I wonder if a man overpaid taxes to the IRS for three years when his kid was 15, then redid his tax returns after the kid turned 18, could he get a refund without it affecting child support.Natural_Born_Cynic wrote: ↑February 13th, 2023, 6:48 am@WilliamSmith
True, but prenups in America doesn't mean sh*t for the man. The wife's lawyer and the judge will null and void the prenup if it is deemed "unfair" for the women in divorce cases. You still lose the 50% of the assets and have to pay the wife "the alimony" every month even if she is F*cking a different man. And you have to pay for "child support" every month until your kids turn 18 which the wife snatches from the children and use it as her own money. I know couple of guys who deliberately transfer all his assets to his mom and dad, overpay his taxes to the IRS and take on cash jobs just to avoid paying a hefty price.
Marriage is like a Russian Roulette. Your babe can turn into a sour puss monster b*tch all the sudden. If you want love and compassion then get a pet instead. They will never divorce you.
Probably, the child support amount was set way back in the past and if his income falls he has to try to get the courts to hear his case. So did the men do, pay the IRS way too much before going before the judge to reduce the aftertax income on the tax return, then redo their taxes to get it back later, or just forgo the extra money and put a lower after tax income down on later tax returns?