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| "ed" <edcosoft[at]sbcglobal.net - quote - > The accountant is wrong. The value (of everything he owns)
After reading other responses, I see how out-to-lunch her> is stepped-up in basis upon his death. accountant is. - quote - > As an aside, and not OT, as your father he should have put
There's a lot more to this. My father paid for my education> YOUR name on the stock because it was from your mother's > father, as a gift to him, and should have been passed on by > him to you, not your step-mother ==== sort of like "family" > heirlooms going to real descendants instead of inlaw's > relatives. Good reason for a trust upon remarrying. > Also OT. I presume you realize your stepbrother will > inherit all the assets your father accumulated prior to his > marriage to your step-mother (per his "brilliant move" in > 1999), or do you think your stepmother will will them all to > you instead of her son (or current husband)? and set aside other money for me. He did the same for my brother. So what she does with her money is her business. << ================================================== ===== > << The foregoing is intended for educational purposes only > << and does NOT constitute legal OR professional advice. > << > << The Charter and the Guidelines for submitting > << messages to this newsgroup are at www.asktax.org. > << Copyright (2006) - All rights reserved. > << ================================================== ===== > |
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| The accountant is wrong. The value (of everything he owns) is stepped-up in basis upon his death. As an aside, and not OT, as your father he should have put YOUR name on the stock because it was from your mother's father, as a gift to him, and should have been passed on by him to you, not your step-mother ==== sort of like "family" heirlooms going to real descendants instead of inlaw's relatives. Good reason for a trust upon remarrying. Also OT. I presume you realize your stepbrother will inherit all the assets your father accumulated prior to his marriage to your step-mother ( per his "brilliant move" in 1999), or do you think your stepmother will will them all to you instead of her son ( or current husband)? ed << ================================================== ===== > << The foregoing is intended for educational purposes only > << and does NOT constitute legal OR professional advice. > << > << The Charter and the Guidelines for submitting > << messages to this newsgroup are at www.asktax.org. > << Copyright (2006) - All rights reserved. > << ================================================== ===== > |
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#1
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| noemail[at]here.com (Edward) posted: - quote - > My mother contracted MS in 1968. I was two
Tell her to get a new accountant. FWIW, I agree with you:> years old. My father took very good care of my > mother her until she her death in 1999. When > my mother died, my father took stepped up > basis and liquidated most stocks and bonds. > Given the market dive, this was a brilliant > move. > In the early 70's he began a relationship with > another woman with whom he had my brother. > We have all been on excellent terms and still > are. He married my step-mother shortly after > my mother died and reinvested everything. My > father passed away in January. His will left my > step-mother everthing. > The problem is that he held onto some stock > given to him by my mother's father as a > wedding present. He never put my > step-mother's name on the stock. Her > accountant says she gets my father's basis > but no step-up because her name is not on > the stock. > I say she gets stepped up basis. As the inheritor, she gets a stepped-up basis -- and it has nothing to do with whose name was on the stock! Bill << ================================================== ===== > << The foregoing is intended for educational purposes only > << and does NOT constitute legal OR professional advice. > << > << The Charter and the Guidelines for submitting > << messages to this newsgroup are at www.asktax.org. > << Copyright (2006) - All rights reserved. > << ================================================== ===== > |
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| Edward wrote: - quote - > My mother contracted MS in 1968. I was two years old. My
ALL of the assets in your father's estate get adjusted to> father took very good care of my mother her until she her > death in 1999. When my mother died, my father took stepped > up basis and liquidated most stocks and bonds. Given the > market dive, this was a brilliant move. > In the early 70's he began a relationship with another woman > with whom he had my brother. We have all been on excellent > terms and still are. He married my step-mother shortly after > my mother died and reinvested everything. My father passed > away in January. His will left my step-mother everthing. > The problem is that he held onto some stock given to him by > my mother's father as a wedding present. He never put my > step-mother's name on the stock. Her accountant says she > gets my father's basis but no step-up because her name is > not on the stock. > I say she gets stepped up basis. FMV on date of death. The accountant is wrong. << ================================================== ===== > << The foregoing is intended for educational purposes only > << and does NOT constitute legal OR professional advice. > << > << The Charter and the Guidelines for submitting > << messages to this newsgroup are at www.asktax.org. > << Copyright (2006) - All rights reserved. > << ================================================== ===== > |
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#-1
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| My mother contracted MS in 1968. I was two years old. My father took very good care of my mother her until she her death in 1999. When my mother died, my father took stepped up basis and liquidated most stocks and bonds. Given the market dive, this was a brilliant move. In the early 70's he began a relationship with another woman with whom he had my brother. We have all been on excellent terms and still are. He married my step-mother shortly after my mother died and reinvested everything. My father passed away in January. His will left my step-mother everthing. The problem is that he held onto some stock given to him by my mother's father as a wedding present. He never put my step-mother's name on the stock. Her accountant says she gets my father's basis but no step-up because her name is not on the stock. I say she gets stepped up basis. << ================================================== ===== > << The foregoing is intended for educational purposes only > << and does NOT constitute legal OR professional advice. > << > << The Charter and the Guidelines for submitting > << messages to this newsgroup are at www.asktax.org. > << Copyright (2006) - All rights reserved. > << ================================================== ===== > |
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| basis, stepped |
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