Nope always busy all of a sudden its just a guess
Same as any year - after 2/15 and before 4/15 (+ a day if holiday) Extensions to file BUT NOT TO PAY are easily available.
Yes, but you have to file listing ALL your debts, not just the one you are being sued for.
The short answer is maybe, but you will not change the file date just by opening the file. When you save a file, it will display the date and time when you saved it (as set in your computer date-time settings). Excel will ask you if you want to save the file when you exit (assuming you did not change the default settings). You can choose to leave the file as is (same file date) or save the file (current file date). An exception to this would be determined by your auto save settings on Excel. If you make any changes to the file, Excel might automatically save the file (thus, changing the file date). Additionally, windows may save the last-accessed date. Bottom line, if you want to view an Excel file and not change the date, save the file to a different name as soon as you open it. Then examine the file copy.
I believe the courts stamped/file date of the debtor's petition would be the date that any action would be based upon. For instance, a fraudulent transfer of property or money would be susupicious if it occurred a few months before that date. Also an inheritance or lottery winning would be vulnerable Pre and post bankruptcy file date.
You must file a motion to extend the time, and it must be filed before the time for filing has expired. Read your local rules.
I have a folder where I make a new file every day, and the new file is always based upon the file for the day before. It is easiest to create the new file if the old one is siting near the top of the folder, which is what happens when it is sorted by creation date. If I sort by name it becomes a jumbled mess.
If you are referring to the date the computer recognizes as the day the OS was installed then it's just stored in the settings of the OS.Most operating systems maintain 2 dates for every file (some maintain 3 dates) in the file system: creation date, last modified date, (sometimes last accessed date). These are simply the date that was in the system clock when that event occurred.creation date, the date the file was first writtenlast modified date, the date the file was most recently written tolast accessed date, the date the file was most recently read fromThese 2 (or 3) dates are part of the information stored in the file's directory entry.
Just resave the file. The flash drive is represented as an ordinary file system. If you can change the date of a file on a hard drive, then you can change it on a flash drive.
If you know the date of the file, you can use windows explorer search function to locate the lost file. If you are asking about how to undo changes to a file you already saved, then the answer is you can not.
NO YOU CAN FILE ANY TIME YOU LIKE ,SEPT OCT IT DOES NOT MATTER. YOU CAN LIVE TOGETHER THE COURT DOES NOT CARE.IF YOU HAVE KIDS MOVE OUT BEFORE THE COURT DAY ABOUT 6MOUTHS TO GET A DATE. GOOD LUCK
Check source file Attributes: ACL's (access control block), access date, last accessed by, file sizes that appear to be exactly the same, creation date of target file vs access date of source... etc.
7 days if you e-filed your return and chose direct deposit.2 weeks if you e-filed your return and requested your refund by mail.8 weeks from the date you mailed your return.