On the tax forms they ask you if your spouse is living or deceased, but they don't ask you if your spouse is a zombie. I think this is a major oversight on the part of the IRS.
clearly, it is a major oversight. the undead don't fall neatly into either category. forget ticky boxes, we need to represent the full spectrum of life status on tax forms! vampires wouldn't be too happy to be left out, either.
The school should issue it by the last week in January (note, I'm still waiting). At UT you can look at it under "finances" on UT-Direct, but when I was in undergrad, they sent it directly to my parent's house, since I was a dependant. ... maybe I should call my parents and see if they've gotten it by mistake. Hmmm.
Something to note: The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 has a rider on it (popularly known as the 'Til Death' clause) that required that all "Supermortem Americans" (Zombies, Vampires, Ghosts and the Resurected[excepting through Reincarnation]) file seperately from former spouses. This is mostly due to incompatibility issues between the Social Security system and the Posthuman registration system. (Although like SSN and TIN, it is still a 9 digit number).
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The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 has a rider on it (popularly known as the 'Til Death' clause) that required that all "Supermortem Americans" (Zombies, Vampires, Ghosts and the Resurected[excepting through Reincarnation]) file seperately from former spouses. This is mostly due to incompatibility issues between the Social Security system and the Posthuman registration system. (Although like SSN and TIN, it is still a 9 digit number).
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