Patel v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration)
| Jurisdiction | Federal Jurisdiction (Canada) |
| Court | Federal Court (Canada) |
| Citation | 2024 FC 28 |
| Date | 09 January 2024 |
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9 practice notes
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Randhawa v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration)
...the decision-making process. Without it, the chain of reasoning is lost and the reasons are no longer intelligible (Patel v Canada (MCI), 2024 FC 28 [Patel] at para B. Was the RAD decision reasonable? (1) Omission of DCG prior to the hearing [11] I agree with the RAD that property rights ar......
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Singh v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration)
...Without it, the chain of reasoning is lost and the reasons are no longer intelligible (Patel v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2024 FC 28 at para 24 B. Was the RAD decision reasonable? [10] At first glance, the RAD appears to focus on material evidence and the decision appears to be r......
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Singh v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration)
...Without it, the chain of reasoning is lost and the reasons are no longer intelligible (Patel v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2024 FC 28 at para B. Legal Framework: sur place [9] A sur place claim is one in which a claimant alleges that they have a well-founded fear of persecuti......
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De Jurado v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration)
...the decision-making process. Without it, the chain of reasoning is lost and the reasons are no longer intelligible (Patel v Canada (MCI), 2024 FC 28 [Patel] at para B. Was the RPD decision reasonable? [11] In this case, the RPD declared credibility as the determinative issue, and largely br......
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9 cases
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Randhawa v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration)
...the decision-making process. Without it, the chain of reasoning is lost and the reasons are no longer intelligible (Patel v Canada (MCI), 2024 FC 28 [Patel] at para B. Was the RAD decision reasonable? (1) Omission of DCG prior to the hearing [11] I agree with the RAD that property rights ar......
-
Singh v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration)
...Without it, the chain of reasoning is lost and the reasons are no longer intelligible (Patel v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2024 FC 28 at para 24 B. Was the RAD decision reasonable? [10] At first glance, the RAD appears to focus on material evidence and the decision appears to be r......
-
Singh v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration)
...Without it, the chain of reasoning is lost and the reasons are no longer intelligible (Patel v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2024 FC 28 at para B. Legal Framework: sur place [9] A sur place claim is one in which a claimant alleges that they have a well-founded fear of persecuti......
-
De Jurado v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration)
...the decision-making process. Without it, the chain of reasoning is lost and the reasons are no longer intelligible (Patel v Canada (MCI), 2024 FC 28 [Patel] at para B. Was the RPD decision reasonable? [11] In this case, the RPD declared credibility as the determinative issue, and largely br......
Get Started for Free