and i was simply asking about a phrase or a law that states that if you leave Canada you are bound by a time
Here is a more detailed link to the regulations and operating guidelines:
https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/leaving-canada-temporarily-while-spouses-pr-outland-is-in-progress-sponser-being-pr-and-sponsorship-eligibility-is-approved.696170/post-9358435
This is how the 'law' works in this case - the relevant law says that IRCC determines through published regulations (I think order-in-council but not certain) what is required of a sponsor, and that says 'resident' in Canada. There's a further explanation in the operating guidelines that 'short trips are ok' (paraphrasing).
I have said repeatedly: that's as specifically defined as it gets. You can interpret that however you like. HOWEVER: we have cases where those outside Canada for much longer than a month have had their applications refused. Hence as a
prudent guideline to others, saying 'a month' is pretty good. Those who wish to risk it are free to do so.
As that thread notes however: be aware that there is no
effective appeal procedure that applies, because re-applying while the sponsor is in Canada is far more practical. And hence any quasi-legal arguments about what exactly 'resident' means are stupid.
versus ( the person that you referred to stated clearly that she was told you where not residing in Canada and that for sure it wasnt only about a 4 month thing it was much more then that ,even an immigration officer cannot create a story on your behalf there is another side of the story .[/QUOTE]
See above: there is no
venue or opportunity in which to explain 'your side of the story' (if that's indeed what your point is, having trouble parsing your language). IRCC is free to decide that you've exceeded their guidelines for 'short trips' and refuse the application.
As for the specific case you seem to be disputing the completeness of, here's the direct quote: "will come and say that I left Canada and I was visiting my husband for 4 months then they rejected our application on the grounds of me not being in Canada. I Applied for him since February 2020 and they freaking rejected the application after 3 months of knowing that I'm out of Canada..."
This does not seem to correspond at all to what you're stating. Sponsor says was out of Canada for four months and app was refused after three. Not a complicated story really.