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Taxes
Let me run this by you, for 4yrs now i have not lived in the city that has contacted me, last yr they nailed me with a fine for not paying them taxes and it costed me a arm and a leg, i never talked with my lawyer or anything just paid them, this yr i live about 70min south of the city have never been back to the city i have moved twice this yr, so i have to pay 2 city taxes, i come home to a certified letter from my mail guy from my old city that raked me last yr with a form requesting payment for this yr, anyone have any ideas on how to fight this, at this rate, im gonna end up paying like 7% to the citys and that sucks serious balls :Oh crap
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hire an accountant.
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thats what im thinking but i dont know if he will be able to help me or have to talk to a lawyer or save a little cash and tell them to fuck off, not one check has that addresse on it in 4yrs, all my new cars all say the present addresse or the one prior and none have said that addresse in 4yrs, etc, i wanna know why they got this addresse and how and why did they send it here
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I've never filed city taxes in my life... :Oh crap
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how in the hell, i moved and before the end of the yr and paid that city in full, then at the end of that yr they sent me a paper saying i needed to pay, i said fuck them, to my surprise i was ordered for court so i just paid the big ass fine to stay outta court, please teach me the ways lol
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texas is a nice state
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Some cities charge income tax based on where you live, others based on where you perform your work, others based on your business address, and so on. It's entirely possible the request you received is in error but you'll need to show them why it's in error. The case basically boils down to what the laws are.
If you can't figure out the details yourself, you should hire an attorney. It may cost you more overall, but you need to do it. At least the legal fees are a deductible cost of doing business. If you do understand the laws, then you can try responding to the city's request yourself, explaining the residential and business circumstances for which you feel you're exempt from their tax jurisdiction. It sounds like you probably don't fully understand them at this point. |
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