English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

my ex-wife (custodial parent) signed the form for all future years giving me (non-custodial) the exemption until my daughter reaches 18 years of age. She now wants to revoke that form. She is going to take me back to court to get that back. What I've researched she cannot revoke unless I as the non-custodial parent refrain from claiming her. There is no way to revoke per IRS 200007031. Can anybody help?

2006-08-25 08:11:25 · 3 answers · asked by J W 1 in Family & Relationships Marriage & Divorce

3 answers

I would say normally there is no way for her to revoke. However if she goes to court and gets a judgement against you stating that she now has the right to claim the exemption, I believe she would be able to take the exemption.

I always have my non-custodial parents get a new 8332 every year so there will not be any questions.

2006-08-25 08:19:10 · answer #1 · answered by WendyD1999 5 · 0 0

Yes she can.

If it;s in the divorce decree, she can change that arrangement by taking you to court. Any amendment to the divorce decree have to be at least 3 years after the original agreement (depending on your state).

If there is no court appointed agreement, and this is in between the two of you, then yes, she can take you to court to have this settle. Normally, one year she would claim, and the next year you would. Odd years and even years until the child is 18.

the IRS 8332 is when the custodial parent forfeits the right to claim a dependent child on their taxes and is only good for one year. This form should be done every year at tax time, she was a real fool for giving you 18 years worth of signed forms.

The IRS revocation is that you mention is in reference of that years tax season, meaning that for that year (only) if one parent files, there is no way of reversing that (that year). This doesn't apply for future tax season.

I hope that that helps

Good luck

2006-08-25 08:42:56 · answer #2 · answered by Blunt 7 · 0 0

purely custodial ascertain can declare the teen. It does now no longer count variety quantity who's paying new newborn help. additionally, non-custodial ascertain can declare the teen on concern that the custodial ascertain alerts a launch style 8332 or there's a courtroom docket order assembly the IRS standards.

2016-12-11 15:20:33 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers