Yes. It must be done in conjunction with the court where the original child support order was mandated.
But what if the ex-spouse lives in another state than the one that awarded your your judgment? Can you enforce that judgment in the other state and will that other state allow you to put a lien on the property?
Once a judgment has been granted in any type of case, it can be filed as an abstract judgment against a debtor that lives in a different state. However, the main problem will be trying to get the order enforced in another state. The parent ordered to pay support can appeal under the UIFSA laws and keep the issue and the involved parties can find themselves facing years of litigation. It is not simply a matter of filing an application of enforcement with the N.J. court, receiving a judgment and enforcing the judgment as a lien against the person's property. This is a matter that is best handled by an attorney who is versant in FCCSOA, URESA and UIFSA laws.
Example of periodic expenses are; Car insurance premium,property taxes, holiday expenses, expenses on certain seasonal activities.
Funeral expenses are NOT deductible on an individual taxpayers income tax return.
Yes. You claim income that you receive in addition to expenses like repairs, insurance, property taxes, depreciation, etc. This is the case with me assuming that you are the owner of property that you rent to others and not rental property where you are the tenant.
Which of these provides the funds needed for expenses such as property taxes, homeowners insurance, mortgage insurance, etc.?
A rental property investment analysis consists of the property that you buy. And it also applies to the expenses that you have to put in it to rent it out.
Jones bought an income property for which $47,000.00 was deducted from gross income for operating expenses. If the operating expenses are 30% of gross income, the value of the property using a cap rate of 12.5%?
Your own liability insurance will never pay for the damage to your property or for your medical expenses. Your collision insurance pays for damage to your property, if it is your fault. Your Uninsured Motorist Insurance or Underinsured Motorist Insurance pays for damage to your property if caused by someone else who is uninsured or under-insured. Your liability insurance will pay for the damage to someone else's property or for someone else's medical expenses, if it is your fault. Someone else's liability insurance will pay for the damage to your property or for your medical expenses, if it is their fault.
No
No. Home improvements are added to the tax basis of your property, home repairs are maintain the good condition of your home. They cannot be deducted from your taxes or added to the tax basis of your property. If you also run a business out of your home you can deduct the expenses. Depending on if the repairs were also energy efficient you are able to deduct some of those expenses.
Generally, the heirs cover the expenses and get reimbursed when the property is sold.
It depends on the form of the business and whether there is community property involved.
Escrow account