
Mom Sparks Family Feud By Reporting Ex To IRS For Illegally Claiming Their Child On Taxes
"He is now not speaking to me."

Navigating co-parenting agreements and finances can be a minefield, as one single mother discovered. She and her ex-husband had an arrangement allowing him to claim their oldest child on his taxes, provided he was up-to-date with child support payments.
However, when he fell $6,000 behind, she informed him that she would claim both children on her taxes as stipulated in their agreement. Despite her warning, he still claimed their oldest child, causing her electronically filed return to be rejected.
Determined to get what was rightfully hers, she submitted her taxes manually, including all necessary documentation to prove her case. After a nine-month wait, she received her tax return and the money garnished from his refund due to his support arrears.
Recently, her ex found out that the IRS ruled he had no right to claim their child from two years ago and now owes $6,000. He confronted her about the situation, and she confirmed she had reported his incorrect filing. This revelation led to a fallout, with her ex no longer speaking to her.
Situations like this highlight the complexities of co-parenting and the importance of adhering to agreements. While it might seem harsh, ensuring fairness and compliance with the law is essential for the well-being of both the children and the custodial parent.
Just take a look at this...
OP, a single mom, lets the dad claim oldest child on taxes for four nights a month and current support payments.

She sought to claim both kids for taxes due to $6k in arrears; he argued she didn't need it with her higher income share.

Tax filing rejected, son already claimed. Nine months later, she got her return and garnished money from his.

He owes $6k to the IRS for wrongly claiming their child. She challenged his claim, and now he's not speaking to her.
Scroll down to see what people had to say...

She didn't let him steal from the IRS or her. Case closed.

He tried to pass the buck, but she wasn't buying it. Taxing, isn't it?

He played, won -$6k. Taxes aren't a game; no regrets, just hoping he pays up!

She played fair and gave him fair warning. His move, his mess to clean.

Is he a newbie in financial mishaps or a pro? Time to secure the kids' safety on his adventure!

She claimed what she earned, not her fault he tried to stretch the truth.

He played the double claim game, she called his bluff. His silence? Just the cherry on top.

Is he waiting for child support to retire too, or is he just clock watching?

He played, he lost, and now he's got a $6k souvenir.

Age doesn't exempt debts. Even at 39 and 41, she's still cashing in.

He's all about the cash, but dodges the responsibility like it's an IRS audit.

He had the playbook and got the warning, but he still fumbled the ball. All on him.

No support, no relief. FAFO: Forget About Financial Obligations.

She had a contract, not a suggestion box.

No sympathy for those who skip out on child support. Karma's got a payment plan.

Lesson learned: mess around, find out. She warned, he ignored. Simple.

He's robbing the cradle, not just the bank. Income doesn't excuse theft.

Honesty is the best policy, and cheating on agreements is worse than cheating on taxes. Now, he owes the IRS and she gets the last laugh—proof that playing by the rules can be surprisingly rewarding.
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Sophia
