People in Tennessee consult with their lawyer when their loved ones die. Part of the typical paperwork executed by these lawyers is a TN estate tax return. Tax people and accountants are rarely engaged to prepare the estate tax return. TN has a $1MM exemption and a flat 5% tax on the excess.
Unless there is no wiggle room, lawyers will value estate property at less than $1MM and will file the return without an appraisal. Tenn Dept of Revenue knows full well this is going on but does not enable its agents to take on members of the Tennessee Bar.
Although rarely engaged to prepare an estate tax return, we as preparers are seemingly ALWAYS confronted to compute gain/loss when this property is ultimately sold. Typically we find out the value upon death is severely understated by the attorney. Real estate will often be sold within a couple years for 2X or 3X multiples of the value claimed by these attorneys. On the horns of the proverbial dilemma, as preparers we are forced to choose between a reasonable basis at date of death, versus a consistent treatment of the lawyer's estimate, which obviously penalizes the taxpayer unfairly.
My question deals with our ethical responsibility. Anyone who reads the above will agree that the situation is wrong. However, what is OUR responsibility?? We had nothing to do with the understatement, and we are NOT being engaged to file a Tennessee return. And our responsibility certainly has nothing to do with a righteous crusade against the Tennessee Bar or any members. If we simply ask for an appraisal and file accordingly, are we not fulfilling our responsibility? Are we welching out on an ethical mandate to assure Tennessee is properly reported when we haven't even been engaged to do so?
Just exactly WHICH of these many parties do we have an ethical obligation to?
I have posted this situation before, but have never asked the question in the above fashion.
Unless there is no wiggle room, lawyers will value estate property at less than $1MM and will file the return without an appraisal. Tenn Dept of Revenue knows full well this is going on but does not enable its agents to take on members of the Tennessee Bar.
Although rarely engaged to prepare an estate tax return, we as preparers are seemingly ALWAYS confronted to compute gain/loss when this property is ultimately sold. Typically we find out the value upon death is severely understated by the attorney. Real estate will often be sold within a couple years for 2X or 3X multiples of the value claimed by these attorneys. On the horns of the proverbial dilemma, as preparers we are forced to choose between a reasonable basis at date of death, versus a consistent treatment of the lawyer's estimate, which obviously penalizes the taxpayer unfairly.
My question deals with our ethical responsibility. Anyone who reads the above will agree that the situation is wrong. However, what is OUR responsibility?? We had nothing to do with the understatement, and we are NOT being engaged to file a Tennessee return. And our responsibility certainly has nothing to do with a righteous crusade against the Tennessee Bar or any members. If we simply ask for an appraisal and file accordingly, are we not fulfilling our responsibility? Are we welching out on an ethical mandate to assure Tennessee is properly reported when we haven't even been engaged to do so?
Just exactly WHICH of these many parties do we have an ethical obligation to?
I have posted this situation before, but have never asked the question in the above fashion.
Comment