I doubt the explanation was: “The payer wanted to pay the individual and use the individual’s SSN rather than the corporate EIN because the payer had a contract with the individual and not his corporation. So we zeroed out the 1099-MISC on Schedule C and nomineed the income to the corporation because we wanted to save some SE taxes.”
More likely, the explanation was: “The payer mistakenly used the individual’s SSN rather then the corporate EIN. So we zeroed out the 1099-MISC on Schedule C and nomineed the income to the corporation.”
There is a difference. Of course IRS is going to accept the later explanation without challenging it short of an audit.
That is exactly the situation in the original post of this thread. Re-read it:
State Farm has a contract with the insurance guy, not the insurance guy’s corporation.
Gee wiz, people, read the context of this discussion before shooting from the hip. The payer refuses to recognize the corporation and insists on paying the individual. How much clearer does this case have to be????
Stare Farm: “WE DO NOT WANT TO USE YOUR CORPORATION EIN BECUASE WE HAVE A CONTRACT WITH YOU! NOT YOUR CORPORATION!!!”
Issue solved. It goes on Schedule C. Not his corporation!
More likely, the explanation was: “The payer mistakenly used the individual’s SSN rather then the corporate EIN. So we zeroed out the 1099-MISC on Schedule C and nomineed the income to the corporation.”
There is a difference. Of course IRS is going to accept the later explanation without challenging it short of an audit.
That is exactly the situation in the original post of this thread. Re-read it:
State Farm has a contract with the insurance guy, not the insurance guy’s corporation.
Gee wiz, people, read the context of this discussion before shooting from the hip. The payer refuses to recognize the corporation and insists on paying the individual. How much clearer does this case have to be????
Stare Farm: “WE DO NOT WANT TO USE YOUR CORPORATION EIN BECUASE WE HAVE A CONTRACT WITH YOU! NOT YOUR CORPORATION!!!”
Issue solved. It goes on Schedule C. Not his corporation!
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