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     Date: 20000822

     Docket: IMM-5822-99

Between:

     DEEPAK TRIVEDI

     Plaintiff

     - and -

     MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION

     Defendant


     REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER

DENAULT J.


[1]      The very able submissions of counsel for the plaintiff did not succeed in persuading the Court that it should intervene in the case at bar to quash the decision of the visa officer.

[2]      The Court recognizes that at first sight the time allowed the plaintiff to attend the interview of October 4, 1999 was very short, since the telegram of October 1, 1999 summoning him to this interview was not received by him until October 2, 1999, especially as the plaintiff had to travel a long distance to get to New Delhi. However, according to the affidavit of the visa officer the plaintiff was summoned by letter on September 3, 1999 -- he did not deny receiving it -- and the officer's assistant telephoned him and obtained confirmation that he would be attending the interview of October 4, 1999. The plaintiff did not request a postponement -- the letter invited to do so if necessary -- and submitted no complaint about the short time allowed for this interview. The Court considers that in these circumstances the visa officer did not infringe the rules of natural justice.

[3]      Additionally, there is no basis for intervening in the assessment of the plaintiff's language abilities, especially regarding spoken and written English. It was not unreasonable for the visa officer to award no points for spoken English when most of the interview had to be conducted with the assistance of an interpreter.

[4]      As regards written English, even taking into account the letters sent to the immigration authorities by the plaintiff before the interview and the test he wrote at the request of the visa officer, it was not unreasonable for the latter to conclude that the plaintiff did not write English either fluently or readily -- even though he indicated in his application for permanent residence that he spoke, read and wrote English fluently. As he concluded that the plaintiff had difficulty writing English, the visa officer could not award any points for this ability.1 Even if the officer had found that the plaintiff wrote English "with ease" he would still not have been entitled to more than the two points awarded.2

[5]      There is nothing in the assessment of the personality factor, for which the visa awarded the plaintiff four points, to justify the Court's intervention.

[6]      The application for judicial review is accordingly dismissed.

     ORDER

     The application for judicial review is dismissed.


     PIERRE DENAULT

     Judge

Certified true translation




Suzanne M. Gauthier, LL.L. Trad. a.


     FEDERAL COURT OF CANADA

     TRIAL DIVISION

     NAMES OF COUNSEL AND SOLICITORS OF RECORD


FILE:          IMM-5822-99
STYLE OF CAUSE:      Deepak Trivedi

             - and -

             The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration

PLACE OF HEARING:      Montréal, Quebec
DATE OF HEARING:      August 16, 2000
REASONS FOR ORDER BY:      Denault J.
DATED:          August 22, 2000

APPEARANCES:

Sylvie Tardiff          FOR THE APPLICANT
Christine Bernard      FOR THE RESPONDENT

SOLICITORS OF RECORD:

Brownstein, Brownstein & Associés      FOR THE APPLICANT

Westmount, Quebec

Morris Rosenberg      FOR THE RESPONDENT

Deputy Attorney General of Canada

__________________

1      Immigration Act, Schedule I, factor 8(1)(c).

2      Immigration Act, Schedule I, factor 8(3)(b).

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