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A-870-88
Joseph Toth (Appellant) v.
Minister of Employment and Immigration (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: TOTH V. CANADA (MINISTER OF EMPLOYMENT AND IMMIGRATION)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Mahoney and Stone JJ.—Toronto, October 17; Ottawa, October 28, 1988.
Immigration — Deportation Jurisdiction of Immigration
Appeal Board — Stay of deportation order — Appeal against Board's decision dismissing application to reconsider order 1971 removal order be executed as soon as practicable — Appellant in Canada since admission as landed immigrant at age 15 — In 1971, convicted of Criminal Code offence — Deportation ordered under Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 325 — Appeal against deportation order dismissed in 1975 and stay of execution granted — In 1980, stay cancelled Leave to appeal Board's 1980 decision refused — In 1988, Board declined further stay of execution — Board did not err in exercising equitable jurisdiction in refusing to again stay execution — Whether Board had, in 1988, jurisdiction to entertain appeal as to validity of deportation — Whether Court could deal with validity of order when appellant failing to raise issue at 1988 Board hearing — Reconsideration of stay properly before Board because order made under previous Immigration Act and order had not been executed — Jurisdic tion of Board continuous as entitled to reopen appeal until deportation order executed — Under previous legislation Board able to order stay of execution only after appeal against order dismissed and power to quash order after dismissal of appeal contingent on subsisting stay — As stay not subsisting in 1988, no continuing power from previous legislation permit ting Board to reconsider validity of deportation order Under present legislation Board's only power to quash stayed deportation order under s. 76(3)(b)(ii) — Power must be exercised in conjunction with cancellation of stay, not by independent reconsideration of validity of deportation order.
This was an appeal against the Immigration Appeal Board's dismissal of an application to reconsider its order that a remov al order made in 1971 be executed as soon as reasonably practicable. The appellant, Hungarian born and a British citi zen, had resided in Canada since admission as a landed immi grant at age 15. In January 1971, he was convicted of an
offence under the Criminal Code and was subsequently ordered deported under the Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 325. An appeal against the deportation order was dismissed and the order was stayed from time to time until 1980 when it was ordered to be executed. Leave to appeal the Board's 1980 order was refused. At a subsequent review hearing allowed by the vice-chairman, the only issue argued was whether the Board should exercise its equitable jurisdiction to again order a stay of execution. In March of 1988, the Board declined a further stay of execution of the deportation order.
Held, the appeal should be dismissed; the stay of execution of the deportation order granted by this Court should be vacated.
The Board had not erred in the exercise of its equitable jurisdiction in holding that with regard to all the circumstances, a further stay of execution should be denied.
Prior to considering whether the order was valid, it would have to be demonstrated that the Board had, in 1988, jurisdic tion to entertain an appeal on the same issue. Reconsideration of the stay was properly before the Board as the deportation order had been made under the previous Immigration Act and had not been executed. The equitable jurisdiction of the Board under subsection 15(1) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act was continuous and need not be exercised once and for all.
Under the previous Immigration Act, a stay of execution was only ordered by the Board after it had dismissed the appeal against the order and its power to quash an order after dismis sal of the appeal was contingent on a subsisting stay. As the stay was not, in 1988, subsisting there was no continuing power which could be derived from the previous Act allowing the Board to reconsider the validity of the deportation order. The Board's only power to quash a deportation order which had been stayed was under subparagraph 76(3)(b)(ii) of the present Immigration Act. This power must be exercised in conjunction with the cancellation of the stay, not by way of an independent reconsideration of the validity of a deportation order. The appellant having declined to pursue the question of the order's validity, the Board and this Court were without jurisdiction to consider this issue as a ground of appeal.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34.
Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28.
Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 325, s. 18(1)(e)(ii). Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52, ss. 72(1) (as
am. by S.C. 1984, c. 21, s. 81), 75(1), 76(1),(3)(b)(ii). Immigration Appeal Board Act, S.C. 1966-67, c. 90,
s. 15(1)(a),(4)(a)•
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Grillas v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration, [1972] S.C.R. 577; Mercier v. Canada (1985), 62 N.R. 73 (F.C.A.).
REFERRED TO:
Lyle v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [ 1982] 2 F.C. 821 (C.A.).
COUNSEL:
F. J. O'Connor and Barbara L. Jackman for
appellant.
Michael W. Duffy for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
O'Connor, Ecclestone & Kaiser, Kingston, for appellant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MAHONEY J.: This is an appeal, by leave grant ed on consent, by a landed immigrant against a decision of the Immigration Appeal Board which dismissed an application to reconsider its order that a removal order made July 27, 1971, be executed as soon as reasonably practicable. The appellant was born in Hungary in 1952. He moved with his family to Great Britain in 1956 and became a citizen of the United Kingdom. He was admitted to Canada with his parents as a landed immigrant at age 15 and has lived in Canada ever since. In January, 1971, he was convicted under the Criminal Code [R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34] of unlawfully taking a motor vehicle (joyriding) and in June 1971, of attempted theft of an automobile. The deportation order made under the Immigra tion Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 325, as amended, herein- after "the old Act", was based on the finding that he was a person described in subparagraph 18(1)(e)(ii), that is, "any person, other than a Canadian citizen or a person with Canadian dom icile, who ... has been convicted of an offence under the Criminal Code". The conviction for attempted theft was subsequently set aside on appeal.
An appeal against the deportation order was taken and, on August 19, 1975, was dismissed. However, execution of the deportation order was stayed for two years pursuant to paragraph 15(1)(a) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act, S.C. 1966-67, c. 90. On April 20, 1976, after his conviction of further criminal offences, the Board reviewed the case. The stay of execution was not revoked but an oral review was directed to take place August 18, 1977, upon expiration of the stay. It adjourned pending disposition by the criminal courts of appeals from further convictions and sentences. Efforts to resume were frustrated by the inability of the appellant to attend before the Board, he being in custody either awaiting trial or serving sentences on various dates fixed for the hearing. Execution of the deportation order was further stayed from time to time. Eventually, the oral review was conducted on June 9, 1980, and, by order dated June 25, 1980, the Board cancelled the stay of the deportation order and directed that it be executed as soon as practicable.
Meanwhile, on April 10, 1978, the Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52, hereinafter "the present Act", had come into force. It repealed both the old Act and the Immigration Appeal Board Act. One difference between the present legislative scheme and the previous one is that, under subsec tion 75(1) of the present Act, a stay of execution is an alternative disposition of an appeal to either allowing or dismissing it, while under subsection 15(1) of the Immigration Appeal Board Act, dis missal was a condition precedent to a stay. Another significant difference is that the joyriding conviction, which supported the making of a deportation order under the old Act, would not have supported the making of a deportation order under the present Act. Leave to appeal the Board's order of June 25, 1980, was refused February 12, 1981, (Court file 80-A-325) and a section 28 [Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10] application attacking it was dismissed July 24, 1981, when the appellant, having discharged his counsel, failed to appear (Court file A-428-80). On September 1, 1987, a vice-chairman allowed
the appellant's application to the Board to again review the deportation order.
At the review hearing, the appellant expressly declined to challenge the validity of the deporta tion order being of the view that, even if it was invalid, his subsequent convictions would support the making of another deportation order under the new Act. The only issue argued was whether the Board should exercise its so-called "equitable" jurisdiction to again stay execution. He did, never theless, express his wish to reserve the right to attack its validity if the Board did not exercise its equitable jurisdiction in his favour.
By order made March 29, 1988, the Board declined to order a further stay of execution of the deportation order. This appeal is taken from that decision. The appellant asserts two grounds of appeal: that the Board erred, firstly, in the exercise of its equitable jurisdiction by failing to conclude that, having regard to all the circumstances, the appellant ought not be removed from Canada and, secondly, in not holding that the deportation order was null and void since the conviction on which it is founded is not a conviction on which a deporta tion order may be founded under the present Act.
There is no merit to the first ground of appeal and it requires little comment. The Board concluded:
It is clear that since 1980 the appellant has successfully defied all the efforts of Canadian authorities to remove him by utilizing to the fullest the financial resources of his father and the generosity of the judicial system. This he was fully entitled to do. But what is peculiarly cynical and evil about this appellant is his deliberate commission of criminal offences and use of the justice and penitentiary system in order to avoid the execution of Canada's immigration laws. In the Board's view this appellant has pushed the tolerance and generosity of Canadian society and justice to the limit and beyond. Indeed, by his conduct, he has mocked and abused it. Any reasonable member of Canadian society reviewing this 17-year-old saga would conclude that he has provided a living example that, given enough financial resources, enough motions and appeals and enough criminal laws to be broken, anyone can avoid deportation from Canada forever. This is outrageous.
While lawful recourse to the courts in an effort to forestall execution of a deportation order is no reason for the Board to decline the favourable exercise of its equitable discretion, that was by no means the only conduct which the Board con sidered. There was ample evidence, much of it out of the appellant's own mouth, which properly weighed against another stay. Included was his statement:
You know, it might sound sick to you but the reason I kept getting in trouble because that was the only way I knew I would not get deported.
It might sound a little sick but that's what was in my head. Oh, I'll get charged, they cannot deport me, and 1 kept doing this and doing this.
It is apparent that the Board weighed all of the evidence both for and against again staying execu tion of the deportation order. It cannot be said to have erred in exercising its discretion as it did.
In arguing that the deportation order is null and void, the appellant relies on this Court's decision in Lyle v. Minister of Employment, and Immigra tion, [1982] 2 F.C. 821 (C.A.). It seems to me, however, that before its validity can be considered, it must be shown, first, that the Board had, in 1988, jurisdiction to entertain an appeal as to the validity of the deportation order and, secondly if so, that notwithstanding the appellant's refusal to deal with its validity at the 1988 hearing, that validity remains a subject properly to be dealt with by this Court on an appeal from the Board's decision consequent upon that hearing.
There is no doubt that the reconsideration of the stay was properly before the Board. That is so because the deportation order had been made under the old Act and had not been executed.
In Grillas v. Minister of Manpower and Immi gration, [ 1972] S.C.R. 577, the Supreme Court of Canada held [at page 590] that the equitable jurisdiction under subsection 15(1) of the Immi gration Appeal Board Act "is a continuing juris diction, and not one which must be exercised once and for all" and, at page 582, that:
... until a deportation order has actually been executed, the Board is entitled, as it did in this case, to reopen an appeal, hear new evidence and, if it sees fit to do so, to revise its former decision and exercise its discretion under s. 15 to allow an appellant to remain in Canada.
In coming to that conclusion, the Supreme Court recognized that, in the absence of a statutory power to reconsider a final order, a tribunal has no such power except (1) where there has been a slip in drawing up the order or (2) where there has been an error in expressing its manifest intention. Recent jurisprudence has added a third category: (3) where there has been a manifest denial of natural justice in the proceeding that resulted in the order. None of those exceptions apply in the present circumstances. The continuing equitable jurisdiction was found in the Immigration Appeal Board Act. That Act provided:
15. (1) Where the Board dismisses an appeal against an order of deportation or makes an order of deportation pursuant to paragraph 14(c), it shall direct that the order be executed as soon as practicable, except that the Board may,
(a) in the case of a person who was a permanent resident at the time of the making of the order of deportation, having regard to all the circumstances of the case, ...
direct that the execution of the order of deportation be stayed, or quash the order or quash the order and direct the grant or entry or landing to the person against whom the order was made.
(4) Where the execution of an order of deportation
(a) has been stayed pursuant to paragraph (1)(a), the Board may at any time thereafter quash the order;
There is no other provision from which an ongoing jurisdiction to review an earlier decision as to a deportation order's validity might be inferred. In the scheme of the previous legislation, a stay of execution could only be ordered by the Board after it had dismissed the appeal against the order and its power to quash an order after dismissal of the appeal was contingent on a subsisting stay. The stay here was not, in 1988, subsisting. It cannot, in the present case, be said that there was a continu ing power, derived from the previous legislation by analogous application of the Grillas decision, per mitting the Board to reconsider the validity of the deportation order. Such power, if it is to be found,
must be found in the present Act whose pertinent provisions follow.
72. (1) Where a removal order is made against a permanent resident, other than a person with respect to whom a report referred to in subsection 40(I) has been made, or against a person lawfully in possession of a valid returning resident permit issued to him pursuant to the regulations, that person may appeal to the Board on either or both of the following grounds, namely,
(a) on any ground of appeal that involves a question of law or fact, or mixed law and fact; and
(b) on the ground that, having regard to all the circum stances of the case, the person should not be removed from Canada.
75. (I) The Board may dispose of an appeal made pursuant to section 72
(a) by allowing it;
(b) by dismissing it; or
(c) in the case of an appeal pursuant to paragraph 72(1)(b) or 72(2)(d), by directing that execution of the removal order be stayed.
76. (1) Where the Board allows an appeal made pursuant to section 72, it shall quash the removal order that was made against the appellant and may
(a) make any other removal order that the adjudicator who was presiding at the inquiry should have made; or
(b) in the case of an appellant other than a permanent resident, direct that he be examined as a person seeking admission at a port of entry.
(2) Where the Board disposes of an appeal by directing that execution of a removal order be stayed, the person concerned shall be allowed to come into or remain in Canada under such terms and conditions as the Board may determine and the Board shall review the case from time to time as it considers necessary or advisable.
(3) Where the Board has disposed of an appeal by directing that execution of a removal order be stayed, it may, at any time,
(a) amend any terms and conditions imposed under subsec tion (2) or impose new terms and conditions; or
(b) cancel its direction staying the execution of a removal order and
(i) dismiss the appeal and direct that the order be executed as soon as reasonably practicable, or
(ii) allow the appeal and take any other action that it might have taken pursuant to subsection (1).
The relevant effect of the new Act appears to be identical to that of the former legislation. The only power to quash a deportation order which has been stayed is found in subparagraph 76(3)(b)(ii) as it
incorporates subsection 76(1). It is a power that must be exercised in conjunction with the cancella tion of the stay, not by way of an independent reconsideration of the validity of the deportation order. The stay was cancelled in 1980. There was no subsisting stay in 1988 which would have pro vided a basis for jurisdiction to review the validity of the deportation order. I accordingly conclude that, in 1988, the Immigration Appeal Board was without jurisdiction to reconsider the validity of the deportation order as a discrete ground of appeal.
If the Board had been satisfied that the deporta tion order was null and void, that might well have been a relevant fact to be taken into account in the exercise of its ongoing equitable jurisdiction. How ever, since the appellant declined to pursue the question before it, the Board cannot be faulted for failing to deal with it. As was said by the Court in Mercier v. Canada (1985), 62 N.R. 73 (F.C.A.) at page 74:
When sitting in appeal of the Trial Division, this court sits as a court of appeal whose function is to decide whether the issues presented at trial were properly disposed of. It is not our duty to determine if some other issues which might have been raised could have resulted in a different outcome if the necessary factual basis had been established.
That observation is as true of an appeal from the Immigration Appeal Board as from the Trial Divi sion. Finally, out of an abundance of caution and at the possible risk of stating the obvious, nothing herein is intended to indicate a concluded opinion as to whether the deportation order is null and void or even voidable on application of the Lyle decision or otherwise.
I would dismiss this appeal. The stay of execu tion of the deportation order imposed by this Court should be vacated.
HEALD J.: I agree. STONE J.: I agree.
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