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    • I suggested consideration of bankruptcy some years ago. It was not well received.
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    • Did you ever think of walking away? Become bankrupt and in 12 months it'll all be behind you. My feeling is that you may well get nothing from the sale of the property anyway. Going by the date this thread started it looks like eight years of arrears, lender's costs and receiver’s fees on top.
    • Just to clarify - I make use of evening legal clinics. It is not always possible to see a lawyer (they have limited time and days/week).  This means questions one has may never get answered or there's weeks between follow-ups.   To be really clear - I am representing myself; I am playing at being lawyer/ barrister - which means I take help wherever I can get it (and then research it thoroughly). Ae - a judge in a recent hearing pointed out the receiver is not part of my current proceedings - and suggested I have a separate claim v the receiver. Disclosure has presented damning evidence v the receiver  The receiver against whom I have a complaint is not part of the receiver governing body.   The receivership is in 2 names - a joint one.  My complaint is directed at whom I was told is the lead receiver.  The other named receiver IS a member of the governing body.  But he has now left the company.  And the lead receiver has retired - but is still a working consultant on my case.   All the evidence shows it was the 'lead' receiver who was doing all the  work/ the misbehaviour.   But if the appointment was 'joint' would I make a complaint against them both?    I am sure that wouldn't go down well with the other receiver who is at the beginning of his career. The law is very much against borrowers.   But the evidence against this receivership is crystal clear.   I just don't know how and to whom to complain.   The places I've tried so far don't offer much transparency       
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Overpaid via work, Paying back what happens about the Tax?


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Hi,

 

My OH has been informed that for 11 months now she has been overpaid via her work, coming to about £1200.

 

She has been working extra days to pay back the overpayment but was wondering what happens to the extra Tax that she paid on this amount, and if she can claim it back how she goes about doing this?

 

Thanks

 

JJ

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Im no expert on paye etc but at a guess i would expect that she can claim back any overpayment of tax via HMRC at the end of the tax year.

 

Others with better knowledge will further advise

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If its been over 11 months then it would have been during the last tax year i presume which ended april so might be worth checking yr OH P60 and maybe give HMRC a call

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Hi,

I don't think that this is as simple as it sounds.

 

The figures on the P60 will probably match, i.e. the tax paid will equal what was due on the wages paid. Therefore NO refund of tax.

 

The extra days you are working, are you being paid for them or not?

 

Ideally, the pay back should be made through deduction from your wages, this would then reduce your tax liability, resulting in you paying less tax and therefore you will get back the extra tax you paid and also prove that you have paid back the overpayment.

 

It is not a good idea to work the extra days for nothing.

REMEMBER! Hunger is the enemy - NOT the hungry!

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Hi,

I don't think that this is as simple as it sounds.

 

The figures on the P60 will probably match, i.e. the tax paid will equal what was due on the wages paid. Therefore NO refund of tax.

 

The extra days you are working, are you being paid for them or not?

 

Ideally, the pay back should be made through deduction from your wages, this would then reduce your tax liability, resulting in you paying less tax and therefore you will get back the extra tax you paid and also prove that you have paid back the overpayment.

 

It is not a good idea to work the extra days for nothing.

 

Thank you for the input.

 

It is a confusing one. What happened was my OH went down to 4 days working from 5.Just to confuse things more my wife gets 3 different pay scales for the different parts of her job she does.

They carried on paying her for 5 days until they realised their mistake.

My wife has been working the extra day since and this has been 'credited' to the amount she owes.

So that was why I was asking about the extra tax she paid, and if she could claim it back.

 

Thanks

 

JJ

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Hi,

 

From what you say, I don't think it is possible to claim the tax back. As far as the tax office is concerned, OH has earned £xxxx.xx and has paid tax on £xxxx.xx.

 

The only way I can see for OH to get tax back is to have had the overpayment deducted from wages before Tax and NI.

The lower wages would have resulted in less tax being paid and this would have resulted in the reclaiming of the tax.

The drawback with this of course is that OH takes home less pay.

 

Unfortunately, I can't see a way round this.

REMEMBER! Hunger is the enemy - NOT the hungry!

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