Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-171-77
Bibi Rahiman Ali (Applicant) v.
Minister of Manpower and Immigration (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Heald and Urie JJ. and MacKay D.J.—Toronto, November 24; Ottawa, December 13, 1977.
Judicial review Immigration Deportation Refusal
by Immigration Appeal Board for extension of time for filing appeal — Whether or not extension should be allowed — Applicant returned to Canada after having been deported — Applicant informed she had no right of appeal — Applicant was permanent resident before first deportation order executed — Whether or not an appeal would lie — Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-2, ss. 2, 18(1)(e)(ix) — Immigration Appeal Board Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-3, s. 11(1)(a) as amended by S.C. 1973-74, c. 27, s. 5 — Immigration Appeal Board Rules, SOR/67-559, Rule 4 — Immigration Inquiries Regulations, SOR/67-621 as amended by SOR/73-470, s. 12(b).
Applicant returned to Canada after the execution of a depor tation order without either a ministerial permit or the Minis ter's permission. A Special Inquiry Officer, making a second deportation order because of applicant's return, informed appli cant that she had no right of appeal to the Immigration Appeal Board. Applicant argues that an appeal did lie and the Special Inquiry Officer accordingly violated section 12(b) of the Immi gration Inquiries Regulations. The Immigration Appeal Board dismissed an application for an order extending the time for filing an appeal from the second deportation order for want of jurisdiction. That decision forms the subject of this application for judicial review.
Held, the application is dismissed. The application cannot succeed because the Immigration Appeal Board does not have the power to extend the time for filing a notice of appeal beyond the time set out in Rule 4 of the Immigration Appeal Board Rules. Moreover, applicant's last admission to Canada before the second deportation order must have been a lawful admission in order to qualify applicant as a "permanent resi dent" on that date. Since that admission was illegal because it was contrary to section 35 of the Immigration Act, applicant was not a permanent resident on the date the second deporta tion order was made. Since she was not a permanent resident she had no right of appeal under section 11(1)(a). The Special Inquiry Officer, therefore, did not breach Regulation 12(b).
Woldu v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration [1978] 2 F.C. 216, applied.
APPLICATION for judicial review.
COUNSEL:
M. Philip for applicant. K. Braid for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Jemmott & Philip, Toronto, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.: This is a section 28 application to review and set aside a decision of the Immigration Appeal Board dated March 10, 1977, wherein that Board refused to grant the applicant an extension of time within which to appeal a deportation order made against the applicant on July 15, 1976 (here- inafter referred to as the second deportation order).
The applicant, a native of Guyana, was granted landed immigrant status in Canada on February 15, 1973. A deportation order was made against the applicant on March 12, 1975 (hereinafter referred to as the first deportation order) for the reason that she was a person described in subpara- graph 18(1)(e)(ii) of the Immigration Act in that she had been convicted of an offence under the Criminal Code of Canada. The applicant appealed the first deportation order to the Immigration Appeal Board and that Board dismissed the appeal. The first deportation order was executed on February 24, 1976. The applicant returned to Canada without the permission of the Minister or a Minister's permit on June 26, 1976.
The second deportation order referred to supra, was made concerning the applicant on July 15, 1976 on the basis that she was a person described in subparagraph 18(1)(e)(ix) of the Immigration Act in that: "You have returned to Canada after a deportation order was made against you at Toronto, Ontario on the 12th of March, 1975, and since no appeal against such order was allowed and you were deported from Canada, since you do not have the consent of the Minister, it is contrary to Sec 35 of the Immigration Act to allow you to
remain in Canada."'
At the special inquiry leading to the making of the second deportation order, the applicant was informed by the Special Inquiry Officer that she did not have a right of appeal to the Immigration Appeal Board. By motion filed on February 24, 1977, the applicant applied to the Immigration Appeal Board for an order extending the time within which to file an appeal to the Board from the second deportation order. By judgment dated March 10, 1977, the Board dismissed that applica tion "for want of jurisdiction". It is that decision of the Board which forms the subject matter of this section 28 application.
Quite apart from the other issues raised by the applicant, it is my opinion that this section 28 application cannot succeed because the Immigra tion Appeal Board does not have the power to extend the time for filing a notice of appeal beyond
' Section 18(1)(e)(ix) of the Immigration Act reads as follows:
18. (1) Where he has knowledge thereof, the clerk or secretary of a municipality in Canada in which a person hereinafter described resides or may be, an immigration officer or a constable or other peace officer shall send a written report to the Director, with full particulars, concerning
(e) any person, other than a Canadian citizen or a person with Canadian domicile, who
(ix) returns to or remains in Canada contrary to this Act after a deportation order has been made against him or otherwise, or
Sections 35 and 35.1 of the Immigration Act read as follows:
35. Unless an appeal against such an order is allowed, a person against whom a deportation order has been made and who is deported or leaves Canada shall not thereafter be admitted to Canada or allowed to remain in Canada without the consent of the Minister.
35.1 Every person against whom a deportation order is made who
(a) is deported or leaves Canada, and
(b) returns to Canada without the consent of the Minister, is, unless an appeal against the deportation order is allowed, guilty of an offence and is liable
(c) on conviction on indictment, to imprisonment for two years, or
(d) on summary conviction, to a fine of not more than five hundred dollars or to imprisonment for six months or to both.
the time set out in Rule 4 of the Immigration Appeal Board Rules 2 . A decision to that effect was made in this Court in the case of Woldu v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration'. While it is true that the facts in the Woldu case (supra) related to section 11(1)(c) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act, (a person claiming refugee status), thus bringing into operation section 11(2) and section 11(3) of that Act, whereas the case at bar relates to section 11(1)(a), (a person claiming status as a permanent resident of Canada), never theless, Rule 4 is expressly made applicable by its terms to all appeals under section 11 of the Act which would, of course, necessarily include appeals like the present one under section 11(1)(a). I am also satisfied that Immigration Appeal Board Rule 4 has been validly enacted by the Board pursuant to the powers given to it under section 8(1) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act 4 since, in my view, Rule 4 is not inconsistent with the scheme of the Act.
A similar view as to the validity of Immigration Appeal Board Rule 4 was also expressed by Gibson J. of the Trial Division of this Court in the case of Minister of Manpower and Immigration v. Immigration Appeal Board, in re Jaroslav Holocek 5 .
2 The applicable portions of Immigration Appeal Board Rule 4 read as follows:
4. (1) An appeal made pursuant to section 11 of the Act shall be instituted by serving a Notice of Appeal upon the Special Inquiry Officer who presided at the inquiry or fur ther examination or upon an immigration officer.
(2) Subject to subsection (3), service of a Notice of Appeal shall be effected within twenty-four hours of service of a deportation order or within such longer period not exceeding five days as the Chairman in his discretion may allow.
3 See page 216 supra.
4 Said section 8(1) reads as follows:
8. (1) The Board may, subject to the approval of the Governor in Council, make rules not inconsistent with this Act governing the activities of the Board and the practice and procedure in relation to appeals to the Board under this Act.
5 Court No. T-1960-75, dated June 9, 1975. [No written reasons Ed.]
However, since applicant's counsel raised another serious and substantive attack on the validity of the second deportation order which issue does not appear to have been dealt with by the Courts, I propose to consider same and to express my views thereon. The applicant submitted that the Special Inquiry Officer did not comply with the provisions of section 12(b) of the Immi gration Inquiries Regulations which section requires a Special Inquiry Officer, when making a deportation order in cases where the person has a right of appeal under the Immigration Appeal Board Act, to inform that person of his right to appeal and to further inform him of the procedure to be followed in instituting such an appeal 6 . The applicant further submits that she has such a right of appeal as a permanent resident of Canada because section 11(1)(a) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act provides a right of appeal from a deportation order to the Immigration Appeal Board on a question of law or mixed law and fact, to a permanent resident [emphasis added]. The applicant then points to the definition of a "perma- nent resident" as contained in section 2 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act and reading as follows:
"permanent resident" means a person who has been granted lawful admission to Canada for permanent residence under the Immigration Act;
and states that she meets this definition because she was granted landed immigrant's status on Feb- ruary 15, 1973. In support of this submission, the applicant also points to the definition of "admis- sion" as contained in section 2 of the Immigration Act and reading as follows:
"admission" includes entry into Canada, landing in Canada and return to Canada of a person who has been previously landed in Canada and has not acquired Canadian domicile;
6 Section 12(b) of the Immigration Inquiries Regulations reads as follows:
12. A presiding officer who makes a deportation order in respect of a person shall forthwith upon making such order
(b) where the person is a person described in paragraph 11(1)(a) or (b) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act, inform him of his right of appeal under that Act and the procedure to be followed in instituting such an appeal; and
The respondent, while agreeing that, prior to the making of the first deportation order, the applicant was a permanent resident of Canada within the meaning of section 11(1) (a) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act, submits that since section 11(1)(a) speaks of a person who is a permanent resident [emphasis added], it does not include people who were or have been previously perma nent residents of Canada and who have been valid ly deported therefrom. It is the respondent's posi tion that the "admission" referred to in the definition of "permanent resident" in the Immi gration Appeal Board Act should not be construed to include an admission prior to a deportation order other than the deportation order sought to be appealed from and that to do otherwise would be to render section 35 of the Immigration Act (supra) meaningless.
I agree with these submissions of respondent's counsel. Section 35 of the Immigration Act makes it illegal for this applicant to re-enter Canada and to remain in Canada without the consent of the Minister. This applicant did not have that consent and thus returned to Canada illegally. I cannot believe that it was the intention of Parliament to continue to accord to a person in such circum stances the status of "permanent resident" of Canada. In this case, it is necessary to consider the status of the applicant as of the date of the second deportation order, namely, July 15, 1976. As of that date, she cannot be said to be a "permanent resident" of Canada since she was illegally in the country at that time. It matters not, in my view, that at some previous point in time, she was a "permanent resident". The operative date is the date upon which her right to appeal would arise if she were a permanent resident and that date is the date of the deportation order she seeks to appeal against.
Support for this view is to be found in the definition of "entry" in section 2 of the Immigra tion Act. Entry is there defined as meaning "the lawful admission of a non-immigrant to Canada for a special or temporary purpose and for a limited time" [emphasis added]. Accordingly, when the definition of "permanent resident" in section 2 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act is
read along with the definitions of "admission" and "entry" as contained in section 2 of the Immigra tion Act, it is clear to me that the last admission of the applicant to Canada prior to July 15, 1976, must have been a lawful admission in order to qualify her as a "permanent resident" on that date. Since that last admission was illegal because it was contrary to section 35 of the Immigration Act, the applicant was not a permanent resident on the date of the making of the second deportation order against her. Since she was not a permanent resident, she had no right of appeal under section 11(1) (a) and if she had no right of appeal, then Regulation 12(b) was not breached by the Special Inquiry Officer. Accordingly, it is my view that applicant's submission fails and that the section 28 application should be dismissed upon this addition al ground.
URIE J. concurred.
MACKAY D.J. concurred.
 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.