Fuerst, Humphrey, Ittleman may provide remedies for the discharge of an IRS tax lien. An IRS tax lien, or Federal tax lien, may be imposed on individuals and corporations that fail to respond to a collection attempt by the Internal Revenue Service for a tax debt. Fuerst, Humphrey, Ittleman may represent clients that have received a "notice of federal tax lien", or a "notice and demand for payment", by the IRS.
In complex corporate tax cases, there may be controversies or implications which have not been accounted for or considered prior to the tax filings. Below are some areas of tax law which Fuerst, Humphrey, Ittleman also represent their clients for:
An IRS tax lien, gives the U.S. Internal Revenue Service a legal claim to your property as collateral or security for payment of your tax debt. The IRS can only file a, "Notice of Federal Tax Lien," after the agency has concluded three mandatory requirements. First, they must evaluate your liability. After they have evaluated your case, they must send you a, "Notice and Demand for Payment," which is essentially a bill that lets you know how much you owe in taxes.
The final step comes if you ignore or decline to pay the total amount of your tax debt within ten days after the IRS notifies you. Once the IRS meets the requirements stipulated above, they can issue and file a tax lien against you for the total amount of your tax debt. When the public lien is filed, your creditors will be advised that the IRS has file and holds a claim against your property. A lien filed by the IRS will include all your property even property that you may have acquired after the lien was filed. This information will used to establish priority of debt in case you file for bankruptcy and will have to be settled in order to sell any property you may own.
Fuerst, Humphrey, Ittleman may attempt to discharge an IRS tax lien.
Contact Fuerst, Humphrey, Ittleman about an IRS tax lien.
Contact Fuerst, Humphrey, Ittleman about an IRS tax lien.
In complex corporate tax cases, there may be controversies or implications which have not been accounted for or considered prior to the tax filings. Below are some areas of tax law which Fuerst, Humphrey, Ittleman also represent their clients for:
- Tax audit
- Tax fraud
- Tax crime
- Tax evasion
- Tax appeals
- Tax planning
- Tax litigation
- Corporate tax
- Tax accounting
- Real estate tax
- Capital gains tax
An IRS tax lien, gives the U.S. Internal Revenue Service a legal claim to your property as collateral or security for payment of your tax debt. The IRS can only file a, "Notice of Federal Tax Lien," after the agency has concluded three mandatory requirements. First, they must evaluate your liability. After they have evaluated your case, they must send you a, "Notice and Demand for Payment," which is essentially a bill that lets you know how much you owe in taxes.
The final step comes if you ignore or decline to pay the total amount of your tax debt within ten days after the IRS notifies you. Once the IRS meets the requirements stipulated above, they can issue and file a tax lien against you for the total amount of your tax debt. When the public lien is filed, your creditors will be advised that the IRS has file and holds a claim against your property. A lien filed by the IRS will include all your property even property that you may have acquired after the lien was filed. This information will used to establish priority of debt in case you file for bankruptcy and will have to be settled in order to sell any property you may own.
Fuerst, Humphrey, Ittleman may attempt to discharge an IRS tax lien.
Contact Fuerst, Humphrey, Ittleman about an IRS tax lien.
Contact Fuerst, Humphrey, Ittleman about an IRS tax lien.

