Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-329-89
Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, the Minister of Employment and Immigration and William Hoogerdyk (Appellants) (Defendants)
v.
Said Mohamed Kigowa (Respondent) (Plaintiff)
INDEXED AS: KIGOWA V. CANADA (CA.)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Mahoney and Desjardins, JJ.A.—Vancouver, January 8; Ottawa, January 26, 1990.
Federal Court jurisdiction — Trial Division — Foreign seaman jumping ship in British Columbia — Detained by immigration officer — Action in damages against immigration officer for unlawful arrest and detention on basis Charter rights violated — Motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction on basis Charter not "law of Canada" within meaning of Constitution Act, s. 101 — Supreme Court's threefold test for Federal Court jurisdiction met: Immigration Act federal law upon which respondent's case based, essential to disposition and nourishing grant of jurisdiction by Federal Court Act, s. 17(5).
Immigration — Foreign seaman jumping ship in British Columbia — Detained by immigration officer acting under Immigration Act — Federal Court having jurisdiction to entertain action in damages against immigration officer for violating Charter rights by unlawful arrest and detention: Immigration Act federal law upon which alien's case based, essential to disposition and nourishing grant of jurisdiction by Federal Court Act, s. 17(5).
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Criminal process — Immigration officer, acting under Immigration Act, detain ing foreign seaman having jumped ship in British Columbia — Action in damages against immigration officer for unlawful arrest and detention as violating Charter ss. 7 and 9 — Motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction — Constitution and Charter not "laws of Canada" within Constitution Act, s. 101 — However, jurisdiction in Federal Court as meeting Supreme Court of Canada's threefold test: Immigration Act federal law upon which claim based, essential to disposition and nourish ing grant of jurisdiction by Federal Court Act, s. 17(5).
The respondent, a seaman residing in Kenya, jumped ship at Nanaimo, British Columbia. He was arrested by an immigra tion officer, the appellant, William Hoogerdyk, on March 22, 1987 and detained in custody until the following day. The immigration officer claimed to have acted under subsection
104(2) of the Immigration Act, 1976 which authorized peace officers to arrest and detain a person who is in Canada illegally "where ... the person poses a danger to the public or would not otherwise appear for the inquiry or for removal from Canada".
The respondent then initiated an action in damages against the immigration officer, alleging that he had no reason to believe that the respondent was a danger to the public or that he would fail to appear for the inquiry and that his arrest and detention were therefore a violation of the Charter rights to liberty (section 7) and not to be arbitrarily detained (section 9). The appellant had moved before the Trial Judge for an order dismissing the action for want of jurisdiction. This was an appeal from the denial of that motion to strike.
Held, the appeal should be dismissed.
Per Mahoney J.A.: Subsection 17(5) of the Federal Court Act, giving the Court jurisdiction in proceedings against offi cers or servants of the Crown, is inherently limited by section 101 of the Constitution Act, 1867, which enables the Court to deal with claims that require the administration of the "laws of Canada". And since the courts have decided that the Constitu tion Acts, 1867 to 1982, and therefore the Charter, not having been enacted by the Parliament of Canada, is not a "law of Canada" within the meaning of section 101, the Court would therefore have lacked jurisdiction to hear this case on that ground alone. That left the Immigration Act, 1976 as a basis for jurisdiction.
A threefold test to determine whether the Federal Court has jurisdiction over a matter has been established by the Supreme Court of Canada: (1) there must be a statutory grant of jurisdiction; (2) there must be an existing body of federal law which is essential to the disposition of the case and which nourishes the statutory grant of jurisdiction; (3) the law on which the case is based must be a "law of Canada" as the phrase is used in section 101.
Here, the statutory grant of jurisdiction was paragraph 17(5)(b) of the Federal Court Act. The law essential to disposi tion will not necessarily be the same as that which nourishes the statutory grant of jurisdiction. It may be that where the third element is supplied by a comprehensive statutory framework, that in itself can be taken as the existing federal law which nourishes the statutory grant to such an extent as to demand little in the way of discrete federal law essential to the disposi tion of the case.
Subsection 104(2) of the Immigration Act, 1976 not only defines the authority of immigration officers and others to arrest and detain aliens in Canada for purposes of the Act; it sets a limit on the right of aliens to be at liberty in Canada while awaiting an inquiry or removal. In the case at bar, federal law was both the basis of the respondent's case and essential to its disposition and also nourished the grant of jurisdiction by subsection 17(5) of the Federal Court Act.
Per Heald J.A.: The respondent's right to be in Canada and his right to freedom here emanated entirely from the provisions of the Immigration Act, 1976. If the torts of false arrest and false imprisonment alleged here were committed, it was because the plaintiff's right to remain free pursuant to the provisions of the Immigration Act, 1976 had been interfered with. The plaintiffs right to freedom and liberty came, not from the common law but from the provisions of the Act. Accordingly, the threefold test for jurisdiction had been satisfied.
Per Desjardins J.A.: Although damages had been claimed, the basis of the respondent's action was not a common law right of freedom from illegal arrest. At common law, an alien had no right to enter the country and no right of movement once having entered illegally. Whatever right of movement the respondent may have had was governed by the Immigration Act, 1976, a "law of Canada". The threefold test was met.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 44], ss. 7, 9.
Constitution Act, 1867, 30 & 31 Vict., c. 3 (U.K.) (as am. by Canada Act 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), Schedule to the Constitution Act, 1982, Item 1) [R.S.C., 1985, Appen dix II, No. 5], s. 101.
Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 2. Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, s. 17(5)(b). Immigration Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. I-2, ss. 12, 103(2). Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52, ss. 27(2)(j),
104(2).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
ITO—International Terminal Operators v. Miida Elec tronics et al., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 752; (1986), 28 D.L.R. (4th) 641; 34 B.L.R. 251; 68 N.R. 241; Roberts v. Canada, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 322; [1989] 3 W.W.R. 117; (1989), 35 B.C.L.R. (2d) 1; 92 N.R. 241; Rhine v. The Queen; Prytula v. The Queen, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 442; (1980), 116 D.L.R. (3d) 385; 34 N.R. 290.
CONSIDERED:
Northern Telecom Canada Ltd. et al. v. Communication Workers of Canada et al., [1983] 1 S.C.R. 733; (1983), 147 D.L.R. (3d) 1; 83 CLLC 14,048; 48 N.R. 161; Oag v. Canada, [1987] 2 F.C. 511; (1987), 33 C.C.C. (3d) 430; 73 N.R. 149 (C.A.).
REFERRED TO:
McNamara Construction (Western) Ltd. et al. v. The Queen, [1977] 2 S.C.R. 654; (1977), 75 D.L.R. (3d) 273; 13 N.R. 181; Oag v. The Queen et al., [1983] 1 S.C.R. 658; (1983), 52 A.R. 347; 41 O.R. (2d) 271; 147 D.L.R. (3d) 528; [1984] 1 W.W.R. 191; 29 Alta. L.R. (2d) 1; 33 C.R. (3d) 97; 52 N.R. 258; Marshall v. The Queen, [1986] 1 F.C. 437 (T.D.); Varnam v. Canada (Minister of National Health and Welfare), [1988] 2 F.C. 454; (1988), 50 D.L.R. (4th) 44; 17 F.T.R. 240; 84 N.R. 163 (C.A.); R. v. Governor of Pentonville Prison, ex parte Azam, [1973] 2 All ER 741 (C.A.); Quebec North Shore Paper Co. et al. v. Canadian Pacific Ltd. et al., [1977] 2 S.C.R. 1054; (1976), 9 N.R. 471.
COUNSEL:
Paul F. Partridge for appellants (defendants). Carolyn McCool for respondent (plaintiff).
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for appellants (defendants).
Legal Services Society of British Columbia, Vancouver, for respondent (plaintiff).
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.A.: I have read the reasons for judg ment in draft prepared by my brother Mahoney J.A. I agree with the result which he proposes.
The respondent (plaintiff) is a seaman who lives in Kenya. He entered Canada as a member of a ship's crew. He abandoned his ship while it was at Nanaimo, British Columbia. Accordingly, at the point in time when he jumped ship, it is alleged that he became a member of the inadmissible class of persons described in paragraph 27(2)(j) of the Immigration Act, 1976 [S.C. 1976-77, c. 52], i.e.—person who "came into Canada as ... a member of a crew, and, without the approval of an immigration officer, failed to be on the vehicle when it left a port of entry". The statement of claim asserts that the plaintiff was arrested by the defendant Hoogerdyk, an immigration officer, on March 22, 1987 and was detained in custody until March 23, 1987. The legal basis for the arrest was
said to be subsection 104(2) of the Immigration Act, 1976.'
In my view this respondent had no entitlement, per se, to enter and to remain in Canada. His right to be in Canada and his right to be at liberty in Canada existed only so long as he was a member of the ship's crew and so long as the ship remained in Canada. His right to be in Canada and his right to freedom here emanated entirely from the provi sions of the Immigration Act, 1976. The depriva tion of that liberty was also said to be pursuant to the provisions of the Immigration Act, 1976.
The issue raised by the statement of claim is a narrow one—namely, whether the defendant Hoo- gerdyk, in arresting the plaintiff, had reason to believe that the plaintiff posed a danger to the public or would not otherwise appear for the inqui ry or for removal from Canada. The statement of claim alleges that the torts of false arrest and imprisonment were committed. If those torts were committed, it was because the plaintiffs right to remain free pursuant to the provisions of the Immigration Act, 1976 were interfered with. Accordingly, the torts alleged are dependant upon federal law, namely, the provisions of the Immi gration Act, 1976. The damages alleged to have been suffered would necessarily arise from the deprivation of a right whose only source was a federal statute. The plaintiffs only right to free dom and liberty comes, not from the common law but from the provisions of the Immigration Act, 1976. Accordingly, I agree that the threefold test discussed by both of my colleagues has been satis fied and that the appeal should therefore be dis missed with costs.
' That subsection reads:
104....
(2) Every peace officer in Canada, whether appointed under the laws of Canada or of any province or municipality thereof, and every immigration officer may, without the issue of a warrant, an order or a direction for arrest or detention, arrest and detain or arrest and make an order to detain
(a) for an inquiry, any person who on reasonable grounds is suspected of being a person referred to in paragraph 2 7 (2)(b), (e), (l), (g), (h), (I) or (j), or
(b) for removal from Canada, any person against whom a removal order has been made that is to be executed, where, in his opinion, the person poses a danger to the public or would not otherwise appear for the inquiry or for removal from Canada.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MAHONEY J.A.: This is an appeal from the refusal of the Trial Division [T-612-89, Collier J., order dated 26/6/89, not yet reported] to dismiss the respondent's action as against the appellant, William Hoogerdyk, for want of jurisdiction in the Federal Court to entertain it. The statement of claim alleges that the respondent is a seaman, resident of Kenya, and that Hoogerdyk is an immi gration officer who was, at all material times, manager of the Canada Immigration Centre at Nanaimo, B.C. Hoogerdyk is alleged to have arrested the respondent at about 10:10 a.m. on Sunday, March 22, 1987, and to have caused him to have been detained until about 3:45 p.m., March 23, 1987.
The statement of claim goes on:
5. The defendant Hoogerdyk purported to make this arrest and to cause this detention under the authority of s. 104(2) of the Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, ch. 52, (as it then was).
6. The defendant Hoogerdyk had no reason to believe, nor did he believe, or have the opinion, that the plaintiff was either
a) a danger to the public, or
b) a person who would not otherwise appear for examina tion, inquiry, or for removal from Canada
within the meaning of s. 104(2) (as it then was) of the Immigration Act, 1976.
7. The defendant Hoogerdyk had no authority to arrest or detain the plaintiff except under s. 104(2) (as it then was) of the Immigration Act, 1976.
8. The defendant Hoogerdyk had an improper motive in arrest ing and causing the detention of the plaintiff.
It concludes by alleging that the arrest and deten tion were each a violation of rights guaranteed him by sections 7 and 9 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms [being Part I of the Consti tution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 44] ] and by claiming unspecified general and special damages.
The Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, provides:
17....
(5) The Trial Division has concurrent original jurisdiction
(b) in proceedings in which relief is sought against any person for anything done or omitted to be done in the performance of his duties as an officer or servant of the Crown.
Parliament's legislative authority is found in, and defined by, section 101 of the Constitution Act, 1867 [30 & 31 Vict., c. 3 (U.K.) (as am. by Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), Schedule to the Constitution Act, 1982, Item 1) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 5]].
101. The Parliament of Canada may, notwithstanding any thing in this Act, from Time to Time provide for the Constitu tion, Maintenance, and Organization of a General Court of Appeal for Canada, and for the Establishment of any addition al Courts for the better Administration of the Laws of Canada.
Thus, notwithstanding Parliament's apparently clear grant of jurisdiction over the respondent's claim against Hoogerdyk by subsection 17(5) of the Federal Court Act, that jurisdiction is inher ently limited by section 101. It exists only if the claim requires the administration of "the laws of Canada", as that term is employed in section 101.
In Northern Telecom Canada Ltd. et al. y Communication Workers of Canada et al., [1983] 1 S.C.R. 733; (1983), 147 D.L.R. (3d) 1; 83 CLLC 14,048; 48 N.R. 161, Estey J., for the majority, at pages 744-745 S.C.R., said:
Anglin C.J.C., in Consolidated Distilleries Ltd. v. Consolidat ed Exporters Corporation Ltd., [1930] S.C.R. 531, at p. 534, said that the expression "laws of Canada" must mean "... laws enacted by the Dominion Parliament and within its compe tence". I read the reasons of the Chief Justice of this Court in McNamara ([1977] 2 S.C.R. 654), and Quebec North Shore, ([1977] 2 S.C.R. 1054), as being to the same effect.
One final note should be added to this jurisdictional discus sion. The Constitution Act, 1867, as amended, is not of course a "law of Canada" in the sense of the foregoing cases because it was not enacted by the Parliament of Canada. The inherent
limitation placed by s. 101, supra, on the jurisdiction which may be granted to the Federal Court by Parliament therefore might exclude a proceeding founded on the Constitution Act.
It follows that the provisions of the Charter upon which the present action is founded are not laws of Canada in the section 101 sense and that we are left with the Immigration Act, 1976 as a basis for jurisdiction.
The Supreme Court has had a number of occa sions, starting with the McNamara Construction (Western) Ltd. et al. v. The Queen, [ 1977] 2 S.C.R. 654; (1977), 75 D.L.R. (3d) 273; 13 N.R. 181; and Quebec North Shore Paper Co. et al. v. Canadian Pacific Ltd. et al., [1977] 2 S.C.R. 1054; (1976), 9 N.R. 471 decisions referred to by Estey, J., to consider the meaning of "laws of Canada" in the section 101 sense since this Court was established in 1970. The presently accepted test was stated by McIntyre J., in ITO—Interna- tional Terminal Operators v. Miida Electronics et al., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 752; (1986), 28 D.L.R. (4th) 641; 34 B.L.R. 251; 68 N.R. 241, at page 766 S.C.R. I think it most useful to quote it in its most recent recitation, by Wilson, J., for a unanimous court, in Roberts v. Canada, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 322; [1989] 3 W.W.R. 117; (1989), 35 B.C.L.R. (2d) 1; 92 N.R. 241, at pages 330 ff. S.C.R., because of its context there.
1. There must be a statutory grant of jurisdiction by the federal Parliament.
2. There must be an existing body of federal law which is essential to the disposition of the case and which nourishes the statutory grant of jurisdiction.
3. The law on which the case is based must be a "law of Canada" as the phrase is used in s. 101 of the Constitution Act, 1867.
This test is well established as the one to be applied in every case where the jurisdiction of the Federal Court is in issue.
While there is clearly an overlap between the second and third elements of the test for Federal Court jurisdiction, the second element, as I understand it, requires a general body of federal law covering the area of the dispute, i.e., in this case the law relating to Indians and Indian interests in reserve lands, and the third element requires that the specific law which will be resolutive of the dispute be "a law of Canada" within the meaning of s. 101 of the Constitution Act, 1867. No difficulty arises in meeting the third element of the test if the dispute is to be determined on the basis of an existing federal statute. As will be seen, problems can, however arise if the law of Canada
which is relied on is not federal legislation but so-called "feder- al common law" or if federal law is not exclusively applicable to the issue in dispute.
Here, there is no issue that paragraph 17(5)(b) of the Federal Court Act meets the first element.
In refusing to dismiss this action as against Hoogerdyk, the learned Trial Judge relied on this Court's decision in Oag v. Canada, [1987] 2 F.C. 511; (1987), 33 C.C.C. (3d) 430; 73 N.R. 149, which he characterized as "the closest, among a confusing array of decisions of the Appeal Division of this Court, to the present situation". Oag brought an action in tort for damages against the Crown in right of Canada and a number of its servants following a ruling by the Supreme Court of Canada, Oag v. The Queen et al., [1983] 1 S.C.R. 658; (1983), 52 A.R. 347; 41 O.R. (2d) 271; 147 D.L.R. (3d) 528; [1984] 1 W.W.R. 191; 29 Alta. L.R. (2d) 1; 33 C.R. (3d) 97; 52 N.R. 258, that the National Parole Board had wrongly revoked his release on mandatory supervision. Stone J., delivering the judgment of this Court held, at pages 520 ff F.C.:
There thus appears, to use the phrase of Laskin, C.J.C., in the Rhine and Prytula case, "a detailed statutory framework" of federal law under which the appellant not only acquired the right to be free but also the right to remain so. It must be emphasized that, as he remained under sentence, the quality of freedom he enjoyed was not the same as that possessed by a person not under sentence. Its limits were demarcated by federal statutes. If the torts of false arrest and imprisonment were committed as alleged, they were committed because his right to remain free thus delineated was interfered with. I do not think that law need expressly provide a remedy for such interference for the claims to be governed by it. These torts, in my view depend for their existence upon federal law; any provable damages resulting from their commission are recover able in the Trial Division. I have concluded that the claims are provided for in the "laws of Canada" or "federal law".
Can it be said that the limits of the respondent's right to remain free, said to have been trespassed upon by Hoogerdyk, were likewise demarked by the Immigration Act, 1976?
The provision specifically pleaded is subsection 104(2) of the Immigration Act, 1976, now subsec tion 103(2) of the Immigration Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. I-2.
103... .
(2) Every peace officer in Canada, whether appointed under the laws of Canada or of any province or municipality thereof, and every immigration officer may, without the issue of a warrant, an order or a direction for arrest or detention, arrest and detain or arrest and make an order to detain
(a) for an inquiry, any person who on reasonable grounds is suspected of being a person referred to in paragraph 27(2)(b), (e), (/), (g), (h), (i) or (j), or
(b) for removal from Canada, any person against whom a removal order has been made that is to be executed,
where, in his opinion, the person poses a danger to the public or would not otherwise appear for the inquiry or for removal from Canada.
To date, in its reported decisions, the Supreme Court appears to have recognized two types of cases as involving the necessary application of federal law, absent express federal statutory pre scription of the law, so as to engage the Federal Court's jurisdiction. One involves the incorpora tion by statute into federal law of law other than statute law and the second involves the existence of a federal statutory framework supporting a cause of action even though its resolution may require, largely if not entirely, application of law that is neither federal legislation nor incorporated into federal law by legislation. The first category is exemplified by the ITO and Roberts decisions; the second by the Rhine v. The Queen; Prytula v. The Queen, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 442; (1980), 116 D.L.R. (3d) 385; 34 N.R. 290.
In ITO, Canadian maritime law was so found and, in Roberts, it was the common law of aborigi nal titles. In the former case, the adoption by Parliament, by section 2 of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10] of a definition which comprehended the non-statute law upon which the cause of action was based was found to suffice.
2. In this Act,
"Canadian maritime law" means the law that was administered by the Exchequer Court of Canada on its Admiralty side by virtue of the Admiralty Act or any other statute, or that would have been so administered if that Court had, on its Admiralty side, unlimited jurisdiction in relation to maritime and admiralty matters, as that law has been altered by this or any other Act of Parliament of Canada.
McIntyre J. at page 774 [ITO], expressed the conclusion as follows:
In my view the second part of the s. 2 definition of Canadian maritime law was adopted for the purpose of assuring that Canadian maritime law would include an unlimited jurisdiction in relation to maritime and admiralty matters. As such, it constitutes a statutory recognition of Canadian maritime law as a body of federal law dealing with all claims in respect of maritime and admiralty matters. Those matters are not to be considered as having been frozen by The Admiralty Act, 1934. On the contrary, the words "maritime" and "admiralty" should be interpreted within the modern context of commerce and shipping. In reality, the ambit of Canadian maritime law is limited only by the constitutional division of powers in the Constitution Act, 1867.
Likewise, in Roberts at page 340, Wilson J., stated her reason for concluding that the law of aborigi nal title was federal common law.
... the question for us, therefore, is whether the law of aborigi nal title is federal common law.
I believe that it is ... While, as was made clear in Guerin, ([1984] 2 S.C.R. 335), s. 18(1) of the Indian Act did not create the unique relationship between the Crown and the Indians, it certainly incorporated it into federal law by affirming that "reserves are held by Her Majesty for the use and benefit of the respective bands for which they were set apart".
Roberts is instructive here in two other respects. It reiterates, at page 338, the proposition, original ly stated in McNamara, that federal legislative competence is not alone enough to satisfy the third element. It also considered, at pages 331 ff., but expressed no concluded opinion on the "intertwin- ing" basis of jurisdiction propounded by the Trial Division in Marshall v. The Queen, [1986] 1 F.C. 437. It did suggest, at page 334, that "it does not appear to find support in the existing jurispru dence ... nor indeed in the wording of s. 101". This Court, in Varnam v. Canada (Minister of National Health and Welfare), [1988] 2 F.C. 454; (1988), 50 D.L.R. (4th) 44; 17 F.T.R. 240; 84
N.R. 163 (C.A.), held Marshall to have been wrongly decided.
The other class of cases in which the Supreme Court has found the causes of action to be sus tained by the law of Canada in the section 101 sense is exemplified by the Rhine and Prytula case referred to by Stone J., in the passage quoted from the Oag decision. That case was concerned with the recovery of debts by the Crown in right of Canada from private persons. The debts had been respectively incurred under the provisions of the Prairie Grain Advance Payments Act, now R.S.C., 1985, c. P-18, and the Canada Student Loans Act, now R.S.C., 1985, c. S-23. In the former, the debt resulted from the direct advance of monies by the Crown; in the latter, from the Crown's guarantee of bank advances. The ratio as to grain advances,
stated at pages 446 ff, was:
... it is contended that there is simply the enforcement of an ordinary contractual obligation which owes nothing to federal law other than its origin in the statutory authorization to make the advance.
I do not agree that the matter can be disposed of in such simple terms. What we have here is a detailed statutory frame work under which advances for prospective grain deliveries are authorized as part of an overall scheme for the marketing of grain produced in Canada. An examination of the Prairie Grain Advance Payments Act itself lends emphasis to its place in the overall scheme. True, there is an undertaking or a contractual consequence of the application of the Act but that does not mean that the Act is left behind once the undertaking or contract is made. At every turn, the Act has its impact on the undertaking so as to make it proper to say that there is here existing and valid federal law to govern the transaction which became the subject of litigation in the Federal Court. It should hardly be necessary to add that "contract" or other legal institutions, such as "tort" cannot be invariably attributed to sole provincial legislative regulation or be deemed to be, as common law, solely matters of provincial law.
That was applied, with refinements immaterial to the present discussion because of the guarantee, to the student loans.
I should probably refrain from adding to the array of this Court's confusing decisions but it does seem to me, with respect, that the very recent recognition, in Roberts, of the clear overlap be tween the second and third elements of the test suggests a basis for rational reconciliation of the confusion. The second element requires an existing body of federal law to do two very different things:
(1) to be essential to the disposition of the case and
(2) to nourish the statutory grant of jurisdiction. It speaks of the same body of law but it seems apparent that the law essential to disposition will not necessarily be the same law as that which may nourish a statutory grant of jurisdiction. Perhaps where, as in Rhine and Prytula, the third element is supplied by a comprehensive statutory frame work, that in itself can be taken as the existing federal law which nourishes the statutory grant to such an extent as to demand little, if anything, in the way of discrete federal law essential to the disposition of the case. In other words, the rela tionship between the parties being entirely a crea ture of federal law, the law to be applied in the resolution of disputes arising out of that relation ship is also taken to be federal law even though it is neither expressed nor expressly incorporated by federal statute. That would appear to have been the case in Rhine and Prytula where it is nowhere suggested that the law by which the debtors' liabil ity to the Crown would actually be determined was anything other than that by which liability for an ordinary commercial obligation would routinely be determined.
Subsection 103(2) of the Immigration Act not only defines the authority of immigration officers and others to arrest and detain aliens in Canada for purposes of that Act; it sets the limit on their right to be at liberty in Canada while awaiting an inquiry or removal, as the case may be. It is federal law which, in the cause of action pleaded here, is the law upon which the respondent's case is based, is essential to its disposition and which also
nourishes the grant of jurisdiction by subsection 17(5) of the Federal Court Act.
All three elements of the test are met in this case. I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
DESJARDINS J.A.: Said Mohamed Kigowa, the respondent in this case, is a resident of Kenya who jumped ship at Nanaimo, British Columbia. In all likelihood, he was then under a duty to appear` at a port of entry. 2 His arrest by an immigration offi cer on March 22, 1987 and his detention till the afternoon of March 23, 1987 prompted him to file an action in damages before the Trial Division on March 22, 1989, alleging illegal arrest and deten tion by the immigration officer.
The issue raised by the appellants is whether the Federal Court of Canada has jurisdiction to hear his case.
I agree with the reasons for judgment of Mahoney J.A. which I had the advantage of read ing in draft. I add only one short comment.
Although damages are claimed by way of relief, the basis of the respondent's action does not rest on a common law right of freedom against illegal arrest. Being an alien, he had no right of entry
2 Subsection 12(1) of the Immigration Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. I-2 provides:
12. (1) Every person seeking to come into Canada shall appear before an immigration officer at a port of entry, or at such other place as may be designated by a senior immigra tion officer, for examination to determine whether that person is a person who shall be allowed to come into Canada or may be granted admission.
under the common law,' consequently, no right of movement once he had entered illegally. The case at bar is distinct from actions in damages under the common law which the respondent might have in common with others. Had the respondent been hurt by a motor vehicle or assaulted, a civil action in tort would have been open to him like any other person in Canada. But here, whatever right of movement the respondent may claim to have and wish to assert is governed by the Immigration Act, a "law of Canada".
The threefold test giving rise to the jurisdiction of the Federal Court being met, I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
' R. v. Governor of Pentonville Prison, ex parte Azam, [1973] 2 All ER 741 (C.A.), at p. 747.
At common law no alien has any right to enter this country except by leave of the Crown; and the Crown can refuse leave without giving any reason: see Schmidt v Secretary of State for Home Affairs ([1969] 2 Ch. 149 at p. 168). If he comes by leave, the Crown can impose such conditions as it thinks fit, as to his length of stay, or otherwise. He has no right whatever to remain here. He is liable to be sent home to his own country at any time if, in the opinion of the Crown, his presence here is not conducive to the public good; and for this purpose, the executive may arrest him and put him on board a ship or aircraft bound for his own country: see R v Brixton Prison (Governor), ex parte Soblen ([1963] 2 QB 243 at pp. 300, 301). The position of aliens at common law has since been covered by the various regulations; but the principles remain the same.
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