Shyama Charan Srivastava (Appellant)
v.
Minister of Manpower and Immigration
(Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Thurlow J. and
Cameron D.J.—Ottawa, February 2, 5 and 16,
1973.
Immigration—Appeal from deportation order—Evidence
admissible on appeal—Decision that appellant not an enter-
tainer—Appeal not restricted to that ground—Decision that
appellant not bona fide immigrant—Opinion of Special
Inquiry Officer reviewable on evidence—Immigration Act,
R.S.C. 1970, c. I-2, secs. 5(p), 7(1)(g).
An appellant on an appeal to the Immigration Appeal
Board from a deportation order made by a Special Inquiry
Officer has a right to call witnesses and otherwise tender
evidence at the hearing before the Board, and the Board
must receive such evidence so long as it is relevant and
admissible.
Where a person applies for admission to Canada as a
non-immigrant under one particular paragraph of section
7(1) of the Immigration Act. e.g. as an entertainer under
paragraph (g), and is ordered deported, he is not restricted
on an appeal from the deportation order to claiming status
as a non-immigrant under the same paragraph of section
7(1).
On an appeal to the Immigration Appeal Board from a
deportation order, the decision of the Special Inquiry Offi
cer that the appellant is not a bona fide immigrant within the
meaning of section 5(p) of the Immigration Act is review-
able by the Board and the matter is to be decided on the
evidence. Gana v. Minister of Manpower & Immigration
[1970] S.C.R. 699, applied.
APPEAL from Immigration Appeal Board.
COUNSEL:
Royce H. Frith for appellant.
D. H. Aylen, Q.C. and Paul Betournay for
respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Magwood, Frith, Pocock, MacDonald and
O'Callaghan, Toronto, for appellant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
respondent.
JACKETT C.J.—This is an appeal under sec
tion 23 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act
R.S.C. 1970, c. I-3, as amended by the Federal
Court Act, R.S.C. 1970, (2nd Supp.), c. 10, from
a decision of the Immigration Appeal Board
dismissing an appeal from a deportation order.'
By its decision, the Immigration Appeal
Board
(a) rejected attacks on the validity of the
deportation order, and
(b) rejected an application that it exercise its
discretionary powers under section 15 of the
Immigration Appeal Board Act.
In so far as the appeal to this Court relates to
the dismissal by the Immigration Appeal Board
of the appellant's application under section 15,
it was dismissed from the Bench without calling
on the respondent. It remains, therefore, to deal
with the appeal in so far as it relates to the
validity of the deportation order.
Three questions are raised by the appeal.
These might be expressed as follows:
1. Did the Immigration Appeal Board err in
law in taking the position during the hearing
that it would not hear evidence concerning
the validity of the deportation order unless it
were evidence that could not have been
brought before the Special Inquiry Officer;
and, if so, is the appellant entitled to a re-
hearing of his appeal by the Immigration
Appeal Board having regard to what hap
pened during the hearing of the appeal before
the Board?
2. Is it the law that the appellant, on his
appeal to the Immigration Appeal Board, was
restricted, when claiming status as a non-
immigrant, to relying on the particular para
graph of section 7(1) of the Immigration Act
that was under consideration during the inqui
ry before the Special Inquiry Officer?
3. Was the appellant entitled to have a review
by the Immigration Appeal Board of the find
ing by the Special Inquiry Officer that he was
not, in the opinion of the Special Inquiry
Officer, a bona fide non-immigrant (and was,
in consequence, a member of the prohibited
class described in section 5(p) of the Immi-
gration Act) or can such a finding only be
attacked if there was no evidence before the
Special Inquiry Officer to support that opin
ion or if that opinion was based on a wrong
principle?
I shall deal first with question number 1,
which I repeat for convenience:
1. Did the Immigration Appeal Board err in
law in taking the position during the hearing
that it would not hear evidence concerning
the validity of the deportation order unless it
were evidence that could not have been
brought before the Special Inquiry Officer;
and, if so, is the appellant entitled to a re-
hearing of his appeal by the Immigration
Appeal Board having regard to what hap
pened during the hearing of the appeal before
the Board?
The position taken by the Board on this ques
tion is shown by the following passage from the
transcript of the proceedings before the Board:
ME FRITH: Well, perhaps that's another issue—perhaps
the Board perhaps might be on. I understand that this is
especially a proceeding de novo—
CHAIRMAN: No, it's an appeal, a straight appeal.
ME FRITH: Well, then, there is no evidence admissible?
Do we have to proceed entirely—
CHAIRMAN: It's admissible in respect to, of course, your
claim, relief under 15, section 15 of our Act, but as far as
the ground of the deportation order is concerned the only
new evidence that would be admissible would be evidence
that you could not physically have brought in before the
special inquiry officer. In other words, the same rules
than any other court of appeal.
ME FRITH: That means in effect we are proceeding,
except as to the section 15, on the record before the
special inquiry officer?
CHAIRMAN: That's right.
ME FRITH: Alright.
A consideration of the correctness of the
view expressed by the Chairman on behalf of
the Board requires a review of parts of the
relevant statutes and the regulations made
thereunder.
In the first place, it should be noted that the
Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-2 contains
substantive provisions as to who can come into
Canada and remain in Canada; 2 and it also con
tains procedural or "machinery" provisions to
give effect to the substantive rules.
The substantive provisions may be summa
rized, in so far as relevant for present purposes,
as follows:
(a) a Canadian citizen has the right to come
into Canada (section 3(1) of the Immigration
Act);
(b) with certain exceptions, a person who has
Canadian domicile as defined for the pur
poses of the Immigration Act must be allowed
to come into Canada (section 3(2) of the
Immigration Act);
(c) every person seeking to come into Canada
is presumed to be an "Immigrant" (that is a
person seeking to come into Canada for per
manent residence) unless he shows the con
trary (section 6 read with the definition of
"Immigrant" in section 2);
(d) certain classes of persons may be allowed
to enter and remain in Canada as "Non-immi-
grants"—among others, these include
"(c) tourists or visitors;"
"(d) persons passing through Canada to another
country;"
"(e) clergymen, priests or members of a religious order
entering Canada or who, having entered, are in Canada
in connection with the carrying out of their religious
duties;"
"(g) members of dramatic, artistic, athletic or other
groups entering Canada or who, having entered, are in
Canada for the purpose of giving performances or exhi
bitions of an entertaining or instructive nature;"
"(h) persons engaged in a legitimate profession, trade
or occupation entering Canada or who, having entered,
are in Canada for the temporary exercise of their
respective callings;" and
"(i) persons entering Canada or who, having entered,
are in Canada for seasonal or other temporary employ
ment, unless otherwise directed by the Minister;"
(e) the Governor in Council is authorized to
make regulations prohibiting or limiting
admission of persons who would otherwise be
admissible (section 57);
(f) the admission of certain classes of persons
is prohibited; in addition to persons who are
prohibited because they belong to classes of
persons apparently regarded as intrinsically
undesirable, this prohibition extends to
"(p) persons who are not, in the opinion of a Special
Inquiry Officer, bona fide immigrants or non-immi
grants;" and
"(t) persons who cannot or do not fulfil or comply with
any of the conditions or requirements of this Act or the
regulations or any orders lawfully made or given under
this Act or the regulations."
These rules and others to which I have not
referred relate both to the admission of persons
to Canada and to allowing persons to remain in
Canada.
Turning to the procedural or machinery provi
sions, it will be found that the Immigration Act
sets up machinery both to enforce the rules
concerning the admission of persons to Canada
and to effect the deportation of persons who are
in Canada contrary to the rules. We are primari
ly interested here in the machinery concerning
the admission of persons to Canada.
The main procedural steps provided to apply
the substantive rules to a person seeking to
come into Canada are
(a) an appearance before an Immigration
Officer, who either grants the person admis
sion (section 19) or reports him to a senior
officer called a Special Inquiry Officer (sec-
tion 22);
(b) an immediate inquiry (section 23(2)) con
ducted by a Special Inquiry Officer who lets
the person come in or admits him if he finds
that he is a person who has a right to come
into Canada and is not a member of a prohib
ited class (section 27(2)) and, otherwise,
makes a deportation order against him (sec-
tion 27(3)); and
(c) an appeal to the Immigration Appeal
Board from a deportation order under section
11 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act..
While what has to be decided on this branch
of this appeal is the right of an appellant in an
appeal from a deportation order to present evi
dence before the Immigration Appeal Board, I
think it is important to consider first the charac
ter of the decision giving rise to the deportation
order being appealed from. In my view, in
carrying out the steps outlined as conditions
precedent to a deportation order, both the Immi
gration Officer and the Special Inquiry Officer
are performing acts of an administrative nature.
They are part of the Department of Manpower
and Immigration (R.S.C. 1970, c. M-1), one of
whose tasks is the administration and enforce
ment of the rules established by Parliament as
to what persons may be admitted to Canada.
They have certain powers to obtain information
for the purpose of making decisions necessary
to carry out that task; 3 and they have a duty to
use those powers to the best of their ability to
obtain the information necessary to enforce the
rules established by Parliament concerning
admission of persons to Canada. In addition, the
Special Inquiry Officer holding an "immediate
inquiry" as contemplated by section 23(1) must
comply with the requirements of section 26 and
of the Immigration Inquiries Regulations, of
which requirements the following are worthy of
note:
(a) the inquiry is to be "apart from the pub
lic" but in the presence of the person con
cerned "wherever practicable" (section
26(1));
(b) the person concerned has a right to obtain
counsel at his own expense and to be repre
sented "at his hearing" (section 26(2));
(c) where a person being examined requires
an interpreter, one must be provided (Regula-
tion 4);
(d) the inquiry may be adjourned where there
is good reason to do so (Regulation 9); and
(e) a full written report must be made of the
evidence at the inquiry (Regulation 10).
While this hearing, which must precede the
making of a deportation order by a Special
Inquiry Officer, has some of the trappings of a
judicial hearing, it is only, in my view, an inqui
ry by an administrative officer with a view to
ensuring that that officer has available to him
the facts necessary for the application of the
law as well as that can be accomplished by an
"immediate inquiry" held "apart from the pub
lic" under the exigencies of keeping a person
under restraint pending a decision as to admis
sion or deportation. The imposition of some of
the requirements of a judicial hearing make it
more likely that the true facts will be ascer
tained but such an inquiry is not the equivalent
of a judicial hearing. In my view, the deporta
tion order is not an adjudication by a judicial
tribunal but, just like an assessment under the
Income Tax Act, is an administrative act by an
official of a government department, taken after
more than usual safeguards to ensure that it has
been properly made.
It is against this background that one must
consider the character of the appeal provided
from a deportation order made by a Special
Inquiry Officer.
The appeal from a deportation order is pro
vided for by the Immigration Appeal Board
Act . 4
That Act creates a board consisting of seven,
eight or nine members holding office during
good behaviour, of whom three, including a
chairman, must be lawyers (section 3). The
Board is a court of record upon which has been
conferred in general terms ail the powers of a
superior court in connection with the taking of
evidence and enforcing of its orders; and which
has, for greater caution, been specifically
authorized to summon witnesses, to administer
oaths, to examine any person upon oath or
otherwise, and
"(c) during a hearing (to) receive such addi
tional information as it may consider credible
or trustworthy and necessary for dealing with
the subject-matter before it." (Section 7.)
Three members, of whom one must be a lawyer,
is a quorum of the Board (section 6(3)); but
there is a provision under which one member of
the Board may hear "evidence relating to an
appeal" to be used by the Board in determining
the appeal (section 10). The Act also provides
that the Board may direct the re-opening of a
"hearing" (which by a definition to be found in
section 2 means a further examination or inqui
ry conducted by a Special Inquiry Officer under
the Immigration Act) either before the Special
Inquiry Officer who presided at the original
hearing or before some other Special Inquiry
Officer "for the receiving of any additional evi
dence or testimony"; and the additional evi
dence so taken, together with the inquiry offi
cer's assessment of it, is for the Board's "con-
sideration in disposing of the appeal" (section
13).
Apart from the provisions that I have summa
rized, in so far as the question now being con
sidered is concerned, the Act leaves the Board's
practice and procedure to be regulated by rules
made by the Board with the approval of the
Governor in Council.
Before examining the Board's Rules, it is
appropriate to note at this point that the right of
appeal against a deportation order is conferred
by section 11, which reads as follows:
11. A person against whom an order of deportation has
been made under the Immigration Act may appeal to the
Board on any ground of appeal that involves a question of
law or fact or mixed law and fact.
It is also worthy of note, for this becomes
relevant in considering the effect of the Rules,
that there are two other main classes of appeals,
namely, an appeal by the Minister from a deci
sion by a Special Inquiry Officer not to make a
deportation order (section 12), and an appeal by
a person who desires to sponsor a relative from
a refusal to approve his application (section 17).
It should also be noted, for the same reason,
that, on these appeals, the Board has what is
referred to as its "section 15 power", which is a
discretionary power, exercisable on grounds of
hardship or for compassionate or humanitarian
considerations, after having dismissed an appeal
against a deportation order, to stay execution of
the deportation order, to quash it or to quash it
and direct admission of the appellant (section
15).
The portions of the Immigration Appeal
Board Rules that, in my view, are relevant, read
as follows:
2. In these Rules,
(/) "record" means
(i) in respect of an appeal made pursuant to section 11
or 12 of the Act,
(A) a copy of the deportation order,
(B) the Minutes of inquiry or further examination,
(C) the report of the evidence signed by the Special
Inquiry Officer,
(D) all exhibits to the inquiry, and
(E) all documents made by or at the instance of the
Special Inquiry Officer respecting the proceedings
before him,
(ii) in respect of an appeal made pursuant to section 11
of the Act, in the case of a person ordered deported
pursuant to subsection (1) of section 24 of the Immigra
tion Act without further examination,
(A) a copy of the deportation order, and
(B) the report of the Special Inquiry Officer signed
by him, and
(iii) in respect of an appeal made pursuant to section 17
of the Act,
(A) the sponsor's written application,
(B) all correspondence between the Department of
Manpower and Immigration and the sponsor and the
prospective immigrants, and
(C) all written reports by immigration officers relat
ing to the refusal of the sponsored application and to
the prospective immigrants;
3. (2) A Notice of Appeal shall
(b) indicate whether the appellant
(ii) wishes to make submissions to the Board in writing,
or
(iii) does not wish to make any submissions to the
Board; and
4. (1) An appeal made pursuant to section 11 of the Act
shall be instituted by serving a Notice of Appeal upon the
Special Inquiry Officer who presided at the inquiry or
further examination or upon an immigration officer.
(4) Where an officer referred to in subsection (1) is
served with a Notice of Appeal, he shall forthwith
(a) file with the Registrar three copies of the Notice of
Appeal and three certified copies of the record;
(b) serve the Minister with one copy of the Notice of
Appeal and the record; and
(c) serve the appellant with one certified copy of the
record.
11. (1) Except as otherwise provided in these Rules, the
appellant or respondent in an appeal may make oral or
written submissions to the Board on any matter pertaining to
the appeal and, without restricting the generality of the
foregoing, may make submissions in respect of the Board's
exercise of its discretion pursuant to subsection (1) of
section 15 or section 17 of the Act.
(2) An appellant or respondent, whether or not he appears
in person before the Board, has the right to be represented
by counsel, but at his own expense.
12. (1) Except as otherwise provided in these Rules, all
written submissions to the Board by the appellant and the
respondent and their witnesses shall be signed by the person
making them and verified by affidavit.
(2) All oral submissions by the appellant and the respond
ent and their witnesses shall be made upon oath or
affirmation.
13. (1) The parties to an appeal may call witnesses to
give evidence under oath or affirmation.
(2) The expenses of a witness shall be borne by the party
calling him.
18. If at the time set for the hearing of an appeal neither
of the parties thereto is present and no one is present to
represent them, the Board may review the Notice of Appeal
and the record together with any written submissions that
may have been made to the Board in respect of the appeal
and render its decisions thereon.
I have summarized the provisions of the stat
utes that, as I appreciate it, may have some
bearing on the question as to whether, in an
appeal from a deportation order, the appellant
has a right to present evidence bearing on the
validity of the deportation order; and I have
quoted those portions of the Board's Rules that,
as it seems to me, may bear on that question.
The Board's position on this question, as it
appears from the remarks of the Chairman
already quoted, would seem to be that, because
the Board is a court of appeal, it does not
receive evidence bearing on the merits of the
order appealed from except where the evidence
could not have been brought before the Special
Inquiry Officer. This view would seem to be
based on the assumption that there is inherent in
the word "appeal" the idea of a review of a
decision on a record made before the tribunal
that made_the decision appealed from. I have
not been able to find any support for this view.
Apart from statute there is no right of appeal.
(See A. G. v. Sillem, 10 H.L.C. 704.) Where
there is an appeal, therefore, its nature must be
determined by reference to the statute that cre
ates it.
All that is implied by the use of the word
"appeal", taken by itself, as I understand it, is
stated in the 11th edition of Wharton's Law
Lexicon as follows:
the removal of a cause from an inferior to a superior court,
for the purpose of testing the soundness of the decision of
the inferior court.
In every appeal, under our system of justice,
there must be a re-hearing. The question that
may arise in each case is whether the re-hearing
is based on a record created, in whole or in part,
in the court of appeal. Some appeals are
ordinarily re-heard on a record created in the
inferior court.' In some appeals, the re-hearing
is based entirely on evidence taken in the court
of appeal; or, as it is sometimes put, the appeal
is by way of a trial de novo 6 There can also be
appeals where the re-hearing is based on evi
dence taken by the inferior tribunal plus evi
dence adduced in the court of appeal'
In the case of a court of appeal that ordinarily
re-hears the case on the record made in the
inferior court, it is not unusual for the court of
appeal to have a discretionary power to receive
further evidence "on special grounds". In such
cases, the court of appeal has usually insisted
upon three conditions being satisfied before
admitting further evidence, namely,
(a) that the evidence could not have been
obtained with reasonable diligence for use at
the trial,
(b) that the evidence must be such that, if
given, it would probably have an important
influence on the result, and
(c) that the evidence must be such as is pre
sumably to be believed or, put another way, it
must be apparently credible though it need
not be incontrovertible.'
Apparently, the Immigration Appeal Board
has proceeded on the view that, in respect of
the validity of a deportation order, it is such a
court of appeal, that is, a court of appeal that is
required to re-hear on the record created by an
inferior tribunal but with a discretionary power
to hear further evidence "on special grounds".
If that is the correct view, the Board did not err
in the position that it took in this case concern
ing the hearing of evidence as to the validity of
the deportation order.
In so far as appeals to the Immigration
Appeal Board are concerned, unlike most
appeals, there is nothing in the governing statute
or the Board's Rules that resolves succinctly the
question raised here. There is nothing in its Act
or Rules such as there is in the Supreme Court
Act, which says (section 67), "The appeal shall
be on a case to be stated ...", or in the Income
Tax Act where, in creating an appeal from the
Tax Appeal Board to the Trial Division of this
Court, it is said (section 100(3)) that, upon the
filing of the required material, "the matter shall
be deemed an action in the Court ... ready for
hearing". Unlike such statutes, there is nothing
in the Immigration Appeal Board Act that bears
directly on the question except that there are
full powers given to take evidence and nothing
to suggest that such powers are limited to the
exercise of discretionary powers or to evidence
that was unavailable for the Special Inquiry
Officer hearing and there is a power to require
the Special Inquiry Officer to take further evi
dence for use by the Board. These powers are
not necessarily inconsistent with the view taken
by the Board on the question of an appellant's
right to adduce evidence although their exist
ence without anything indicating that they are to
have a limited use makes that view seem a little
strained. However, in my view, there are a
number of considerations that point clearly to
the result that an appellant in an appeal from a
deportation order to the Immigration Appeal
Board has a right to adduce evidence on the
issues of fact relevant to the question whether
he is a person who has a right to be allowed to
come into Canada, or to stay in Canada if he is
already in Canada.
In the first place, a deportation order is an
order made by an administrative officer apart
from the public in the course of administration,
and, while that officer is required to conduct an
inquiry and he takes evidence on oath that is
recorded, in my view, the record that he creates
is not a record in respect of which there can be
an assumption of completeness and accuracy
such as there can be when there has been a
contest under the adversary system before a
judicial officer and the hearing has taken place
in public. In so far as I know, whenever Parlia
ment has provided for an appeal to a judicial
tribunal from an administrative decision and the
validity of that decision would be likely to
depend on the settlement of a dispute as to
facts, the appeal has been by way of a re-hear
ing that included an opportunity for the appel
lant to adduce evidence. I have in mind such
appeals as tax appeals to the Tariff Board (see
section 5(2) and (13) of the Tariff Board Act)
and to the Tax Review Board (which have
always proceeded, to the best of my knowledge,
on the basis that the parties are entitled to
adduce evidence relating to the correctness of
the assessment under attack) and trade mark
appeals (section 59(3) of the Trade Marks Act,
R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10). I see a difference where
the question involved is such that it would not
be likely to give rise to a dispute as to facts,
such as an appeal from the Commissioner of
Patents under the Patent Act. In my view, the
problems involved in having a judicial tribunal
determine an "appeal" from a decision of an
administrative officer by way of a re-hearing of
a disputed question of fact on a record created
by the administrative officer would ordinarily
be so great that, in the absence of some indica
tion to the contrary, there is an assumption that
Parliament intended that the appellant have a
right to adduce evidence before the appeal
tribunal.
In the second place, when the Rules of the
Immigration Appeal Board are examined, in my
view, they confer a right to adduce evidence
with reference to the validity of the deportation
order. It is true that the evidence taken before
the Special Inquiry Officer is part of the
"record" that is supplied to the Board and to
both parties (Rules 2(f) and 4(4)), and, at least
in certain circumstances, may be acted upon
(Rule 18). Taken by itself, that might have been
thought to show that the appeal was to be
re-heard on the record although it is not so
stated. However, the parties to an appeal are
expressly authorized to call witnesses to give
evidence (Rule 13). This alone would be suffi
cient in my view to show that the appeal is not
to be heard on the evidence adduced before the
Special Inquiry Officer to the exclusion of any
thing else. In addition, moreover, the parties are
authorized to make "oral or written submis
sions on any matter pertaining to the appeal"
(Rule 11(1)); and, in my view, these submis
sions are not submissions in the sense in which
that word is ordinarily used by lawyers, namely,
"something urged deferentially", because, when
they are in writing, these submissions must be
verified by affidavit (Rule 12(1)) and, when
they are oral submissions "by the appellant and
the respondent and their witnesses", these sub
missions must be made on oath or affirmation.
There is a necessary implication from these
requirements that the "submissions" authorized
by the Rules are vehicles for putting evidence
before the Board and, as I have already indica
ted, they may be on any matter pertaining to the
appeal.
A third consideration that, in my view, shows
that an appeal to the Immigration Appeal Board
is not an appeal on the "record" is that, even if
it were conceivable that this first hearing before
a judicial tribunal, in the case of an appeal from
an ordinary deportation order, was to be a re-
hearing on the "record" established by the
Rules (Rule 2(1)), which contains at least some
evidence, it is not conceivable that it was
intended that an appeal by a person deported to
the United States under section 23(1), or that an
appeal by a "sponsor", should be re-heard on
the "record" as established by the Rules (Rule
2(f)). Even if the "record", where there has
been an "inquiry" by a Special Inquiry Officer,
might have been regarded as a sufficient basis
for a re-hearing by way of appeal by a properly
constituted court, a reference to the definition
of record for these other two classes of case
shows that the appellant would have, indeed, a
very limited opportunity to obtain relief, if he
had no right to go outside that "record".
Finally, additional support for the conclusion
that such an appellant has an unrestricted right
to call evidence arises from the consideration
that the Board is constituted as a court of
record with power to summon witnesses and
require them to give evidence on oath coupled
with the consideration that the Board, in addi
tion to the powers conferred on it by section 14
in dealing with appeals, is by section 22 given
inter alla "sole and exclusive jurisdiction to
hear and determine all questions of fact or law,
including questions of jurisdiction, that may
arise in relation to the making of an order of
deportation".
As against these considerations, which point
to the conclusion that an appellant in an appeal
from a deportation order has a right to adduce
any evidence that will put a different light on
the issues of fact relevant to the question
whether he is a person who has a right to be
allowed to come in to Canada, there is one
provision in the Immigration Appeal Board Act
itself that causes me some difficulty. I refer to
section 14 of that Act, which authorizes the
Board to dispose of an appeal under section 11
by allowing it, dismissing it or "rendering the
decision and making the order that the Special
Inquiry Officer ... should have rendered and
made." This would seem to be a provision that
is more appropriate to a tribunal that re-hears an
appeal on the basis of the record made before
the tribunal appealed from and would seem to
point to the appeal being that sort of appeal.
However, even where an appeal is on the record
made before the tribunal appealed from, it is
usual for the appeal tribunal to have authority to
receive additional evidence "on special
grounds" and nevertheless the formula con-
tained in section 14 is usually employed in such
a case to define the appeal tribunal's decision
making powers. While, therefore, the way in
which section 14 is formulated raises a doubt in
my mind, my conclusion is that, in any case
where the appeal court may receive additional
evidence, whether "on special grounds" or as a
matter of course, the power to render the deci
sion that the court below should have given
must be read as a power to render the decision
that the court below should have given if it had
had all the evidence before it that the appeal
court has before it and that, while section 14
points towards an appeal on the record made
before the authority appealed from, it does not
outweigh the considerations that I have referred
to that, in my view, point the other way.
For the above reasons, I am of the view that
an appellant, in an appeal from a deportation
order, has a right to call witnesses and other
wise tender evidence at the hearing before the
Immigration Appeal Board and that the Board
must receive such evidence as long as it is
relevant and admissible (due account being
taken of section 7(2)(c) of the Immigration
Appeal Board Act). 9
Coming now to the question as to whether the
appellant is entitled to any relief in this case
because of the Board's refusal to receive evi
dence concerning the validity of the deportation
order, I have come to the conclusion that the
Board, by the position that it took in the passage
of the transcript that has been quoted, refused
to hear the appeal in the manner in which it was
by law required to hear it, and that the appellant
is, therefore, entitled to a new hearing. (Cf. The
Queen v. Marsham [1892] 1 Q.B. 371, per Lord
Halsbury, L.C. at page 375.) In my view, there
fore, the appeal should be allowed, the decision
of the Immigration Appeal Board should be set
aside and the matter should be referred back to
the Immigration Appeal Board for re-hearing on
the basis that the parties are entitled to put in as
of right any relevant and admissible evidence
relating to the validity of the deportation order.
I turn now to the second question raised by
this appeal, which I repeat for convenience:
2. Is it the law that the appellant, on his
appeal to the Immigration Appeal Board, was
restricted, when claiming status as a non-
immigrant, to relying on the particular para
graph of section 7(1) of the Immigration Act
that was under consideration during the inqui
ry before the Special Inquiry Officer?
The portion of the Immigration Appeal
Board's decision, which raises this question,
reads as follows:
In his argument on appeal, Mr. Frith sought to induce this
Court either to allow the appeal, on the ground that the
appellant was a bona fide non-immigrant, or alternatively, to
render the decision and make the order the Special Inquiry
Officer should have made, pursuant to section 14(c) of the
Immigration Appeal Board Act, that is, admit the appellant
as a bona fide non-immigrant under any one of four subsec
tions of section 7(1) of the Act, namely, section 7(I)(e) (a
member of a religious order in Canada in connection with
the carrying on of his religious duties), section 7(1)(g) (enter-
tainer, or, as Mr. Frith emphasized, performances of an
"instructive nature"—this was the subsection under which
entry was actually sought), section 7(I)(h) (temporary exer
cise in Canada of a legitimate trade or occupation), or
section 7(1)(i) (seasonal or temporary employment).
•
In the instant appeal, however, all the evidence adduced
at the inquiry was introduced in support of the subject's
claim to entry as an entertainer, for a period of two to three
years, on the strength of a "contract", that is a document
which by no legal standards, or even by the standards of
common sense, could be accepted as more than a statement
of goodwill on the part of Mr. Stirling. A Special Inquiry
Officer, in respect of a person seeking to come into Canada,
is not obliged to go on a fishing expedition through all the
sub-paragraphs of section 7(1) to find a category which may
suit the prospective non-immigrant. The latter has the
burden of proving his eligibility within the category under
which he seeks entry: section 26(4) of the Immigration Act,
which provides:
26. (4) Where an inquiry relates to a person seeking to
come into Canada, the burden of proving that he is not
prohibited from coming into Canada rests upon him.
Mr. Srivastava sought entry as an entertainer, and, in the
opinion of the Special Inquiry Officer, failed to satisfy the
burden on him that he was a bona fide non-immigrant within
that category.
In my view, the answer to the second ques
tion is that the appellant, in an appeal to the
Immigration Appeal Board from a deportation
order is not restricted, when justifying his claim
to status as a non-immigrant, to trying to make
out that claim under the particular paragraph of
section 7(1) that was under consideration during
the inquiry before the Special Inquiry Officer. I
go further and I say that there is nothing in the
statute or Rules to prevent the Immigration
Appeal Board from doing justice according to
the law on the facts as they were at the time of
the appellant's attempt to obtain admission to
Canada. To take an extreme case, if a Canadian
citizen resident in Europe applied for entry as a
visitor and the Special Inquiry Officer, without
any knowledge of the applicant's Canadian citi
zenship, made a deportation order against him
on the ground that he was not a bona fide
immigrant or non-immigrant, I should have no
doubt that, on an appeal to the Immigration
Appeal Board, the appellant would have a right
to show the true facts and, by virtue of his right
under section 3(1) of the Immigration Act to
come into Canada, obtain a judgment of the
Board quashing the deportation order. I do not
see any difference between such a case and a
case where the evidence and argument before
the Special Inquiry Officer has all been directed
to one head of section 7(1) but where, with
better advice and after more mature considera
tion, the evidence and argument before the
Board is directed at one or more other heads of
that subsection. (It is of course quite possible
that such a person may, in the course of such an
endeavour, show that he is in the prohibited
class created by section 5(1)(t) of the Immigra
tion Act because he has not answered "truthful-
ly" the questions put to him by the Immigration
Officer as required by section 19(2) of that
Act.) I do not see how the onus of proof on the
person seeking to come into Canada created by
section 26(4) affects the matter. The result of
that onus is that, in the absence of evidence on
a particular issue of fact, it must be decided
against the person. It contains nothing that has
effect to limit the issues in respect of which
evidence may be adduced on the appeal. Fur
thermore, the Board, where evidence in support
of a novel issue is adduced, has a duty to ensure
that there is a fair hearing and must, therefore,
ensure that the respondent has, if he has not
already had, a reasonable opportunity to pre
pare to meet it.
In dealing with this question, it would seem
necessary to include some reference to the
statement, in that part of the Board's reasons
that has already been quoted, that a "special
inquiry officer ... is not obliged to go on a
fishing expedition through all the sub-para
graphs of section 7(1) to find a category which
may suit the prospective non-immigrant" as, in
my view, this statement is based on an errone
ous view as to the nature of the task being
performed by a Special Inquiry Officer. A Spe
cial Inquiry Officer is not a judicial officer
adjudicating on issues that have been framed
formally or informally under the adversary
system. A Special Inquiry Officer, as I have
already indicated, is, in my view, a departmental
officer performing a task of a purely administra
tive nature even though it includes the making
of decisions on a quasi-judicial basis. Persons
are to be admitted to Canada, subject to certain
exceptions, if they are non-immigrants in the
sense that they fall within one of the heads of
section 7(1). When a person (other than a
returning citizen or resident of Canada or a
would be immigrant) who seeks admission to
Canada does not clearly fall within such a head
in the view of the Immigration Officer- before
whom he first appears, a Special Inquiry Officer
holds a more searching inquiry to ascertain
whether he does in fact fall within one of those
heads. We were not referred to any provision
for a written application. There is no suggestion
anywhere that the person seeking to come into
Canada is supposed to know anything about the
Act or Regulations. He must answer questions
truthfully. When the officer has his story, the
officer makes up his mind whether he falls
within one of the various heads of section 7(1).
In the ordinary case, once the officer has heard
the facts, it will be quite apparent that the
applicant does fall within a certain head or that
he not fall within any of them. There will be the
odd case when he may have to consider several
of them. The fact remains that it is an "inquiry"
by the Special Inquiry Officer, who knows the
statute, and that, in the vast proportion of cases,
the person seeking to come into Canada will
know nothing about the Act. In my view, the
officer has a duty to inquire why the person
seeking admission desires to come into Canada
and, on the basis of what he is told by that
person and of what he otherwise ascertains to
make a determination as to whether he is a
non-immigrant within any of the various heads
in section 7(1) of the Immigration Act.
I am, therefore, of the view that the judgment
of this Court referring this matter back for a
new hearing should contain a direction that, on
the new hearing, the appellant is not to be
restricted to the contention that he was a non-
immigrant by virtue of section 7(1)(g).
The third question raised by this appeal, as
set out at the beginning of these reasons, reads
as follows:
3. Was the appellant entitled to have a review
by the Immigration Appeal Board of the find
ing by the Special Inquiry Officer that he was
not, in the opinion of the Special Inquiry
Officer, a bona fide non-immigrant (and was,
in consequence, a member of the prohibited
class described in section 5(p) of the Immi
gration Act) or can such a finding only be
attacked if there was no evidence before the
Special Inquiry Officer to support that opin
ion or if that opinion was based on a wrong
principle?
This question raises, for decision, the effect of
section 5(p) of the Immigration Act, which
reads as follows:
5. No person other than a person referred to in subsection
7(2), shall be admitted to Canada if he is a member of any of
the following classes of persons:
(p) persons who are not, in the opinion of a Special
Inquiry Officer, bona fide immigrants or non-immigrants;
This question is raised by that part of the
Board's reasons in this Case that read as
follows:
It will be noted that section 5(p) of the Act is one of the
very few sections where specific reference is made to the
opinion of the Special Inquiry Officer; in other words, he is
given discretion. It has long been settled law that where a
judicial appeal is provided from a decision based on discre-
tion or opinion, the appellate tribunal has no power to
substitute its opinion for that of the lower tribunal—even if
it would have, on the same evidence, formed a different
opinion—unless the decision of the lower tribunal was based
on a wrong principle, or, on the evidence, was manifestly
wrong. In Lonnie Verne Woods, 1970, 1 LA.C. 1, this Court
held (at page 12)
The words "in the opinion of" in Section 5(p) of the
Immigration Act undoubtedly give the Special Inquiry
Officer discretionary power, and if it is clear on the face
of the record that there is some evidence on which this
opinion can reasonably be based, the Board cannot substi
tute its opinion for that of the Special Inquiry Officer,
even if it does not agree with his decision.
In the instant appeal, can it be said that the Special
Inquiry Officer, on the evidence before him, was manifestly
wrong? The criteria for determining the bona fides of a
non-immigrant has long been established. (Vela v. Min of
Manpower and Immigration, 1970,11 I.A.C. 111). While Mr.
Srivastava was able to bring himself within some of these, it
must be said that on the evidence before her, the Special
Inquiry Officer was justified in forming the opinion that he
failed to bring himself within the first two criteria listed in
Vela, i.e.:
a) He is a person who is a member of any of the classes
designated in section 7, sub-sections 1 and 2 of the
Immigration Act.
b) He is seeking to enter Canada for a legitimate and
temporary purpose; and is able to establish this.
As to a) the appellant failed to establish that he was
seeking entry as a bona fide entertainer, or performer of
"exhibitions" of an "instructive nature". The mere fact of
this request for entry for a period of from two to three years
casts doubt on his bona fides in this regard, and the vague
terms of the document presented by him as a "contract"
could inspire no confidence in anyone's mind as to the
genuineness of his prospective employment.
As to b) the evidence relating to his prior application for
permanent residence in Canada, taken together with his
testimony (page 12, Minutes of Inquiry):
Q. What do you intend to do after this undertaking is
over?
A. I would like to go back to India; I would do the same
job.
Q. Is it your intention to apply for permanent residence in
Canada?
A. Not exactly, not at the moment; I don't know what will
happen later on.
is sufficient to support the opinion of the Special Inquiry
Officer that he was not a bona fide non-immigrant—that he
was seeking to enter Canada under the guise of a non-immi
grant, but with the real intention of remaining as an
immigrant.
It must be held, therefore, that there was evidence before
the Special Inquiry Officer to support her opinion, and that
she did not form her opinion contrary to the evidence, or
without evidence, nor was it based upon a wrong principle.
In my view, the correctness of the Board's
view turns on the question whether the words
"in the opinion of a Special Inquiry Officer"
were designed, as the Board seems to have
thought, to confer on such an officer some
special discretion or whether they are merely a
reference, in passing, to the fact that it is such
an officer who must make the first actual deci
sion as to whether a person desiring to enter
Canada is not only a person who states facts
that would make him an "immigrant" or "non-
immigrant" but is actually (bona fide) a person
who is what he says he is. In my opinion, the
matter is concluded by authority. I can see no
distinction between the right of an appellant to
have a decision of a Special Inquiry Officer
under section 5(p) reviewed by the Immigration
Appeal Board and the right of an appellant to
have a decision of an Immigration Officer under
Regulation 34(3)(f) so reviewed. That provision
made it one of the conditions to admittance for
permanent resident under Regulation 34(3) that
"in the opinion of an immigration officer" the
applicant would have been so admitted if he had
been examined outside Canada. The Immigra
tion Appeal Board had taken the view that the
opinion of the Immigration Officer was not sub
ject to review, unless it was manifestly wrong,
either by the Special Inquiry Officer or the
Immigration Appeal Board itself. The Supreme
Court of Canada, however, in Gana v. Minister
of Manpower and Immigration [19701 S.C.R.
699, decided that such a decision had to be
reviewed both by the Special Inquiry Officer
and the Board. I am of opinion that the reason
ing in that case 10 applies equally to require the
Immigration Appeal Board to review a decision
of a Special Inquiry Officer under section 5(p).
I am, therefore, of the view that the order
referring the matter back to the Board for re-
hearing should contain a direction that the
Board should reconsider on the evidence the
question whether the appellant is a person who
is not a bona fide immigrant or non-immigrant
within the meaning of section 5(p).
Having regard to the above conclusions, I am
of the view that the judgment herein should
read as follows:
"The appeal is allowed; the decision of the
Immigration Appeal Board dismissing the
appellant's appeal from the order of deporta
tion made against him on April 26, 1972 is set
aside; and the matter is referred back to the
Immigration Appeal Board to re-hear the
appeal on the basis that
(a) the parties are entitled to adduce evi
dence relating to the validity of the deporta
tion order;
(b) that the appellant is not restricted, in
claiming status as a non-immigrant, to rely
ing on the paragraph of section 7(1) of the
Immigration Act that was under considera
tion before the Special Inquiry Officer; and
(c) that the question as to whether the
appellant is a person who was not a bona
fide immigrant or non-immigrant within the
meaning of section 5(p) of the Immigration
Act is to be decided on the evidence."
* * *
THURLOW J. I concur.
* * *
CAMERON D.J.—I concur.
' There is also an application under section 28 of the
Federal Court Act but its existence would seem to be
academic.
z A reference during the first part of this review to a
section or other part of a statute without specifying the
statute will be a reference to the Immigration Act. One of
the difficulties encountered in interpreting the Immigration
Act is that there is no uniformity of drafting. Sometimes a
procedural rule is so worded as to create a substantive right.
See, for example, section 27(2)(b). Other times, as will
appear, the substantive position does not depend on the
procedural steps notwithstanding the manner in which the
relevant provision is framed.
Every immigration officer can administer oaths (section
10(4)) and is entitled to question a person applying for
admission (section 19(2)). A Special Inquiry Officer has the
powers of a commissioner under Part I of the Inquiries Act.
He can summon witnesses, administer oaths, issue commis
sions to take evidence, engage counsel, clerks, stenogra-
phers and other persons and do all other things necessary
for a full inquiry (section 11(3)).
4 References hereafter to sections without naming the
statute will be references to sections in the Immigration
Appeal Board Act.
See, for example, section 67 of the Supreme Court Act,
which provides - 1ter alia that "The appeal shall be upon a
case to be stated by the parties ... and the case shall set
forth the judgment objected to and so much of the plead-
ings, evidence ... and documents as is necessary to raise
the question for the decision of the Court ...".
6 E.g., appeals from summary convictions under the
Criminal Code and tax appeals to the Trial Division of this
Court.
7 Compare section 56(5) of the Trade Marks Act, which
provides that, on the appeal, evidence "in addition to that
adduced before the Registrar" may be adduced.
These conditions are not always insisted upon in modern
times. See per Pigeon J. (diss.) in Podlaszecka v. The Minis
ter of Manpower and Immigration, (1972) 23 D.L.R. (3d)
331, at page 334.
9 I refrain from expressing any opinion as to the effect
that can be given by the Immigration Appeal Board to the
evidence that was taken before the Special Inquiry Officer
(which evidence is before the Board as part of the "record")
where evidence has been adduced before the Board. When
no evidence has been adduced, the record is, sometimes,
given a certain status by Rule 18. When "further" evidence
is adduced before the Board or a member or under section
13, one view might be that the Board comes to the best
conclusion it can having regard to all the evidence. This
admittedly might give rise to problems. (How does the
Board decide a conflict between evidence adduced before
the Special Inquiry Officer and evidence adduced before it,
for example?) An alternative view would be that, when
evidence is adduced by the appellant before the Board, that
evidence must be sufficient to demolish the prima facie
validity of the deportation order. There are possibly other
views. Certainly, it would be well to have the matter settled
by the Rules. In the meantime, I find it difficult to believe
that the question is often likely to give rise to difficulty as a
practical matter. If it does arise, however, it should be
resolved in the light of the circumstances in which it arises.
10 See per Spence J. at page 710: "... the existence of the
jurisdiction of the Special Inquiry Officer and the Immigra
tion Appeal Board leads me to conclude that the whole of
the decision of the immigration officer is subject to review
and revision despite the use of the opening words of s. 34(3)
of the regulations."
You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.