My friend has a separation agreement with his ex.
The agreement states that if they require any information from each other that they must provide it in writing, they both have to present the information within 30 days and they can only ask once per calendar year.
Back in June the ex was asking my friend for money towards babysitting. He told her that he had no problem paying, he just needed the receipts.
She didn't give him any receipts, he questioned her a few times about it....never received any receipts. Then one day, she handed him a piece of lined paper that she had just wrote out months and a price beside them. (Is that proper proof? Would he be allowed to use that as proof for income tax claiming purposes?)
He was expecting actual receipts from the child care provider--so he hasn't gave her any money yet.
September 13, she sent him a letter asking for his 2009 and 2010 income tax summary's....but she failed to give him hers. She just wrote down my income for 2009 was ***** income for 2010 was *****
So he wrote her back explaining that if she wanted his income tax summary's, she needed to provide the exact same document to him. He basically said, since you just wrote your incomes down on this piece of paper--that is how I'm responding to you and he wrote his incomes down for 2009 and 2010.
He told her you first requested this September 13, so you have until October 13 to present me with your income tax summary's in order for me to provide mine.
October 13 passed and didn't receive any income tax summary's from her---according to their separation agreement, she cannot ask again until next year.
October 21, he gets a letter from a lawyer saying that his ex has retained her, she seen his correspondence with the ex, and unfortunately he has to still provide his income tax summary's and he has 10 days to do so, or they are taking him to court.
So do lawyers not have to follow the separation agreement rules? She had 30 days to present/get this stuff and failed to do it--the agreement states she can't ask again until next year.
The lawyer did include the ex's income tax summary's though
We noticed that she is claiming $9000 and some for child care costs and that full amount of $9000 and some is getting deducted off----does the government refund people 100% of child care costs??
or does this sound like she has 100% child care subsidy?
The agreement states that if they require any information from each other that they must provide it in writing, they both have to present the information within 30 days and they can only ask once per calendar year.
Back in June the ex was asking my friend for money towards babysitting. He told her that he had no problem paying, he just needed the receipts.
She didn't give him any receipts, he questioned her a few times about it....never received any receipts. Then one day, she handed him a piece of lined paper that she had just wrote out months and a price beside them. (Is that proper proof? Would he be allowed to use that as proof for income tax claiming purposes?)
He was expecting actual receipts from the child care provider--so he hasn't gave her any money yet.
September 13, she sent him a letter asking for his 2009 and 2010 income tax summary's....but she failed to give him hers. She just wrote down my income for 2009 was ***** income for 2010 was *****
So he wrote her back explaining that if she wanted his income tax summary's, she needed to provide the exact same document to him. He basically said, since you just wrote your incomes down on this piece of paper--that is how I'm responding to you and he wrote his incomes down for 2009 and 2010.
He told her you first requested this September 13, so you have until October 13 to present me with your income tax summary's in order for me to provide mine.
October 13 passed and didn't receive any income tax summary's from her---according to their separation agreement, she cannot ask again until next year.
October 21, he gets a letter from a lawyer saying that his ex has retained her, she seen his correspondence with the ex, and unfortunately he has to still provide his income tax summary's and he has 10 days to do so, or they are taking him to court.
So do lawyers not have to follow the separation agreement rules? She had 30 days to present/get this stuff and failed to do it--the agreement states she can't ask again until next year.
The lawyer did include the ex's income tax summary's though
We noticed that she is claiming $9000 and some for child care costs and that full amount of $9000 and some is getting deducted off----does the government refund people 100% of child care costs??
or does this sound like she has 100% child care subsidy?
Comment