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90-T-726
Joan Millicent Hamilton (Applicant) v.
Minister of Employment and Immigration (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: HAMILTON V. CANADA (MINISTER OF EMPLOY MENT AND IMMIGRATION) (T.D.)
Trial Division, Reed J.—Ottawa, August 16, 17 and 24, 1990.
Immigration — Deportation — Application to stay execu tion of order pending s. 18 challenge of denial of exemption from requirement application for landed status be made out side Canada — Allegation officials not considering psychia trist's report — Whether Court having jurisdiction — Necessi ty for leave — Whether serious question to be tried — On merits, Court unprepared to grant discretionary remedy.
Federal Court jurisdiction — Trial Division — Whether Court having jurisdiction to stay execution of deportation order pending s. 18 challenge of denial of exemption from requirement landed immigrant status application be made outside Canada — Review and exposition of case law on subject — Court probably having jurisdiction as statutory remedy nugatory if applicant deported.
This was an application to stay execution of a deportation order pending a section 18 challenge of the denial of an exemption from the requirement that landed immigrant status applications be made outside Canada. Applicant asserts a real, subjective fear of harm if returned to Jamaica. After a deporta tion notice was issued, applicant filed a psychiatrist's report based on written materials furnished by her lawyer. The appli cant had declined to meet with the psychiatrist because she was afraid that he would spread false stories which could impair her employment prospects. Applicant challenges the validity of the Minister's refusal on the ground that the report was not considered.
The issues were: (1) has the Court jurisdiction to stay a deportation order not itself challenged; (2) must leave be obtained; (3) can this application proceed prior to leave being granted for the section 18 application; and (4) whether, on the merits, a stay is justified.
Respondent relied on case law to the effect that the Court lacks jurisdiction to grant a stay when a deportation order is not directly in issue while applicant referred to cases holding that the Court had an implied jurisdiction to stay an order if
the right of an appeal therefrom would otherwise be rendered nugatory.
Held, the application should be dismissed.
The order sought to be stayed was intimately connected to the relief asked of the Court. If applicant is deported, relief through the subsection 114(2) process would be rendered nuga- tory. The point at issue herein had not been resolved by the decision of the Court of Appeal in Bhattia v. Minister of Employment and Immigration. Counsel was probably correct in arguing that the Court has jurisdiction to entertain this application.
As to the necessity for leave, that had been added to the legislation to prevent abuse of process by applicants commen cing unmeritorious proceedings merely to procure additional time in Canada. Accordingly, it would be unusual for the Court to stay a deportation order without having granted leave to commence a proceeding under section 18 or 28.
In any event, granting a stay is a discretionary remedy. It was doubtful that there is a serious question to be tried. Had the psychiatrist's report been made available at a much earlier time, it could have been considered in a timely manner by the government officials and the stay request dealt with in the context of a section 18 leave application. Accordingly, the Court was not prepared to exercise its discretion in applicant's favour.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, ss. 18, 28. Immigration Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. I-2, s. 114(2).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Toth v. Canada (Minister of Employment & Immigra tion) (1988), 6 Imm. L.R. (2d) 123; 86 N.R. 302 (F.C.A.); Bains v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), 90-A-1030, Pratte J.A., order dated 7/3/90, (F.C.A.), not yet reported; Yhap v. Canada (Min- ister of Employment and Immigration), 89-T-676, Mul- doon J., order dated 1 2 / 1 0/89, F.C.T.D., not yet reported; Yhap v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigra tion), [1990] 1 F.C. 722 (T.D.); Bhattia v. Canada (Minister of Employment & Immigration) (1989), 7 Imm. L.R. (2d) 63 (F.C.A.).
DISTINGUISHED:
Lodge v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1979] 1 F.C. 775; (1979), 94 D.L.R. (3d) 326; 25 N.R. 437 (C.A.).
REFERRED TO:
Attorney General of Canada v. Jolly, [1975] F.C. 216; (1975), 54 D.L.R. (3d) 277; 7 N.R. 271 (C.A.); Astudil- lo v. Minister of Employment and Immigration (1979), 31 N.R. 121 (F.C.A.); Armson v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1989), 9 Imm. L.R. (2d) 150 (F.C.A.); Attakora v. Minister of Employment and Immigration (1987), 99 N.R. 168 (F.C.A.); Sharma v. Minister of Employment and Immigration (1984), 55 N.R. 71 (F.C.A.).
COUNSEL:
M. Pia Zambelli for applicant. Robert Goldstein for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Jackman, Zambelli, Silcoff, Toronto, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
REED J.: The applicant seeks a stay of the execution of a deportation order which has been issued against her. The stay is sought pending resolution of proceedings which the applicant seeks to pursue under section 18 of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7. She seeks to challenge the validity of the Minister's refusal to recommend that she be granted an exemption, on compassion ate and humanitarian grounds, from certain requirements of the Immigration Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. I-2. She filed an application for leave to commence proceedings pursuant to section 18 to challenge the Minister's decision coincident with the filing of the present application.
The applicant entered Canada in 1982 on a visitor's visa. She remained in this country illegal ly. In 1986, she was arrested. She made a formal claim for refugee status. That claim was rejected. A departure notice was subsequently issued. She failed to comply with it. Her mother died three days before the applicant was supposed to leave the country pursuant to that departure notice. Her mother's funeral was held two days after the departure date. She made an application pursuant to subsection 114(2) for exemption, on humani-
tarian and compassionate grounds, from the requirement that applications for landed immi grant status must be made from outside the coun try. The request for consideration on that basis appears to have commenced around April 18, 1990 (at least the letter attached to the applicant's affidavit of August 13, 1990 carries that date). The application was ultimately denied and a deportation notice, which had issued on June 6, 1990, was to be executed on August 13, 1990.
The present application for a stay of the depor tation order was brought before the Court by notice of motion filed on August 13. A motion to commence proceedings under section 18 of the Federal Court Act challenging the Minister's refusal to recommend an exemption pursuant to subsection 114(2) was filed at the same time. The application for a stay of the deportation order was heard by teleconference hearings on August 16 and 17. The respondent consented to delay execu tion of the deportation order until a decision is rendered by the Court on the applicant's present application.
The grounds on which the applicant sought sub section 114(2) exemption were: that she had a very real subjective fear of harm which would befall her if she were returned to Jamaica; her sister is a Canadian citizen, resident in Canada, and willing to assist her, and is the applicant's only blood relative. The applicant is also her sister's only remaining relative not settled in Canada. It is clear from the material attached to the affidavits that the request of April 18, 1990 did not result in a favourable decision being taken. As has been noted, the deportation order was issued on June 6, 1990. On August 1, 1990 counsel for the applicant sent further information to the respondent in sup port of the application for subsection 114(2) relief. This was a psychiatrist's assessment of the appli cant. The psychiatrist's report reads, in part, as follows:
Although I have not had the opportunity to examine her directly, it is my opinion that her letters and reports show a pattern which is consistent with a diagnosis of Delusional (Paranoid) Disorder of the persecutory type ....
It is my opinion that she would show a deterioration in her functioning should she have to return to Jamaica ... Her paranoid views would likely be intensified and as a result of this it is likely that she would isolate herself more. As well she lacks social support in Jamaica as she has no family there, apparently has no close friends there and has been out of the country for several years.
As is noted in the report, the psychiatrist had never met the applicant as of the time the report was prepared. She refused to be interviewed by him for fear that he would spread false stories about her which would hurt her employment opportunities in Canada. Thus, the psychiatrist's assessment was prepared on the basis of extensive written materials sent to him by counsel for the applicant. Subsequent information on file indicates that the applicant did meet the psychiatrist person ally on August 13, 1990 and he, in a cryptic note, confirmed his earlier assessment.
The applicant challenges the validity of the Minister's refusal to recommend a subsection 114(2) exemption primarily on the ground that the relevant officials refused to consider the psychia trist's report. The applicant's evidence to this effect is based on conversations which her counsel had with officials of the Department of Employ ment and Immigration. The relevant portions of the affidavit of Maureen Silcoff state:
2. I am informed by the applicant's solicitor and do verily believe it to be true that the applicant's application for humani tarian and compassionate consideration was turned down both by Case Review in Ottawa and the Regional Headquarters of the Immigration Commission. I am informed by the applicant's solicitor and do verily believe it to be true that on August 9, 1990 she spoke with Ms. Pam Cullen of the Case Review in Ottawa who told her that the [sic] Dr. Payne's psychiatric report did not convince her that humanitarian and compassion ate relief was warranted.
3. I am informed by the applicant's solicitor that thereafter she asked Mr. Craig Morrison of Regional Headquarters to review the case and that on August 9, 1990 she spoke with Mr. Morrison who told her that he also had refused the application, because Dr. Payne's report did not constitute evidence that showed that favourable consideration was warranted, because it was just a prediction by a psychiatrist as to what might occur if the applicant was sent back to Jamaica.
There is no doubt that decision-making bodies are required to consider all relevant evidence placed before them: Attorney General of Canada v. Jolly, [1975] F.C. 216 (C.A.); Astudillo v. Minister of Employment and Immigration (1979),
31 N.R. 121 (F.C.A.). They are to base their findings on the evidence before them and not to arbitrarily reject evidence which is uncontradicted and not obviously implausible: Armson v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1989), 9 Imm. L.R. (2d) 150 (F.C.A.); Attakora v. Minister of Employment and Immigration (1987), 99 N.R. 168 (F.C.A.); Sharma v. Minister of Employment and Immigration (1984), 55 N.R. 71 (F.C.A.).
Counsel classified the issues to be addressed for the purposes of the present case as: (1) whether the Court has jurisdiction to entertain the applica tion for a stay of the deportation order given the fact that the deportation order is not itself chal lenged; (2) if there is such jurisdiction, whether the present application can be pursued without first obtaining leave (if leave is required counsel indicated that she was making an application for such, orally, coincidentally with her arguments on the merits); (3) if there is jurisdiction, and leave is either not needed or granted, whether this applica tion can be proceeded with prior to leave to com mence the main section 18 application being given; (4) whether, in any event, there are grounds on the merits which would justify issuing an order to stay the deportation order (a serious question to be tried; whether irreparable harm will be caused to the applicant if an order is not granted; where the balance of convenience lies): see Toth v. Canada (Minister of Employment & Immigration) (1988), 6 Imm. L.R. (2d) 123 (F.C.A.).
The respondent's position that this Court has no jurisdiction to issue a stay when the validity of the deportation order is not directly in issue, is based on the Court of Appeal decisions in Lodge v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1979] 1 F.C. 775 (C.A.) and Bhattia v. Canada (Minis- ter of Employment & Immigration) (1989), 7 Imm. L.R. (2d) 63 (F.C.A.). In the Lodge decision it was said at pages 783-784:
An injunction will lie against a public authority to restrain the commission of an act that is ultra vires or otherwise illegal. See, for example, Rattenbury v. Land Settlement Board [1929]
S.C.R. 52 per Newcombe J. at p. 63: "... the court will interfere to restrain ultra vires or illegal acts by a statutory body"; also Le Conseil des ports nationaux v. Langelier [1969] S.C.R. 60 at p. 75, where Martland J. speaks of the power to restrain the commission of an act "without legal justification". From the analysis in these and other authorities I think we may assume for purposes of the present case that an injunction will lie in a proper case against a Minister of the Crown who purports to act under a statutory authority. This was expressly held with respect to the execution of deportation orders by the Minister of Manpower and Immigration in Carlic v. The Queen and Minister of Manpower and Immigration (1968) 65 D.L.R. (2d) 633, where Freedman J.A. (as he then was), delivering the judgment of the Manitoba Court of Appeal, said at page 637: "It may be well to point out that Courts have more than once affirmed their right to restrain a Minister of the Crown from the doing of acts which were either illegal or beyond statutory power".
So long as the validity of the deportation orders in the appellants' case has not been successfully challenged it cannot be said that the Minister would be exceeding his statutory authority or otherwise acting contrary to law in executing them.
... Counsel were unable to cite to us any authority, and I have not been able to find any, to support the use of injunction to restrain the performance of a statutory duty on the ground that such performance may have an adverse effect on some right which the applicant seeks to assert in another forum. I do not think that such a use of injunction can be recognized as a matter of principle. It would be tantamount to a general power to suspend the execution of administrative decisions in cases judged to be equitable. The Court does not have that power, even with respect to decisions that are the subject of review before it.
Having said this, I may observe that I cannot see why the execution of the deportation orders should make it impossible to investigate the appellants' complaint or to afford them such relief as section 41 of the Act may provide. From the affidavit in support of their application for injunction their complaint would not appear to be dependent on their personal knowledge. [Underlining added.]
And in Bhattia, Mr. Justice Marceau stated [at pages 64-66]:
I readily agree with the position reached by my colleagues. However, I do so under reserve of two remarks which I shall respectfully make in view of the influence that this decision might have because, on the one hand, it is the first of its kind to be rendered under the new regime introduced by the amend ments to the Immigration Act 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52, which came into force on January 1, 1989, and, on the other hand, because it is rendered by a panel of three Judges and not by a single Judge as will be the case, at least in principle, from now on.
1. My first remark goes to the very admissibility of the application as it was presented. I seriously doubt that the Court is entitled to order a stay of execution of a deportation order before it is in a position to consider the application for leave to commence a proceeding under s. 28 of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, against that deportation order, as required by subs. 83.1(1) of the Act. My doubt rests on three grounds.
a) The Court's power to order stay of execution of a tribu nal's decision is an ancillary and auxiliary power which only exists in order to protect the Court's primary power to declare the decision itself null and void. One can hardly see how such a secondary power could arise before the s. 28 proceedings against the decision itself have been formally engaged, that is to say prior to the time when the question of the validity of the decision itself is before the Court.
b) One of the two basic conditions governing the Court's ancillary and auxiliary power to order a stay of execution is the existence of prima facie arguable grounds for challenging the validity of the order. Now, this is precisely the question, and the only one, raised in an application to commence proceedings under s. 28. It is difficult to accept that the Court could decide, as it would have to do here, that there are such grounds, while at the same time holding that it is not yet ready to rule on the application for leave to introduce the proceedings under s. 28.
c) The other underlying condition justifying the exercise of the Court's power to grant a stay is the finding that otherwise an eventual overturning of the impugned decision could be rendered nugatory, the immediate execution of the decision threatening to create an irreversible situation or to cause an irreparable harm. In the case of an exclusion order, the possi bility of such irreparable harm necessarily and exclusively depends on the risk faced by the applicant if he is sent back to where he came from, in light of the political situation there.
In making these remarks I am mindful that, in Toth v. Canada (Minister of Employment & Immigration) (1988), 6 Imm. L.R. (2d) 123, 86 N.R. 302, this Court has previously consented to grant a stay of execution of a deportation order before authorizing appeal proceedings against the order itself. I would note first that the procedure for appeal by leave at issue in Toth was a recourse created by the Immigration Act, 1976, itself, and thus its exercise before this Court could be seen as having been initiated as soon as leave was sought. The recourse involved here exists by virtue of the Federal Court Act, and the leave required by the new immigration Act certainly forms no integral part of it. The power to stay that the Court may have is ancillary and auxiliary to the power vested in it by the Federal Court Act which is not engaged until the Court has accepted to review and possibly set aside the decision itself. But in any event I feel that the situation resulting from the coming into force of the major amendments to the Act is sufficiently distinct from that existing formerly, that the authority of the Toth case, which did not involve a claim for refugee status,
should not be seen as unreservedly binding. [Underlining added—footnotes omitted.]
Mr. Justice Marceau's reasons were additional to those given by the other two members of the Court, who only found it necessary to say that, assuming the principles enunciated in Toth applied, those requirements had not been met by the fact situation which existed in Bhattia.
The decision in Toth v. Canada (Minister of Employment & Immigration) (1988), 6 Imm. L.R. (2d) 123 (F.C.A.) was decided before Bhattia and after Lodge. In the Toth decision, a deportation order was stayed pending a decision being taken on whether leave would be granted to appeal a decision of the Immigration Appeal Board to the Federal Court of Appeal. The princi ple on which that decision was based was that a refusal of a stay would render any appeal rights which might subsequently be given nugatory [at page 126]:
This Court decided in the case of N.B. Electric Power Comm. v. Maritime Electric Co., [1985] 2 F.C. 13, 60 N.R. 352 (C.A.), that in cases where there exist statutory provisions conferring a right to appeal against the order of a tribunal, that circumstance together with the provisions of subs. 30(1) supra, confer an implied jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Appeal to stay the operation of that order where the appeal would otherwise be rendered nugatory.
In this regard, Mr. Justice Stone, in the N.B. Electric Power case, discussed at p. 27 [F.C.] of the reasons:
"the absurdity that could result if, pending an appeal, opera tion of the order appealed from rendered it nugatory."
He went on to observe:
"Our appellate mandate would then become futile and be reduced to mere words lacking in practical substance. The right of a party to an `appeal' would exist only on paper for, in reality, there would be no `appeal' to be heard, or to be won or lost. The appeal process would be stifled. It would not, as it should, hold out the possibility of redress to a party invoking it. This court could not, as was intended, render an effective result. I hardly think Parliament intended that we be powerless to prevent such a state of affairs."
I endorse these comments by my colleague and apply them....
Counsel for the applicant argues that Lodge, therefore, cannot be read as broadly as counsel for the respondent contends and that it must be read in the light of decisions such as: Toth v. Canada (Minister of Employment & Immigration) (1988), 6 Imm. L.R. (2d) 123 (F.C.A.); Bains v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (Court file no. 90-A-1030, March 7, 1990); and Yhap v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (Court file no. 89-T-676, October 12, 1989 and [1990] 1 F.C. 722 (T.D.)).
The Lodge decision dealt with a situation which was quite different from that in issue in this case or that which was in issue in Toth, Bains or Yhap. In the first place one of the important factors in Lodge was that the injunction, if granted, would be final in nature; it was not viewed as an interlocuto ry order. Mr. Justice Le Dain wrote [at page 783] of the remedy being sought:
It is not made in an action pending in the Federal Court. It involves a final and not an interlocutory judgment upon the claim for an injunction.
The principles which must be applied are those which deter mine whether a permanent injunction should be granted to restrain a Minister of the Crown from performing a statutory duty. [Underlining added.]
In the present case, as was also the case in Toth, Bains and Yhap, the deportation order which it is sought to stay is intimately connected to the relief sought from this Court. The relief sought by the applicant, from the Governor in Council, pursuant to the subsection 114(2) review, is to allow the applicant to apply for landed immigrant status from Buffalo, New York, rather than being returned to Jamaica. (Initially the request had been for permission to apply for such status from within Canada.) If the applicant is deported to Jamaica, the relief sought through the subsection 114(2) process would be rendered nugatory. In such circumstances counsel may very well be right in suggesting that the principles enunciated in Toth apply and that the Court has authority to issue a stay of deportation pending the outcome of the section 18 application. Certainly the Court did so in Yhap. And the Court of Appeal followed a similar approach in the Bains case. In addition, as I read the Bhattia decision I am not convinced
that Mr. Justice Marceau would have found it appropriate to preclude a stay order being granted, had leave already been given to commence a sec tion 28 proceeding. As has already been noted, while Mr. Justice Marceau wrote the reasons set out above, the other two members of the Court of Appeal found it necessary to say only that assum ing the principles in Toth applied they were not met by the factual situation which existed in the Bhattia case. Thus the point in issue in the present case was essentially left open.
In Bains, the Court of Appeal granted the stay of a deportation order until the applicant's applica tion for leave to commence judicial review pro ceedings pursuant to section 28 of the Federal Court Act could be heard and disposed of by that Court. The decision which it was sought to have reviewed in those proceedings was one by the Immigration Appeal Board relating to the appli cant's claim for Convention refugee status.
In Yhap, Mr. Justice Muldoon granted a stay of a deportation order until the applicant's motion for leave to commence a section 18 proceeding was dealt with. The decision which it was sought to have reviewed in that proceeding was the legal appropriateness of the policy directives issued to officials of the Department of Employment and Immigration, by reference to which they were instructed to review claims for subsection 114(2) exemption on compassionate and humanitarian grounds. The stay of the deportation order was issued on October 12, 1989 (89-T-676). On November 14, 1989 the applicants were granted leave by the Court to commence a section 18 proceeding (T-2543-89). This culminated in a decision of March 8, 1990 (T-2543-89) in which the criteria being applied were held to constitute a fettering of discretion. Thus, the decisions made by reference thereto were considered to have been
made in the absence of a full and fair hearing and referred back for reconsideration.
Mr. Justice Muldoon's reasons for granting the stay of the deportation order in Yhap read [at pages 4 and 12-13], in part:
In effect, the relief here sought by the applicants is in the nature of an interlocutory injunction or, in the applicants' solicitors' own expression, that which may be termed an inter locutory or temporary prohibition. In regard to the federal administration, paragraph 18(a) of the Federal Court Act confers upon the Trial Division exclusive original jurisdiction to issue, inter alia, an injunction and a writ of prohibition "against any federal board, commission or other tribunal". Those are the principal remedies. However, paragraph 18(b) adds:
(b) to hear and determine any application or other proceed ing for relief in the nature of relief contemplated by para graph (a) .... [Emphasis not in original text.]
Therefore, in making applications for relief in the nature of relief contemplated by paragraph 18(a), the applicants are indeed purporting to commence proceedings under section 18— to be precise paragraph 18(b) of the Federal Court Act. They must accordingly, first obtain leave to do so under section 83.1 of S.C. 1988, c. 35. This apparently obvious line of reasoning eluded the applicants' solicitors and counsel. A belated request for such leave was made in open Court on October 6, 1989, the return date specified in the applicants' notices of motion.
If the Minister would undertake not to remove any of the applicants until the status of the law and the legality of the proceedings be known, there would be no conceivable basis for this proceeding. One may sympathize with a refugee claimant who is ordered out of Canada according to laws of known validity and lawful procedures, but the Court will decline to intervene in such circumstances. On the other hand, it would be cold comfort indeed to the applicant or any of his fellows to be removed and then to learn that the law under which he was processed had been declared to be invalid or the proceedings found to be unfair or unlawful. It may be observed that recent radical amendments to the immigration statutes, not yet con solidated nor yet fully tested as to constitutionality, legality of procedures or the fairness of their enforcement, accompanied by the above noted plethora of ministerial statements and directives, and lacunae in the regulations mean that the federal law, whose better administration is committed to this Court, is in what is at least perceived to be a state of imprecision and flux.
Subsection 26(1) of the Federal Court Act runs as follows:
26. (1) The Trial Division has original jurisdiction in respect of any matter, not allocated specifically to the Court
of Appeal, in respect of which jurisdiction has been conferred by any Act of Parliament on the Federal Court, whether referred to as such or as the Exchequer Court of Canada.
The cited provision is analogous to subsection 30(1) of the Act in relation to the Appeal Division's implied jurisdiction which was described for a unanimous bench by Mr. Justice Heald in Toth v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1988), 6 Imm. L.R. (2d) 123 (F.C.A.). Here, too, if pending an application to the Trial Division and a section 28 application to the Appeal Division, the operation of the process resulted in rendering the respective proceedings nugatory, it would be absurd, not to emphasize unjust. [Underlining added.]
On reviewing this jurisprudence, it seems to me clear that the Lodge decision does not address the issue. The claim for a stay in that case was based on the assertion that such was necessary in order to allow the applicant the opportunity to pursue a claim before the Human Rights Commission. It was not connected to a proceeding pending before this Court. The present application seeks a stay of deportation until the application for a section 18 review is disposed of. That section 18 application is before this Court and is part of the present file. It is similar to the situations which existed in both Bains and Yhap.
As I read Mr. Justice Marceau's comments in Bhattia, they indicate to me that in the light of the new immigration procedures which now require applicants to obtain leave of the Court before commencing a section 18 or a section 28 applica tion, it should be unusual for the Court to grant a stay of a deportation order unless it had already granted leave to commence a section 18 or a section 28 proceeding. It is clear why this is desir able. One of the main issues to be decided in considering whether to grant a stay is the same or at least similar to that which must be decided in determining whether to grant leave: whether a serious question to be tried exists. In addition, the requirement that leave be obtained was added to the legislation to prevent applicants abusing the Court procedures by commencing proceedings which had little legal merit, but which could be stretched out over some considerable period of time, thereby gaining for the applicants additional Lime in Canada to which they were not legally entitled. I take from Mr. Justice Marceau's com-
ments a concern that by allowing an applicant to obtain a stay of a deportation order, before the leave application is granted, one could potentially be opening the door, yet again, to procedural abuse in this regard. I hasten to add that I do not think the present application is one which could be classified as an abuse of the procedure.
Granting a stay of execution of an order, in a case such as the present, however, is a discretio nary remedy. In the light of the new leave require ments, I would be very reluctant to exercise that discretion, to grant a stay of a deportation order, in the absence of leave having been given to com mence a section 18 application, except where spe cial and compelling circumstances can be shown to exist. In the present case, the reason the appli cant's motion for leave to commence a section 18 application was not filed until August 13 is because the psychiatrist's report was not given to the respondent until August 1. The applicant knew as of June 6, 1990 that a deportation order had issued against her. The request for consideration on compassionate and humanitarian grounds had been commenced at least by April 1990, if not earlier. On looking at the progress of this matter, it is clear that there is no compelling reason why the evidence in question (the psychiatrist's report) could not have been prepared and presented to the respondent at a much earlier period of time. Had this been done it could have been dealt with in a timely fashion by the officials concerned. In that event, it would have been possible to have the request for a stay considered in the context of the section 18 leave application. Consequently, even if there is jurisdiction to grant the order sought, I would not be prepared to exercise my discretion to grant one in this case.
In addition, I have serious doubts about the strength of the applicant's claim that there exists a serious question to be tried. Certainly the com ments of Ms. Pam Cullen that the "psychiatric's report did not convince her" does not show that that report was ignored as evidence. It merely shows that it was given little weight. Also, what
weight should be given to Mr. Morrison's com ment that "Dr. Payne's report did not constitute evidence that showed that favourable consider ation was warranted, because it was just a predic tion by a psychiatrist as to what might occur if the applicant was sent back to Jamaica" is hard to assess. It is certainly not such a clear and flagrant "rejection" of the evidence as I think counsel's argument would characterize it.
In the context of the application for leave to commence proceedings under section 18, the respondent will have time to respond to the appli cant's assertions and explain the procedure which was followed more fully. That context allows for a more considered review of the strength of the issue which an applicant seeks to raise than is possible in the present context. It is for that reason that I feel some hesitation in making comments on the strength of the applicant's case.
In any event, having come to the conclusions set out above, I do not find it necessary to deal with the other issues which have been raised. For the reasons given the application will be dismissed.
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