Reporting Requirements
Most of the complex reporting requirements that carry stiff penalties involve transactions that do not look anything like this.
I invite anyone to correct me, and provide a concrete citation. But I don't think there is any requirement for a US citizen to report that he received a gift from a foreign source.
I stand by my opinion that the transaction in question is not a gift, to or from the client.
But I also agree with Bees' observation that even if it IS a gift, the US citizen isn't going to give the gift until 2013.
US citizens have to report foreign assets--particularly funds that are on deposit in foreign bank accounts. They also have to report transactions, or assets, if they are a grantor or a beneficiary of a foreign trust.
That's not what I see here.
I suggested in an my original post that this transaction might be a constructive trust, meaning that the brother, who is not a US citizen, has given the taxpayer, who IS a US citizen, a chunk of money, or a piece of real estate, and has said to his brother, "Here, Bro, do me a favor and hold this thing for me for a couple years. Take good care of it until I can immigrate to the US." And his brother agreed to do so.
That agreement arguably creates a common-law trust, in which the foreign guy is the grantor and the beneficiary, and the US citizen is the trustee. But it's not a foreign trust. The trustee, and the assets, are here in the USA. It's a domestic trust.
With all the new laws and regs, there might be something I have overlooked. And I can understand why some clients and tax pros might get nervous about any transaction of this size that involves a transfer of funds to or from another country. But the fact that the funds came from another country doesn't automatically trigger all those reporting requirements. You still have to look at the fact pattern.
The client is a US citizen. He has not transferred any money out of the US, and he has not acquired an interest in any assets, or bank accounts, or trusts that are outside the US.
I don't think he received a gift, either. But even if he did, he wouldn't be required to file a gift tax return.
The guy who gave the gift isn't required to file a gift tax return, because he's not a US person.
Can someone enlighten me as to what reporting requirements are applicable to this scenario?
BMK
Most of the complex reporting requirements that carry stiff penalties involve transactions that do not look anything like this.
I invite anyone to correct me, and provide a concrete citation. But I don't think there is any requirement for a US citizen to report that he received a gift from a foreign source.
I stand by my opinion that the transaction in question is not a gift, to or from the client.
But I also agree with Bees' observation that even if it IS a gift, the US citizen isn't going to give the gift until 2013.
US citizens have to report foreign assets--particularly funds that are on deposit in foreign bank accounts. They also have to report transactions, or assets, if they are a grantor or a beneficiary of a foreign trust.
That's not what I see here.
I suggested in an my original post that this transaction might be a constructive trust, meaning that the brother, who is not a US citizen, has given the taxpayer, who IS a US citizen, a chunk of money, or a piece of real estate, and has said to his brother, "Here, Bro, do me a favor and hold this thing for me for a couple years. Take good care of it until I can immigrate to the US." And his brother agreed to do so.
That agreement arguably creates a common-law trust, in which the foreign guy is the grantor and the beneficiary, and the US citizen is the trustee. But it's not a foreign trust. The trustee, and the assets, are here in the USA. It's a domestic trust.
With all the new laws and regs, there might be something I have overlooked. And I can understand why some clients and tax pros might get nervous about any transaction of this size that involves a transfer of funds to or from another country. But the fact that the funds came from another country doesn't automatically trigger all those reporting requirements. You still have to look at the fact pattern.
The client is a US citizen. He has not transferred any money out of the US, and he has not acquired an interest in any assets, or bank accounts, or trusts that are outside the US.
I don't think he received a gift, either. But even if he did, he wouldn't be required to file a gift tax return.
The guy who gave the gift isn't required to file a gift tax return, because he's not a US person.
Can someone enlighten me as to what reporting requirements are applicable to this scenario?
BMK
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