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Declaration of Severance of Common Law Relationship?
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I was in a commonlaw relationship for 3yrs. The relationship was disolved over 7yrs now. I am currently married do i need to submit a declaration of severance of common law relationship proof? I am currently married to a wonderful man and would like to start the process of sponsering him. I have no contact with my previous spouse and do not know where he is. If i need that declaration form how do i go about getting it? Any suggestion would help.
Not 100% sure of this; Im sure some seniors like PMM, Rjessome or ariell will answer if they know but, I would imagine that if you are married legally (in Canada perhaps or another country where the recognition of the marriage will not be called in to question) that the common law relationship can be seen to have ended due to the fact that you are legally married.
Questions that spring to mind are, when you were in this common law relationship did you sponsor the partner? If so, are you clear of any financial responsibility that may have accumulated? If you did not sponsor the previous partner, and simply lived together as Canadians in Canada, there doesn't seem to be any logic with declaring the end of that relationship.
I had the same question but found an example after searching a bit on the internet (http://www.canada-city.ca/canada-immigration/posting.php?messageid=8707). Essentially, you write a letter that has the same standard phrases and a similar layout as the "Statutory Declaration of Common-Law Union" (IMM5409E) but of course you change the middle part. Your ex does not need to be involved! Then it needs to be certified by a commissioner of oaths. We just went to the town hall (in Montreal, actually the one for our borough) where the receptionist could do it for us after paying $5. But others may do it too.
Here it is -- strategic places marked with (); hope that helps.
STATUTORY DECLARATION OF SEVERANCE OF COMMON-LAW RELATIONSHIP
Country: (country)
Province: (province)
In the matter of an application made pursuant to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act and Regulations and in the matter of common-law union, I, (name), of the city of (city), in the province of (province), do solemnly declare that:
1.The common-law relationship between myself and (name) ended on (date).
2.At no time since our relationship ended have we lived together, nor tried to reconcile the relationship.
3.This declaration is made with the knowledge that it is being relied upon by Immigration Canada and the Canadian Embassy in (city), (country).
I make this solemn declaration conscientiously believing it to be true, and knowing that it is of the same force and effect as if made under oath.
Name of Declarant: Signature of Declarant:
Name of Commissioner of Oaths: Signature of Commissioner of Oaths:
Declared before me at the city of (city), in the province of (province), this (number)th day of (month) of the year (year).
It depends on the Region Specific Guide requirements if you need this or not. If you do, follow the information and example amsyul gave which was great!
I am going through a somewhat similar problem - thought I would just continue in this thread.
I was in a common law relationship from 2003 - 2006 with someone.
We never formally declared we were commonlaw but lived together and had a bank account together.
I am now in a 3.5 year common law relationship with an amazing guy, who is sponsoring me to come to Canada.
It is ok for JUST ME to fill out a declaration that I separated from my ex common law partner in 2006?
Actually, it's not the same. The OP is married so her marriage certificate is enough proof and voids any previous common law relationships.
In your case, you have to fill out a declaration since you are in another common law relationship.
JuliaJ said:
I am going through a somewhat similar problem - thought I would just continue in this thread.
I was in a common law relationship from 2003 - 2006 with someone.
We never formally declared we were commonlaw but lived together and had a bank account together.
I am now in a 3.5 year common law relationship with an amazing guy, who is sponsoring me to come to Canada.
It is ok for JUST ME to fill out a declaration that I separated from my ex common law partner in 2006?
So if I understand correctly, if you were in a common-law relationship in the past with someone else and you are now legally married to another person, the marriage certificate would be enough proof to show that the previous union no longer exist?
So if I understand correctly, if you were in a common-law relationship in the past with someone else and you are now legally married to another person, the marriage certificate would be enough proof to show that the previous union no longer exist?
HI there, I am an Australian Citizen and ha sponsored my ex-defacto partner Australian PR. We are no longer together and not in touch. I got married to another lady and now we are planning to apply for Canadian PR through Express Entry. Do i need to mention about my previous partner in the section where they ask about the ex-wife or common-law union? Will they find out about this based on my Australian Passport no? Say I do declare about my ex-partner with whom I was for 3 years (we were not married, so there is no question of divorce), I provide with the Declaration of Severance of Common Law. Will the Canadian Immigration government ask for any other documents after that? If so does anyone have any idea what all they ask for?
HI there, I am an Australian Citizen and ha sponsored my ex-defacto partner Australian PR. We are no longer together and not in touch. I got married to another lady and now we are planning to apply for Canadian PR through Express Entry. Do i need to mention about my previous partner in the section where they ask about the ex-wife or common-law union? Will they find out about this based on my Australian Passport no? Say I do declare about my ex-partner with whom I was for 3 years (we were not married, so there is no question of divorce), I provide with the Declaration of Severance of Common Law. Will the Canadian Immigration government ask for any other documents after that? If so does anyone have any idea what all they ask for?
Hi,
If there was no children or no legal declaration (example: taxation), then I would say no. There is no legal question if you're commiting marriage fraud; and no chance of a marriage of convenience (which is ultimately why they need that).
That doesn't mean you can't submit one for completeness. But they won't be looking for every person you lived with.
Hi,
If there was no children or no legal declaration (example: taxation), then I would say no. There is no legal question if you're committing marriage fraud; and no chance of a marriage of convenience (which is ultimately why they need that).
That doesn't mean you can't submit one for completeness. But they won't be looking for every person you lived with.
Hi,
Thank you for your response.
No there were no children conceived and regarding tax declaration - we did have a common bank account for sometime to prove for PR application.
We dated from July 2012 onwards.
On Aug 2015, she had applied for Aus PR (me acting as a sponsor)
Jan 2016 we broke up and parted our ways. Since I promised to help with her PR - I didn't withdraw the application.
Since there was nothing between us, I got married July 2016.
We are still not in contact.
Her visa was declared May 2017. Got to know from the Mara agent.
So this is the situation.
Kindly guide.
Hi,
Thank you for your response.
No there were no children conceived and regarding tax declaration - we did have a common bank account for sometime to prove for PR application.
We dated from July 2012 onwards.
On Aug 2015, she had applied for Aus PR (me acting as a sponsor)
Jan 2016 we broke up and parted our ways. Since I promised to help with her PR - I didn't withdraw the application.
Since there was nothing between us, I got married July 2016.
We are still not in contact.
Her visa was declared May 2017. Got to know from the Mara agent.
So this is the situation.
Kindly guide.
You are required to declare your former common-law partner, regardless of whether you had children or any other reason. If you lie about the previous relationship, I'm guessing in an effort to cover up the immigration fraud in Australia, you will be committing misrepresentation. That is also fraud and can result in refusal and a 5 year ban from Canada.
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