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| DavidAndro...[at]gmail.com wrote: - quote - > I am part owner of an S-Corp based in Ohio. I am currently a
Of course Ohio can tax the gain. If you have income from an> resident of California. I have suspended at-risk limited > losses on this corporation from prior years, which were > incurred when I was a resident of Ohio. Last year, the > corporation made money by selling some of the assets in the > corporation. The amount of gains last year is less than the > suspended losses of the prior years (the parts attributed > to me) > Do I have to pay any federal taxes, and/or taxes in > California, and/or taxes in Ohio? I am thinking the > following: On Federal taxes, the suspended losses will cover > the gains. Net..no tax. > On Ohio taxes --- can Ohio tax a non resident? If they do, > can the suspended losses cover the gains. > On California taxes - can the suspended losses cover the > gains? Or do I have to pay California taxes. > I do need to see a CPA, but wanted to get a quick opinion on > this. Ohio source, Ohio can and will tax it. If you owe tax to Ohio, and California taxes the same income, California will give you credit for the Ohio tax. For California purposes, if you were a full-year resident in 2006, you recalculate carryforward items as if you had been a California resident for all relevant years. So you can use the suspended losses, but you must recompute the amounts to account for any differences between California and federal law -- just as the current year income must be adjusted. If you were a nonresident for any part of 2006, the rules get pretty complicated. The FTB has an excellent publication on this, Pub. 1100 (http://www.ftb.ca.gov/forms/misc/1100.pdf). It includes examples relating to partnerships, though not S corps; the result should be about the same. Basically, for purposes of Col. D of the Schedule CA-540NR (total income from all sources as if California resident for all relevant periods), you would include the S corporation income and the suspended losses, both recomputed by California's rules. In Col. E, you would include only the S corporation income that arose during the part of the year when you were a resident (either prorate by the days or months, or actual cutoff), and could use the suspended losses only to that extent. It isn't clear to me how this would affect the remaining loss, if any, that could be carried to subsequent years for California purposes. As for Ohio, it seems logical that the losses could be used to offset the Ohio-source gains. However, Ohio law is complicated (like California, Ohio computes taxable income by its own rules, rather than starting with federal taxable income or AGI and specifying certain adjustments), and I haven't looked into it. You may need two advisers for this one -- one in Ohio and one in California. Katie in San Diego << ================================================== ===== > << The foregoing was not intended or written to be used, > << nor can it used, for the purpose of avoiding penalties > << that may be imposed upon the taxpayer. > << > << The Charter and the Guidelines for submitting posts > << to this newsgroup as well as our anti-spamming policy > << are at www.asktax.org. > << Copyright (2006) - All rights reserved. > << ================================================== ===== > |
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| I am part owner of an S-Corp based in Ohio. I am currently a resident of California. I have suspended at-risk limited losses on this corporation from prior years, which were incurred when I was a resident of Ohio. Last year, the corporation made money by selling some of the assets in the corporation. The amount of gains last year is less than the suspended losses of the prior years (the parts attributed to me) Do I have to pay any federal taxes, and/or taxes in California, and/or taxes in Ohio? I am thinking the following: On Federal taxes, the suspended losses will cover the gains. Net..no tax. On Ohio taxes --- can Ohio tax a non resident? If they do, can the suspended losses cover the gains. On California taxes - can the suspended losses cover the gains? Or do I have to pay California taxes. I do need to see a CPA, but wanted to get a quick opinion on this. Thanks, David << ================================================== ===== > << The foregoing was not intended or written to be used, > << nor can it used, for the purpose of avoiding penalties > << that may be imposed upon the taxpayer. > << > << The Charter and the Guidelines for submitting posts > << to this newsgroup as well as our anti-spamming policy > << are at www.asktax.org. > << Copyright (2006) - All rights reserved. > << ================================================== ===== > |
| Tags |
| california, income, resident, scorp, state |
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