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12 January 2014 | 9 replies
Paid for indirectly by US taxpayers.
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9 February 2014 | 11 replies
They saw the error and within 24 hours they sent the tax payment including late fees to the city and they went back to the seller to get this portion of the funds back.
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3 April 2015 | 29 replies
Yeah I'm sure the taxpayers got their moneys worth alright but that is another subject.
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13 June 2013 | 6 replies
Hey Matt Rothwell, check out the paragraph that starts (3) Property used by the taxpayer as his principal residence.It's very open-ended, but it's the IRS' definition of a primary residence.http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CFR-2007-title26-vol11/xml/CFR-2007-title26-vol11-sec1-1034-1.xml
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25 June 2013 | 23 replies
You could always let her owner finance it and she can just keep making the tax payments.
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29 June 2013 | 28 replies
So taxpayers were paid back... over 16% more than invested.
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11 July 2013 | 20 replies
Here is a quick blurb from my research software:A taxpayer may exclude from income the gain from the sale of the taxpayer's main home if both the ownership and use tests are met.
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8 July 2013 | 7 replies
If foreclosure is looming and a tax payment plan is worked out, they will postpone the sale so long as the payments are being made.
10 July 2013 | 6 replies
Its up to the tax payer (the IRA, in this case), to file their tax return and pay taxes.