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My wife did dispute the first time but did not ask to apply Notional entitlement on the dispute form. I am settled now and have had 3 year residence permit and last month i got the second residence permit(4th years of living legally). I am not currently working but am in receive of carers allowance for my son as i look after him more than 40 hours a week.D4109125 wrote:Dispute the overpayment on form TC846 (click)
Get a letter from your wife's GP stating that she suffers from depression and this effects her memory etc...
On the dispute ask them to deduct what you would have been entitled to as a couple for the period, you'll have to supply details of your employment etc.. and explain there was compelling circumstances due to your wife's health and that is situation is adding unnecessary pressure. Explain that your wife was told to claim as a single parent due to you not having a NI number and that given her mental state she did not argue.
I assume that you're now settled?
Its funny cause you were the one who gave me advice as i finished my 3 years residence permit and wanted to go for ILR but you advised me correctly to go for 3 more years of residence permit before i can apply for ILR. Thanks to you i applied for 3 years residence permit and got it last month.D4109125 wrote:Are you settled as in were you granted ILR or have PR? What is your immigration status?
The only difference between this example and our circumstances is that he was an asylum seeker and i am married to a British woman. GRRRRRRExample 2
Sophie is working part time and claiming CTC and working tax credit (WTC). On 12 October 2009 she is joined by her partner Charles who is an asylum seeker not entitled to work in the UK. Sophie does not notify the Revenue because it does not affect the amount of tax credits she is entitled to. She is therefore overpaid from 12 October 2009. Following advice from a CAB she notifies the change on 12 April 2010 and makes a new claim jointly with Charles which is backdated to 12 January and wipes out the overpayment from that date. Under the new policy, the outstanding overpayment from 12 October to 12 January is offset against the amount Sophie and Charles would have been entitled to as a couple from 12 October. As this is the same amount she received as a lone parent, she does not have to repay an overpayment.
In the end? When was that? The reason I ask is this. The law changed on 06.04.09. From that date the requirement for a NI number to be supplied when a Tax Credits was made changed insofar as it :-My wife told tax credit on 30th march 2007 that she was wanted to change her single claim to joint claim but the problem was that they were asking for my national insurance number which i didn't had. In the end wife spoke to some kind of manager at tax credit office over the phone who advised that the only way to get tax credit is for her to claim as a single parent.
-: and it seems to me that you fit that totally.... does not apply to any person who is subject to immigration control within the meaning set out in section 115(9)(a) of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 and to whom a national insurance number has not been allocated.
Which year?On 31 October I received my NI number
-: and to me if one party cannot supply a NINO, and thus a joint claim cannot be made (prior to 06.04.09) then a claim by the other spouse looks to be OK.A claim can be made:
jointly by the members of a couple,
jointly by the members of a polygamous unit or,
singly by a person only if they are unable to make a joint claim under (a) or (b)
The OP got his NI in October 2011, I assume the overpayment relates to a period after 2009 and the regulation changes when the claim should have been joint as its only ~£2300John wrote:In the end? When was that? The reason I ask is this. The law changed on 06.04.09. From that date the requirement for a NI number to be supplied when a Tax Credits was made changed insofar as it :-My wife told tax credit on 30th march 2007 that she was wanted to change her single claim to joint claim but the problem was that they were asking for my national insurance number which i didn't had. In the end wife spoke to some kind of manager at tax credit office over the phone who advised that the only way to get tax credit is for her to claim as a single parent.
-: and it seems to me that you fit that totally.... does not apply to any person who is subject to immigration control within the meaning set out in section 115(9)(a) of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 and to whom a national insurance number has not been allocated.
Source : Regulation 14 of The Tax Credits (Miscellaneous Amendments) Regulations 2009.
Which year?On 31 October I received my NI number
In the HMRC Tax Credits Technical Manual, TCTM06100 - Claims and Notification: Making a claim, it includes :-
-: and to me if one party cannot supply a NINO, and thus a joint claim cannot be made (prior to 06.04.09) then a claim by the other spouse looks to be OK.A claim can be made:
jointly by the members of a couple,
jointly by the members of a polygamous unit or,
singly by a person only if they are unable to make a joint claim under (a) or (b)
-: and it entirely possible that someone would have got incorrect advice when phoning.I'm afraid many HMRC decision makers are ignorant of the rules.
The Overpayment is from the day i got my NI number, 31 October 2011 till 25 January 2012. As 25 January 2012 was the date we put in for a joint claim. The problem was that my wife was suffering from a lot of illnesses at that time( She is currently on DLA) and on top of that we got a son who is Autistic (8 years old and still wear nappies). I didnt know much about the system and wife wasnt as strong. My wife knew that she could have got more money on a joint claim but decided that we would sort income support and housing benefit out and move them under my name. And because we didnt tell them for around 3 months the tax credit office wants to punish us for that.John wrote:My wife called and told them on 30th march 2007 and told them that she was married and applied for a joint claim. Tax credits asked for my(Husband) NI number which i didnt had. We actually contacted the job centre and tried to get a NI number for me. We even went to central london at job centre where i was turned down as i didnt had the relevant paper work and were told to wait till i receive the proper papers.
In the end? When was that? The reason I ask is this. The law changed on 06.04.09. From that date the requirement for a NI number to be supplied when a Tax Credits was made changed insofar as it :-
-: and it seems to me that you fit that totally.
Source : Regulation 14 of The Tax Credits (Miscellaneous Amendments) Regulations 2009.I am really sorry and please please do not take it the wrong way but i cant understand much about these two thing .Which year?
In the HMRC Tax Credits Technical Manual, TCTM06100 - Claims and Notification: Making a claim, it includes :-
And yes Amber is correct in saying that i got my NI number on 31st October 2011.
We didn't know anything about the regulations or wasnt told by anyone otherwise we would have let the tax credits know.
D4109125 wrote:
The OP got his NI in October 2011, I assume the overpayment relates to a period after 2009 and the regulation changes when the claim should have been joint as its only ~£2300
Yes it is only 3 months as we had my son and two step sons living with us with my son's disablity premium added in the tax credit. The letter we received from tax credit also state that it is from 31 October 2011 till 25 January 2012.John wrote:
Are you sure? That amount of "overpayment" in just three months?