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#27
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| On Jul 5, 2:03�pm, kam...[at]panix.com (Arthur Kamlet) wrote: - quote - > In article <9b61ed06-b378-450c-a822-363deaef2...[at]l64g2000hse.googlegroups.com> ,
deductions.> �<KEBSCHU...[at]aol.com> wrote: > > To All: > > Looks like we've finally got this figured out! > > �But what we cannot forget is that if the amount that has to be > > repaid is $3000 �or less and has to be reported as a deduction subject > > to the 2% AGI floor, the taxpayer can still be whacked even when the > > 2% AGI floor does not reduce the deduction. �Why? �Because $3000 of > > income �can produce more than $6000 of taxable income because the > > $3000 is included in the AGI phase-out calculations that are part of > > almost 30 provisions in the Tax Code related to deductions, > > exemptions, exclusions, credits, etc. �Thus the taxpayer can pay tax > > on more than $6000 on the $3000 of income that has to be repaid and > > get a $3000 deduction or if the deduction is phased-out by the 2% AGI > > floor he/she may get zippo benefit when the $3000 is repaid. > > So at the 25 percent tax rate, the taxpayer can get whacked for $1500 > > in taxes with "illusory income". �Do we have a great Congress or > > what? > > And compare that with the instructions that IRS has derived from > > section 56(b)(1)(D). �See line 7 on Form 6251 and consider what > > happens when the refund is from a year when the regular tax was paid. > > Deduction for the tax overpayment and then exclusion of the refund > > from AMTI. > Are we entering the third and final year of the phase-out > of the phase-out? Meaning no more phase-outs? > -- > ArtKamlet �at �a o l dot c o m �Columbus OH �K2PZH .... and the phase-out of the phase-out (down) of total itemized Cheers, WDK -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#26
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| On Jul 5, 2:03Â*pm, kam...[at]panix.com (Arthur Kamlet) wrote: - quote - > In article <9b61ed06-b378-450c-a822-363deaef2...[at]l64g2000hse.googlegroups.com> ,
exemption phase-out?> Â*<KEBSCHU...[at]aol.com> wrote: > > On Jul 4, 8:01�pm, Katie <katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote: > > To All: > > Looks like we've finally got this figured out! > > Â*But what we cannot forget is that if the amount that has to be > > repaid is $3000 Â*or less and has to be reported as a deduction subject > > to the 2% AGI floor, the taxpayer can still be whacked even when the > > 2% AGI floor does not reduce the deduction. Â*Why? Â*Because $3000 of > > income Â*can produce more than $6000 of taxable income because the > > $3000 is included in the AGI phase-out calculations that are part of > > almost 30 provisions in the Tax Code related to deductions, > > exemptions, exclusions, credits, etc. Â*Thus the taxpayer can pay tax > > on more than $6000 on the $3000 of income that has to be repaid and > > get a $3000 deduction or if the deduction is phased-out by the 2% AGI > > floor he/she may get zippo benefit when the $3000 is repaid. > > So at the 25 percent tax rate, the taxpayer can get whacked for $1500 > > in taxes with "illusory income". Â*Do we have a great Congress or > > what? > > And compare that with the instructions that IRS has derived from > > section 56(b)(1)(D). Â*See line 7 on Form 6251 and consider what > > happens when the refund is from a year when the regular tax was paid. > > Deduction for the tax overpayment and then exclusion of the refund > > from AMTI. > Are we entering the third and final year of the phase-out > of the phase-out? Meaning no more phase-outs? > -- > ArtKamlet Â*at Â*a o l dot c o m Â*Columbus OH Â*K2PZH What 'chu talking bout, Art? Anything other than the phase-out of the Phase-out up to 85 percent of the Social Security benefit exclusion and the phase-out of medical and miscellaneous expense deductions due to the thresholds can more than double the taxable income attributable to income at the margin. Cheers, WDK -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#25
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| In article <9b61ed06-b378-450c-a822-363deaef2095[at]l64g2000hse.googlegroups.com> , <KEBSCHULLW[at]aol.com> wrote: - quote - > On Jul 4, 8:01�pm, Katie <katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote: > > On Jul 3, 12:33�pm, "removeps-gro...[at]yahoo.com" <removeps- > > > gro...[at]yahoo.com> wrote: > > > > Suppose the repayment of less than 3k is a repayment of wages, then > > > the deduction is reported on Schedule A as misc deduction subject to > > > the 2% of AGI limit. �If the taxpayer does not itemize, then they > > > don't get any benefit from the deduction, which discriminates against > > > lower income taxpayers. �And besides, if they do itemize it is subject > > > to the 2% limit, which means that you likely don't get the benefit of > > > the deduction anyway, which discriminates against taxpayers dealing > > > with small amounts of money. > > > Note that the Sec. 1341 deduction in the year of restoration, if it is > > a miscellaneous itemized deduction, is not subject to the 2% AGI > > floor. �That's something I learned from our discussion with Dieter, > > that I didn't know before. �So thanks to Dieter for that. > > > Katie in San Diego > > > -- > To All: > Looks like we've finally got this figured out! > But what we cannot forget is that if the amount that has to be > repaid is $3000 or less and has to be reported as a deduction subject > to the 2% AGI floor, the taxpayer can still be whacked even when the > 2% AGI floor does not reduce the deduction. Why? Because $3000 of > income can produce more than $6000 of taxable income because the > $3000 is included in the AGI phase-out calculations that are part of > almost 30 provisions in the Tax Code related to deductions, > exemptions, exclusions, credits, etc. Thus the taxpayer can pay tax > on more than $6000 on the $3000 of income that has to be repaid and > get a $3000 deduction or if the deduction is phased-out by the 2% AGI > floor he/she may get zippo benefit when the $3000 is repaid. > So at the 25 percent tax rate, the taxpayer can get whacked for $1500 > in taxes with "illusory income". Do we have a great Congress or > what? > And compare that with the instructions that IRS has derived from > section 56(b)(1)(D). See line 7 on Form 6251 and consider what > happens when the refund is from a year when the regular tax was paid. > Deduction for the tax overpayment and then exclusion of the refund > from AMTI. Are we entering the third and final year of the phase-out of the phase-out? Meaning no more phase-outs? -- ArtKamlet at a o l dot c o m Columbus OH K2PZH -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#24
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| On Jul 4, 8:01�pm, Katie <katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote: - quote - > On Jul 3, 12:33�pm, "removeps-gro...[at]yahoo.com" <removeps- > gro...[at]yahoo.com> wrote: > > Suppose the repayment of less than 3k is a repayment of wages, then > > the deduction is reported on Schedule A as misc deduction subject to > > the 2% of AGI limit. �If the taxpayer does not itemize, then they > > don't get any benefit from the deduction, which discriminates against > > lower income taxpayers. �And besides, if they do itemize it is subject > > to the 2% limit, which means that you likely don't get the benefit of > > the deduction anyway, which discriminates against taxpayers dealing > > with small amounts of money. > Note that the Sec. 1341 deduction in the year of restoration, if it is > a miscellaneous itemized deduction, is not subject to the 2% AGI > floor. �That's something I learned from our discussion with Dieter, > that I didn't know before. �So thanks to Dieter for that. > Katie in San Diego > -- To All: Looks like we've finally got this figured out! But what we cannot forget is that if the amount that has to be repaid is $3000 or less and has to be reported as a deduction subject to the 2% AGI floor, the taxpayer can still be whacked even when the 2% AGI floor does not reduce the deduction. Why? Because $3000 of income can produce more than $6000 of taxable income because the $3000 is included in the AGI phase-out calculations that are part of almost 30 provisions in the Tax Code related to deductions, exemptions, exclusions, credits, etc. Thus the taxpayer can pay tax on more than $6000 on the $3000 of income that has to be repaid and get a $3000 deduction or if the deduction is phased-out by the 2% AGI floor he/she may get zippo benefit when the $3000 is repaid. So at the 25 percent tax rate, the taxpayer can get whacked for $1500 in taxes with "illusory income". Do we have a great Congress or what? And compare that with the instructions that IRS has derived from section 56(b)(1)(D). See line 7 on Form 6251 and consider what happens when the refund is from a year when the regular tax was paid. Deduction for the tax overpayment and then exclusion of the refund from AMTI. Cheers, WDK -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#23
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| On Jul 3, 12:33*pm, "removeps-gro...[at]yahoo.com" <removeps- gro...[at]yahoo.com> wrote: - quote - > Suppose the repayment of less than 3k is a repayment of wages, then
Note that the Sec. 1341 deduction in the year of restoration, if it is> the deduction is reported on Schedule A as misc deduction subject to > the 2% of AGI limit. *If the taxpayer does not itemize, then they > don't get any benefit from the deduction, which discriminates against > lower income taxpayers. *And besides, if they do itemize it is subject > to the 2% limit, which means that you likely don't get the benefit of > the deduction anyway, which discriminates against taxpayers dealing > with small amounts of money. a miscellaneous itemized deduction, is not subject to the 2% AGI floor. That's something I learned from our discussion with Dieter, that I didn't know before. So thanks to Dieter for that. 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#22
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| On Jul 4, 3:54*pm, "D. Stussy" <s...[at]bde-arc.ampr.org> wrote: - quote - > <removeps-gro...[at]yahoo.com> wrote in message > news:16d41867-1992-4262-8938-0559a759261f[at]q24g2000prf.googlegroups.com... > > On Jul 4, 1:58 pm, "D. Stussy" <s...[at]bde-arc.ampr.org> wrote: > > > "Katie" <katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote in message > > > > Actually, Dieter, I was wrong about that. *The deduction in the > > > > restoration year is a capital loss, subject to the Sec. 1211 > > > > limitation, if the income was originally capital gain. *See Reg. Sec. > > > > 1.1341-1(c). > > > I disagree for this reason: > > > Section 1341 existed in the 1954 Code (and maybe earlier). *In 1986, > > > Congress added section 67, which specifically lists it (at 67(b)(10)) as > an > > > "itemized deduction" that is exempt from the 2% of AGI floor. *That > > > reclassified it as ordinary IN ALL CASES and invalidated regulations put > in > > > place before the change that said otherwise. > > > Since 1987, as an individual only gets the claim of right deduction as > an > > > itemized deduction (not limited by the 2% AGI floor), it is always > ordinary > > > in nature. *Prior to 1987, it could have been claimed anywhere on a tax > > > return (and was usually claimed on the schedule where the income being > > > reversed was listed). *This does not affect the claim of right as a > credit. > > > TR 1.1341-1(c), enacted in 1957 and updated last in 1978, was superseded > by > > > a change in statute in 1986. > > Could publication 525 not be in accordance with the law then > > <Quote source="http://www.irs.gov/publications/p525/ar02.html#d0e9279 > > "> > Type of deduction. * The type of deduction you are allowed in the year > > of repayment depends on the type of income you included in the earlier > > year. You generally deduct the repayment on the same form or schedule > > on which you previously reported it as income. For example, if you > > reported it as self-employment income, deduct it as a business expense > > on Schedule C or Schedule C-EZ (Form 1040) or Schedule F (Form 1040). > > If you reported it as a capital gain, deduct it as a capital loss on > > Schedule D (Form 1040). If you reported it as wages, unemployment > > compensation, or other nonbusiness income, deduct it as a > > miscellaneous itemized deduction on Schedule A (Form 1040). > > </Quote> 1986 and earlier law was exactly that. *Such is incorrect for 1987 and later > law. > 26 USC 67(b) is pretty clear: *"..., the term 'miscellaneous itemized > deductions' means the itemized deductions other than --" > *... (10) the deduction under section 1341 (...), *... > All the [other] enumerated items are itemized deductions (taxes, interest, > contributions, casualty losses, gambling losses, medical, ETD for IRD, work > expenses overcoming a disability, unrecovered pension basis, and a few > others). *It's clear that by including the claim of right deduction in the > list that Congress reclassifed the deduction for individuals as ordinary > income and ONLY as an itemized deduction. *Section 67 only applies to > individuals, estates, and trusts. > When one deducts taxes or interest on Schedule C, one is not taking a > deduction under the authority of section 163 or 164. *One is using section > 162 as authority and deducting it as an "ordinary and necessary business > expense," not as a tax or as [non-personal] interest. > To claim a 1341 deduction "above the line", one has to have a section > authorizing it to appear there. *The problem is that the deduction is NOT an > expense, and therefore neither IRC 162 nor 212 authorize it above the line. > (Not all deductions are expenses - e.g. personal and dependency exemptions). > It is a reversal of income - like "returns and allowances" (e.g. Schedule C, > line 2). *Although it did have capital treatment for an individual under > pre-87 law, 1341(4)(B) does NOT authorize a capital loss carryover beyond > the [current] taxable year for a claim of right deduction, and IRC 1212(b) > does not authorize capital loss carrybacks for non-corporate entities. *What > that provision effectively means is that where the claim reverses a capital > gain, the individual taxpayer's OTHER capital losses carry forward without a > $3,000 (or $1,500 if MFS) reduction and that the current year's capital loss > is zero - since the claim of right deduction is an itemized deduction that > must appear on Schedule A. > Section 63(d) defines itemized deductions as any deduction other than > personal (and dependency) exemptions and those listed in section 62 for > computing AGI. *Section 62(a) enumerates only one type of repayment - at > (12), as an AGI adjustment: *Certain types of unemployment compensation. > Prior law may have recognized it according to character, but the addition of > section 67(b) which specifically includes it as among "itemized deductions" > changed that -- it CANNOT be a deduction which adjusts AGI. So the IRS is wrong in Pub. 525? I don't really think so. I don't see that the inclusion of the 1341 deduction in Sec. 67 as an itemized deduction not subject to the 2% AGI floor changes the character of the deduction. All it means is that when the deduction is properly deductible as an itemized deduction, it is not subject to the floor. That's what the IRS says in Pub 525. Of course IRS publications are not authority for anything, but one is not likely to be penalized for following their instructions. Also, the regulations under Sec. 1341 are quite detailed, with examples, of how NOL carryforwards and carrybacks are handled when the recognition year tax liability is recomputed. Of course for an individual, capital losses are only carried forward. Reg. 1341(c) gives an example; if a taxpayer restores $4,000, and the amount is a long-term capital loss, the taxpayer (assuming no other capital gains/ losses in the restoration year) can deduct only $3,000 in the current year and can deduct the remaining $1,000 in the following year. The whole $4,000 is taken into account in determining whether the Sec. 1341 rules apply. RIA is pretty good about noting when regulations have not been updated for later legislation, but there is no note to that effect on Reg. 1.1341-1. I think the regulation is still good, and the IRS publication is correct also. 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#21
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| <removeps-groups[at]yahoo.com> wrote in message news:16d41867-1992-4262-8938-0559a759261f[at]q24g2000prf.googlegroups.com... - quote - > On Jul 4, 1:58 pm, "D. Stussy" <s...[at]bde-arc.ampr.org> wrote:
law.> > "Katie" <katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote in message > > > Actually, Dieter, I was wrong about that. The deduction in the > > > restoration year is a capital loss, subject to the Sec. 1211 > > > limitation, if the income was originally capital gain. See Reg. Sec. > > > 1.1341-1(c). > > > I disagree for this reason: > > > Section 1341 existed in the 1954 Code (and maybe earlier). In 1986, > > Congress added section 67, which specifically lists it (at 67(b)(10)) as an > > "itemized deduction" that is exempt from the 2% of AGI floor. That > > reclassified it as ordinary IN ALL CASES and invalidated regulations put in > > place before the change that said otherwise. > > > Since 1987, as an individual only gets the claim of right deduction as an > > itemized deduction (not limited by the 2% AGI floor), it is always ordinary > > in nature. Prior to 1987, it could have been claimed anywhere on a tax > > return (and was usually claimed on the schedule where the income being > > reversed was listed). This does not affect the claim of right as a credit. > > > TR 1.1341-1(c), enacted in 1957 and updated last in 1978, was superseded by > > a change in statute in 1986. > Could publication 525 not be in accordance with the law then > <Quote source="http://www.irs.gov/publications/p525/ar02.html#d0e9279 > "> Type of deduction. The type of deduction you are allowed in the year > of repayment depends on the type of income you included in the earlier > year. You generally deduct the repayment on the same form or schedule > on which you previously reported it as income. For example, if you > reported it as self-employment income, deduct it as a business expense > on Schedule C or Schedule C-EZ (Form 1040) or Schedule F (Form 1040). > If you reported it as a capital gain, deduct it as a capital loss on > Schedule D (Form 1040). If you reported it as wages, unemployment > compensation, or other nonbusiness income, deduct it as a > miscellaneous itemized deduction on Schedule A (Form 1040). > </Quote 1986 and earlier law was exactly that. Such is incorrect for 1987 and later 26 USC 67(b) is pretty clear: "..., the term 'miscellaneous itemized deductions' means the itemized deductions other than --" ... (10) the deduction under section 1341 (...), ... All the [other] enumerated items are itemized deductions (taxes, interest, contributions, casualty losses, gambling losses, medical, ETD for IRD, work expenses overcoming a disability, unrecovered pension basis, and a few others). It's clear that by including the claim of right deduction in the list that Congress reclassifed the deduction for individuals as ordinary income and ONLY as an itemized deduction. Section 67 only applies to individuals, estates, and trusts. When one deducts taxes or interest on Schedule C, one is not taking a deduction under the authority of section 163 or 164. One is using section 162 as authority and deducting it as an "ordinary and necessary business expense," not as a tax or as [non-personal] interest. To claim a 1341 deduction "above the line", one has to have a section authorizing it to appear there. The problem is that the deduction is NOT an expense, and therefore neither IRC 162 nor 212 authorize it above the line. (Not all deductions are expenses - e.g. personal and dependency exemptions). It is a reversal of income - like "returns and allowances" (e.g. Schedule C, line 2). Although it did have capital treatment for an individual under pre-87 law, 1341(4)(B) does NOT authorize a capital loss carryover beyond the [current] taxable year for a claim of right deduction, and IRC 1212(b) does not authorize capital loss carrybacks for non-corporate entities. What that provision effectively means is that where the claim reverses a capital gain, the individual taxpayer's OTHER capital losses carry forward without a $3,000 (or $1,500 if MFS) reduction and that the current year's capital loss is zero - since the claim of right deduction is an itemized deduction that must appear on Schedule A. Section 63(d) defines itemized deductions as any deduction other than personal (and dependency) exemptions and those listed in section 62 for computing AGI. Section 62(a) enumerates only one type of repayment - at (12), as an AGI adjustment: Certain types of unemployment compensation. Prior law may have recognized it according to character, but the addition of section 67(b) which specifically includes it as among "itemized deductions" changed that -- it CANNOT be a deduction which adjusts AGI. -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#20
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| On Jul 4, 1:58 pm, "D. Stussy" <s...[at]bde-arc.ampr.org> wrote: - quote - > "Katie" <katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote in message
Could publication 525 not be in accordance with the law then> > Actually, Dieter, I was wrong about that. The deduction in the > > restoration year is a capital loss, subject to the Sec. 1211 > > limitation, if the income was originally capital gain. See Reg. Sec. > > 1.1341-1(c). > I disagree for this reason: > Section 1341 existed in the 1954 Code (and maybe earlier). In 1986, > Congress added section 67, which specifically lists it (at 67(b)(10)) as an > "itemized deduction" that is exempt from the 2% of AGI floor. That > reclassified it as ordinary IN ALL CASES and invalidated regulations put in > place before the change that said otherwise. > Since 1987, as an individual only gets the claim of right deduction as an > itemized deduction (not limited by the 2% AGI floor), it is always ordinary > in nature. Prior to 1987, it could have been claimed anywhere on a tax > return (and was usually claimed on the schedule where the income being > reversed was listed). This does not affect the claim of right as a credit. > TR 1.1341-1(c), enacted in 1957 and updated last in 1978, was superseded by > a change in statute in 1986. <Quote source="http://www.irs.gov/publications/p525/ar02.html#d0e9279 " Type of deduction. The type of deduction you are allowed in the year of repayment depends on the type of income you included in the earlier year. You generally deduct the repayment on the same form or schedule on which you previously reported it as income. For example, if you reported it as self-employment income, deduct it as a business expense on Schedule C or Schedule C-EZ (Form 1040) or Schedule F (Form 1040). If you reported it as a capital gain, deduct it as a capital loss on Schedule D (Form 1040). If you reported it as wages, unemployment compensation, or other nonbusiness income, deduct it as a miscellaneous itemized deduction on Schedule A (Form 1040). </Quote -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#19
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| "Katie" <katiej_1958[at]yahoo.com> wrote in message news:15a3a930-ddec-4dca-94bc-a1f2c07052b0[at]i18g2000prn.googlegroups.com... - quote - > On Jul 3, 11:40 pm, "D. Stussy" <s...[at]bde-arc.ampr.org> wrote:
I disagree for this reason:> > "Katie" <katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote in message > > > So yes, I think Kowell does get a deduction for the amount he repaid, > > > or an adjustment to his current year tax liability. Also, I don't > > > think the deduction is a capital loss; I think it's ordinary. The (b) > > > calculation takes care of the difference between capital and ordinary. > > > As a deduction, it is ordinary - because it goes on schedule A. > > As a credit, the character doesn't matter. However, it is a REFUNDABLE > > credit. > > Actually, Dieter, I was wrong about that. The deduction in the > restoration year is a capital loss, subject to the Sec. 1211 > limitation, if the income was originally capital gain. See Reg. Sec. > 1.1341-1(c). Section 1341 existed in the 1954 Code (and maybe earlier). In 1986, Congress added section 67, which specifically lists it (at 67(b)(10)) as an "itemized deduction" that is exempt from the 2% of AGI floor. That reclassified it as ordinary IN ALL CASES and invalidated regulations put in place before the change that said otherwise. Since 1987, as an individual only gets the claim of right deduction as an itemized deduction (not limited by the 2% AGI floor), it is always ordinary in nature. Prior to 1987, it could have been claimed anywhere on a tax return (and was usually claimed on the schedule where the income being reversed was listed). This does not affect the claim of right as a credit. TR 1.1341-1(c), enacted in 1957 and updated last in 1978, was superseded by a change in statute in 1986. -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#18
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| On Jul 3, 11:40*pm, "D. Stussy" <s...[at]bde-arc.ampr.org> wrote: - quote - > "Katie" <katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote in message
Actually, Dieter, I was wrong about that. The deduction in the> > So yes, I think Kowell does get a deduction for the amount he repaid, > > or an adjustment to his current year tax liability. *Also, I don't > > think the deduction is a capital loss; I think it's ordinary. *The (b) > > calculation takes care of the difference between capital and ordinary. > As a deduction, it is ordinary - because it goes on schedule A. > As a credit, the character doesn't matter. *However, it is a REFUNDABLE > credit. restoration year is a capital loss, subject to the Sec. 1211 limitation, if the income was originally capital gain. See Reg. Sec. 1.1341-1(c). 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#17
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| "Katie" <katiej_1958[at]yahoo.com> wrote in message news:0013291a-9d6a-4911-b5a1-8042dcc054d2[at]f24g2000prh.googlegroups.com... - quote - > On Jul 2, 5:33 am, rdad...[at]panix.com (Dick Adams) wrote:
As a deduction, it is ordinary - because it goes on schedule A.> > Katie <katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote: > > > Ernie Klein <eckl...[at]pacbell.net> wrote: > > > <The trials and tribulations of a Ponzi Scheme victim> > > Ernie, see IRC Sec. 1341. > > > Perfect cite, Katie. > > > I recall the one time I thought Katie was wrong. > > After a thorough search of the IRC, Regs, etc. > > it turned out she was correct. > Well, I HAVE been wrong from time to time, and I might be wrong here. > But I think the answer is that Kowell received the gains under a claim > of right (i.e., based on what was known at the time, he had the right > to the money) and Sec. 1341 applies. His tax liability for the year > in which he was forced to repay the gains is the lesser of (a) the tax > computed with a deduction for the amount repaid or (b) the tax for the > repayment year calculated without the deduction, minus the reduction > in tax for the year(s) of receipt of the income that would have > resulted if that income had not been received. > So yes, I think Kowell does get a deduction for the amount he repaid, > or an adjustment to his current year tax liability. Also, I don't > think the deduction is a capital loss; I think it's ordinary. The (b) > calculation takes care of the difference between capital and ordinary. As a credit, the character doesn't matter. However, it is a REFUNDABLE credit. -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#16
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| On Jul 3, 12:33*pm, "removeps-gro...[at]yahoo.com" <removeps- gro...[at]yahoo.com> wrote: - quote - > Suppose the repayment of less than 3k is a repayment of wages, then > the deduction is reported on Schedule A as misc deduction subject to > the 2% of AGI limit. If the taxpayer does not itemize, then they > don't get any benefit from the deduction, which discriminates against > lower income taxpayers. And besides, if they do itemize it is subject > to the 2% limit, which means that you likely don't get the benefit of > the deduction anyway, which discriminates against taxpayers dealing > with small amounts of money. > Publication 525, Repayments: > http://www.irs.gov/publications/p525/ar02.html#d0e9279 The 2% floor on itemized deductions dates back to the 1986 Tax Reform Act. The $3,000 limit on application of Sec. 1341 goes back a lot farther than that -- at least into the 1950s and maybe as far as the 1930s. The problem with an anomaly or injustice or whatever you want to call it that has small tax effects, like this one, is that no one taxpayer can afford to pursue it, either by a lawsuit or by lobbying for a statutory change. - quote - > Consider the following scenario for method (b), where you compute your > tax on your prior year tax return without the extra income, and take > the difference as a credit on line 70. Say in the prior year of 1998 > your income was 125k, including the 32k capital gain. You had rental > loss of 10k, but as your income was above the 100k, the loss was > partially disallowed and you got to deduct only 5k, and 5k got carried > over. The following year your rental income was a profit of 8k, but > combined with the carried over loss of 5k, the actual profit is 3k. > Now you go back and redo your 1998 return without the 32k income. The > income is 93k, so the entire loss of 10k is allowed. But this does > not sound right as the 10k loss would be deducted in full in 1998, and > then part or all of it deducted again in 1999. So I'm guessing that > you should not increase your rental loss (meaning still take only 5k > of loss as in your original return), or for that matter any item with > a carryover component (such as investment interest, charitable > contributions, etc). I think the regs take care of this. See Reg. Sec. 1.1341-1(d). You have to recalculate the tax for all of the prior years that were affected by the inclusion of that income. So you would have to reduce the (b) calculation by the amount of tax benefit you got in subsequent years from any carryovers that resulted from the inclusion of the income. - quote - > Finally, what about state taxes. > Regarding method (b) of computing the credit, will the same method > carry over to the state? > And would method (a) of taking the deduction also carryover to state? > Say the person did not live in California when they got the 32k, but > they are a California resident now, then I imagine the deduction is > not allowed. Many states probably conform to Sec. 1341. A state that, by statute, starts the calculation of taxable income with federal AGI or federal taxable income probably conforms. However, you would have to look at it state by state. California does have a statute that conforms very closely to Sec. 1341 (CRTC Sec 17049). Also, in California, after 2001 an individual resident takes items into account as if he had been a resident for all relevant years. So the deduction would be allowed, just as a resident is allowed to claim a capital loss carryforward that arose in a nonresident year. Of course the result of the (b) calculation would be zero, unless the taxpayer actually filed a nonresident return and paid a tax in the year the income was reported. Again, you'd have to look at this state by state. 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#15
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| On Jul 3, 12:46 pm, kam...[at]panix.com (Arthur Kamlet) wrote: - quote - > removeps-gro...[at]yahoo.com <removeps-gro...[at]yahoo.com> wrote:
If they're from higher income upbringing, their normal tax might be> > Suppose the repayment of less than 3k is a repayment of wages, then > > the deduction is reported on Schedule A as misc deduction subject to > > the 2% of AGI limit. If the taxpayer does not itemize, then they > > don't get any benefit from the deduction, which discriminates against > > lower income taxpayers. > That's OK. If the taxpayer is from higher income upbringing, and > is pushed into AMT territory, he won't get any benefit from the > deduction, which discriminates against higher income tax payers. > Fair & equitable, no? more than the AMT tax, so they do get the benefit of the deduction. -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#14
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| In article <515592a2-bc5c-448d-8482-09294b17c7bd[at]f1g2000prb.googlegroups.com> , removeps-groups[at]yahoo.com <removeps-groups[at]yahoo.com> wrote: - quote - > Suppose the repayment of less than 3k is a repayment of wages, then > the deduction is reported on Schedule A as misc deduction subject to > the 2% of AGI limit. If the taxpayer does not itemize, then they > don't get any benefit from the deduction, which discriminates against > lower income taxpayers. That's OK. If the taxpayer is from higher income upbringing, and is pushed into AMT territory, he won't get any benefit from the deduction, which discriminates against higher income tax payers. Fair & equitable, no? -- ArtKamlet at a o l dot c o m Columbus OH K2PZH -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#13
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| On Jul 3, 11:35*am, Katie <katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote: - quote - > On Jul 2, 8:13*pm, KEBSCHU...[at]aol.com wrote:
Suppose the repayment of less than 3k is a repayment of wages, then> > Do you have any insight into why the Code requires different treatment > > depending on whether the repayment by the taxpayer is more or less > > than $3000? > No, none whatever. *As far as I can see, Sec. 1341 including the > $3,000 limitation goes back to the 1954 Code and who knows how far > beyond. *Certainly $3,000 was a lot more when this statute was first > enacted than it is today, so your objection would have been much more > significant then than it is now. > Bear in mind that in general, if a taxpayer repays an amount received > in an earlier year under a claim of right, a deduction is allowed in > the year of repayment. *Sec. 1341 provides an additional benefit in > the form of what is in effect a refund of the overpayment of tax in > the year the income was received, if that's more than the reduction in > current year tax arising from the deduction. *So even if the repayment > is less than $3,000, a deduction is allowed in the repayment year. > You just don't get the (possibly) additional benefit of the (b) > calculation. the deduction is reported on Schedule A as misc deduction subject to the 2% of AGI limit. If the taxpayer does not itemize, then they don't get any benefit from the deduction, which discriminates against lower income taxpayers. And besides, if they do itemize it is subject to the 2% limit, which means that you likely don't get the benefit of the deduction anyway, which discriminates against taxpayers dealing with small amounts of money. Publication 525, Repayments: http://www.irs.gov/publications/p525/ar02.html#d0e9279 - quote - > I did look at the regs and I see that I was wrong about the nature of
Consider the following scenario for method (b), where you compute your> the deduction in the year of repayment. *Reg. Sec. 1.1341-1(c) says > that if the income was capital gain, the repayment is treated as > capital loss subject to the Sec. 1211 limitation on current year > deduction. * So, unless the taxpayer has other capital gains in the > repayment year, the deduction is limited to $3,000. *That makes it > perhaps more likely that the (b) calculation will be more advantageous > -- which is the whole point of Sec. 1341. tax on your prior year tax return without the extra income, and take the difference as a credit on line 70. Say in the prior year of 1998 your income was 125k, including the 32k capital gain. You had rental loss of 10k, but as your income was above the 100k, the loss was partially disallowed and you got to deduct only 5k, and 5k got carried over. The following year your rental income was a profit of 8k, but combined with the carried over loss of 5k, the actual profit is 3k. Now you go back and redo your 1998 return without the 32k income. The income is 93k, so the entire loss of 10k is allowed. But this does not sound right as the 10k loss would be deducted in full in 1998, and then part or all of it deducted again in 1999. So I'm guessing that you should not increase your rental loss (meaning still take only 5k of loss as in your original return), or for that matter any item with a carryover component (such as investment interest, charitable contributions, etc). The original post mentions 32k of long term capital gains in a year probably before 2000, so the tax on it would be 20% of 32k, or $6,400. In addition, the 32k income might have lowered the AMT exemption and thereby increased AMT tax, increased AGI and thereby lowered medical expense deduction and so on, so all in all, the credit would be $6,400 or something in excess of $6,400. Finally, what about state taxes. Regarding method (b) of computing the credit, will the same method carry over to the state? And would method (a) of taking the deduction also carryover to state? Say the person did not live in California when they got the 32k, but they are a California resident now, then I imagine the deduction is not allowed. -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#12
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| On Jul 2, 8:13Â*pm, KEBSCHU...[at]aol.com wrote: - quote - > > But I think the answer is that Kowell received the gains under a claim > > of right (i.e., based on what was known at the time, he had the right > > to the money) and Sec. 1341 applies. �His tax liability for the year > > in which he was forced to repay the gains is the lesser of (a) the tax > > computed with a deduction for the amount repaid or (b) the tax for the > > repayment year calculated without the deduction, minus the reduction > > in tax for the year(s) of receipt of the income that would have > > resulted if that income had not been received. > > So yes, I think Kowell does get a deduction for the amount he repaid, > > or an adjustment to his current year tax liability. �Also, I don't > > think the deduction is a capital loss; I think it's ordinary. �The (b) > > calculation takes care of the difference between capital and ordinary. > > Katie in San Diego > Think about what could happen if the "gain" had been less than $3000. > You are probably not surprised that I am annoyed by the treatment for > amounts less $3000. > Do you have any insight into why the Code requires different treatment > depending on whether the repayment by the taxpayer is more or less > than $3000? No, none whatever. As far as I can see, Sec. 1341 including the $3,000 limitation goes back to the 1954 Code and who knows how far beyond. Certainly $3,000 was a lot more when this statute was first enacted than it is today, so your objection would have been much more significant then than it is now. Bear in mind that in general, if a taxpayer repays an amount received in an earlier year under a claim of right, a deduction is allowed in the year of repayment. Sec. 1341 provides an additional benefit in the form of what is in effect a refund of the overpayment of tax in the year the income was received, if that's more than the reduction in current year tax arising from the deduction. So even if the repayment is less than $3,000, a deduction is allowed in the repayment year. You just don't get the (possibly) additional benefit of the (b) calculation. I did look at the regs and I see that I was wrong about the nature of the deduction in the year of repayment. Reg. Sec. 1.1341-1(c) says that if the income was capital gain, the repayment is treated as capital loss subject to the Sec. 1211 limitation on current year deduction. So, unless the taxpayer has other capital gains in the repayment year, the deduction is limited to $3,000. That makes it perhaps more likely that the (b) calculation will be more advantageous -- which is the whole point of Sec. 1341. 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#11
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| In article <0013291a-9d6a-4911-b5a1-8042dcc054d2[at]f24g2000prh.googlegroups.com> , Katie <katiej_1958[at]yahoo.com> wrote: - quote - > But I think the answer is that Kowell received the gains under a claim
Let me see if I understand this (and ask a hypothetical question):> of right (i.e., based on what was known at the time, he had the right > to the money) and Sec. 1341 applies. His tax liability for the year > in which he was forced to repay the gains is the lesser of (a) the tax > computed with a deduction for the amount repaid or (b) the tax for the > repayment year calculated without the deduction, minus the reduction > in tax for the year(s) of receipt of the income that would have > resulted if that income had not been received. 10 years ago, someone had "income" of, say, $50,000, which he shouldn't have. This year, he has to return it. So he does the following calculations: 1) Redo his income tax return for 10 years ago without the $50,000, and see how much less tax he paid. Take that as a tax credit this year. 2) Take a deduction of $50,000 this year. (What sort of deduction? Subject to limitations based on income?) He does whichever of those is better for him. Now, suppose he had $50,000 of deferred investment interest expense going in to 1998. The bogus income wiped that out, but didn't actually add to his tax bill. So calculation (1) is $0. However, if he hadn't used it up, he'd have had a lower tax bill the following year (when he had more investment income to deduct it against). Does that matter? If not (and he didn't have much investment income in the ensuing decade), he's just converted $50,000 of deferred (and still deferrable) investment interest expense into an actual $50,000 deduction, right? Seth -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#10
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| On Jul 2, 4:04�pm, Katie <katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote: - quote - > On Jul 2, 5:33�am, rdad...[at]panix.com (Dick Adams) wrote:
Katie:> > Katie �<katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote: > > > Ernie Klein <eckl...[at]pacbell.net> wrote: > > > <The trials and tribulations of a Ponzi Scheme victim> > > Ernie, see IRC Sec. 1341. > > Perfect cite, Katie. > > I recall the one time I thought Katie was wrong. > > After a thorough search of the IRC, Regs, etc. > > it turned out she was correct. - quote - > Well, I HAVE been wrong from time to time,
record.... YUP! :-) But you always graciously come back and correct the - quote - > and I might be wrong here. .... NOPE! :-) - quote - > But I think the answer is that Kowell received the gains under a claim
Think about what could happen if the "gain" had been less than $3000.> of right (i.e., based on what was known at the time, he had the right > to the money) and Sec. 1341 applies. �His tax liability for the year > in which he was forced to repay the gains is the lesser of (a) the tax > computed with a deduction for the amount repaid or (b) the tax for the > repayment year calculated without the deduction, minus the reduction > in tax for the year(s) of receipt of the income that would have > resulted if that income had not been received. > So yes, I think Kowell does get a deduction for the amount he repaid, > or an adjustment to his current year tax liability. �Also, I don't > think the deduction is a capital loss; I think it's ordinary. �The (b) > calculation takes care of the difference between capital and ordinary. > Katie in San Diego You are probably not surprised that I am annoyed by the treatment for amounts less $3000. Do you have any insight into why the Code requires different treatment depending on whether the repayment by the taxpayer is more or less than $3000? Cheers, WDK -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#9
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| Katie <katiej_1958[at]yahoo.com> wrote: - quote - > Well, I HAVE been wrong from time to time,
Yeah, I think that was the time you agreed with me. ;-)Stu -- << ------------------------------------------------------- > << 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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#8
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| On Jul 2, 5:33*am, rdad...[at]panix.com (Dick Adams) wrote: - quote - > Katie *<katiej_1...[at]yahoo.com> wrote: > > Ernie Klein <eckl...[at]pacbell.net> wrote: > > <The trials and tribulations of a Ponzi Scheme victim> > Ernie, see IRC Sec. 1341. > Perfect cite, Katie. > I recall the one time I thought Katie was wrong. > After a thorough search of the IRC, Regs, etc. > it turned out she was correct. Well, I HAVE been wrong from time to time, and I might be wrong here. But I think the answer is that Kowell received the gains under a claim of right (i.e., based on what was known at the time, he had the right to the money) and Sec. 1341 applies. His tax liability for the year in which he was forced to repay the gains is the lesser of (a) the tax computed with a deduction for the amount repaid or (b) the tax for the repayment year calculated without the deduction, minus the reduction in tax for the year(s) of receipt of the income that would have resulted if that income had not been received. So yes, I think Kowell does get a deduction for the amount he repaid, or an adjustment to his current year tax liability. Also, I don't think the deduction is a capital loss; I think it's ordinary. The (b) calculation takes care of the difference between capital and ordinary. 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 (2007) - All rights reserved. > << ------------------------------------------------------- > |
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| interesting, question, tax |
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