bambino said:
Sadly, after spending thousands of dollars on legal fees and waiting over a year to have the Federal Court decide her application, Ms. Hussein's victory will likely be Pyrrhic. I do wonder how Justice Rennie would have ruled in this case :
I just spoke to the lawyer who argued this case for the Minister. The idea behind that particular language re: the "decision-maker" is that under the new processing rules all cases go through a citizenship officer, and if he or she cannot make a decision, the case is referred to the CJ. What happens in Ms. Hussein's case is that it is being sent back on that new track, going to the citizenship officer first. The language in the Hussein decision does not preclude a hearing with a CJ. The citizenship officer may, and quite possibly will, still send it up the chain to the CJ.
Now, it is a separate question what guidelines those citizenship officers acting as decision-makers have to follow, and if they have the power to flat-out deny applications or need to refer to a CJ any file where they believe the applicant does not meet the strict physical residence requirement.
As I have suggested in another thread, I understood that new section 14(1) as I believe the language was intended to be understood, to mean that in
residency cases the Minister's choice (as exercised by Citizenship Officers) is to either approve and grant citizenship, or otherwise make a referral to a Citizenship Judge for a hearing on residency. That is, only a CJ can decide to deny an applicant based on a failure to meet the residency requirement.
But the literal language in the
Citizenship Act does not overtly state, in the declarative form, that applications must be referred to a Citizenship Judge for a hearing. (The language of new section 14(1) is essentially conditional,
if . . . referred to a CJ. The language in the prior version of section 14(1) was that all grant applications
shall be considered by a CJ.)
On the other hand, in another forum there has been a report of a residency case on track for a
hearing with a Citizenship Officer in conjunction with an ATIP response indicating the FPAT has been completed. I initially assumed that this was actually a reference to a hearing with a Citizenship Judge. But the individual making that report has continued to report that it is about a hearing with a Citizenship Officer.
I do not know, but I believe it can be safely assumed that Justice LeBlanc referred this case back to
CIC rather than to another Citizenship Judge at the
request of the Minister (via a plea in the alternative), and that the language used by Justice LeBlanc derives from pleadings in the case submitted by the Minister's counselors (the lawyers representing CIC).
Not too much should be read into a single case, a single decision, especially during the period of transition. But the phrase that really jumps out is the reference to how Bill C-24, as now in force, has changed things:
". . . the manner in which applications for citizenship are to be determined [has been modified] by placing the
adjudication of such applications within the ambit of [CIC]." (see paragraph 27 of the decision)
The outstanding question is whether this government intends to interpret the
Citizenship Act, as amended by Bill C-24, to give CIC (the Minister acting through delegates, those being Citizenship Officers) the authority to:
-- grant or deny citizenship
or
-- to grant citizenship or refer the applicant to a CJs for a determination
That is, as you say, whether citizenship officers
acting as decision-makers "have the power to flat-out deny applications or need to refer to a CJ any file where they believe the applicant does not meet the strict physical residence requirement."
Frankly, as a jurist, I think the language of Bill C-24 is a mess, rife with ambiguity and outright vagueness. This is why even when a single party has control over what legislation is adopted and made law, the democratic process demands a robust debate, an opportunity to fully vet the provisions proposed. That opportunity was quashed by the PM.
The reference to where the "adjudication" is to take place looms large. This will not be the final interpretation of what the Minister's authority is now, as of August 1, 2014, but it is definitely a huge clue as to what this government is advocating.
In this regard, to be clear, Ms. Hussein's case
was already referred to a Citizenship Judge. It passed from CIC's hands into that of the Citizenship Commission, into the hands of a Citizenship Judge.
And, if the proper place for the
adjudication of a citizenship application is now with the Minister, will applicants be entitled to seek leave for judicial review of that decision? even though CIC has in the meantime referred the matter to a CJ?
And, why didn't Justice LeBlanc consider remanding the matter to CIC with an order to grant citizenship? Justice LeBlanc assessed the record and found no credible basis supporting a finding that Ms. Hussein failed to meet the residency requirement. Why does CIC get a second bite of the apple?
Under previous law, the Federal Court could not order the grant of citizenship given that only CJs had the authority to approve applicants for the grant of citizenship. But that is no longer the law which applies.
It is not uncommon for the language of new law to raise a range of issues and questions which will require litigation and judicial review over the course of years to resolve. And even before this decision, there were more than a few obvious issues likely to involve matters of statutory interpretation and invoke appellate litigation. But I am afraid the language in this decision derives from a direction in interpretation being pursued by the current government which will spill the proverbial
can-of-worms.
By the way, there is little doubt about how Justice Rennie, or Justice Snider, or Justice Zinn, would have ruled in this case, leaving Ms. Hussein to re-apply. Which, I suspect, would leave Ms. Hussein a PR (my
guess is that she has spent a lot of time abroad since applying for citizenship, and that is an unstated element underlying the case . . . although, CIC has long taken a very harsh approach to applicants who lacked a passport for any of the relevant period, and that was a factor in this case).
Ultimately: This decision foretells a quagmire of appellate litigation even without considering the impact of the new residency elements, such as the "intent to reside" clause. Moreover, clearly the stark dichotomy between
routine application processing and how things go for those applicants deemed to have a
residency case will obviously continue to have a big impact on processing timelines (less than a year for those routinely processed,
years for those deemed a residency case) and on the extent to which there is a profound intrusion into the private affairs of the residency-case-applicant (including the applicant's thoughts, given the import "intent" will have).