Job Recruitment Website - Property management - On the issue of residential property fees!

On the issue of residential property fees!

The second floor is right. You should recall who collected your expenses and what happened at that time, and then ask the property management company to go back and check the "retention copy" of their receipts to see if they have any accounts. This account is not written by the toll collector, but let them check whether the receipt issued by the previous charge is yours or not because of negligence. Don't make trouble, or people will "find" it. However, from the perspective of taxation and finance (stipulated by national laws), all accounting enterprises should keep 10 years for future audit.

The basis that can prove whether you pay the fee is the receipt. 1 Lou can't say that your family will sue you. What evidence do you have? With your mouth? You have the right to keep the receipt, which is the basis of your payment. Otherwise, how can you prove that you paid the fee?

If it is paid, but the property has no records and accounts, you can ask to see the fee permit. If the other party can't come up with it, you don't have to pay it (except that the property fee is a contract fee system, but it is generally a contract system). If so, it depends on the time on the charge permit. The issuing date is the charging time allowed by law. From the issuing date to the closing date, you should pay according to the charging license, otherwise you don't have to pay after the time or beyond. If the property management company has all these, you can't help it. You have to pay even if you go to court, because you have no evidence to prove that you paid the fee.

I hope it helps you ~