Every time I ponder on this, I find more possible problems for myself and the client. Hopefully I am "overthinking" the situation.
Ms LASTNAME came in yesterday with two CP516s, one each for TY2008 and for TY2009. No problem here, we did as much of the returns as possible but could not complete them because she had more Sch A information at home. She is due to come back Wednesday to finalize.
The CP516s were addressed to her as Ms LASTNAME, but she told me she should actually be Ms MAIDENNAME because she has recently learned "at the time of her marriage, her husband's divorce was not finalized so we were never legally married".
Obviously she has been working with an attorney on this and she said they were going to "get a divorce instead of voiding the marriage because it [the divorce] is easier."
Now the problems are that for TY2006 and TY2007 they filed MFJ but in fact were not legally married. What is your take on how those years should be resolved for her?
I cannot file Form 1040Xs for those years because they received the full amount of the refund. So, if I subtract her portion of the refund from the joint refund received it would appear that she "owes" the difference when she in fact does not.
Injured Spouse SEEMS to me to be the way to go. BUT, she was NOT a spouse since there was no legal marriage, and she did receive her refund, i.e., nothing was held back (i.e., she suffered no injury). True enough, the injured spouse form will allocate incomes, refunds, etc so this PROBABLY should be used, but my mind still wonders.
Or, should she work with the Taxpayer Advocate Office on this?
Lastly, I wonder why her attorney is advising her to get a divorce instead of voiding the marriage. I AM NOT A LAWYER, but it seems to me that a divorce SHOULD only be obtained to dissolve a valid marriage, not to "return to square one", as it were. And, Texas is a community property state, so I wonder if the existence of a "divorce" could come back and backfire on her at sometime in the future.
Your comments on Form 1040X, Form 8379, and the Taxpayer Advocate Office for this situation are welcomed - especially if you have faced a similar instance.
Ms LASTNAME came in yesterday with two CP516s, one each for TY2008 and for TY2009. No problem here, we did as much of the returns as possible but could not complete them because she had more Sch A information at home. She is due to come back Wednesday to finalize.
The CP516s were addressed to her as Ms LASTNAME, but she told me she should actually be Ms MAIDENNAME because she has recently learned "at the time of her marriage, her husband's divorce was not finalized so we were never legally married".
Obviously she has been working with an attorney on this and she said they were going to "get a divorce instead of voiding the marriage because it [the divorce] is easier."
Now the problems are that for TY2006 and TY2007 they filed MFJ but in fact were not legally married. What is your take on how those years should be resolved for her?
I cannot file Form 1040Xs for those years because they received the full amount of the refund. So, if I subtract her portion of the refund from the joint refund received it would appear that she "owes" the difference when she in fact does not.
Injured Spouse SEEMS to me to be the way to go. BUT, she was NOT a spouse since there was no legal marriage, and she did receive her refund, i.e., nothing was held back (i.e., she suffered no injury). True enough, the injured spouse form will allocate incomes, refunds, etc so this PROBABLY should be used, but my mind still wonders.
Or, should she work with the Taxpayer Advocate Office on this?
Lastly, I wonder why her attorney is advising her to get a divorce instead of voiding the marriage. I AM NOT A LAWYER, but it seems to me that a divorce SHOULD only be obtained to dissolve a valid marriage, not to "return to square one", as it were. And, Texas is a community property state, so I wonder if the existence of a "divorce" could come back and backfire on her at sometime in the future.
Your comments on Form 1040X, Form 8379, and the Taxpayer Advocate Office for this situation are welcomed - especially if you have faced a similar instance.
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