skids wrote:
Quite remarkable to get any kind of break from the taxman. This must be some other country than the United States where our taxman is known as the IRS.
If you put "the" and "IRS" together it spells "theirs" which may have something to do with getting any kind of break from the taxman pretty rare here.
If you put "the" and "IRS" together it spells "theirs" which may have something to do with getting any kind of break from the taxman pretty rare here.
When I moved to a new apartment in Dallas 8 months later, I updated the registration.
A year later I moved to yet another apartment in Dallas, where I again updated the registration.
After living in that third apartment for 9 months, I received a notice from the City of Dallas that I owed them for three years (1990, 1991, 1992) of what they called a "Vehicle Value Tax", and that I also owed penalties and interest for 1990 and 1991, which hadn't been paid yet.
I wasn't aware that the city would tax me on the value of my vehicle. I didn't have a problem with it, I figure they have to raise money somehow, it was just a weird way to do it. And the amount of the tax wasn't much (I think it was between $20 & $25 per year for my truck*). So I sent them a check for the three years worth of taxes, but did NOT include the penalties and interest. I included a note stating that I wasn't paying the penalties and interest, because I didn't think it was fair to charge me for something that I wasn't aware of.
They sent another letter requesting the penalties and interest, so I called them and explained my position. The agent and I went back and forth about it a few times. I stated that I had no problem paying the tax, just not the penalties and interest. I told him that I wasn't aware of the tax, had never received a notice, so I felt that it wasn't on me. He did acknowledge that the notices they sent me were all returned to them (because I had moved before they sent the notices). I told him that it was unreasonable to expect people to move to the area and think, "hmmm, I wonder what random items I might be taxed on by the city?"
At one point, he said, "If I owed someone money, I'd make sure I knew how much it was and would pay it."
I replied, "If someone owed me money, I'd make sure they knew how much it was and that they'd pay it."
He ended up waiving the penalties and interest, and I moved to Mesquite that Fall, so I didn't owe for 1993. They did away with the tax before I moved back to Dallas in 2001.
* The tax was based on Blue Book value of the vehicle as of January 1 of the year in question, for any vehicle 7 years old or newer. If a resident of Dallas owned a vehicle on Jan 1, they owed tax on it. So a base model 1987 Isuzu P'up wasn't worth a whole lot during those three years.