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The Attorney General of Canada (Applicant)
v.
Marc Michel Cylien (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Thurlow and Pratte JJ.—Montreal, November 19 and 20, 1973.
Judicial review—Deportation order—Respondent claiming status of "refugee'—Appeal to Immigration Appeal Board— Declaration of respondent—Whether Board to consider "declaration" alone—Evidence—Interpretation of "deci- sion"—Jurisdiction of Federal Court of Appeal—Federal Court Act, s. 28—Immigration Appeal Board Act, s. 11 (as amended by 1973, c. 27).
By an amendment to section 11 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act (1973, c. 27, effective August 15, 1973) a right of appeal from a deportation order is permitted only where the deportation order was made against a permanent resident, a holder of a visa issued outside Canada, a person claiming to be a "refugee" protected by the 1951 United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, or a person claiming to be a Canadian citizen. By subsection 11(2), where the appeal is based on a claim that the appel lant was a "refugee" or a Canadian citizen the notice of appeal must contain a declaration under oath setting out all the particulars on which the claim is based. By subsection 11(3), where the appeal is based on a claim under subsection 11(2), a quorum of the Immigration Appeal Board must, on notice of appeal, consider the declaration and if "on the basis of such consideration" there are reasonable grounds to believe "that the claim could, upon the hearing of the appeal, be established" it must allow the appeal to proceed or refuse to allow the appeal and direct the deportation order to be executed.
On August 30, 1973 the respondent appealed from a deportation order and on September 5, 1973 made a declara tion explaining why he was claiming status as a "refugee". A panel of three members of the Board made an order direct ing that the "record" of the inquiry leading up to the deportation order be transmitted to the Board under Regula tion 4(4)(a). The Attorney General of Canada applied for judicial review under section 28 of the Federal Court Act submitting that the Board was required to decide whether the appeal was to proceed upon a consideration of the "declaration" alone and not upon a review of the "record".
Held, the application is dismissed. The Board's conclusion as to the nature of its statutory duty under section 11(3) is not a decision made by it in the exercise of its "jurisdiction or powers" to make decisions and is not, therefore, a "decision" that this Court has jurisdiction to set aside under section 28(1) of the Federal Court Act.
National Indian Brotherhood v. Juneau [1971] F.C. 66, referred to.
APPLICATION for judicial review.
COUNSEL:
Paul 011ivier, Q.C., and Duff Friesen for applicant.
Reynold Icart for respondent. SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for applicant.
Communications to 3878 St. Hubert St., Montreal, for respondent.
JACKETT C.J. (orally)—This is an application by the Attorney General of Canada under section 28 of the Federal Court Act. On the application for directions, counsel for the Attor ney General was put on notice that the Court would have to be satisfied that the subject matter of the application falls within section 28. Submissions concerning the Court's jurisdiction were, accordingly, made when the application came on for hearing.
Before the jurisdiction problem can be stated, it is necessary to review the background. This may be done as follows:
1. Prior to the coming into force of chapter 27 of the Statutes of 1973 on August 15, 1973, section 11 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act conferred on every person against whom a deportation order had been made under the Immigration Act a right to appeal to the Immi gration Appeal Board.
2. Since August 15, 1973, section 11 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act, as amended by chapter 27,
(a) has conferred, by subsection (1), such a right of appeal but only where the deportation order was made against
(i) a permanent resident,
(ii) a holder of a visa issued outside Canada,
(iii) a person claiming to be a "refugee" protected by the 1951 United Nations Con vention Relating to the Status of Refugees, or
(iv) a person claiming to be a Canadian citizen,
(b) has provided, by subsection (2), that where such an appeal is based on a claim that the appellant was a "refugee" or a Canadian citizen, the notice of appeal must contain a declaration under oath setting out
(i) the nature of the claim;
(ii) a statement in reasonable detail of the facts on which the claim is based;
(iii) a summary in reasonable detail of the information and evidence intended to be offered in support of the claim upon the hearing of the appeal; and
(iv) such other representations as the appellant deems relevant to the claim.
(c) has provided, by subsection (3), that where an appeal is based on a claim that the appellant is a "refugee" or a Canadian citizen, a quorum of the Board must, on receipt of the notice of appeal "forthwith consider the dec laration" and
(i) if "on the basis of such consideration" the Board is of opinion that there are reasonable grounds to believe "that the claim could, upon the hearing of the appeal, be established", it must allow the appeal to proceed, and
(ii) in any other case, it must refuse to allow the appeal to proceed and must direct that the order of deportation be executed.
3. Deportation orders are made under the Immi gration Act by officers known as Special Inqui ry Officers and, by the Immigration Appeal Board Rules, an appeal is instituted by serving a notice of appeal upon the Special Inquiry Offi cer (section 4(1)) who is required (section 4(4)) inter alia to file forthwith with the Registrar of the Board copies of the notice of appeal and of the "record", which, by definition, includes the deportation order and a record of everything that took place at the inquiry before the Special Inquiry Officer leading up to the making of the deportation order.
4. On November 2, 1973, an Originating Notice under section 28, in which Marc Michel Cylien was described as respondent, was filed in this
Court by the Deputy Attorney General of Canada. By this notice, application is made to the Court to set aside "the decision and order of the Immigration Appeal Board dated respective ly the 16th and 24th of October, 1973 ..."
5. On November 7, 1973, an application was made under Rule 1403, which provides for an order of directions as to inter alia "the material that will constitute the case for decision of the section 28 application". The respondent appeared on such application with a friend but had no legal representation and was, under standably, not qualified to make any submis sions concerning the order of directions. Coun sel for the Attorney General submitted a description of the material on which he was prepared to base his section 28 application and an order was, accordingly, made providing inter alia that the case for decision of the section 28 application would consist of the following:
(a) The deportation order against Marc Michel Cylien dated August 30, 1973;
(b) Notice of appeal;
(c) Statement under section 11(2);
(d) Order of the Immigration Appeal Board, dated September 10, 1973;
(e) Notice of a hearing of the Immigration Appeal Board, dated September 11, 1973;
(f) Decision (reasons) of the Immigration Appeal Board, dated October 16, 1973;
(g) Order of the Immigration Appeal Board, dated October 16, 1973 and signed on Octo- ber 24, 1973;
(h) The Convention referred to in the Immi gration Appeal Board Act and related documents.
6. Drawing inferences from the documents in the case and accepting, without deciding, that the "reasons" of the Immigration Appeal Board dated October 16, 1973 establish such facts as are stated therein, the following sequence of events led up to this section 28 application:
(a) On August 30, 1973, a deportation order was made against the respondent.
(b) On the same day, the respondent signed a notice of appeal.
(c) On September 5, 1973, the respondent made a declaration explaining why he was claiming status as a "refugee".
(d) On September 10, 1973, certified copies of the deportation order, the notice of appeal and the "declaration" were filed with the Immigration Appeal Board.
(e) On September 10, 1973, a panel of three members of the Board made an order directed to the Minister of Manpower and Immigration reciting that the Board had commenced a consideration of the respondent's "declara- tion" and ordering that the "record" of the inquiry leading up to the deportation order be transmitted to the Board under Regulation 4(4)(a).
(f) On September 11, 1973, the Board sent a notice to the Minister of Manpower and Immigration giving notice that the Board would, on September 18, 1973, consider the respondent's "declaration".
(g) On September 18, 1973, counsel for the Minister appeared before the Board and made a "suggestion". He submitted to the Board, in effect, that section 11(3) required the Board to decide whether the appeal is to proceed or not upon a consideration of the respondent's "declaration" and "upon that alone",; and he suggested that, if the Board considered that the "transcript" and a hearing were necessary "or proper" for the due exercise of its juris diction under section 11(3), it should refer to the Federal Court of Appeal the question of law as to whether section 11(3) authorizes the Board, when forming an opinion pursuant to that provision, to consider
(a) the transcript of the inquiry, and
(b) whatever further evidence or represen tations might emerge from a hearing.
The hearing was, thereupon, adjourned sine die.
(h) On October 16, 1973, the Board, by a majority, gave reasons for its "decision" rejecting the suggestion made on behalf of the Minister. By such reasons, it was stated that the Board's order of September 10, 1973, was confirmed subject to an extension of time for production of the record of the inquiry lead ing up to the deportation order.
The "reasons" of the Immigration Appeal Board reveal a sharp difference of opinion as to the duty imposed on the Immigration Appeal Board by section 11(3) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act as amended in 1973. On the view put before the Board on behalf of the Minister, as I understand it, in the case of an appellant claiming to be a "refugee" or a Canadian citizen, there is to be a screening process, forthwith after the filing of the Notice of Appeal, based only on a consideration by the Board of a "declaration" under oath in which the appellant is required to set out
(a) the nature of the claim;
(b) a statement in reasonable detail of the facts on which the claim is based;
(c) a summary in reasonable detail of the information and evidence intended to be offered in support of the claim upon the hearing of the appeal; and
(d) such other representations as the appellant deems relevant to the claim.
On the Minister's view, if, after a consideration of that "declaration", the Board is of opinion that "there are reasonable grounds to believe that the claim could, upon the hearing of the appeal, be established", it would allow the appeal to proceed and if, after considering that "declaration", the Board is of opinion that there are no "reasonable grounds to believe that the claim could, upon the hearing of the appeal, be established", it would refuse to allow the appeal to proceed. The Board's view, on the other hand, is that the screening process required by section 11(3) is not of such a restricted charac ter and that, before deciding whether or not to allow an appeal to proceed, it should, or at least may, take into consideration, in addition to the section 11(3) declaration, what came out on the inquiry before the Special Inquiry Officer and
what might be brought out before it on a hearing specially held for the section 11(3) determina tion. It can readily be seen that there is a substantial difference in the nature and duration of the process contemplated by section 11(3) depending upon which of these views is correct and that the determination of the correct inter pretation of that provision is of importance in relation to the administration of the system of appeals from deportation orders.
I have no doubt that the question so raised can be settled at this stage of this particular matter by proceedings under the Federal Court Act. There is, however, an important question of law as to whether the remedy is under sec tion 18 or section 28. That question, which is raised for decision for the first time by this application, is important because the efficient administration of the Federal Court Act depends upon its correct determination.
The relevant provisions of the Federal Court Act read as follows:
2. In this Act
(g) "federal board, commission or other tribunal" means any body or any person or persons having, exercising or purporting to exercise jurisdiction or powers conferred by or under an Act of the Parliament of Canada, other than any such body constituted or established by or under a law of a province or any such person or persons appoint ed under or in accordance with a law of a province or under section 96 of The British North America Act, 1867;
18. The Trial Division has exclusive original jurisdiction
(a) to issue an injunction, writ of certiorari, writ of prohi bition, writ of mandamus or writ of quo warranto, or grant declaratory relief, against any federal board, com mission or other tribunal; and
(b) to hear and determine any application or other pro ceeding for relief in the nature of relief contemplated by paragraph (a), including any proceeding brought against the Attorney General of Canada, to obtain relief against a federal board, commission or other tribunal.
28. (1) Notwithstanding section 18 or the provisions of any other Act, the Court of Appeal has jurisdiction to hear and determine an application to review and set aside a decision or order, other than a decision or order of an
administrative nature not required by law to be made on a judicial or quasi-judicial basis, made by or in the course of proceedings before a federal board, commission or other tribunal, upon the ground that the board, commission or tribunal
(a) failed to observe a principle of natural justice or otherwise acted beyond or refused to exercise its jurisdiction;
(b) erred in law in making its decision or order, whether or not the error appears on the face of the record; or
(c) based its decision or order on an erroneous finding of fact that it made in a perverse or capricious manner or without regard for the material before it.
(3) Where the Court of Appeal has jurisdiction under this section to hear and determine an application to review and set aside a decision or order, the Trial Division has no jurisdiction to entertain any proceeding in respect of that decision or order.
The question that has to be decided at this time is whether the subject matter of this sec tion 28 application is a "decision" that can be set aside under section 28 of the Federal Court Act.
In National Indian Brotherhood v. Juneau [1971] F.C. 66 at pages 77 et seq. I discussed, without deciding, some of the problems that may arise in determining the ambit of the words "decision or order" in section 28(1). The por tion of the reasons in the case to which I refer reads, in part, as follows:
Probably the most important question that has to be decided concerning the application of s. 28(1) is the question as to the meaning of the words "decision or order". Clearly, those words apply to the decision or order that emanates from a tribunal in response to an application that has been made to it for an exercise of its powers after it has taken such steps as it decides to take for the purpose of reaching a conclusion as to what it ought to do in response to the application. I should have thought, however, that there is some doubt as to whether those words—i.e., decision or order—apply to the myriad of decisions or orders that the tribunal must make in the course of the decision-making process. I have in mind decisions such as
(a) decisions as to dates of hearings,
(b) decisions on requests for adjournments,
(c) decisions concerning the order in which parties will be heard,
(d) decisions concerning admissibility of evidence,
(e) decisions on objections to questions to witnesses, and
(fl decisions on whether it will permit written or oral arguments.
Any of such decisions may well be a part of the picture in an attack made on the ultimate decision of the tribunal on the ground that there was not a fair hearing. If, however, an interested party has a right to come to this Court under s. 28 on the occasion of every such decision, it would seem that an instrument for delay and frustration has been put in the hands of parties who are reluctant to have a tribunal exer cise its jurisdiction, which is quite inconsistent with the spirit of s. 28(5).
I also have doubts as to whether a refusal by a tribunal to entertain an application or its decision to embark on an inquiry is a decision that falls within s. 28(1). It may well be that, in respect of such matters, the dividing line falls between decisions of a tribunal before it embarks, and completes, its processing of a matter, where a party must proceed by one of the old Crown writ proceedings and build a case upon which the Court may decide whether he is entitled to relief, and decisions based on a case which has been made before the tribunal, where the Court of Appeal may base its decision on what was or was not done before the tribunal.
I do not pretend to have formulated any view as to what the words "decision or order" mean in the context of s. 28(1), but it does seem to me that what is meant is the ultimate decision or order taken or made by the tribunal under its statute and not the myriad of incidental orders or decisions that must be made in the process of getting to the ultimate disposition of a matter.
I do not propose, at this time, to endeavour to reach a conclusion on any aspect of the problem that I referred to at that time except to the extent that it is necessary in order to reach a conclusion as to whether what this section 28 application seeks to have set aside constitutes a "decision" within the meaning of that word in section 28(1).
As I understand the submissions on behalf of the Attorney General, there is, expressly or impliedly, in the reasons delivered by the majority of the Board on October 16, 1973, a "decision" by which the Board rejected the objection to its jurisdiction, confirmed its previ ous decision concerning production of the "record" and decided to proceed with a hearing before performing its section 11(3) duty. This is the decision that counsel is asking this Court to set aside under section 28.'
Assuming the correctness of the Minister's view as to the Board's duty under section 11(3), in my view what the Board did, by the reasons delivered on October 16, properly regarded, constituted either
(a) a refusal to perform its duty under section 11(3), which was to consider the respondent's "declaration" forthwith after its receipt and to make a decision, based only on that consid eration, as to whether the appeal should be allowed to proceed or not, or
(b) an assertion of a jurisdiction, which it does not have, to take into account the evi dence and representations heard by the Spe cial Inquiry Officer and further evidence and representations that it will itself receive before performing its duty under section 11(3),
or it is both such a refusal to perform its duty and such a wrongful assertion of jurisdiction; and it is clearly a case where mandamus or prohibition or both would lie to determine the exact nature of the Board's duty in the circum stances unless such remedy is taken away by section 28(3).
That being so, the question to be decided on this application, in my view, is whether such a refusal to perform a duty or such an assertion of jurisdiction can, in the circumstances of this case, be regarded as a "decision" within the meaning of that word in section 28.
In considering whether what has been put forward here as a decision is a "decision"- within the meaning of that word in section 28(1), it is to be remembered that the Immigra tion Appeal Board is a federal board, commis sion or other tribunal because it is a body having, exercising or purporting to exercise "jurisdiction or powers" conferred by an Act of the Parliament of Canada (see section 2(g) of the Federal Court Act). A decision that may be set aside under section 28(1), must, therefore, be a decision made in the exercise or purported exercise of "jurisdiction or powers" conferred by an Act of Parliament. A decision of some thing that the statute expressly gives such a tribunal "jurisdiction or powers" to decide is clearly such a "decision". A decision in the purported exercise of the specific "jurisdiction or powers" conferred by the statute is equally
clearly within the ambit of section 28(1). Such a decision has the legal effect of settling the matter or it purports to have such legal effect. Once the tribunal has exercised its "jurisdiction or powers" in a particular case by a "decision" the matter is decided even against the tribunal itself?
What we are concerned with here is some thing different. The Board has "jurisdiction or powers" under section 11(3) to decide at a preliminary stage whether the respondent's appeal is to be allowed to proceed or not. It has not, however, made that decision as yet. The problem that has arisen, and in respect of which the Board has taken position , is whether sec tion 11 , properly interprete , requires the Board to make its section 11(3) decision after consid ering the section 11(2) declaration, and nothing else, or whether the statute requires or permits the Board to consider other material before it makes that decision. This is a question of law that the Board has no "jurisdiction or powers" to decide. It must, of course, form an opinion on that question but that opinion has no statutory effect.'
There is a clear difference between a "deci- sion" by the Board of something that it has "jurisdiction or powers" to decide and a deci sion by it as to the view as to the nature of its own powers upon which it is going to act. Once the Board decides something that it has "juris- diction or powers" to decide in a particular case, that decision has legal effect and the Board's powers with regard to that case are spent. When, however, the Board takes a posi tion with regard to the nature of its powers upon which it intends to act, that "decision" has no legal effect. In such a case, nothing has been decided as a matter of law. The Board itself, whether differently constituted or not, in the very case in which the position was taken, can change its view before it deals with the case and, in fact, proceed on the basis of the changed view.
The question that has to be considered here is, therefore, whether section 28(1) extends not
only to all decisions made by the Immigration Appeal Board in the exercise or purported exer cise of "jurisdiction or powers" to make deci sions that have some legal effect or conse quences but extends also to all conclusions reached by the Board during the various prelim inary steps taken in the process leading up to the actual exercise of "jurisdiction or powers" to make decisions.
I am conscious that many aspects of the prob lem as to the ambit of the word "decision" in section 28 not presently in mind may arise in the future and that, when they do, they may well bring to light considerations that have not been thought of as yet. I desire, therefore, as already indicated, to limit any expression of opinion in this case to what is necessary for the disposition of this section 28 application.
My view in this case is that the Board's conclusion as to the nature of its statutory duty under section 11(3) is not a decision made by it in the exercise of its "jurisdiction or powers" to make decisions and is not, therefore, a "deci- sion" that this Court has jurisdiction to set aside under section 28(1) of the Federal Court Act.
I am, therefore, of opinion that the section 28 application should be dismissed.
,APPENDIX
I. In coming to the conclusion that I have reached in this matter, I have not overlooked the express reference in section 28(1)(a) to excess of jurisdiction and refusal of jurisdiction. When paragraph (a) is considered in its context, in my view, it is not only not inconsistent with that conclusion but it supports it. The relevant portion of section 28(1) confers a jurisdiction to determine an application to set aside a "decision or order" upon the "ground" that the tribunal by which it was made
(i) "failed to observe a principle of natural justice",
(ii) "acted beyond ... its jurisdiction", or
(iii) "refused to exercise its jurisdiction".
This does not confer an independent jurisdiction to decide that a tribunal has failed to observe a principle of natural justice, has exceeded its jurisdiction or has refused to exercise its juris diction. Rather it establishes "grounds" for set ting aside a "decision or order". Just as a "deci- sion or order" may be set aside because, in reaching or making it, there was a failure by the tribunal to observe . a principle of natural justice, so a "decision or order" may be set aside because it was a purported exercise of a juris diction that the tribunal did not have or because, in the course of reaching the decision or making the order, the tribunal refused to exercise some part of its jurisdiction. An example of a decision or order that was set aside because, in reaching it, the tribunal refused to exercise its jurisdic tion is to be found in Toronto Newspaper Guild v. Globe Printing Company [1953] 2 S.C.R. 18 where Kellock J. giving judgment on behalf of himself and Estey and Locke JJ., in the course of holding that an order of a board should be quashed because the board had refused to inquire into one of the facts that was essential to its decision, said, at page 35, "This was the very obligation placed upon the Board by the statute. By refusing to enter upon it, the board in fact declined jurisdiction."
II. It is not irrelevant, in considering the prob lem raised by this section 28 application to note that, in cases to which section 28 does not apply, certiorari does not lie where there has been a refusal by a Board to find that it has no jurisdiction until there has been a decision made by the Board in the purported exercise of the jurisdiction that it does not have. In Bell v. Ontario Human Rights Commission [1971] S.C.R. 756, there had been such a refusal (see per Martland J. at page 764) and an application was made for prohibition. The Ontario Court of Appeal held that the application for prohibition was premature but was overruled by the Supreme Court of Canada. With reference to the relative roles of prohibition and certiorari, Martland J. (delivering the judgment of the majority in the Supreme Court of Canada) referred at page 772 to R. v. Tottenham and District Rent Tribunal, Ex p. Northfield (High-
gate) Ltd. [1957] 1 Q.B. 103, where Lord God- dard said at page 107:
But Mr. Winn asked us to express some opinion whether ii was right for the applicants to apply to this court foi prohibition or whether they ought not to have gone to the tribunal and taken the point there. Of course, they couk have taken the point before the tribunal, and if the tribunal had decided in their favour, well and good. If the tribunal had decided contrary to their contention, then they would have had to come here and, instead of asking for prohibi tion, asked for certiorari; but I think it would be impossible and not at all desirable to lay down any definite rule as tc when a person is to go to the tribunal or come here foi prohibition where the objection is that the tribunal has nc jurisdiction. Where one gets a perfectly simple, short and neat question of law as we have in the present case, it seems to me that it is quite convenient, and certainly within the power of the applicants, to come here for prohibition. That does not mean that if the tribunal, during the time leave has been given to move for prohibition and the hearing of the motion, like to continue the hearing they cannot do so; of course, if prohibition goes it will stop them from giving any decision, and if prohibition does not go they can give their decision. For myself, I would say that where there is a clear question of law not depending upon particular facts— because there is no fact in dispute in this case—there is no reason why the applicants should not, come direct to this court for prohibition rather than wait to see if the decision goes against them, in which case they would have to move for certiorari.
What Lord Goddard is referring to in that pas sage when he uses the word "decision" is a decision by the tribunal in the purported exer cise of its "jurisdiction or powers" and not a decision as to whether it has jurisdiction in the particular matter. This is clear from his state ment that "if the prohibition does not go, they can give their decision".
* * *
THURLOW and PRATTE JJ. concurred.
1 During the course of argument, counsel for the Attorney General indicated that he was not seeking to have the "order" of October 24 set aside except as an integral part of such "decision".
2 Unless of course it has express or implied powers to undo what it has done, which is an additional jurisdiction.
3 The statute does not, as it might have done, confer on the Board a jurisdiction to determine its own jurisdiction.
 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.