As I understand I can enter Canada by road from US side (B1) visa on expired PR card. At the most border officer will report my case of not meeting RO/returning after 6 years. I will still be allowed to enter and work until decision on my PR revoke case is made.
Yes, TECHNICALLY you can enter Canada as a matter of right. And if you arrive at a PoE on the U.S. border, you can stand on that right and the border officials will allow YOU to enter.am in similar situation - my PR card expired an year ago and I don't meet RO by 500 days. Not in Canada since last 6 years.
I hv US B1travel visa, if I enter Canada via land from US , I understand border officer will report my case to immigration and process of removing my PR begins and I will have 30 days to file for appeal in Canada. I am ok with this. But.
1. Can there be a scenario that border officer do not allow me enter Canada with expired PR card and not meeting RO and out of Canada for last 6 years?
2. Also, I am married now and have kid, do that have to apply for visitor visa in order to travel with me? Or there is something dependant visa for them?
That does NOT mean your child will be allowed entry. And if the child is traveling WITH YOU, that complicates things, complicates things a lot.
Frankly, UNLESS you have good H&C reasons to explain your absence, it is difficult to perceive WHY you are considering this. And if you do have a strong H&C case, and you want the child to accompany you, the more sensible approach would be to make a PR Travel Document application based on H&C grounds.
Individually, ALONE, it may make sense to come to Canada via the U.S., so that you can for sure enter Canada. Take your chances so to say. Or recognizing you will only be allowed to remain in Canada temporarily. Your reasons, expectations, and intentions are for you to consider.
But being accompanied by a child who does not have status changes the dynamics considerably.
If the child is not visa-exempt, the child will need a visa. That route is complicated, probably NOT workable, at least not in a way that would allow the child to accompany you.
EVEN IF the child is visa-exempt, if the child is accompanying you upon your arrival at the PoE, the combination of your expired PR card, your lengthy absence, and a child without status, will almost certainly trigger a referral to Secondary and a more probing examination of your status, including in particular your history of absence from Canada. I cannot forecast how this will go. A lot could depend on a wide, wide range of personal circumstances, including any plausible H&C reasons for the delay in coming to Canada, including any other compelling reasons for why Canadian authorities should allow your child to enter Canada DESPITE YOUR status as INADMISSIBLE.
In the past border officials were sometimes known to pressure Inadmissible PRs to renounce their PR status and then apply for visitor status. Technically the border officials could not deny entry to a PR who declines to renounce PR status, but it appears the officials would sometimes frame things in a way that made some Inadmissible PRs believe they would not be allowed to enter Canada except as a visitor. Purportedly CBSA has been doing better and not pressuring PRs in this way. It is not clear to what extent they are even advising PRs that they can renounce PR status and apply for visitor status.
Potential PoE Standoff (of a sort):
You asked "Can there be a scenario that border officer do not allow me enter Canada . . . " No, not you ALONE. But, they can deny allowing you to enter accompanied by a child without status.
TECHNICALLY you have a right to enter Canada. TECHNICALLY the child can be denied entry. Will the border officials stand on the latter technicality if you stand on the technicality of your right to enter Canada? That's the possible standoff you might encounter.
I do NOT know that it would happen this way, but it is easy to see the leverage a PoE official would have over an INADMISSIBLE PR who is accompanied by a child without status. They can deny the child entry. Simple as that. Would they? I do NOT KNOW.
Again, for emphasis, I do not know how border officials will respond to your situation in particular. BUT this brings this back to the fact that currently you are, essentially, a PR MERELY as a TECHNICALITY. You are an INADMISSIBLE PR. Which brings this back to whether or not you have an explanation for the length of absence that would make a decent H&C case.
And which also demands recognizing there is an elephant-in-the-room: what is the planned trip to Canada about -- why are you coming to Canada. No need to respond about this here. This is more about the context in which border officials will be making decisions if and when you arrive at a PoE seeking to return to Canada accompanied by your child . . . basically about whether your situation will encourage border officials to take a more flexible, lenient approach. That is, your reasons for this trip will likely have significant influence in how it goes.