Last year, my same-sex partner's application was denied, and one of the reasons given for denial was clearly the claim that I as the sponsor was allegedly able to cohabitate in Vietnam with him for 12 months in order to become common-law, and I chose not to. At the time, I had been in Vietnam together with him, and was planning to return to Canada for 6 months to take care of my affairs there.
If you refer to my post, I attempted to be quite careful and specific about the language I used, specifically saying:
IRCC seems to treat this as I think the program was intended by government - that Canada mostly expects that the reason spousal sponsorship (and conjugal) exists is to allow Canadians (PRs or citizens) to reside in Canada with their spouses, and the govt should not be in business of making them reside abroad to be able to return. Not to mention the practical aspects, like ability to work, etc.
So leaving aside that I think I tried to caveat that my description was by no means a complete one, and based on my impressions, the part I'm going to draw attention to is from your post above: "I had been in Vietnam together with him, and was planning to return to Canada for 6 months to take care of my affairs there."
So yes, you were residing together, it seems you were working together, and (if I understand correctly) your 'return to Canada' was intended to be temporary.
Or put differently, I should have said that they likely do approach each case on a case-by-case basis, and some will be found to be situations where (IRCC believes) the couple could have become common law
and chose not to. And, seemingly, there was no barrier to you residing there and working etc because ... you had been doing so for quite some time (it seems, I'm reading between the lines a bit).
Yep, conjugal not meant for those cases, I assume is their reasoning.
PA and SPR have not provided sufficient information to satisfy me that continuing to cohabitate (and thus meet the definition of common-law partners) in Vietnam was not possible.
I'm bolding this part not to pick apart the case excessively, but because the "not possible" here is (in my opinion) vague. Because we all know that 'not possible' could be interpreted as actually impossible (from contrary to the laws of physics, a logical impossibility, or outright illegal) to 'not feasible or practical in normal circumstances.'
Reasonable people can disagree on what it means in context. I daresay a lawyer - if engaged - would argue strenuously on behalf of their client that 'possible' in the sense of 'not extraordinarily inconvenient, onerous, burdensome' is the
reasonable standard meant in this context.
Some here
seem to me to be arguing that a far higher bar of 'possible' is being imposed by govt - that eg a Canadian resident and PR should or must actually give up employment, risk their PR status, take on extremely high financial burdens etc - in order to qualify as conjugal. I doubt that the bar would be put so high, but it is - literally - just my opinion.
Unfortunately in your case, how it would come out even by this lower standard is ambiguous - for example, if you're a citizen, you would not be risking your status in Canada to live with your partner abroad - just as one example.
In other words, I don't think your case demonstrates that the government
will require most conjugal-partner sponsors to reside abroad and establish common law - but rather only that they might decide that in some cases, it is 'possible' (feasible etc).
Granted, there were other reasons given for the denial which were certainly more valid - i.e. although a separation agreement was in place regarding my first marriage, a divorce had never been finalized, and also my partner had never applied for a tourist visa to visit Canada - so there was no point in attempting any appeal based on the above point.
Even more so given that there are other factors that on their own may or may not be sufficient to refuse, or at least contributing factors. They at least seem to have used these as contributing factors, including possibly in rejecting the idea that covid matters should be taken into consideration.
However it still remains a big concern, as once we clear up the other reasons and submit a new application, I worry that Immigration will use the same argument above as reason for denial. The tourist visa situation now in Vietnam is that only a 30-day visas can be obtained, then a foreigner must apply for another visa, leave the country and enter VN again using the new visa, month after month. There is no indication from the government how many times this can be done consecutively. So far, people have been able to do it for 10 months now, but that situation could change at any time.
All of my above, unfortunately, does not answer the question you have about how to proceed given what was done before. I would
suggest that having TRV refusals in hand, dealing with the separation issue
and outlining in detail why it would not be practical or feasible for you to give up your life/work/etc in Canada to establish common law - taken together, these
might be enough. But I don't know.
Yours is a case where I would recommend speaking to a lawyer (at least for a consult), and considering whether getting married is now possible (somewhere).
And a remidner of why many here suggest - often - that conjugal really should be seen as 'extraordinary' and if couples can get married or establish common law, that is more certain and less risky than applying conjugal.
[And if it wasn't clear - my sympathies, it's unfortunate that you and your partner have to go through this. Woudl that it were not so.]