bill of $65,000. I did a similiar one last year except the taxpayer was a self employed health ins agent and the money the taxpayer/agent lost had to do with a loan the taxpayer/agent made to an inventor that went bad. That taxpayer/agent ended up reporting this loss on Sch D but I would think this would be different since the $65K is related directly to the taxpayers business. So would this appear on Sch C part 5?
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Sch C filer has client who did not pay his..
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Originally posted by joanmcq View PostSo if the income wasn't reported, no loss. Basic accounting.
LTOnly in government or politics is a "cut in spending" really an increase. It's just not as much of an increase as they wanted it to be, therefore a "cut".
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Look at it this way AZ
If he could claim a deduction for income not received, what would stop you from claiming a deduction for 100K tax returns at your average price each that you didn't do? Ok ya got me my example is even more farfetched than yours but not much more.Last edited by erchess; 11-14-2008, 03:29 AM.
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Well, this is certainly a timely question. Info on current weekly Tax Pro e-mail from NATP discusses this situation at length, not about deducting loss, but about issuing the debtor Form 1099-C, Cancellation of Debt. There are rules and regs, but it can be done by a tax preparation business if proper procedures are followed. There is poetic justice after all.Last edited by Burke; 11-14-2008, 04:28 PM.
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