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The correct entry in the date column is for all the transactions is?
The question is NOT whether taxes are dischargeable in a bankruptcy. The question that has been asked is whether the IRS can still pursue you for taxes that were discharged in a bankruptcy (which would obviously confirm that some taxes are dischargeable in specific circumstances).If your taxes were discharged in a bankruptcy, the IRS cannot come after you for those taxes after the bankruptcy has been discharged. If they are doing so, they probably did not enter them as discharged correctly on their computer system.To correct this, you should call IRS collections and explain to them that the taxes should have been discharged in your bankruptcy. Ask them to send a referral to the IRS Insolvency Unit, and the Insolvency Unit will be able to pull the bankruptcy records and confirm what should have been discharged.Note that any liens that were filed before the bankruptcy will survive the discharge process. So, although the IRS debt has been discharged a lien may continue to exist. This lien only attaches to equity that was exempted in the bankruptcy process (so if you had $20,000 of equity in your home that you exempted under bankruptcy homestead exemption, the lien continues to attach to that equity). It does NOT attach to any equity that builds in your assets after the filing of your bankruptcy petition.
For a business letter, the name of the month should be spelled out and the year written in full, for example:February 29, 201229 February 2012Either is correct. For memos, forms, etc. abbreviated date forms, which vary from from country to country, are acceptable, but a letter should use the complete form.
No. This is not correct English. It is better to say:Please find attached your letter of credit.
If your double-entry records are correct, a balance sheet will always balance (by definition).ASSETS = LIABILITIES + EQUITYIf it does not balance, check all your entries, since the last balance sheet that did balance. You will find one or more errors to correct. Find and correct all of the errors until the balance sheet balances.
Bankruptcy does not get discharged. Debts are discharged. The bankruptcy will remain on your credit report for 10 years from the date of filing. The debts that were discharged can remain for 7 years from the date of discharge, showing a zero balance and that they were discharged in bankruptcy.
The debt collector cannot change the date of anything, legally. If the account was discharged in bankruptcy, everything up to the filing date is not owed any longer.
In general it is 6 years after the discharged date.
Probably not. They are likely all post petition (meaning after your filing date - they don't have to be before the discharge date) items anyway.
Bankruptcy laws are complex. You will need to get correct answers from a competent attorney.
You will get paid up to the date of discharge. After you have been discharged (just like being fired), you don't get paid.
No serial number data published that I know of
'Date' is the correct spelling.
Out-of-date
commencement date
When it is filed. A discharge may be opposed by a creditor and there may be listed debts that cannot be discharged, or unlisted debts that may be discharged, so the "discharge" date is irrelevant.
kimberly annette williford