Getting into the weeds in regards to Mandamus is complicated. In practical terms, however, for purposes of CITIZENSHIP applications, there is little or nothing to be gained by looking to Mandamus EXCEPT in very unusual, distinct circumstances, and even then the assistance of a lawyer is virtually (albeit not technically) NECESSARY.
The mere passage of time does NOT trigger qualifying for Mandamus in regards to CITIZENSHIP application decision-making. An extraordinary long period of time with no action might indicate there is an INVALID reason why IRCC has suspended processing or put the application on hold. This could be, just MIGHT be, a basis for obtaining relief by way of a Writ of Mandamus. To be clear, the basis for obtaining the Writ would be the act of improperly (not lawfully) suspending or putting the application on hold, NOT just the fact that this or that amount of time has passed.
Overall, otherwise, however, there are NO Federal Court decisions which so much as suggest that IRCC (or CIC before it) is required by law to render a decision on a
CITIZENSHIP application within any particular period of time. Suggestions to the contrary are wrong. To the extent that arguments to the contrary are predicated on Mandamus cases in other contexts, those arguments are erroneous and the reliance on such cases (as to this particular issue, the mere passage of time) is misleading.
Reminder/clarification: IRCC has NO time limitations for when a citizenship application must be decided, so the passage of time itself does NOT constitute grounds for a Writ of Mandamus
Wrong!
My statement, the one you quote, which is explicitly about the process to make a
CITIZENSHIP application decision, is correct.
To be clear, as to making a decision on a CITIZENSHIP application:
THE PASSAGE OF TIME ITSELF DOES NOT CONSTITUTE GROUNDS FOR A WRIT OF MANDAMUS. Period. There is NO equivocating or waffling about this in cases addressing applications for Mandamus as to
CITIZENSHIP application decision-making.
Thus, by the way, this is NOT merely true "in a sense." It is simply, definitively true. True as to
CITIZENSHIP application decision-making.
The role the passage of time, in itself, might play in other contexts is a totally separate discussion, including in some other contexts involving citizenship applications, such as the passage of time between when an application has been approved and when the then candidate (applicant becomes a "citizenship candidate" upon approval) is given the opportunity to take the oath. In this respect, if there is a statutory duty to make a decision within a specified time frame (such as a Citizenship Judge's duty to make a decision within a specified time of the referral), the failure to make a decision within the prescribed time MAY (not necessarily will, but might) constitute grounds for issuing Mandamus.
There seems to be some tendency to conflate the mere passage of time with what constitutes an unreasonable delay in taking an action. This generally derives from confusing what constitutes evidence (such as length of time) supporting a particular argument (a particular "delay" is so unreasonable as to constitute a
de facto decision which is contrary to law) versus what the particular legal duty is that is central to establishing grounds for the issuance of a Writ of Mandamus.
EVEN IF a case that has
NOTHING to do with processing citizenship applications, like the (NOT a citizenship case)
Kanthasamyiyar Federal Court decision (2015 FC 1248, see
http://canlii.ca/t/glzvm or
https://decisions.fct-cf.gc.ca/fc-cf/decisions/en/item/126325/index.do) is looked to as a source illuminating the general principles involved and how they may be applied in a particular case, an effort to extrapolate the analysis about an "unreasonable delay" in that case and apply it in the citizenship application process is actually more misleading than it is helpful. Note, there are far better sources illuminating the general principles governing Mandamus than the
Kanthasamyiyar decision, such as the oft-cited 1994
Apotex Inc. Federal Court of Appeals decision (1 FC 742, 1993 CanLII 3004 (FCA) see:
http://canlii.ca/t/4nmr ), noting that
Apotex Inc. not only better states the general principles, it is a Federal Court of Appeals decision, and hence is
binding precedent, whereas
Kanthasamyiyar, a Federal Court decision, is
NOT binding precedent.
BUT to put the
Kanthasamyiyar decision in perspective, that case addressed a period of time adding up to
TEN YEARS, 10 YEARS. The underlying demand for action sent the Minister was made nearly
NINE (9) YEARS after the application for Permanent Residence was made (PR app February 2006; demand letter September 2014). While the Federal Court found, in that case, there was in those nearly nine years an "unreasonable delay," it was
NOT so unreasonable as to support a grant of costs.
In other words, for those who (erroneously) think that cases like the
Kanthasamyiyar decision will promise the remedy of Mandamus based on a mere passage in time, OK, sure,
WAIT EIGHT OR NINE YEARS and take your best shot.
Here's a worthwhile clue: while the passage of time itself (again) will NOT constitute a basis for granting Mandamus, the passing of extraordinary long periods of time without apparent reason will often derive from an overt delay in processing, whether that is in the form of suspending processing, a hold on processing, or some other mode in which the processing is stalled, for which there is an explanation, which usually will be a valid explanation but which in some cases is not. An invalid reason to suspend or put processing on hold can be (subject to other factors) GROUNDS FOR MANDAMUS.
The mere fact that a long time has passed is not the issue. What matters is WHY.
If the reason why such a long time has passed is a valid reason, the amount of time will NOT support an application for the Writ of Mandamus.
If the reason why IRCC is not actually proceeding to process a citizenship application is NOT valid, that will support the Writ application and can possibly be enough to succeed, even though way less than NINE YEARS has passed.
The basis for a Writ in the latter circumstance, again, is not how much time has passed, it is the fact that the Minister has in effect acted contrary to law . . . the reason WHY the application is on-hold or suspended is the issue. Not how long it has been in process (recognizing that the longer an improper hold is, the more unreasonable it is, the stronger the case for the court to exercise its DISCRETIONARY power to issue Mandamus).
Leading to this:
There are hundreds of cases where IRCC had been compelled to render decisions within a very strict timeline, Instructing the Minister's delegate to adhere by its mandate, in which it had originally failed to exercise, depending on the situation.
To the extent this is suggesting there are such cases compelling CIC or IRCC to "render decisions" on Citizenship Applications "within a very strict timeline," it is
a blatant misrepresentation. Note, over the course of the last two decades there are no more than a few dozen cases, IN
TOTAL, in which a Writ of Mandamus has been issued regarding citizenship applications, NOT a hundred let alone "hundreds," and most of these did NOT address citizenship application decision-making timelines but involved particular actions by the Minister, such as where a decision has been made and the applicant has been approved for the grant of citizenship and the Minister has refused to grant citizenship even though the time within which the Minister can appeal the CJ's approval has passed (see
Stanizai 2014 FC 74
http://canlii.ca/t/g2wb9 . . . worth noting, in this case the timeline between application date and decision-made was more than
FOUR years, no hint that time period was problematic, it was the failure of the Minister to grant citizenship AFTER the positive decision had already been made that led to Mandamus).
SUMMARY: Generally, even in cases involving rather long delays in processing, there is little or no reason for a citizenship applicant to be looking toward Mandamus as a way to compel IRCC to make a decision. There are RARE situations in which pursuing Mandamus is appropriate and can actually help (as noted before, in most such cases just a demand letter FROM A REPUTABLE LAWYER will suffice, no need to actually make a Writ application).
In terms of wondering how long is so long an applicant will want to explore what is happening and why, to determine if perhaps there is a hold or suspension which is not justified, timelines vary so greatly that is difficult if not near impossible to assess in the abstract. But overall the timeline in a non-routine case can slip well beyond a year or two years, and in some periods of time has gone longer than three or even four years, some of the latter reporting some success in getting CIC (as it was at the time) into taking some action through a lawyer-made demand essentially threatening an application for Mandamus.
BUT NO, there is NO two or even three year threshold, let alone merely one-year, which will trigger qualifying for a Writ of Mandamus. That is NOT how it works. Not even close.