As previously noted, there are many threads or topics here in which the procedural details related to decisions terminating PR status are discussed at-length and in-depth. With lots of references and links to primary and official sources.
There are multiple procedural aspects involved. For example, just a discussion about obtaining a special PR TD which will allow SOME (not all) PRs to board a flight to Canada, so they can be in Canada pending their appeal, which I will address in more or less outline form below, is complex and detailed enough it has been the specific subject of discussion in multiple topics.
Without trying to reconstruct a comprehensive accounting of what is extensively explained in those other topics . . .
That his appeal be dismissed by IAD (Immigration Appeal Division) presupposes a physical presence of the applicant in court, and therefore in Canada, right?
If the answer is no, I would be curious to see if a person who has been prohibited from going to Canada to attend their appeal hearing has ever applied for leave for judicial review citing a breach of their natural justice right. (and procedural fairness)
I'll do my research.
"That his appeal be dismissed by IAD (Immigration Appeal Division) presupposes a physical presence of the applicant in court, and therefore in Canada, right?"
There is no need to suppose or presuppose. You raise this as if there might be some question about the actual procedure in these cases. As if the context was
how-it-should-be (be that in regards to legal or equitable reasons, social or political reasons, ethical or moral reasons) rather than
how-it-actually-works.
Whatever views posed in regards to
how-it-should-be, in contrast,
how-it-actually-works is well documented in HUNDREDS of IAD decisions and, going back over many years, a significant number of Federal Court decisions.
The procedures, the actual procedures followed in real cases, are also extensively explained in the applicable Operational Manuals
For pdf versions of the Operational Manuals see links at
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/corporate/publications-manuals/operational-bulletins-manuals.html and see ENF 1, ENF 3, ENF 4, ENF 5, ENF 6, ENF 23, and OP 10. (These are being phased out, just as those governing citizenship, such as CP 5 "Residence," have already been replaced by Program Delivery Instructions. So to some extent they are not up-to-date, and thus some caution should be exercised in relying on particular aspects of these without cross-checking and verification against official sources, like the statutes and regulations; and they especially do not account for special covid-19 measures).
ENF 23 "Loss of permanent resident status," and OP 10 "Permanent Residency Status Determination," cover most of key elements in the process. The latter, for example, describes much of the procedure in a Visa Office ("OP" is Overseas Processing). But the others include important information, such as ENF 5 "Writing 44(1) Reports" and ENF 6 "Review of reports under subsection 44(2)."
Short answer: No, many appeals (in cases reviewing decisions to terminate PR, both by CBSA as well as IRCC officers in Visa Offices abroad) are heard, decided, and dismissed by the IAD with NO physical presence of the PR (the individual affected remains a PR as long as the appeal remains pending) before the IAD.
To be clear, however, PRs are NOT prohibited from entering Canada pending their appeal, and are NOT prohibited from appearing at their appeal hearing.
Not so Short Explanation:
PRs, even those with appeals pending following decisions to terminate their PR status, are NOT prohibited from entering Canada. They are NOT prohibited from traveling or "
going to Canada." And those abroad who have been physically IN Canada within the previous year will generally be issued a special PR Travel Document so they can use regulated commercial transportation to travel to Canada. The notice of decision sent to the PR will ordinarily (as much as the anecdotal reporting reveals) include information about making an application for a special PR TD for the purpose of coming to Canada for the appeal.
Those who have not been IN Canada within the previous year can apply for the special PR TD as well, but it appears this is usually denied.
In any event, there is NO PROHIBITION barring any of these PRs, those with an appeal pending, from going to Canada.
In particular, PRs who can travel via the U.S. can go to Canada for their appeal by getting to a land-crossing PoE into Canada on the U.S. border, where they will allowed to enter Canada. PRs who have private transportation that will allow them to otherwise travel to Canada from abroad are not prohibited from doing so. (I'd guess not many can do this . . . while I have had friends and partners with ocean going boats and some with private planes, in what one might describe as my previous life (as in long before I immigrated to Canada), I'm guessing the number of PRs with access to private planes capable of trans-oceanic flights or boats capable of a trans-oceanic voyage are few in number).
But as for PRs abroad who do not have a valid PR card, and who are denied a special PR TD, and who cannot arrange to travel via the U.S. or via private means, one might say they are practically "
prohibited from going to Canada to attend their appeal hearing," since they will not be allowed to board regulated commercial transportation under the rules governing who commercial transport can carry to Canada.
"If the answer is no, I would be curious to see if a person who has been prohibited from going to Canada to attend their appeal hearing has ever applied for leave for judicial review citing a breach of their natural justice right. (and procedural fairness)"
Caveat: current procedure is likely very different than the routine procedure, given measures taken in response to Covid-19. The current procedures are temporary, even if they last longer than most imagined. My observations here are about how these things actually work apart from how special measures related to covid-19 currently affect them.
Let us be clear, again,
Canada does not prohibit PRs from entering Canada. That said, of course there is a big difference between restrictions on who is allowed entry into Canada, versus restrictions on who is allowed to travel to Canada, and in regards to the latter, the means of travel matters (since commercial transporters are strictly regulated and restricted in who they may allow to be passengers aboard their conveyances).
So, first, PRs abroad who have an appeal pending, for either a Report and Departure Order issued at a PoE, or for a decision denying a PR Travel Document, are
NOT "
prohibited from going to Canada to attend their appeal hearing," at least
NOT "
prohibited" by Canadian law. But many will find it very difficult to get to Canada, since for many the only means of travel to Canada is via commercial transportation and without either a PR card or PR TD the carriers will not allow, and cannot allow, the PR to board their plane or boat.
Thus, historically, many do not appear or appear via telephone from abroad.
Overall: those PRs (with an appeal pending) who can find a means of travel to Canada will be allowed to enter Canada, allowed to remain in Canada pending the appeal, and to the extent there is an in-person appeal hearing (which I think the PR IN Canada can probably insist on, except perhaps not in the current situation), allowed to physically appear. No restraint at all on their fair procedure right to participate in a hearing, let alone an excessive or unjustified restraint.
WARRANTS NOTING: As noted in a previous observation, other than the extent to which the law in effect entitles PRs to ENTER Canada itself, Canadian law does not offer much if any protection of a PR's rights regarding international travel.
That policy side of Canadian immigration law should not be underestimated. As I previously attempted to emphasize, there is a big difference in what the Canadian rules ALLOW, in effect tolerate, compared to those purposes and objectives promoted by the rules. At the risk of oversimplifying things, one might say the laws, regulations, and practices do NOT limit or restrict a PR's travel outside Canada, but they do NOT support, let alone promote or protect the PR's travel outside Canada, not much anyway.