Forum Discussion
monkey44
Aug 04, 2013Nomad II
Old-Biscuit wrote:rockportrocket wrote:
Well Monkey, being a licensed practicing attorney for 40 plus years, and suing the state of Ga in 2001 and LOSING, as we were residents of Texas, but worked in Ga , borrowed money from our 401K while in Ga, monies earned in other states, none in Ga, forced to pay taxes on that money, plus taxes on monies earned in other states, while owning a Tx corp.
Please explain to me how that is impossible ~!!!!!!!!!!!
or better still, tell the state of Ga to return all my stolen tax money !!!!!!!
Nonresidents who work in Georgia or receive income from Georgia sources and are required to file a Federal income tax return are required to file a Georgia Form 500 Individual Income Tax Return.
Some examples of Georgia source income are wages, Georgia lottery winnings, income from flow through entities (s-corporations, partnerships, LLCs, trusts, and estates),
All I'm sure you were informed of when you lost and had to pay the taxes due.
You said / he said, Georgia required anyone to be a resident of Georgia if you earned income there. That's my dispute, not that you shouldn't pay taxes on money you earned there. But, for a state to say in order to work in that state, you have to reside in that state can't be true. I've worked for years in other states besides California and Mass and Florida - all at one time or another my residential state.
Never once did I have to become a resident of that state where I worked, but always in the states where I work, I have to file taxes in that state and pay them - but no one ever said I had to become a resident to work ... that's simply not true. In some cases, maybe with some jobs, perhaps. But every circumstance is different, and must be treated as it is individually, not as 'everyone'.
Just because you happen to be an attorney, doesn't mean your correct all the time. There is always two sides of an issue in court, and one side always loses, but, still two sides to the issues - and that means fifty percent of the attorneys in a case argue the wrong (losing) side of it.
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