determination pursuant to sub section 32(6) of the Act that a deportation order instead of a departure notice should issue in this case.
In addressing this issue, the Adjudicator set forth properly, in my view, the governing criteria as set out in subsection 32(6) of the Act. He said that he was satisfied, on the evidence, that the applicant would leave Canada on or before a date specified by the Adjudicator in a departure notice. Thereafter he considered whether the circum stances of the case warranted a deportation order or a departure notice. He then proceeded to review those circumstances (case pages 34 and 35) which may be summarized as follows. The applicant, aged 30, is a citizen of Hong Kong. He came to Canada on a student visa in December of 1976. He was authorized to attend school in Canada as a visiting student from the beginning of 1976 until the end of June 1981. The conditions listed on the student authorization read as follows:
1. Not authorized to work.
2. Must attend U of A only.
3. Valid until 30 June 81.
After a brief absence from Canada in the winter of 1980-81, he came back into Canada in February of 1981 on the strength of the valid and subsisting student authorization described supra. After obtaining his degree at the University of Alberta in Edmonton in the spring of 1981, he commenced work in June of 1981 in Vancouver as a tour manager for a travel agency. He continued in this employment until his arrest, pursuant to section 104 of the Immigration Act, 1976 in May of 1983. At page 35 of the case, the Adjudicator said:
Apparently as a result of anonymous information, immigration officers attended the business on May 4th of this year, ques tioned you and eventually took you into custody. The evidence indicates that you originally claimed to be a Canadian citizen who had been landed in 1976. At the time of this interview you were not aware that the person to whom you were speaking was an immigration officer and have indicated in your evidence that when he did identify himself as an immigration officer you admitted that you had no right to be in Canada, and it's the arrest that followed that sequence of events.
Now, as your Counsel pointed out, you have earned the person al and professional respect of your business associates.
It is my perception that you have been forthright at this inquiry and I would say that your demeanour reflects to your credit. However, you were a student in Canada who chose at the end of your studies not to leave Canada. I also note that even while you were a student you did not comply with the law. You testified that while attending the University of Alberta you took part-time work as a waiter two days a week. Apparently, this was without an employment authorization and done to supplement the funds you were receiving from home.
The Immigration Regulations Part I, which were in effect when you first became a student, required that you have sufficient funds to maintain yourself during the course of your studies and specifically prohibited students from taking employment without the written permission of an immigration official. The current legislation likewise considers that foreign students would not be normally a part of the work force during the course of their sojourn in Canada and likewise prescribes a student from taking employment without authorization.
Though much has been said that reflects to your credit, because of your conduct as a student and afterwards I find that I am not satisfied that a deportation order ought not be made.
Your business reputation does not in my mind excuse you from the consequences of your conduct which must be considered as an exhibition of keeping bad faith with the authorities, both while you were here legally as a student and in the almost two-year period following. Nothing in the evidence discloses that your decision to remain and work unlawfully in Canada was anything other than a deliberate and wilful act on your part.
For these reasons I have decided that I will make a deportation order against you. After you have been removed from Canada, you are prohibited from returning to Canada without first obtaining the consent of the Minister.
My problem with the above-quoted passage arises mainly from the penultimate paragraph thereof which I consider to be the ratio upon which the Adjudicator decided that a deportation order rather than a departure notice should be issued. What the Adjudicator seems to be saying in that paragraph is that while much of the evi dence adduced and many of the circumstances of the case reflect credit upon the applicant, upon his business reputation and upon his credibility, never theless the fact that he overstayed in Canada without authorization and accepted employment without authorization is sufficient in itself to out weigh and offset the circumstances favourable to the applicant because both of those actions were "deliberate and wilful" on the part of the appli cant. I am unable to accept this reasoning. I would think that in practically every case of this nature, the actions of the applicant are deliberate and
wilful in the sense that the applicant consciously overstays or consciously accepts employment with out authorization. If these circumstances were, by themselves, sufficient to entitle an adjudicator to decline to issue a departure notice, notwithstand ing the existence of many other circumstances favourable to the applicant, then it would be dif ficult to think of a case where a departure notice would issue. In every case, the requirement for the deport/depart decision under subsection 32(6) only arises after an adjudicator has determined that an applicant is a member of an inadmissible class. Thus, a breach of the provisions of the Immigra tion Act, 1976 is present in every case requiring a subsection 32(6) determination. As noted supra, I think in practically every case it could also be said that the illegality arises because of a deliberate act on the part of the applicant. However, subsection (6) of section 32 enjoins the Adjudicator to have regard to all the circumstances of the case in making his deport/depart decision.
For the reasons detailed supra, I have concluded that in this case, the Adjudicator has given undue weight to the circumstance of a breach of provi sions of the Immigration Act, 1976. If Parliament had intended that circumstance to be the dominat ing and determining circumstance, then there would have been no point in conferring the subsec tion 32(6) discretion on the Adjudicator. By so conferring a discretion, Parliament must have intended the Adjudicator to look at all the circum stances and implied in that discretionary power is the power to grant departure notices where all the circumstances warrant it, notwithstanding that breaches of the Immigration Act, 1976 have occurred. Accordingly, I have concluded that the Adjudicator misconceived the parameters of the discretion conferred upon him pursuant to subsec tion 32(6) of the Act, which misconception repre sents an error in law reversible by the Court under section 28 of the Federal Court Act.
Counsel for the applicant raised another objec tion to the proceedings before the Adjudicator. This objection relates to the admission by the Adjudicator at the inquiry of Exhibit C4. That exhibit purports to be a memorandum dated Janu- ary 30, 1976, from one F. B. Webster, a special inquiry officer at Vancouver, to the Commission
for Canada, Manpower and Immigration Section, Hong Kong. The memorandum reads as follows:
LAU Hak Wo (Frankie)
1. Mr. Lau, born 4 October, 1953, was issued a non-immigrant visa 7(1)(c) by your office on 10 December, 1975. He applied for a change of status on 23 December 1975, to that of student and then was subsequently arrested under the provisions of subparagraph 18(1)(e)(viii) of the Immigration Act when it was alleged that he came into Canada by reason of false or misleading information given by himself. An Inquiry subse quently opened and adjourned when counsel was requested and we have now been advised that the subject departed for Hong Kong via Japanese Airlines on 27 December, 1975. However, we have been unable to verify his departure.
2. It would be appreciated, therefore, if you would endeavour to ascertain Mr Lau's present whereabouts and his last address in Hong Kong was 989 King's Road, Flat C2, 11/F Hong Kong. Additionally we have been given to understand by Columbia College that they have written him a letter of acceptance which will be valid for presentation some time after May, 1976.
The transcript of the inquiry discloses that Exhibit C4 was admitted over the objections of counsel for the applicant. Counsel objected firstly because the document was not under oath and secondly, because he was deprived of the opportu nity of cross-examining the author of the memo randum on its contents. The Adjudicator admitted the memorandum into evidence and reserved his decision on the weight to be given to it. In his reasons he decided that question as follows:
While the Minister's representative drew adverse inferences from the circumstances of your December 1975 trip to Canada and the subsequent change of your travel document, it seems to me that your explanations are both plausible and credible. I therefore attach very little weight to what happened in 1975 as it affects my decision at this inquiry. [Emphasis added.]
In my view the Adjudicator should not have given any weight whatsoever to the document. It refers only to allegations that the applicant came into Canada by reason of false or misleading infor mation. There is nothing in the record to suggest that the inquiry was proceeded with or a decision reached by a special inquiry officer on the allega tions. On this basis, the allegations are unproven and unsubstantiated. As such they had a potential for prejudice and should have been rejected sum marily. Furthermore, they relate to alleged actions by the applicant more than seven years prior to the inquiry being conducted. I do not consider this
error by the Adjudicator to be as serious as the initial error discussed supra in view of the Adjudicator's remarks supra that he attached little weight to what happened in 1975 in so far as it affects the decision in subject inquiry. However, because the case presenting officer placed some emphasis on the importance of Exhibit C4 in, his final submissions to the Adjudicator and because it is not possible to conclude that the Adjudicator was not, at least to some extent, influenced by this evidence, I think this further error by the Adjudicator is an additional reason why the depor tation order in this case should not be allowed to stand.
Accordingly, and for the foregoing reasons, I have concluded that the section 28 application should be allowed, the deportation order set aside, and the matter referred back to an adjudicator to make the determination required under subsection 32(6) of the Immigration Act, 1976 on a basis not inconsistent with these reasons.
MAHONEY J.: I agree. MARCEAU J.: I concur.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.