Tax Guru – Ker$tetter Letter

Helping real people win the tax game.

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Archive for September, 2006

IRS Motto?

Posted by taxguru on September 8, 2006

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Updated Excuse

Posted by taxguru on September 8, 2006

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Posted by taxguru on September 7, 2006

From the free WSJ sections:

Tips for Women Seeking To Start a Business

Unmarried Couples Who Buy Property Need Extra Protections

 

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Microsoft QuickBooks?

Posted by taxguru on September 7, 2006

As has been quite obvious, I am a huge fan of the QuickBooks programs and try to pass along any tips and useful guides that I come across. I was a little concerned about the reliability of this CD-ROM self study course because both the email that I received advertising it and the table of contents that you can click on from their website have the following picture:

For anyone unclear on why this would concern me, while Microsoft did attempt to purchase Intuit 15 or so years ago, that was shot down by the Feds on anti-trust grounds and QuickBooks has always been produced by Intuit, a company completely unrelated to Bill Gates’ behemoth. I wonder about what else isn’t accurate in a course about QuickBooks if they can’t even keep this basic fact straight.

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Carryover Cost Basis

Posted by taxguru on September 7, 2006

 

Q:

Subject: 1031 Cost Basis vs. Actual Price – Accounting Question
 
Dear Guru:
 
I would appreciate ANY help you could spare!  My question is this:
 
My corproation bought “Vacant Lot A” in 2003 for $5,000.00.  In 2005 my corporation sold “Vacant Lot A” for $40,000.00, using a 1031 Exchange.  With the 1031 Exchange proceeds, my corporation bought another investment property, “Vacant Lot B” for $40,000.00.   What is the “book value” I should show as my corporation’s asset for “Vacant Lot B”?  Would it be the cost basis of $5,000.00 or the actual purchase price of $40,000.00??   
I don’t know who else to ask!  I would greatly appreciate you pointing me in the right direction!

A:

If you’ve ever read any of my blog postings, you should already know in what direction I will be pointing you; into the arms of a professional tax advisor.  It is crazy and downright irresponsible for you to attempt to operate a corporation without the appropriate guidance of trained professionals.  I’m assuming that you are the 100% owner of this corp because any co-owners could bring an action (lawsuit) against you for fiscal malfeasance if you have been risking their investment without proper professional support services.

The terminology in your email also raises some concerns about the validity of your 1031 exchange.  To be valid, your corp should not have actually received any of the proceeds form the first property, but had them held by a neutral third party exchange facilitator.  Hopefully, you had an exchange facilitator and didn’t try to handle the 1031 sale and reinvestment on your own, in which case, there would have been a taxable sale.

Assuming there was a valid 1031 exchange via an appropriate facilitator, there is a tax form (8824) that needs to be attached to your corporate tax return documenting the details of the 1031 exchange.  Part of that form includes a calculation of the cost basis of the new replacement property.  This calculation takes into account the cash given, the cash received, the debt assumed or paid off on the old property, the debt assumed on the new property, as well as the adjusted cost basis of the old property. 

Using simplistic numbers and assuming that you essentially swapped one property for another that was worth $40,000, the adjusted basis of the replacement property on the corp books will be the exact same basis as the old property. In this case, that means it would be $5,000.  A 1031 like kind exchange is technically a tax deferred exchange.  This means that if you were to sell (not exchange) the new replacement property for $40,000, the gain from the original property would pop up and be taxable.

This is a very basic principle which any competent professional tax advisor should have no problem explaining to you.

Good luck.  I hope this helps.

Kerry Kerstetter

 

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What could go wrong?

Posted by taxguru on September 5, 2006

 

IRS sends collection agencies calling for back taxes

 The three official sub-contractors:

The IRS chose three firms for the initial cases: The CBE Group of Waterloo, Iowa; Pioneer Credit Recovery of Arcade, N.Y.; and Linebarger Goggan Blair & Sampson, an Austin, Texas, law firm.

Who knows how many other free-lancers will jump in and try to scam money out of taxpayers.

What do the three official subs earn for this?

The profit potential is large. The collection companies will keep up to 24% of what they recover. That amounts to as much as $336 million of the $1.4 billion the IRS projects the program will recover during the next decade.

 

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Bewitching

Posted by taxguru on September 2, 2006

I guess a case could be made for a similar deduction in this country if the appropriate qualifications were met, such as you were already a witch before taking the classes and not just starting out in that profession.

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News From WebCPA

Posted by taxguru on September 2, 2006

Whatever happened to tax reform? – This perpetual political promise is no closer to reality than it’s ever been. In fact, as always, we are continuing to move in the complete opposite direction, guaranteeing an increasing and never-ending workload for those of us in the tax profession.

GAO: Reforming the tax system will close tax gap – Duh!

Finding a safe pair of hands – Succession planning for the continuation of small businesses is often overlooked.

TIGTA: IRS must work on high-income return audits – For obvious reasons, the higher your AGI, the larger the bullseye on your back.

QuickBooks and Write-Up: Shifting Roles – It seems so counter-productive to have clients use QB for their bookkeeping and then CPAs use a completely different program to prepare financial statements, when everyone could very easily use the same QB files.

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How our tax payments are used…

Posted by taxguru on September 2, 2006

RINO shopping spree

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Posted by taxguru on September 2, 2006

IRS fraudulent refunds an estimated $318M  – Oops!  Does this now mean that we can expect a typical over-reaction from IRS, similar to their audits of all amended returns claiming refunds because they screwed up and allowed $50 million in bogus slave tax credits a few years ago? 

 

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