This
case concerns a judicial review of a study permit refusal based on
misrepresentation under s. 40(1) of the IRPA. The Federal Court ultimately
concluded that IRCC failed to provide the applicant with the high level of
procedural fairness required in misrepresentation cases and granted the
application for judicial review
Background
The
applicant, a citizen of Ghana, applied for a study permit to attend Niagara
College and submitted financial documents to show she could fund her studies
which included a sponsorship letter from her father and a bank statement from
his account. During processing, IRCC became concerned that the bank statement
might not be genuine and issued a Procedural Fairness Letter (PFL) and
asked the applicant to explain how she obtained it and why it had been
submitted.
The
applicant responded by explaining that her father obtained the statement from
the bank and provided it to support her studies in Canada. She also provided a
confirmation letter from a bank official verifying the existence of the account
and the account balance.
However,
the applicant was unaware that IRCC had separately contacted the bank. The bank
advised IRCC that it could not verify the authenticity of the stamp appearing
on the bank statement and later stated that the document appeared fake because
the signature and stamp did not originate from the identified branch. After
receiving the applicant’s response to the PFL, IRCC again contacted the bank
regarding the additional verification letter and eventually refused the
application, concluding that the applicant had submitted two fraudulent
documents, including one provided in response to the PFL.
Court
Findings
The
Court held that the process was procedurally unfair. Applying the
factors from Baker v Canada, the Court ruled that misrepresentation
findings require a high level of procedural fairness because of their
severe consequences, including a five-year inadmissibility period,
reputational stigma, potential impact on family members, and restrictions on
future immigration opportunities.
The
Court emphasized several principles:
- In misrepresentation
cases, applicants must receive full disclosure of the concerns against
them, not merely vague allegations.
- If IRCC relies on extrinsic
evidence (information from outside the application, such as
communications with a bank), that evidence should generally be disclosed
so the applicant can respond.
- Procedural
Fairness Letters must reveal
the actual concerns rather than simply request explanations.
- Officers must conduct
their own independent assessment and cannot simply adopt
conclusions from third parties without analysis.
The
Court found that IRCC failed to disclose the bank’s concerns, did not explain
what document was allegedly fake, and appeared to rely blindly on the bank’s
statements without independent analysis. The evidence itself did not clearly
support IRCC’s conclusion that two fraudulent documents had been submitted.
As a result, the Federal Court allowed the judicial review, set aside the refusal, and ordered reconsideration by a different officer with full disclosure of any future s. 40 concerns and a fair opportunity for the applicant to respond.





