It therefore seems to me that the first order of business (for the lawyer) is to determine whether the decision constituted (narrowly) a denial of the PR card, OR factually a termination of PR status. (If I have missed something in this thread about the specific language in the denial/notification of appeal period, then my mistake.
If the former, it may not be productive to pursue an appeal of the narrow decision, but rather to apply for a PRTD.
I am referring to two different potential appeals:
-appealing the denial of PR card now, after the allotted appeal period has lapsed;
-appealing (in future) a PRTD denial.
Again for lawyers, but I believe appealing after the appeal period has lapsed is far more challenging, as may have to be appealed on more narrow procedural grounds. If a PRTD application can be lodged (and denied), that would have its own appeal period that can be prepared for and met, and would not face the procedural issues.
This is very much what I have wondered about over the course of many years. Since I saw the one for-sure PR card denial appeal.
Researching and analyzing this gets
COMPLICATED.
Discussing this inevitably goes deep into the
weeds. And what I have so far been able to find leaves some key aspects unresolved. So any attempt to sort this out here is bound to be more or less an academic exercise and a distraction. Which tends to be my kind of thing -- which I try to keep under control when there are real and practical questions to be addressed.
Here the real and practical questions lead, emphatically, to the conclusion that
the OP really needs to sort this stuff out with the LAWYER. Enough background and explanation has been provided to illuminate the substantive issues and to acknowledge the biggest hurdle, the procedural roadblock due to failing to timely make the appeal. And that turning to the LAWYER about these things is the OP's only real option (well someone suggested possibly conceding loss of PR status and apply for PR anew, which may indeed be the OP's only viable path to establishing a life in Canada).
Thus, for the OP, to be clear: turn to the LAWYER. Or consider re-applying for PR anew.
Wandering a Bit Into the Weeds:
There are many IAD and even some Federal Court decisions which have definitely distinguished PR card applications, and eligibility requirements, from other formal Residency Obligation compliance determinations. Including the 2017 Federal Court decision in Geng v. Canada 2017 FC 1155 (CanLII)
http://canlii.ca/t/hpdvf and the 2012 decision in Khan v. Canada, 2012 FC 1471
http://canlii.ca/t/fv90w, in which Justice McDonald and Justice Zinn respectively specifically distinguished the regulations governing the issuance of a PR card (governed by Section 59(1) IRPA Regulations
https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/regulations/SOR-2002-227/page-14.html#h-686417 versus the statutory provisions governing Residency Obligation enforcement and compliance determinations, which includes Section 28 IRPA
https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/I-2.5/page-7.html#h-274598 governing the Residency Obligation itself, and Sections 44 and 46 IRPA
https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/I-2.5/page-10.html#docCont governing, respectively, reports for inadmissibility and loss of PR status.
Without taking the time to drill into the many decisions again (been awhile since I tried to sort this stuff out in depth; again it gets complicated), at a glance and as I recall, most (if not nearly all) the IAD and Federal Court decisions distinguishing PR card issuance decisions from Residency Obligation determinations, are largely about (indirectly if not directly) the validity of decisions terminating PR status for a breach of the RO despite the PR having been recently issued a new PR card. That is, and this is something I repeat here from time to time, even though a PR has applied for and been issued a new PR card, the PR can still be Reported and issued a Departure or Removal Order at a PoE upon arrival if on that date the PR is determined to be in breach of the RO . . . and for a PR who is abroad but needs a PR TD to return to Canada to pick up a recently issued PR card, if the PR has failed to comply with the RO the visa office can deny the application for a PR TD and that will be upheld (unless H&C reasons justify settling the decision aside). Some of these decisions, however, address the situation where IRCC has already issued a new PR card and then in the course of a counter-pick-up-interview the PR is determined to be, at that time, in breach of the RO . . . which goes off in yet an entirely different direction but nonetheless revolves around the fact that issuing and delivering the new card is distinguishable from a formal RO determination.
As noted before, one rarely sees things going the other way, rarely seeing a decision denying a PR card. And, indeed, the statutorily defined events specifying when a person loses permanent resident status, Section 46(1) IRPA
https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/I-2.5/page-10.html#docCont makes
NO MENTION of status being terminated when a PR card application has been denied.
MY
GUESS,
just a GUESS . . . which would circumvent the questions suggested here by
@armoured . . . is that IRCC does not actually "deny" PR card applications based on the failure to comply with the Residency Obligation. MY GUESS is that, actually, in some manner, in these cases, the FORMAL DECISION is the issuance of a Removal Order. Which when the time for making an appeal has expired comes into force and thus terminates PR status pursuant to Section 46(1)(c) IRPA.
Except, I have indeed seen at least one official decision which was, purportedly, the denied appeal of a decision denying a PR card application . . . and there are occasional (rare but occasional) reports like the OP's which specifically states that the PR card application was denied and that is the subject of their attempt to appeal.
Which invites the questions suggested here by
@armoured . . . as in what would happen if the PR simply ignored the decision denying the PR card application and either made a PR Travel Document application or was able to travel to Canada so as to arrive at a PoE seeking entry as a PR. (Whether by using a still valid PR card or traveling via the U.S.) And then, if a PR TD was denied, appeal that, or if Reported at the PoE, appeal that.
It is possible, and my GUESS still leans in this direction, that in these cases where it is stated that the PR card application was denied, they are still, actually, formally, cases in which it is *said* that IRCC has denied the PR card application, but that is more in effect given the issuance of a Removal Order which, pursuant to Section 46(1)(c) IRPA, is a decision terminating PR status . . . which can be appealed. (Note: the provisions governing appeals also makes NO MENTION of a right to appeal a decision denying a PR card application.)
Which brings up the observation . . .
. . . we have not seen the communications and appeals notice, so this is somewhat speculative.
Yep. My guess suggests that the formal communication of decision is likely in the form of a
Removal Order. But the OP reports a decision denying the PR card application. And, again, I have seen at least one IAD decision specifically referencing the subject of the appeal was a decision denying a PR card application. So . . . ???
Does not illuminate much if anything at all regarding the OP's situation, regarding which, again, the OP should be turning to and relying on the LAWYER.
So why even entertain this rather weedy tangent? The bigger, broader import is to put PR card applications into context. It is very UNUSUAL for IRCC to deny a PR card application for non-compliance with the Residency Obligation. As I have oft tried to emphasize, for the PR with a potential RO compliance problem, negative action resulting from a PR card application will almost always be one of two things:
-- a formal RO compliance examination, and if that results in a determination the PR breached the RO, the issuance of a Removal Order (not a decision denying issuing a new PR card), OR
-- non-routine processing, including Secondary Review, which can bog the application down in a very lengthy processing time, potentially adding a YEAR to the timeline (and in the wake of Covid-19, perhaps even longer)
But . . . it needs to be noted, that is about PR card applications properly made by PRs IN Canada. So, to be clear, so far as I have seen reports about PR card applications being "denied," all those involve PRs who are ABROAD. Which includes the OP's case AND includes one official case I have seen, that PR likewise was outside Canada.