You'll love this one, if you can deal with it.
Tennessee judge is aware he can no longer determine custody or dependency. So he designates 182.5 days in each household to absolve himself of any custody issues. However, in the divorce decree he acknowledges that he can't control these qualifiers for dependency or head/household, but he issues an order that forces the parties to "split the difference 50-50" of the tax benefit. I believe he can do that, as he is not tampering with any IRS rules.
Sooooo, father gets a $3,434 benefit by claiming, and mother gets a $2,238 by claiming. So father claims the benefit, but how much does he have to pay mother for losing her refund (assuming the judge's order is valid)?
Tennessee judge is aware he can no longer determine custody or dependency. So he designates 182.5 days in each household to absolve himself of any custody issues. However, in the divorce decree he acknowledges that he can't control these qualifiers for dependency or head/household, but he issues an order that forces the parties to "split the difference 50-50" of the tax benefit. I believe he can do that, as he is not tampering with any IRS rules.
Sooooo, father gets a $3,434 benefit by claiming, and mother gets a $2,238 by claiming. So father claims the benefit, but how much does he have to pay mother for losing her refund (assuming the judge's order is valid)?
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