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T-750-76
Anoop Kumar Kalicharan (Applicant) v.
Minister of Manpower and Immigration (Respondent)
Trial Division, Mahoney J.—Toronto, March 8; Ottawa, March 24, 1976.
Immigration—Prerogative writs—Applicant ordered de ported following conviction for theft—Subsequently granted conditional discharge by Ontario Court of Appeal Seeking prohibition against execution of order—Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-2, ss. 7(1)(f), 18(1)(e)(ii),(2)—Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34, ss. 614(2), 662.1(1),(3),(4).
Applicant, who had entered Canada as a student, was con- vioted of theft, and ordered deported under section 18(1)(e)(ii) of the Immigration Act. Subsequently, the Ontario Court of Appeal granted a conditional discharge. Applicant applied for prohibition against execution of the deportation order.
Held, the order for prohibition is granted. The Special Inquiry Officer was under no legal obligation to await the result of the appeal before issuing the deportation order; a person convicted at trial is a convicted person notwithstanding the existence of an unexhausted right of appeal. However, under a conditional discharge pursuant to the Criminal Code substituted by a court of appeal for a sentence imposed by a trial court, the conviction is deemed never to have been passed. The decision is not simply new evidence which would permit the Special Inquiry Officer to reopen the hearing, or merely a fact to be considered if an appeal is entertained by the Immi gration Appeal Board. Rather, the basis for making the depor tation order no longer exists in fact, and is deemed in law not to have existed at all.
R. v. Law Society of British Columbia (1968) 68 D.L.R. (2d) 179, agreed with.
ACTION. COUNSEL:
R. Kligerman for applicant. K. Braid for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Shuber, Gluckstein, Toronto, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MAHONEY J.: The applicant moves, by originat ing notice of motion, for a writ of prohibition prohibiting the execution of an order that he be deported. The applicant entered Canada, as a stu dent, pursuant to section 7(1)(f) of the Immigra tion Act'. Following his conviction for theft con trary to the provisions of section 294 of the Criminal Code 2 , he was sentenced to pay a $50 fine. He appealed against the sentence but not the conviction.
On February 5, 1976, a Special Inquiry Officer issued the deportation order on the basis that the applicant was a person described in subparagraph 18(1)(e)(ii), namely one who, being neither a Canadian citizen nor with a Canadian domicile, has been convicted of an offence under the Crimi nal Code. The Immigration Act provides:
18. (2) Every person who is found upon an inquiry duly held by a Special Inquiry Officer to be a person described in subsection (1) is subject to deportation.
On February 19, 1976, the Ontario Court of Appeal allowed the applicant's appeal and granted him a conditional discharge.
The pertinent provisions of the Criminal Code follow:
614. (2) A judgment of a court of appeal that varies the sentence of an accused who was convicted has the same force and effect as if it were a sentence passed by the trial court.
662.1 (I) Where an accused, other than a corporation, pleads guilty to or is found guilty of an offence, other than an offence for which a minimum punishment is prescribed by law or an offence punishable, in the proceedings commenced against him, by imprisonment for fourteen years or for life or by death, the court before which he appears may, if it considers it to be in the best interests of the accused and not contrary to the public interest, instead of convicting the accused, by order direct that the accused be discharged absolutely or upon the conditions prescribed in a probation order.
R.S.C. 1970, c. I-2.
2 R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34.
(3) Where a court directs under subsection (1) that an accused be discharged, the accused shall be deemed not to have been convicted of the offence to which he pleaded guilty or of which he was found guilty and to which the discharge relates except that
(a) the accused or the Attorney General may appeal from the direction that the accused be discharged as if that direction were a conviction in respect of the offence to which the discharge relates or, in the case of an appeal by the Attorney General, a finding that the accused was not guilty of that offence; and
(b) the accused may plead autrefois convict in respect of any subsequent charge relating to the offence to which the dis charge relates.
(4) Where an accused who is bound by the conditions of a probation order made at a time when he was directed to be discharged under this section is convicted of an offence, includ ing an offence under section 666, the court that made the probation order may, in addition to or in lieu of exercising its authority under subsection 664(4), at any time when it may take action under that subsection, revoke the discharge, convict the accused of the offence to which the discharge relates and impose any sentence that could have been imposed if the accused had been convicted at the time he was discharged, and no appeal lies from a conviction under this subsection where an appeal was taken from the order directing that the accused be discharged.
Whatever the practical considerations that ought to have prevailed, the Special Inquiry Officer was under no legal obligation to await the result of the appeal before issuing the deportation order. A person convicted at trial is a convicted person notwithstanding that he may have an unexhausted right of appeal that would render him otherwise'. The applicant was, on February 5, 1976, a person described in subparagraph 18(1)(e)(ii) and, thus, subject to deportation.
As I appreciate the provisions of the Criminal Code, as they bear upon a conditional discharge substituted by a court of appeal for a sentence imposed by a trial court, the conviction is not reversed; it is deemed never to have been passed. The decision of the Ontario Court of Appeal is not merely new evidence that would permit the Special Inquiry Officer to reopen his hearing; nor is it simply a fact to be taken into account by the Immigration Appeal Board if, as and when, that tribunal entertains an appeal from the Special Inquiry Officer's decision. Rather, its import is
R. v. Law Society of British Columbia, Ex parte MacKrow (1968) 68 D.L.R. (2nd) 179.
that the basis for making the deportation order not only no longer exists in fact; it is deemed, in law, not to have existed at all. This, therefore, is a proper case for prohibition and the order sought will issue accordingly.
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