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Huang v. Canada, 2009, is a case where the applicant answered 'no', but where she had in fact applied for a visa. The visa officer found she had misrepresented herself. (There were other reasons for rejecting the application, though.)
https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/irb/doc/2009/2009canlii33696/2009canlii33696.html?searchUrlHash=AAAAAQArbWlzcmVwcmVzZW50YXRpb24gSXJlbGFuZCBpbW1pZ3JhdGlvbiBzdHVkeQAAAAAB&resultIndex=2

In Qin v. Canada, 2009, the judge says that it is important to look at whether the misrepresentation was deliberate or merely careless (paragraph 16).
https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/irb/doc/2009/2009canlii79997/2009canlii79997.html?searchUrlHash=AAAAAQAzbWlzcmVwcmVzZW50YXRpb24gaW1taWdyYXRpb24gZWxzZXdoZXJlIGluYWR2ZXJ0ZW50AAAAAAE&resultIndex=4
You can go to the CanLII website and look for cases there.

You will find that in most cases where misrepresentation is an issue, the appeal is dismissed.
 
canadianwoman said:
Huang v. Canada, 2009, is a case where the applicant answered 'no', but where she had in fact applied for a visa. The visa officer found she had misrepresented herself

You will find that in most cases where misrepresentation is an issue, the appeal is dismissed.
Thanks for you time :-*
I am convinced to write them an explanation letter, but my husband wants to go to a lawyer, hopefully he would be convinced also, as my husband is very calm and believes that officers working with their hearts and that they would understand that I made a mistake, so naive :P
 
Viking14 said:
Thanks for you time :-*
I am convinced to write them an explanation letter, but my husband wants to go to a lawyer, hopefully he would be convinced also, as my husband is very calm and believes that officers working with their hearts and that they would understand that I made a mistake, so naive :P

The only real option is to submit a corrected form! This would NOT require a lawyer and would give you both peace of mind, knowing that you've corrected your mistake.
 
Ponga said:
The only real option is to submit a corrected form! This would NOT require a lawyer and would give you both peace of mind, knowing that you've corrected your mistake.
Thanks for the reply )))
But I have some other small silly mistakes in other form, I feel ashamed, but not everyone can handle when there is a lot of information you have to remember and write down (((
I made a mistake in 1 year of my deceased father day, made a mistake in my Residence in Dubai, just forgot to mention that I vas first on Visit visa and then became a resident, directly wrote that i became as resident.
Feel so bad ((((, sorry guys :-*
 
Viking14 said:
Thanks for the reply )))
But I have some other small silly mistakes in other form, I feel ashamed, but not everyone can handle when there is a lot of information you have to remember and write down (((
I made a mistake in 1 year of my deceased father day, made a mistake in my Residence in Dubai, just forgot to mention that I vas first on Visit visa and then became a resident, directly wrote that i became as resident.
Feel so bad ((((, sorry guys :-*

We all made mistakes. The most important is you found those mistake before Decision made.
 
Viking14 said:
Thanks for the reply )))
But I have some other small silly mistakes in other form, I feel ashamed, but not everyone can handle when there is a lot of information you have to remember and write down (((
I made a mistake in 1 year of my deceased father day, made a mistake in my Residence in Dubai, just forgot to mention that I vas first on Visit visa and then became a resident, directly wrote that i became as resident.
Feel so bad ((((, sorry guys :-*

In all seriousness, meaning no :-*, or other emoticons...you have a chance to fix this mistake, by submitting an updated/corrected form!
 
thanks canadianwoman i will correct the form and courier it if thats the best option only that it will slow the process.
 
My father applied for Quebec investor category in 2012 and i am included as a dependent but latter on i was remove from the application at that time i'm not under 22 year of age...we called it rejection? ???
 
If CIC or the visa officer actually rejected you, then 'yes'. If you were just taken off the application by your father because of your age, then 'no'. In either case I would explain the situation. It is better to explain what happened than for the visa officer to have questions, which might trigger an interview.
 
canadianwoman said:
If CIC or the visa officer actually rejected you, then 'yes'. If you were just taken off the application by your father because of your age, then 'no'. In either case I would explain the situation. It is better to explain what happened than for the visa officer to have questions, which might trigger an interview.
Thanks canadianwoman...but i already sent Application. .so what to do now..send them updated form??
 
Your case is not as serious as the ones above, because you were taken off your father's application, not actually rejected. Still, once your application is at the visa office and you have a file number, I would send a letter of explanation about this to be added to your file.
 
Thank You Candianwoman