This is a followup on my earlier post on trusts. To sum up the situation, I have found out what years are missing for two identical trusts that my client set up for two children with money that came from the taxpayer's mother. The trusts were funded with the same sum of money in each and in each the money was divided evenly between zero coupon US Treasury bonds that were disbursed without being cashed and without reaching maturity, and shares of a mutual fund. There were sales of the mutual fund in the last year for which returns were filed but none since then. At disbursement the mutual funds were passed to the children without being liquidated. So I'm going to prepare and sign the forms and the mother will sign them and mail them in. Then I'll negotiate with the IRS about arrangements to pay up.
1. In this scenario I don't have any sales of assets to worry about do I? I mean, there's no special rule that the bonds and or the fund are deemed to have been liquidated when the kids got their shares?
2. In the unlikely event that the parent dies without paying the tax can the IRS go after the husband or the kids? Mom was the only trustee, husband is not the father of the kids by biology or formal adoption, but he and Mom filed jointly for some of the years.
3. Does anyone have any ideas on getting the penalties abated? I really feel sorry for the client here because there should never have been trusts set up. The relevant fees have added up to much much more than the tax savings of the trusts which is why she stopped filing them.
4. Do I need to see the legal paperwork that created the trusts? Or is it enough that the broker and the IRS accepted that trusts existed and the IRS assigned EINs?
1. In this scenario I don't have any sales of assets to worry about do I? I mean, there's no special rule that the bonds and or the fund are deemed to have been liquidated when the kids got their shares?
2. In the unlikely event that the parent dies without paying the tax can the IRS go after the husband or the kids? Mom was the only trustee, husband is not the father of the kids by biology or formal adoption, but he and Mom filed jointly for some of the years.
3. Does anyone have any ideas on getting the penalties abated? I really feel sorry for the client here because there should never have been trusts set up. The relevant fees have added up to much much more than the tax savings of the trusts which is why she stopped filing them.
4. Do I need to see the legal paperwork that created the trusts? Or is it enough that the broker and the IRS accepted that trusts existed and the IRS assigned EINs?
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