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A-24-74
Sai Yau Fan (Applicant) v.
Minister of Manpower & Immigration (Respond- ent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Mackay and Sweet D.JJ.—Toronto, June 27, 1974
Judicial review—Immigration—Admission to Canada as student—Seeking work visa to remain in Canada—Deporta- tion ordered for lack of immigrant visa—Deportation order set aside—Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. 1-2, ss. 7, 22, 23, An Act respecting certain Immigration Laws and Proce dures S.C. 1973-74, c. 28—Immigration Regulations, s. 18— Federal Court Act, s. 28.
The applicant was admitted to Canada as a non-immigrant student in September, 1973. In subsequent discussion with immigration officers, concerning a work visa acquired for his employment as a graduate assistant, the applicant indicated his desire to remain in Canada. An immigration officer's report under section 22 of the Immigration Act recommended against permanent admission on the ground that the applicant lacked a valid immigrant visa as required by section 28(1) of the Immigration Regulations, Part I. Following the report an inquiry was made and deportation ordered. The applicant moved to set aside the order, under section 28 of the Federal Court Act.
Held, the order for deportation should be set aside. The applicant entered Canada as a non-immigrant; nothing hap pened to change his status as such; and section 7(3) of the Immigration Act never came into operation. Hence the inquiry under section 23(2) was probably of no legal effect and could not support a deportation order. The applicant was not, at the time of the section 22 report, a person seeking to enter Canada, and was not, at that time, deemed to be such a person, and could not therefore be ordered to be deported for lack of an immigrant visa, as contemplated by section 28(1) of the Immigration Regulations, which applied only in the case of a person seeking to be admitted to Canada.
Morrison v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration [A-33-74]; Koo Shew Wan y. Minister of Manpower and Immigration [1973] F.C. 578, considered. Podlaszecka v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration [1972] S.C.R. 733, distinguished.
APPLICATION to set aside deportation order.
COUNSEL:
B. A. Thomas for applicant.
A. C. Pennington and R. G. Vincent for
respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Thomas and Rye, Toronto, for applicant. Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment delivered orally in English by
JACKETT C. J.: This is an application under section 28 of the Federal Court Act to set aside a deportation order made by a Special Inquiry Officer under the Immigration Act.
The applicant was admitted to Canada as a non-immigrant student on September 4, 1973, for a period of one year and thereupon com menced a course of studies at the University of Toronto. In September of that year he was interviewed by immigration officers as a result of problems concerning a work visa required so that he could take employment as a graduate assistant in the department of the University where he was a student. During the course of the interviews with the immigration officers, he indicated that he desired to remain in Canada permanently. Indeed, it would seem that he indicated that it was his intention to stay in Canada permanently. A report was thereupon made, on September 21, 1973, by an immigra tion officer to a Special Inquiry Officer, which purported to be a "Report under section 22 of the Immigration Act". That report reads as follows:
1. SAI YAU FAN entered Canada as a non-immigrant. He has now reported to the undersigned in accordance with subsec tion 7(3) of the Immigration Act, and, is seeking admission to Canada for permanent residence.
2. Pursuant to section 22 of the Immigration Act, I have to report that I have interviewed and examined SAI YAU FAN and in my opinion, he is not a Canadian citizen or a person who has acquired Canadian domicile.
3. I am also of the opinion that it would be contrary to the Immigration Act and Regulations to grant his admission to Canada for permanent residence because he is a member of the prohibited class of persons described in paragraph 5(t)
of the Immigration Act in that he does not fulfil or comply with the conditions and requirements of the Immigration Regulations Part 1, amended, by reason of:
He is not in possession of a valid and subsisting immi grant visa as required by subsection (1) of section 28 of the said Regulations.
Following such report, an inquiry was held as a result of which the applicant was ordered deported. This section 28 application has been brought to have the deportation order set aside.
Section 22 of the Immigration Act reads as follows:
22. Where an immigration officer, after examination of a person seeking to come into Canada, is of opinion that it would or may be contrary to a provision of this Act or the regulations to grant admission to or otherwise let such person come into Canada, he may cause such person to be detained and shall report him to a Special Inquiry Officer.
That section only applies, of its own force, to a case where a person was, in fact, "seeking to come into Canada" at the time when the officer formed the opinion "that it would or may be contrary to a provision of [the] Act or the regulations to grant admission to or otherwise let such person come into Canada". It does not apply, of its own force, to a person, such as the applicant, who had already been allowed to come into Canada and is, as a result, still in Canada.
The validity of the proceedings in this case and the resulting deportation order must, there fore, depend on the applicability, in the circum stances, of section 7(3) of the Immigration Act, which reads as follows:
(3) Where any person who entered Canada as a non-immi grant ceases to be a non-immigrant or to be in the particular class in which he was admitted as a non-immigrant 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.
As appears from the wording of section 7(3), that subsection only applies where a person who had entered Canada as a non-immigrant either
(a) ceased to be a non-immigrant, or
(b) ceased to be in the particular class in which he was admitted as a non-immigrant, and
in either case, had thereafter remained in Canada. Such a person is required by section 7(3) to report such facts to an immigration offi cer and is deemed, by that subsection, "to be a person seeking admission to Canada". The result of his being deemed to be a person seek ing admission to Canada, when the section applies, in my opinion, is that
(a) an inquiry can then be launched by a sec tion 22 report, and
(b) by virtue of section 1 of chapter 28 of the Statutes of 1973, the visa requirement of Regulation 28(1) is applicable.'
However, if section 7(3) is not applicable, it would not appear that either section 22 or Regu lation 28(1) is applicable in the case of a person who has been allowed to come into Canada as a non-immigrant.
In this case, the applicant entered Canada as a non-immigrant but nothing happened after he entered Canada to change his status as such and, in my view, section 7(3) never came into operation. Compare Koo Shew Wan v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration. 2
' Compare the recent decision of this Court in Morrison v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration [A-33-74].
2 [1973] F.C. 578.
Section 2 of chapter 28 of the Statutes of 1973-74, which is the only provision that I know of where section 7(3) is given a broader application than that provided by its own terms, has no application in this case as it only applies in the case of a person who made application for permanent resi dence before November 6, 1972.
In my view Podlaszecka v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration [1972] S.C.R. 733, does not apply to the cir cumstances of this case. It is true that it was there held that "On making an application for permanent residence in Canada while in the country as a non-immigrant, the appel lant took herself out of section 19(l)(e)(iv) of the Act and came within section 7(3) which required that she present herself for examination". It was not, however, laid down that section 7(3) would apply in any case where a person who entered as a non-immigrant had not remained in Canada
The real basis for the deportation order in this case, as I understand the view of the Special Inquiry Officer, is not that the applicant entered Canada as a non-immigrant and subsequently changed his status but that he was not a "bona fide" non-immigrant when he came into Canada so that he was, at that time, a prohibited person under section 5(p) who is now subject to depor tation under section 18(1)(e)(iv) and (2). 3 That is quite a different situation calling for a different procedure and, probably, for a different onus of proof. (I must not be taken as agreeing with the view, apparently held by the Special Inquiry Officer in this case, that a person who comes into Canada as a non-immigrant is necessarily a person who is not a bona fide non-immigrant merely because he has a very strong desire, at the time that he comes in, to live in Canada permanently. Such a desire may be quite con sistent with an intention to comply with Canadi- an law, and only remain, or return at some
after he had, either ceased to be a non-immigrant or to be in the particular class in which he was admitted as a non-immi grant. Moreover, it is clear that, by virtue of legislative action since the Podlaszecka decision, a person cannot now obtain an immigrant visa by applying to an immigration officer in Canada (see Regulations 2(h) and 28(1)) and it is inconceivable that the occasion for applying the Podlaszecka decision on that point would arise again.
Those provisions read as follows:
5. No person, other than a person referred to in subsec tion 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;
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
(iv) was a member of a prohibited class at the time of his admission to Canada,
(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.
subsequent time, as and when he is permitted to do so in accordance with the law.)
As section 7(3) did not apply in this case, I am of opinion that the inquiry resulting in the deportation order probably was of no legal effect and cannot support a deportation order. What is more important is that I am firmly of opinion that the applicant was not, at the time that the section 22 report was made, a person seeking to come into Canada, and was not, at that time, deemed to be such a person, and could not therefore be ordered to be deported for not having a valid and subsisting immigrant visa as contemplated by Regulation 28(1), which only applies in the case of a person seeking to be admitted to Canada. 4
If section 7(3) had been applicable in the circumstances, it would have been necessary to consider whether the applicant had been given a fair opportunity of answering the allegations that were being made against him. Before that question could be decided, it may well be that the respondent would have had to be allowed to cross-examine on the affidavits filed by the applicant and to file affidavits of his own.
I am of opinion that the deportation order should be set aside.
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MACKAY D.J. concurred.
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SWEET D.J. concurred.
4 Regulation 28(1), by its terms, applies to a person who "seeks to land" in Canada and "landing", by virtue of section 2 of the Act, means "lawful admission ... to Canada for permanent residence".
 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.