miccanada said:
Hi there. I am a canadian citizen and I would like to sponsor my australian girlfriend through common law application.
We have been living together for a few years, but it was in a friend's basement... No lease, no proof. When my girlfriend renewed her IEC Visa she did so as single because we have no proof of living together, in fact my mail still went to my dad's house.
Does the single status on her IEC visa mean we misrepresented ourselves? we bought a house in may this year with both names on mortgage. So scared now as her IEC visa expires in May 2015.
I assume that both of you also did your CRA income taxes as single last year. Technically if you have lived together 12-months with someone and are common-law, legally you need to file taxes as common-law in the year you became officially common-law. Doing so as single and the CRA finding out later you were really common-law, would cause an immediate audit on your taxes and cause to repay any benefits you received as single that wouldn't have been entitled to as a couple. I'm not sure how good communication is between the CIC and CRA, but there is more at risk than just the IEC.
If it was my situation, I would do what Avadava recommended. However this is assuming while you were together in your brother's home, ALL your mail, bills, etc was being delivered to your dad's house, AND when you did taxes you used your dad's house as main residence, AND there were no other ties to your brother's house. If this is all true then for CIC purposes you could just say you were living at your dad's house.
For proof of common-law for PR application, a joint mortgage is the best proof you could have. So if you got this May 2013, then you could apply for PR in May 2014. Before May 2013, you were living at your dad's house and visiting your brothers house often. Since there was no proof of you being in your brothers home, even if you applied as common-law under your brothers home there is a chance CIC would reject that claim since you had no mail going there and no proof of living there.
Yours sounds like an honest mistake and even if she declared common-law on her IEC app it probably wouldn't have changed anything. Some will state that you should not misrepresent to CIC for any reason whatsoever, but again if i was personally in your situation, considering all the options I would most likely do this. At the end of the day you're a genuine couple and will be in a genuine common-law relationship, so that is the biggest factor to me. I'm sure many will disagree and please remember this is my opinion only, so you will need to do what you think is right.