In response to case 1: Upon reading the
Nationality Act of 1940, sec. 310 (b)(2), it states that an 'alien married on or after May 24, 1934 to a US citizen is eligible for naturalization upon full and complete compliance of the requirements of naturalization laws, with the exception of having resided in the US for three years prior to filing for naturalization instead of the required five'. So this means that upon marrying an American citizen, Kayjulia's mother would not have been automatically naturalized, and that she can choose not to naturalize as an American and remain a British subject. Paragraph 10(2) of the 1914 Act says that 'if a British woman marries an alien, she would not lose her British status simply because of the marriage, unless she acquires her husband's nationality automatically because of marriage', which is not the case under the Nationality Act of 1940. So I think this makes case 1 invalid.
In response to case 2: If Kayjulia's mother was born in 1915, and moved to the US with her parents in 1944, that means she was at least 28 years old. I admit that I do not know if under British law and at 28 years old and still under the guardianship of her parents that she would still be considered a minor child back in 1944, but today, she would be considered an adult. So if she would also be considered an adult in 1944, paragraph 12(1) of the 1914 Act would not apply to her when she moved to the US with her parents, and therefore if her father loses his British status, she would not because she is no longer his minor child. So I think because of this, case 2 is also without merit.
But back to my argument for 3(1)(l). Let's say that Kayjulia's mother did lose her British status because of either she automatically acquired her husband's citizenship under paragraph 10(2), or because of her father acquired a foreign nationality while she was still a child under paragraph 12(1). Both are regarded as prior legislations that caused Kayjulia's mother to lose her British status; therefore, 3(1)(l) declares that Kayjulia's mother is now a Canadian citizen because she lost her British status before 1949, but not by renouncing it, or having it revoked (which again I will point out that it can only affect those that were granted British nationality, not natural-born British subjects like Kayjulia's mother), as listed under 3(2.3) as exceptions for which 3(1)(l) can not be applied.
Except that there is nowhere stated that you have to get the other citizenship immediately. Actually all it takes to file for USA citizenship under special conditions for foreigners that have married USA citizens.
That is the beauty of the British law, that it does not state the time.
So in simple words - you have married a Yankee? Yes. You did get his citizenship? Yes. So you are no longer British subject.
How I know this?
It so happens what in my country we have also law specifically dealing with a citizenship that you get because of a marriage.
It is like this - if you try to get a dual citizenship you will loose your own. But there is an exception. If you get a foreign citizenship because of a marriage (of course these days it is for both man and woman), you can keep your original citizenship.
So nothing more is written about it in the law itself. But there is an executive direction to that law stating:
That because of customs of different countries are different, officers dealing such cases should consider this clause to be fulfilled if you got the citizenship of your spouse during the time you were still married.
And in case of British law, there would be less explicit directions, so most likely you would have to go after previous cases, where judge would decide that a woman ceased to be a British citizen just because she got the citizenship of her husband while she was married to him.
So that could have easily been the case of his mother.
And when it comes to the second point. I do not know where do you have that info from, as no such thing was stated. The original poster only revealed that:
- his mother was born in 1915 in NFL. and so were parents of her mother born there (also in that case one might need to check history of that specific region and from when it belonged under GB)
- and a second difficult to read sentence - "She immigrated to the US with her parents in 1944 she had me". I do not know how you, but because how this sentence is written it does not properly inform if
She had immigrated to USA with her parents in 1944 or if her son was born in 1944. All that because that sentence is missing a DOT somewhere in the middle (or some words as well).
And because of that second option is possible (depending what it was suppose to mean).
And no. In the article I have highlighted is clearly stated:
had their British subject status revoked (or ceased to be a British subject as a result of the revocation of another person’s British subject status being revoked);
so in case her father getting an other citizenship, she would cease to be British because of that. And in case of the marriage as well.
So again in simple words. If she was not British in 1949 she could never acquire Canadian citizenship regardless if she was born there or not.