Thank you computergeek for explaining that. We didn't even live together or do anything together at all.computergeek said:Having a former common-law partner is not grounds for refusal. From your brief description, it sounds like you aren't even sure if what you had qualified as a common law relationship ("... we never stayed together or have any serious relationship...") So, even if CIC were to find out about your previous relationship AND decide it was common-law, it wouldn't rise to the level of fraud if you had a reasonable belief it did not qualify as a common law relationship.
If you didn't live together, I don't see how it could have been common-law.
For the purposes of Immigration, a common-law relationship is an exclusive conjugal relationship involving at least one year cohabitation. If the relationship was not serious and you didn't live together, as you say, then no, this person was not your common-law partner as defined by CIC and you did not misrepresent yourself by answering "NO".Josephs said:I used to have someone like a common law partner in the country where I'm living now, but we never stayed together or have any serious relationship. When the form as me if I have ever had a common law partner i write NO. Can this lead to refusal of my visa?
Thank you so much.CharlieD10 said:For the purposes of Immigration, a common-law relationship is an exclusive conjugal relationship involving at least one year cohabitation. If the relationship was not serious and you didn't live together, as you say, then no, this person was not your common-law partner as defined by CIC and you did not misrepresent yourself by answering "NO".
I don't know much but I think you should tell your wife to bring the original copy to the airport to meet you.IndianOcean said:Hey guys,
I will be landing in Montreal next week, can I provide them with a copy of CSQ instead of the original one? Since the original is with my wife back in Montreal.
Is there any problems with that?
Thanks
A Canadian Citizen does not need to return to Canada to initiate sponsorship (just has to be able to show a qualified plan for doing so.) Similarly, the children of a Citizen are themselves Canadian Citizens, regardless of where they are born, so all THEY need are certificates of citizenship so they can obtain Canadian passports.POLICAP said:Hi Every one. Please I need clarifications to this questions.
Under In Canada Spouse application for PR.
Assuming a permanent resident/citizen who lived outside the country for while married and have kids. Now decided to come back to Canada with the wife and the kids under visitor visas.
1.Can he sponsor the wife and the kids under In Canada spouse application for PR?
2. How are they going to process the kids application as a dependants of the spouse ? .
Thanks.
If they are just waiting on medicals, then you are near the end of the journey (although there is NO guarantee that something else won't go wrong!) Did you reply to that e-mail? Did you send the original copy of your IMM 1017 EFC form (from the DMP, with your picture and the DMP's seal all over it.)macbook said:Hi guys,
we have a very straight forward common law applicaticon, done overseas in europe. we filled it last october but with no medical as per VO request, now 2 weeks ago they sent us an email asking for the medical, which has been already done. the average processing time for this VO is 8 months.
1.would any of you say that the visa is very close to being issued as they have asked for the medical?
Yes, they would. And they reserve the right to do so right up to the bitter end. Did you order a copy of your CAIPS/GCMS notes? They would tell you where the visa office is with respect to this whole process. They PROBABLY would have asked BEFORE asking for medicals. But again, there's no guarantee.macbook said:2.would they have asked for an interview first if they had any doubts about our relationship?
Um, no. That would mean you don't intend on leaving. You should have a return ticket. If you think it quite likely you won't use it, get a REFUNDABLE return ticket, say 4-5 months after your arrival date. Even if your PR hasn't arrived, you can always cancel your return ticket and apply for an extension of your VR - after all, plans DO change.macbook said:3. we already bought the plane tickets for april, in case the visa is not issued until then, can i just say at the border that i intend to wait out the visa in the country as i do not have a return ticket? would that be ok? i come from a visa exempt country and have entried canada before
I've never seen a COPR (someday, I hope) but I would expect it needs to be an original letter, not a copy, so I would expect them to mail it. Even if they CAN e-mail it, they can also send it via physical mail - so make sure it goes to an address where someone who obtains it can forward it to you. In theory you could update the mailing address once you are in Canada to your Canadian address.macbook said:4.the COPR is sent to the mailing address? or is everything processed by email as it has been so far?