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A-686-76
Dejo Olafisoye Fadahunsi (Applicant) v.
Minister of Manpower and Immigration (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Heald and Ryan JJ. and MacKay D.J.—Toronto, December 1 and 20, 1976.
Judicial review—Immigration—Application for student visa—Student visa previously granted—On expiry, applicant granted visitor's visa—Whether present application is for extension of student visa or new application for student visa by bona fide non-immigrant—Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-2, ss. 5(p),(t), 7(1)(c),(1), and 7(3)—Immigration Regulations, Part I, s. 35.
Respondent contends that the applicant is asking for an extension of a student visa and that he is not entitled to do so because he is a member of the prohibited class of persons described in section 5(p) of the Immigration Act.
Held, the application is allowed and the decision of the Special Inquiry Officer and the deportation order are set aside. It was not open to the immigration officer or the Special Inquiry Officer to treat the application of the applicant as an application to extend his student visa since the latter had been supplanted by a visitor's visa. The Special Inquiry Officer mistook the meaning of term "bona fide": he did not intend to find that the applicant was not a bona fide non-immigrant for a reason that would not relate to his bona fides as a student, but instead appears to have held that the applicant was not a bona fide non-immigrant because he was not a bona fide student.
Shafi-Javid v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration [1977] 1 F.C. 509, applied.
APPLICATION for judicial review. COUNSEL:
H. Robertson for applicant.
G. R. Garton for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
H. Robertson, Toronto, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
RYAN J.: This is a section 28 application to review and set aside the deportation order in respect of the applicant made by Special Inquiry
Officer M. Caden, and dated October 5, 1976. The deportation order reads:
On the basis of the evidence adduced at the inquiry held at Toronto Enforcement C.I.C., 480 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, on 20th September, 1976; 23rd September, 1976; 28th September, 1976; 1st October, 1976; and 5th October, 1976, I have reached the decision that you may not come into or remain in Canada as of right in that
(1) you are not a Canadian citizen
(2) you are not a person having Canadian domicile, and that;
(3) you are a member of the prohibited class of persons described in paragraph 5(t) of the Immigration Act in that you cannot or do not fulfil or comply with the conditions or requirements of the Immigration Act or the Regulations by reason of:
you did not remain in good standing with a university, college or educational institution, as required by paragraph 35(3)(a) of the Immigration Regulations, Part I, amended; and
that you do not have sufficient financial resources to main tain yourself in Canada as a student, as required by para graph 35(1)(c) of the Immigration Regulations, Part I, amended.
(4) you are a member of the prohibited class of persons described in paragraph 5(p) of the Immigration Act in that, in my opinion, you are not a bona fide non-immigrant. I hereby order you to be detained and to be deported.
Paragraph 7(1)(f) of the Immigration Act' provides:
7. (1) The following persons may be allowed to enter and remain in Canada as non-immigrants, namely,
(/) students entering Canada for the purpose of attending and, after entering Canada, while they are in actual attend ance at any university or college authorized by statute or charter to confer degrees or entering Canada for and, after entering Canada, while they are actually taking some other academic, professional or vocational training approved by the Minister for the purposes of this paragraph;
Section 35 of the Immigration Regulations, Part I 2 , is in these terms:
35. (1) Subject to this section, a student described in para graph (/) of subsection (1) of section 7 of the Act may be allowed to enter and remain in Canada as a non-immigrant if
(a) he complies with the requirements of the Act and these Regulations;
' R.S.C. 1970, c. I-2. 2 SOR/67-434.
(b) he presents to an immigration officer an official letter of acceptance from a university or college described in that paragraph or an educational institution providing academic, professional or vocational training approved by the Minister for the purposes of that paragraph; and
(c) in the opinion of an immigration officer he has sufficient financial resources to maintain himself and any dependants accompanying him during the period for which he is admit ted as a student.
(2) A student referred to in subsection (1) and his depend ants shall not take employment in Canada without the written permission of an officer of the Department.
(3) The period during which a student referred to in subsec tion (1) may remain in Canada shall not exceed twelve months from the date of his entry into Canada but may be extended by an immigration officer for further periods not exceeding twelve months each if
(a) he remains in good standing with and actual attendance at a university, college or educational institution described in paragraph (b) of subsection (1);
(b) he has observed the conditions of his entry; and
(c) he complies with the requirements of the Act and these Regulations.
Paragraph 5(t) of the Immigration Act reads:
5. No person, other than a person referred to in subsection 7(2), shall be admitted to Canada if he is a member of any of the following classes of persons:
(t) persons who cannot or do not fulfil or comply with any of the conditions or requirements of this Act or the regulations or any orders lawfully made or given under this Act or the regulations.
The applicant arrived at Toronto on February 20, 1973. He was granted entry as a student. His evidence was that he planned to study at a college in Brandon, Manitoba, but that, owing to illness, he arrived at the college too late to start classes. He returned to Toronto. When his student visa expired, he reported to the immigration office in Toronto. He testified that "... they said because I did not go to school during those three months, they would put me on inquiry. That inquiry was held and I was ordered deported and I appealed. The appeal was not heard until 1975.... I was allowed to stay."
From 1973 to 1975, he remained in Toronto pending the disposition of his appeal. From April to August 1974, he went to Woodsworth College,
University of Toronto, and took pre-university courses in physics, chemistry and mathematics. Achievement reports issued by Woodsworth Col lege certified that he received a B grade in physics and in chemistry, and that he was recommended for full-time studies.
He was enrolled at Centennial College from September to December 1974, and again from January to May 1975, as a student in engineering technology. He took some ten courses, passing all except one, with grades of B or C. He failed a course in English.
When he finished at Centennial College, he again attended Woodsworth College where he suc cessfully completed a pre-university course in mathematics that finished in August.
No immigration document was issued in respect of the applicant's attendance at Woodsworth Col lege or Centennial College during this period. The applicant's evidence was that he went to the immi gration office and was told that he could go to school pending the decision of his appeal.
The applicant's passport was not entered as an exhibit at the inquiry, but it was before the Special Inquiry Officer. In the course of his examination of it, the officer said:
On page 11 there appears another stamp—Canada Immigra- tion—September 2nd, 1975 and beside that handwritten 7-1-f issued at Toronto with the words "until 20th January, 1976". IMM.1097 A.9159334. Further on page 11 there is another Canada Immigration Stamp ... I believe it states January 21, 1976 ... it is difficult to read. It is issued at Hamilton.
There is another stamp below that—Canada Immigration, handwritten 7-1-f January 21, 1976 in Hamilton. It is until 1st June, 1976-1097 A8632046. It has the numbers noted below-3315-117066.
On page 13 there appears to be a last entry, Canada Immigra tion stamp dated June 15, 1976 7-1-c (handwritten in the body of the stamp) issued in Hamilton. It is handwritten "to Septem- ber 1st, 1976" with the initials P. B. appearing in the centre to the right of this stamp. At the top of the stamp is the handwritten notation 1097 No. A.8632046.
We do not have before us the actual student's visa issued to the applicant on September 2, 1975, the visa which was to expire on January 20, 1976, nor do we have before us any document in respect of the entry on page 11 of his passport consisting
of a stamp and a handwritten notation to the effect that a 7(1)(f) status was granted in Hamilton and extended to June 1, 1976. It is reasonable to assume, however, that this notation operated as or was evidence of an extension of the period permit ted in respect of the 7(1)(f) status granted on September 2, 1975. We do know, however, from the evidence, that the applicant had been admitted to McMaster University in September 1975, as a first-year engineering student. It must have been on the basis of this admission that he was granted student status. We know, too, that the applicant attended McMaster University during the fall, winter and spring of 1975 and 1976 until the end of the University year. We also know that he failed his year at McMaster.
After his student status came to an end, he was given a new status. On June 15, 1976, he was admitted as a visitor under paragraph 7(1)(c) of the Immigration Act for a period extending to September 1, 1976 3 . For two and a half months he was, so far as we are aware, neither a student in fact nor for purposes of the Immigration Act. He was a visitor. When his status as a visitor expired, he reported, as he was required to do, under subsection 7(3) of the Act 4 . Pursuant to that subsection, he presented himself for examination, and by virtue of the subsection he was deemed to be, whatever in fact he may have been, a person seeking admission to Canada for purposes of his examination and for all other purposes under the Immigration Act.
Mr. D. Welsh, the immigration officer who examined him, made a statutory declaration that was received in evidence. He declared:
3 Paragraph 7(1)(c) of the Immigration Act provides:
7. (1) The following persons may be allowed to enter and
remain in Canada as non-immigrants, namely,
(c) tourists or visitors;
° Subsection 7(3) of the Immigration Act reads:
(3) Where any person who entered Canada as a non- immigrant ceases to be a non-immigrant or to be in the particular class in which he was admitted as a non-immi grant and, in either case, remains in Canada, he shall forthwith report such facts to the nearest immigration officer and present himself for examination at such place and time as he may be directed and shall, for the purposes of the examination and all other purposes under this Act, be deemed to be a person seeking admission to Canada.
... I interviewed Dejo Olafisoye Fadahunsi at this office on the 20 September 1976. At that time Mr. Fadahunsi advised me that he had failed his first year in Engineering at McMaster University and that the university would give him absolutely no credit for his first year there. He now wishes to enrol in Centennial College in the Chemical Technician Program.
A letter from the admissions office of Centenni al College, dated September 14, 1976, was entered in evidence. This letter confirmed that the appli cant was registered "as a student at Centennial College, Fall 1976 Semester, commencing the 7th of September". The letter indicates that the pro gram in which the applicant was enrolled was that of chemical technician and that he was enrolled in the third semester of the program.
In my view, in the circumstances of this case, it was not open, either to the immigration officer or to the Special Inquiry Officer, to treat the applica tion of the applicant as an application to extend the period stipulated in the student visa which had been supplanted by the visitor's visa, the visa on the expiry of which he was reporting. This is particularly so when one has in mind that it would be unreal to view his application for a student visa to attend Centennial College to study as a chemi cal technician as an application for an extension of the period of time that had been granted under the visa issued on the strength of an admission by McMaster University to study engineering, the visa which had expired some three months earlier. It is also true that we have no evidence concerning the circumstances surrounding the grant of visi tor's status, and it would be improper for us to speculate about the reasons. At any rate, this is not a case of a student, admitted as such, requesting an extension of time while he was in status as a student, nor is it a case of such a student reporting forthwith after the expiry of his student visa. The word "extended", which appears in subsection 35(3) of the Regulations, is not, of course, a term of art, but it is not flexible enough, if properly construed, to encompass, in all the circumstances of this case, a finding that what the applicant did in September 1976 constituted an application for an extension of the period of time under the stu dent's visa that had expired on June first.
It was conceded before us that the deportation order is not supportable on the ground, asserted in
the order, that the applicant does not have suffi cient financial resources to maintain himself in Canada as a student.
I have given careful consideration to the finding of the Special Inquiry Officer that the applicant was a member of the prohibited class of persons described in paragraph 5(p) of the Immigration Act in that, in the opinion of the Officer, he was not a bona fide non-immigrant. Paragraph 5(p) is in these terms:
5. No person, other than a person referred to in subsection 7(2), shall be admitted to Canada if he is a member of any of the following classes of persons:
(p) persons who are not, in the opinion of a Special Inquiry Officer, bona fide immigrants or non-immigrants;
Reading the reasons of the Special Inquiry Offi cer as a whole, including what he described as a review of the evidence, I have concluded that he did not intend to find that the applicant was not a bona fide non-immigrant for a reason that would not relate to his bona fides as a student as, for example, that he might have intended to remain indefinitely in Canada on completion of his stud ies. It seems to me that he intended to hold that the applicant was not a bona fide non-immigrant because he was not a bona fide student.
In Shafi-Javid v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration [1977] 1 F.C. 509, a case involving a finding that an applicant was not, in the opinion of the Special Inquiry Officer, a bona fide non-immi grant, Chief Justice Jackett said [at page 515]:
... in my view, the expression "bona fide" refers to the authenticity of the person as a visitor and not to the acceptabili ty of his reason for being a visitor.
In that case the question, so far as is relevant here, was whether the applicant was a bona fide visitor, but the term bona fide would, in the case of a student, have a similar reference, that is, it would refer to his authenticity as a student and not to his reasons for being a student.
Applying that test, and again reading the rea sons of the Special Inquiry Officer as a whole, I am of the view that he mistook the meaning of the term "bona fide" in deciding as he did. This view
is reinforced when I consider that the applicant was deemed, by subsection 7(3), to be a person seeking admission to Canada as a student and that, as decided above, he was not to be considered as a student seeking extension of a period under a student visa still in existence or just expired.
I would grant the application and set aside the decision of the Special Inquiry Officer and the deportation order. I would refer the matter back to a Special Inquiry Officer to be determined on the basis of the evidence adduced at the inquiry con ducted by Special Inquiry Officer M. Caden and on the basis of these reasons.
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HEALD J.: I concur.
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MACKAY D.J.: I concur.
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