I plan to talk to the attorney regarding this but want to understand as much as possible before I do.
In 2008, my client and her sister became owners of remainder interest in farmland (Property A) from their parents. In 2010 (both parents still alive) the sisters bought out the value of the life-estate (calculated with value of land and age of parents) using borrowed money. So the sisters then jointly owned full interest in the land. The sisters also jointly owned another piece of land (Property B) received as a gift. In 2012 they separated the land so each sister now owns one piece of land. No money changed hands but her sister is now solely liable for the loan on Property A and my client has property B free and clear.
What information do I need to determine basis in property A? The buy-out price plus some value for the remainder interest? Is the remainder interest a gift using the parents' basis?
Could this be considered a like-kind exchange?
Thank you
In 2008, my client and her sister became owners of remainder interest in farmland (Property A) from their parents. In 2010 (both parents still alive) the sisters bought out the value of the life-estate (calculated with value of land and age of parents) using borrowed money. So the sisters then jointly owned full interest in the land. The sisters also jointly owned another piece of land (Property B) received as a gift. In 2012 they separated the land so each sister now owns one piece of land. No money changed hands but her sister is now solely liable for the loan on Property A and my client has property B free and clear.
What information do I need to determine basis in property A? The buy-out price plus some value for the remainder interest? Is the remainder interest a gift using the parents' basis?
Could this be considered a like-kind exchange?
Thank you
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