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T-714-86
Nafareih Mahtab (Applicant) v.
Canada Employment and Immigration Commis sion and Royal Canadian Mounted Police (Respondents)
INDEXED AS: MAHTAR V. CANADA EMPLOYMENT AND IMMI GRATION COMMISSION
Trial Division, Teitelbaum J.—Montreal, April 28; Ottawa, May 26, 1986.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Criminal process — Search or seizure — Immigration officer seizing applicant's passport without warrant pursuant to s. 11 1(2)(6) Immigration Act, 1976 — Applicant voluntarily giving passport to immi gration officer at political refugee status inquiry — Seizure of passport contrary to s. 8 Charter — Supremacy of Charter — Prior authorization by warrant prerequisite for valid search and seizure — Continued detention of passport seizure within s. 8 — Seizure without warrant prima facie unreasonable — Presumption of unreasonableness not rebutted — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the Constitu tion Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), s. 8 — Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52, s. 111(2)(b) (as am. by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 47, s. 23).
Immigration — Seizure of passport — Iranian citizen, using Spanish passport to enter Canada — Claiming political refugee status — Iranian passport voluntarily given to immi gration officer at inquiry — Officer seizing passport without warrant pursuant to s. 111(2)(b) Immigration Act, 1976 — Passport allegedly in hands of RCMP — Seizure valid under Immigration Act, 1976 as no warrant required — Seizure contrary to s. 8 Charter as unreasonable — Passport ordered returned — Seizure without warrant justified if risk person and passport may disappear — Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52, s. 111(2)(b) (as am. by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 47, s. 23) — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), s. 8.
The applicant, an Iranian citizen, entered Canada using a Spanish passport purchased on the black market. She admitted having done so in order to circumvent Canadian law which requires Iranian citizens to obtain a Canadian visa before coming to Canada. Immediately upon landing, the applicant requested political refugee status. At the special inquiry hear ing held with respect to her claim, she voluntarily handed over her Iranian passport to the immigration officer in the belief
that this was the custom. It is alleged that the official then seized the passport without warrant by virtue of paragraph 111(2)(b) of the Immigration Act, 1976. The respondents contend that the seizure was justified in that the applicant had entered Canada using a false passport and that her Iranian passport appeared to have been altered. The applicant moves for an injunction ordering the respondents to advise as to where the passport is and to return it. She also seeks damages. The issue is whether the seizure effected under paragraph 111(2)(b) is contrary to section 8 of the Charter as being unreasonable.
Held, the motion should be allowed in part. The respondents are ordered to return the passport.
Paragraph 111(2)(b) of the Immigration Act, 1976 author izes an immigration officer to seize and hold at a port of entry or in Canada any documents where he has reasonable grounds to believe that such action is required to facilitate the carrying out of the provisions of the Act. Paragraph 111(2)(b) does not require prior authorization in the form of a warrant. Therefore, in so far as the Immigration Act, 1976 is concerned, the seizure was validly effected.
The Court could not, however, come to the same conclusion with respect to the Charter. As stated in Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145, any law inconsistent with the Constitution, the supreme law of Canada, is of no force or effect. That case established that for a search and seizure to be valid under Canadian law, prior authorization must be obtained where feasible; "such authorization is a precondition for a valid search and seizure". Osier J. in R. v. Zaharia and Church of Scientology of Toronto (1985), 21 C.C.C. (3d) 118 (Ont. H.C.) held that continued detention constitutes a seizure within the meaning of section 8 of the Charter. In the case at bar, although the passport was voluntarily given to the respondents, its continued "detention" is a seizure.
Having regard to the facts of the case, it cannot be said that the seizure of the passport without warrant was reasonable and necessary. A seizure without warrant is prima fade unreason able. The respondents have failed to show any proof as to why it was impossible to obtain a warrant.
There may be circumstances where an immigration officer will not be required to obtain a warrant before effecting a seizure. One could imagine situations where, if the seizure is not immediately made, the person and passport may disappear. However, this is not the case here. The facts show that it would have been feasible for the immigration officer to obtain a warrant before seizing the passport.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
FOLLOWED:
Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc., [ 1984] 2 S.C.R. 145. CONSIDERED:
R. v. Zaharia and Church of Scientology of Toronto (1985), 21 C.C.C. (3d) 118 (Ont. H.C.).
REFERRED TO:
R. v. Jagodic and Vajagic (1985), 19 C.C.C. (3d) 305 (N.S.S.C.).
COUNSEL:
Jean- François Bertrand for applicant. Suzanne Marcoux-Paquette for respondents.
SOLICITORS:
Jodoin & Noreau, Montreal, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondents.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
TEITELBAUM J.: The applicant Nafareih Mahtab, is asking me, in her present motion, to order, by way of injunction, the respondents, the Employment and Immigration Commission of Canada and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police to:
Order the respondents to report to the applicant on the follow ing matters:
— Where her passport is;
— Who is responsible for her passport;
— What action will be taken regarding this passport;
Order the respondents either to lay charges relating to this passport, to allow the applicant to defend her property, or return the said property to her, and to do one of the foregoing within fifteen (15) days of judgment herein;
Order the respondents, if neither of the two (2) actions men tioned in the preceding conclusion can be taken, to furnish the applicant with such Canadian travel documents as will allow her freedom of action and movement equivalent to having her passport;
Order the respondents jointly and severally to pay the applicant the sum of $2,500 as liquidated damages:
— $1,000 as compensation for the trouble caused by the illegal action of the respondents;
— $1,500 as compensation for the loss by the applicant of enjoyment of her property, only if her passport can no longer be returned to her;
The whole with costs against the respondents.
At the time of the hearing, the applicant aban doned her request for damages. I believe that this was a wise decision as a motion requesting an
injunction is not the proceeding in which to claim monetary damages.
After the hearing concluded, it became clear to me that what the applicant really wanted was an order whereby the respondents would have to return to her the passport seized by the immigra tion official and, allegedly, presently in the hands of the RCMP.
A brief résumé of the facts would be helpful in giving a better understanding as to why this motion for injunction became necessary.
The applicant, Nafareih Mahtab, an Iranian citizen, on or about February 5, 1981 asked, while in Iran, the Government of Iran for a passport so as to be able to leave the country. The passport was issued with an expiry date of February 5, 1984.
On or about July 16, 1983, more than two years after the issuance of the passport, the applicant left Iran to go to West Germany to visit with her brother, the brother being a political refugee in West Germany. The applicant decided to leave West Germany on October 16, 1983 to go to France. I assume that the applicant used her valid Iranian passport to travel to France. According to the affidavit filed by the applicant with her motion, she states that her intention was to ask for political refugee status in France.
During the hearing before me, I was told that while in France, the applicant was a student. No mention was made as to her supposed request for refugee status, was it made, was it refused or was it granted.
In that the applicant's passport (Iranian) was to expire and did expire on February 5, 1984, the applicant allegedly went to the Iranian Embassy in Paris, France to ask for an extension of the expiry date.
According to the applicant, she went to the Iranian Embassy on February 5, 1984, the very last day, handed in her passport, made her request for the extension and was asked to return on February 9, 1984. On February 9, 1984, she
returned to the Iranian Embassy, received her passport and, without verifying the passport, left with it.
The applicant then states that after leaving the Embassy and while walking, she decided to look at her passport and saw, she claims, that an error had been made. While the passport was extended valid ly according to the Iranian calendar, it was not properly extended according to the "Gregorian Calendar" that is, it was extended to 2/2/85 instead of 5/2/87.
Even if this were true, the passport was extend ed to February 2, 1985, the original expiry date being February 5, 1984.
The applicant claims because of this error, pass port validity date extended to February 2, 1985 instead of February 5, 1987, she returned the passport to the Iranian Embassy where a clerk of the Embassy simply changed the date by writing over the original date. That is, it was 2-2-1985 and was changed to 5-2-1987 by simply writing a 5 over the first 2 and a 7 over the 5 in 1985. There is also a notation to see page 11 of the passport. Page 11 of the passport states:
This passport is valid until 05.02.1987 Paris, 09.02.1984.
It should be noted that on page 9 of the passport where the first change was made the date is 2-2-1985 or 5-2-1987. There is no "0" before the numeral "2" or "5" as on page 11. As well, there were no initials of the individual who made the change nor any signature on page 11 as to who agreed to the extension to 1987. There is what seems to be a seal of the Government of Iran on page 11.
In any event, the applicant decided not to remain in France. She wished to come to Canada and did so on November 24, 1984. Immediately upon landing in Canada, she asked for political refugee status.
The applicant admits that in order to come to Canada, she came with a "false" passport. False, at least, in the sense that she used a Spanish
passport as if she were a Spanish citizen. She states she did this in order to avoid obtaining a Canadian visa to come to Canada as all Iranian citizens are obliged to do.
Her attorney gave two reasons why the appli cant came on a "false" passport:
a) Persons holding an Iranian passport are required to obtain a Canadian visa to come to Canada which was impossible to obtain
and
b) The airline would refuse to allow a person to board unless they had prima facie proof of valid travel documents.
Therefore, in order to avoid the Canadian law, the applicant purchased, her attorney states, on the "marché noir" [black market] a "false" Span- ish passport.
The attorney informed me that immediately upon landing, the applicant declared, besides that she wished political refugee status, the passport which she used to travel to Canada was false. This took place on November 24, 1984. The applicant's Iranian passport was, according to her, still in France.
According to the applicant, she was let out on liberty until March 26, 1985 when a special inqui ry was to take place. The special inquiry was postponed to April 9, 1985. It is at the special inquiry where one formally requests political refugee status.
The attorney for the claimant informs me that during this time, I assume between November 24, 1984 and April 9, 1985, some four and one half months, the applicant wrote to France to obtain her passport and gave it to the officer holding the special inquiry on April 9, 1985.
The passport, according to the claimant's attor ney, was then seized in virtue of paragraph 111(2)(b) of the Canadian Immigration Act, 1976 [S.C. 1976-77, c. 52 (as am. by S.C. 1980-81-82- 83, c. 47, s. 23)].
The legal issue before me is to determine the legality of the seizure made on April 9, 1985 by an officer of the Department of Canadian Immigra-
tion. No warrant was obtained to effect the sei zure. It is alleged that section 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms [being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act, 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.)] has been contravened.
Section 8 states:
8. Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable search or seizure.
The most important word contained in this sec tion is the word "unreasonable". On reading this section it would seem to me that where the search and seizure were reasonable then the individual would not be protected by this section of the Charter of Rights.
This section has been subject to much contro versy and as a result has led to many court challenges.
I believe the most important case on the inter pretation of this section is the Supreme Court case of Hunter el al. v. Southam Inc., [ 1984] 2 S.C.R. 145. The said case sets the norms as to when a seizure may be made without the prior issuance of a warrant as well as deciding who should authorize the issuance of a warrant for such a search and seizure.
The judgment of Dickson J. (as he then was) was followed by MacIntosh J. in the case of R. v. Jagodic and Vajagic (1985), 19 C.C.C. (3d) 305 (N.S.S.C.) as well as by Osler J. in the case of R. v. Zaharia and Church of Scientology of Toronto (1985), 21 C.C.C. (3d) 118 (Ont. H.C.).
The principles enunciated by Dickson J. (as he then was) in the Hunter case are of extreme importance. The first general principle is that (at page 148):
The Constitution of Canada, which includes the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, is the supreme law of Canada. Any law inconsistent with the provisions of the Consti tution is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of no force or effect.
As I have stated, the issue is to see if paragraph 111(2)(b) of the Immigration Act, 1976 contra venes section 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
Paragraph 111(2)(b) of the Immigration Act,
1976 states:
...
(2) An immigration officer may
(b) seize and hold at a port of entry or in Canada any travel or other documents that may be used for the purpose of determining whether a person may be granted admission or may come into Canada where he has reasonable grounds to believe that such action is required to facilitate the carrying out of any provision of this Act or the regulations; ...
As can be seen, no request for a warrant for search or seizure is required by this paragraph of the Immigration Act, 1976.
In this case, the seizure was made at the formal special inquiry on April 9, 1985 at which inquiry the applicant asked for admission to come into Canada as a political refugee.
At first blush, it can be stated that the seizure was validly effected in so far as the Immigration Act, 1976 is concerned but not so as a result of section 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights, which is supreme to the law as enunciated in the Immigration Act, 1976.
What is required in order for there to be a valid search and seizure Under our law?
The following excerpt from the decision of Dick- son J. (as he then was) in the case of Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc. (supra) is, in my opinion, perti nent to the issue under review (at pages 160 and 161):
A requirement of prior authorization, usually in the form of a valid warrant, has been a consistent prerequisite for a valid search and seizure both at common law and under most statutes. Such a requirement puts the onus on the state to demonstrate the superiority of its interest to that of the individual. As such it accords with the apparent intention of the Charter to prefer, where feasible, the right of the individual to be free from state interference to the interests of the state in advancing its purposes through such interference.
I recognize that it may not be reasonable in every instance to insist on prior authorization in order to validate governmental intrusions upon individuals' expectations of privacy. Neverthe less, where it is feasible to obtain prior authorization, I would hold that such authorization is a precondition for a valid search and seizure.
Mr. Justice Dickson goes on to state that a warrantless seizure is prima facie "unreasonable". At page 161, Mr. Justice Dickson states:
... I would in the present instance respectfully adopt Stewart J.'s formulation as equally applicable to the concept of "unrea- sonableness" under s. 8, and would require the party seeking to justify a warrantless search to rebut this presumption of unrea sonableness. [The underlining is mine.]
In the present case the applicant, at the hearing of April 9, 1985, voluntarily gave her Iranian passport to the special inquiry officer Robert Raci- cot (paragraph 10 of the applicant's affidavit) in that she was of the belief that it was the custom to leave with the Canadian authorities identity docu ments (paragraph 11 of the applicant's affidavit).
In the applicant's affidavit (paragraph 10), she states that after giving her passport to Mr. Racicot he seized the passport, without warrant, by virtue of paragraph 111(2)(b).
The passport is in the hands of the Canadian Immigration or with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
To the present time, no warrant for search or seizure was obtained by the respondents.
The respondents argued that the passport was not seized. That, as per paragraph 10 of the appli cant's affidavit, the applicant voluntarily gave the passport to Mr. Racicot and that the applicant knew why the passport was being taken.
The respondents further argue that they are of the belief that prima facie, there is reason why the passport should be seized. They gave me two reasons:
a) Applicant came to Canada with a passport not her own, to avoid Canadian law;
b) On April 9, 1985, when Applicant produced her passport it revealed, on page 9 of the passport that there may have been an alteration.
In the application before me, I am not asked to judge whether or not the applicant should be granted political refugee status. I have very little regard for persons who attempt to come to Canada and then to remain there by illegal means.
This method, coming to Canada with a false passport or by other illegal means, can only be condoned if the person is trying to escape a coun try where the person's life may be in serious danger.
In this case, the applicant could have remained in West Germany with her brother or in France where she herself stated she went to claim political refugee status.
This does not, in any way, negate the fact that no warrant was obtained from an independent person, such as a judge, to seize the applicant's passport.
Mr. Justice Osler in the case of R. v. Zaharia and Church of Scientology of Toronto (supra) states very clearly that continued detention consti tutes a seizure within the meaning of section 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. At page 124, Mr. Justice Osler states:
I am of the view that it is impossible to separate detention from seizure for Charter purposes.
I believe that although the passport was volun tarily given to the respondents, its continued "detention" is a seizure.
Is the seizure of the passport without the issu ance of a warrant reasonable and necessary having regard to the facts in this case?
I believe not. The seizure made, by the con tinued detention of the passport, is against the meaning of section 8 of the Charter.
The respondents are claiming that they continue to hold the seizure in place because of a report that the passport was altered.
No one denies the fact that the passport was altered. What is questioned is by whom was the passport altered. No charges were made against the applicant that she made the alterations, only that alterations were made. The alterations may have been made legally. This is a matter to be decided at another time.
The case of Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc. (supra) states the principle that, prima facie, a seizure without a warrant is unreasonable. The respondents have not shown me any proof why it was not possible to obtain such a warrant before
effecting the seizure (detention of passport). This is not the same as a customs officer making a seizure of goods at a border where a person is attempting to smuggle merchandise into Canada and a seizure must be effected immediately.
I believe that the facts of this case show that it was feasible for Mr. Racicot to have obtained the issuance of a warrant before effecting a seizure of the passport. The applicant should be given the opportunity to rebut any claim that she committed an illegal act by being in possession of the altered passport.
It is not in every instance that an immigration officer will be required to obtain a warrant before seizing a passport. There may be instances where, if the seizure is not immediately made, the person and passport may disappear.
This is not the present case.
Following the principles set out by Mr. Justice Dickson, I find the seizure of the applicant's pass port "unreasonable" and thus illegal by virtue of section 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
The motion is granted in part. I hereby order the respondents to return to the applicant the Iranian passport 865238, which passport contains the name of the applicant, within 15 days of the present judgment, the whole with costs.
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