A client recently received a letter from their mortgage holder, Chase Bank. They closed on their home mortgage in 2011. The recent letter (received Feb 2012) stated that the bank had discovered that they (bank) had failed to give them the required 3 days notification of time Truth in Lending Act) before the closing concerning the fact that their APR had increased during the application process, and therefore they were sending them a check for the difference between the old rate and the new rate...for the life of the loan! The check was for $63,000+!
The obvious question: what is the tax consequence? I have reasoned that they will be getting a Form 1098 each year for the life of the loan that states the amount of interest paid with the new higher rate. They would then (from an amortization schedule for the previous rate acquired from the bank, I suppose) subtract the difference of interest that would have been paid with the old and new rate, and subtract this amount from the Form 1098 amount to be put on Schedule A. Of course if it is all taxable income for 2012, Chase will send them a 1099, but that won't arrive until Jan 2013, and they would like to know what to do with the money now!
Any thoughts?
The obvious question: what is the tax consequence? I have reasoned that they will be getting a Form 1098 each year for the life of the loan that states the amount of interest paid with the new higher rate. They would then (from an amortization schedule for the previous rate acquired from the bank, I suppose) subtract the difference of interest that would have been paid with the old and new rate, and subtract this amount from the Form 1098 amount to be put on Schedule A. Of course if it is all taxable income for 2012, Chase will send them a 1099, but that won't arrive until Jan 2013, and they would like to know what to do with the money now!
Any thoughts?
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