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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Me versus the IRS.
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<blockquote data-quote="Rochard" data-source="post: 2550564" data-attributes="member: 17155"><p>The IRS is impossible to deal with. </p><p></p><p>My salary in 2001 more than tripled, and I got a $10k bonus that wasn't taxed. The next year I again owed a huge amount of money. </p><p></p><p>This last Valentine's Day the IRS slammed me into a wall. They put lien on my house, and garnished my wages until the point where I would be making $1200 a month (less than my house payment). How in the world the IRS has the right to do this is beyond me; This would have put in bankruptcy in less than two or three months. </p><p></p><p>Instead of paying them I sunk all of my money into an attorney with the primary goal of stopping the garnishment, and was able to stop them from taking nearly all of my wages. We refianced our house to pay off the IRS, and also came into some money due to a death in the family and my brother also decided to pay off some money he had borrowed from me two year prior. </p><p></p><p>But that wasn't the end of my IRS problems. We were short on our final payment by six cents and the IRS seems to have the legal right to fine us for this - to the tune of $1200. I was six cents short on my final payment and they fined me $1200. So now I'm fighting this, and it's gonna cost me at least $1200 in attorney fees. However, I'd rather have it go to my attorney than the IRS.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Rochard, post: 2550564, member: 17155"] The IRS is impossible to deal with. My salary in 2001 more than tripled, and I got a $10k bonus that wasn't taxed. The next year I again owed a huge amount of money. This last Valentine's Day the IRS slammed me into a wall. They put lien on my house, and garnished my wages until the point where I would be making $1200 a month (less than my house payment). How in the world the IRS has the right to do this is beyond me; This would have put in bankruptcy in less than two or three months. Instead of paying them I sunk all of my money into an attorney with the primary goal of stopping the garnishment, and was able to stop them from taking nearly all of my wages. We refianced our house to pay off the IRS, and also came into some money due to a death in the family and my brother also decided to pay off some money he had borrowed from me two year prior. But that wasn't the end of my IRS problems. We were short on our final payment by six cents and the IRS seems to have the legal right to fine us for this - to the tune of $1200. I was six cents short on my final payment and they fined me $1200. So now I'm fighting this, and it's gonna cost me at least $1200 in attorney fees. However, I'd rather have it go to my attorney than the IRS. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
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Me versus the IRS.
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