@thevisawhisperer
What is important to recognize about the
who-accompanied-whom issue, for PRs needing RO credit for time spent abroad with their citizen spouse or common-law partner, is that the outcome is
NOT certain in cases where it might appear the citizen was the one accompanying the PR abroad.
Even if the outcome
SHOULD be certain and favourably so. Rather, in practice, in fact, in SOME cases it is NOT. Rather, the outcome can vary. See the ACTUAL cases going the other way. There are many of them.
The approach you are referencing has been and still appears to be the USUAL approach, the approach applied in MOST cases.
But that is NOT how it actually goes in
all the cases, in a significant number of cases that go the other way.
There is disagreement among the authorities making these decisions. So far that disagreement has not been addressed let alone resolved by the Federal Court let alone the Federal Court of Appeals (only the latter would establish binding precedent).
The difference in our views appears to be about claiming what will for-sure happen versus recognizing what can happen in some cases.
SUMMARY: it is a mistake to not recognize there are in fact different approaches to this issue, by the authorities who make these decisions, and sometimes, for some PRs, who-accompanied-whom can make a difference in whether they get credit toward RO compliance.
That is, if it is not clear the PR is the one accompanying the citizen spouse abroad, there is some
RISK who-accompanied-whom can be considered in determining if RO credit is allowed. Any assertion to the contrary is misleading.
When submitting these applications, I took my guidance from IRCC operational guidelines, which states in manual ENF 23 Section 7.5:
ENF 23 is a source I have personally cited, quoted, and discussed many, many times over the course of many years. And which moreover is specifically discussed in depth in the topic where this subject is addressed at length, in a discussion that itself has spanned nearly two years. I am very well familiar with this Operational Manual. I have been quoting it for more than a decade. But I am also very well familiar with scores of cases which REJECT its approach. (And many others which make it clear that the Operational Manual is not binding but finding it persuasive as to this particular issue.)
But yes, sure, those provisions in ENF 23, in particular, are indeed a key indicator of what the
likely approach is and will be in
most cases.
At least for now. Which in most cases means that as long as the couple are living together abroad ("ordinarily residing" together), the PR will get credit toward RO compliance for those periods of time.
BUT AGAIN THAT IS NOT HOW IT GOES IN ALL CASES. And that is NOT how it will
for-sure go in the future.
Notwithstanding what it says in ENF 23, there are NUMEROUS actual cases in which decision-makers in IRCC(CIC), CBSA, the IRB IAD, have indeed considered
who-accompanied-whom, and just for one isolated example, in the Gehrke case
http://canlii.ca/t/j4cms there was an inquiry into the intent and purpose underlying why the PR and citizen spouse were abroad. (That is, in Gehrke the panel more or less acknowledged the PR moved abroad together with, and resided with, the citizen spouse BUT because the purpose for doing so was for the PR's purposes, not the citizen's, the panel denied credit -- note, this is the most extreme outcome of these kinds of cases I have so far seen, as this was a couple who had been together for many years IN Canada before going abroad TOGETHER; I got the impression some discriminatory influence may have been a factor.)
That is, sometimes
who-accompanied-whom matters. And it is misleading to claim otherwise. It is really misleading to assure the OP there is no risk of a
who-accompanied-whom analysis.
Especially in regards to decisions that will be made years from now given that it is clear that the Minister, at least through the Minister's representatives, have been consistently arguing (including in the Louis decision you cite and quote), for years now, that
who-accompanied-whom does matter.
In this latter regard, in the PDIs which are being adopted to replace the Operational Manuals (like ENF 23), at least so far there is no hint that the credit is available to a PR ordinarily residing abroad with a citizen spouse, ONLY that it is available to a PR who is "
accompanying outside Canada a Canadian citizen who is their spouse or common-law partner." This happens to be the same language relied on in the arguments pressed by the Minister's representative and the same as the language interpreted and applied in cases DENYING the credit if it was the citizen accompanying the PR.
That noted, in most cases, SO FAR, it still appears that the reasoning and approach you reference is still being applied. USUALLY. BUT again,
NOT ALWAYS.
The trick (which to my knowledge no one has mastered) is to know if and when the other approach will apply, the approach in which the credit may be denied based on a
who-accompanied-whom analysis. Regarding this, again, make no mistake, there are NUMEROUS actual cases in which PRs have been denied credit toward the RO based on a
who-accompanied-whom analysis. That is reality.
Some additional sources:
Please realize I am NOT citing these sources as representative of how it will go for the OP or to assert that
who-accompanied-whom will be for-sure considered for a PR relying on the accompanying a citizen spouse abroad credit.
I am citing these sources to illustrate that there are cases in which
who-accompanied-whom is considered and can make a difference. At least SOME cases. As previously noted, the "trick" is to know if and when this approach might be applied. Discerning who is at RISK is complicated.
In contrast, for example, I could be citing many cases going the other way, going what I have described as the "usual" way, similar to the Louis case you cite. See In'Airat v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2019 CanLII 124093 (CA IRB),
http://canlii.ca/t/j4cls for example, or cases that explicitly followed ENF 23 like Turken c Canada, 2016 CanLII 64004 (CA IRB),
http://canlii.ca/t/gtw9d and Mustafa v Canada 2018 CanLII 47219 (CA IRB),
http://canlii.ca/t/hs76z.
But again, the following cases illustrate that the USUAL approach is
NOT always how it goes, so that those who might be affected are
aware of the risk that
who-accompanied-whom can matter:
Kirpal v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2019 CanLII 130765 (CA IRB),
http://canlii.ca/t/j5hmh
No credit given because citizen was accompanying the PR, not the PR accompanying the citizen; but H&C relief allowed
Haddadian v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2019 CanLII 130720 (CA IRB),
http://canlii.ca/t/j5hkm
No credit based on no temporal nexus in moving abroad (PR abroad was in common law relationship with a Canadian the PR met AFTER the PR was already abroad)
Ibrahim v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2018 CanLII 60499 (CA IRB),
http://canlii.ca/t/hst3d . . . specifically declining to follow the "not binding" guidelines in ENF 23, but rather persuaded by the Minister's representative who argued "
the term 'accompanying' requires the appellant to follow his Canadian-citizen spouse and not the reverse."
Khan v Canada, 2015 CanLII 99397 see
http://canlii.ca/t/grz8t "The time period after the Appellant’s spouse’s returned to Bangladesh in August 2010 cannot be calculated as days the Appellant spent “accompanying” his Canadian citizen spouse in Bangladesh. He lived there and she was there to be with him."
Khaira v Canada 2014 CanLII 95529 (CA IRB),
http://canlii.ca/t/gksqq "this does not meet with the definition under section 28(2)(a)(ii), as the appellant’s wife went to India to accompany him rather than the claim that he was in India to accompany her"
As well as anecdotal reports in this forum: see, for example the report by
@mhsaleh65 who was issued a Departure Order for failing to comply with the RO at a PoE;
@mhsaleh65 stated "when I added the days of accompanying my wife outside Canada, the officer rejected that on the ground that she was accompanying me and not the other way" See
https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/departure-order.577134/#post-7154399
I have mentioned that there is, technically, a third approach, sometimes referred to as the "temporal nexus" question. See Caesar v Canada, 2014 CanLII 99165
http://canlii.ca/t/gnf7w for example.