Yes. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p17.pdf read page 253 upper right hand corner
Yes, a husband and wife can choose to file their income taxes separately if they meet certain criteria.
“husband and wife live together but file separately. both are itemizing deductions. husband pays mortgage and r/e taxes. house in both names. does the mortgage interest and r/e taxes have to be split if all paid by husband or is husband entitled to take full deduction.”
File injured spouse forms to separate your tax liability from his.
Yes, but you can file a form to get your part. See links
If the license been properly executed, yes. Otherwise contact the prison to determine how to get it executed.
The spouse of an incarcerated husband has all rights over their property. This is only if the two people are legally married.
Yes. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p17.pdf read page 253 upper right hand corner
The incarcerated person needs to havesomeone who is either a spouse or holds power of attorney or legal representativefor them file their taxes. If there is no one in either category the prisoner will have a tax liability status until he or she is released and able to file. Also note: most people in prison have very little income and as a result, they are not legally required to file an income tax return.
I am not a lawyer but before we got married, my husband and I, filed taxes together as a living together couple.
More than likely, yes.
There is an IRS form that you can complete so that you are considered free of responsibility for the arrears.
Entirely up to you whether you file your Federal Taxes jointly or seperately. And you will also have to file MI state taxes. I don't believe TX has a state income tax, but that may have changed. This might be a case where a good tax accountant can help you out.