Hello all,
Just wanna share my experience and ask for your opinions, hopefully this will help others too.
Became PR Oct 2006, Applied Apl 2014 with 1106 days under old rule, got RQ and send all required documents, all passport stamps in place.
Test Invite Dec 2014, passed test but the CO have questions regarding residence. " I cannot tell if you are established in Canada, you are not eligible for citizenship if you are not established." Then she said I would need a second interview.
Then I waited for another year, and got a notice to appear for a CJ hearing for Feb 2016 in Toronto CIC office. The judge started by asking many questions about before the relevant period, i.e. 2006-2010, where I spent most my time studying in a US university. He asked about where I lived when I landed in Canada, and where I go to during my summers and winters in university. It was 10 years ago and honestly I cannot recall all details about it. I was very honest to just say I cannot clear remember if I could not recall. He was just writing all my answers on his note.
Toward the end of the interview, though, the judge appeared to begin questioning my credit " I don't know if you are living in or just visiting Canada. That is something I have to decide. I still don't know what my decision will be. Please send me all the documents I required and I will make sure I look into every page of that." He also gave me the paper to send more documents, including all my credit card bills and transcription for UT and OREA courses. I did send him all the documents, and there are frequent activities in my bank/credit card statements that I was actually living in Canada during the relevant period.(Restaurants, phone bills, parking, supermarkets, etc.)
Then the judge said " They (CIC)found you xx days short of the required 1095 days." I was very surprised and challenged him immediately by saying that I was 100% sure that am not because I calculated my days carefully like a million times, there is no chance that I am short of days. Then he pulled out the FPAT and started going through every date of entry/exit on the FPAT with me. Everything was correct until the last date, instead of 04/02 which is April 02, FPAT showed 02/04, which is Feb 04. This lead to a reduction of 57 days of my residence and hence I was "xx days short". I immediately asked the CJ " Is that a mistake?" He immediately replied "I don't know, I will make sure I look into that later". It seemed to me that he was a little frustrated about it and did not want to talk about it any more though.
I have the following questions:
1. It appears to me that the CJ relied on CIC FPAT and presumed that I was short of days, so he chose to apply KOO test when conducting the interview. Or can he actually know CIC made the error and decided not to tell me before applying KOO at the interview? He did not even mention about my shortage of days at the beginning of the interview. I understand that a CJ could apply any of the three tests, but can the CJ still use KOO after he knows the applicant fulfills the physical and it was a human error by CIC? It is my understanding KOO applies only to those who are short of days and a CJ cannot blend tests to make decision, nor can he ignore the strong evidence that I did have enough physical residence just for applying KOO (Zhou. vs Canada 2013)
2. I have ALL US Entry Stamps and also I/94 Record, as well as ALL Canada Entry Stamps and CBSA entry record. They match 100% with my passport and information on my application and RQ. And FPAT did match my record EXCEPT for the last one. Are the dates on FPAT what CIC considered to be PROVEN? It they do, my understanding is that this counts as solid proof that I have fulfilled the physical residence. Am I correct?
3. I did have school transcripts and credit card/bank statements although I have never worked in Canada. The bank statements contains frequent activities in Canada, i.e., Restaurants, movies, parking, gas, pet store, grocery, etc. Are these enough to show I "customarily and normally lived" in Canada or do I have to be employed to prove that? Also my mother and brother lived with me together in Canada and they became Canadian. Most of my absences and short trips of 10 or less days back to my home country to visit family. Will these facts favor me of an approval if the CJ applies KOO?
3. If the CJ approves, what are the odds of t a CIC appeal? They calculated my days wrong on FPAT in the first place, would this make them feel less likely to win the appeal?
4. My Ecas was updated to DM on Apl 18, and no new line has been added when I click on it. It's about a month now. As I read on this forum, two other cases where the CJ rejected after hearing seem both to have a new line on ECAS " Decision has been made and you will be contacted in three months." and both received the rejection letter only a few days after DM. I was pessimistic about the outcome at first actually because the interview was not very smooth, but now I have more hope that the CJ may have approved my application. Am i correct?
It seems to me in that in my case, even if I got rejected, I will definitely appeal because of the following logic: Should the CIC got the dates right, they can of course still refer to a CJ for decision, But:
If the CJ did not know about the CIC mistake, then the CIC is responsible for KOO being applied. It's put additional burden on me.
If the CJ did know about the CIC mistake, he breaks procedural fairness and should have told me about the error by CIC in advance.
You are very welcome to share you opinions ,and again, hope my case could help others.
Fingers crossed, really hope that I can get approved and became a Canadian which has been a dream for years.
Just wanna share my experience and ask for your opinions, hopefully this will help others too.
Became PR Oct 2006, Applied Apl 2014 with 1106 days under old rule, got RQ and send all required documents, all passport stamps in place.
Test Invite Dec 2014, passed test but the CO have questions regarding residence. " I cannot tell if you are established in Canada, you are not eligible for citizenship if you are not established." Then she said I would need a second interview.
Then I waited for another year, and got a notice to appear for a CJ hearing for Feb 2016 in Toronto CIC office. The judge started by asking many questions about before the relevant period, i.e. 2006-2010, where I spent most my time studying in a US university. He asked about where I lived when I landed in Canada, and where I go to during my summers and winters in university. It was 10 years ago and honestly I cannot recall all details about it. I was very honest to just say I cannot clear remember if I could not recall. He was just writing all my answers on his note.
Toward the end of the interview, though, the judge appeared to begin questioning my credit " I don't know if you are living in or just visiting Canada. That is something I have to decide. I still don't know what my decision will be. Please send me all the documents I required and I will make sure I look into every page of that." He also gave me the paper to send more documents, including all my credit card bills and transcription for UT and OREA courses. I did send him all the documents, and there are frequent activities in my bank/credit card statements that I was actually living in Canada during the relevant period.(Restaurants, phone bills, parking, supermarkets, etc.)
Then the judge said " They (CIC)found you xx days short of the required 1095 days." I was very surprised and challenged him immediately by saying that I was 100% sure that am not because I calculated my days carefully like a million times, there is no chance that I am short of days. Then he pulled out the FPAT and started going through every date of entry/exit on the FPAT with me. Everything was correct until the last date, instead of 04/02 which is April 02, FPAT showed 02/04, which is Feb 04. This lead to a reduction of 57 days of my residence and hence I was "xx days short". I immediately asked the CJ " Is that a mistake?" He immediately replied "I don't know, I will make sure I look into that later". It seemed to me that he was a little frustrated about it and did not want to talk about it any more though.
I have the following questions:
1. It appears to me that the CJ relied on CIC FPAT and presumed that I was short of days, so he chose to apply KOO test when conducting the interview. Or can he actually know CIC made the error and decided not to tell me before applying KOO at the interview? He did not even mention about my shortage of days at the beginning of the interview. I understand that a CJ could apply any of the three tests, but can the CJ still use KOO after he knows the applicant fulfills the physical and it was a human error by CIC? It is my understanding KOO applies only to those who are short of days and a CJ cannot blend tests to make decision, nor can he ignore the strong evidence that I did have enough physical residence just for applying KOO (Zhou. vs Canada 2013)
2. I have ALL US Entry Stamps and also I/94 Record, as well as ALL Canada Entry Stamps and CBSA entry record. They match 100% with my passport and information on my application and RQ. And FPAT did match my record EXCEPT for the last one. Are the dates on FPAT what CIC considered to be PROVEN? It they do, my understanding is that this counts as solid proof that I have fulfilled the physical residence. Am I correct?
3. I did have school transcripts and credit card/bank statements although I have never worked in Canada. The bank statements contains frequent activities in Canada, i.e., Restaurants, movies, parking, gas, pet store, grocery, etc. Are these enough to show I "customarily and normally lived" in Canada or do I have to be employed to prove that? Also my mother and brother lived with me together in Canada and they became Canadian. Most of my absences and short trips of 10 or less days back to my home country to visit family. Will these facts favor me of an approval if the CJ applies KOO?
3. If the CJ approves, what are the odds of t a CIC appeal? They calculated my days wrong on FPAT in the first place, would this make them feel less likely to win the appeal?
4. My Ecas was updated to DM on Apl 18, and no new line has been added when I click on it. It's about a month now. As I read on this forum, two other cases where the CJ rejected after hearing seem both to have a new line on ECAS " Decision has been made and you will be contacted in three months." and both received the rejection letter only a few days after DM. I was pessimistic about the outcome at first actually because the interview was not very smooth, but now I have more hope that the CJ may have approved my application. Am i correct?
It seems to me in that in my case, even if I got rejected, I will definitely appeal because of the following logic: Should the CIC got the dates right, they can of course still refer to a CJ for decision, But:
If the CJ did not know about the CIC mistake, then the CIC is responsible for KOO being applied. It's put additional burden on me.
If the CJ did know about the CIC mistake, he breaks procedural fairness and should have told me about the error by CIC in advance.
You are very welcome to share you opinions ,and again, hope my case could help others.
Fingers crossed, really hope that I can get approved and became a Canadian which has been a dream for years.