Or at least I THINK you will...
I am facing a situation that I will be forthright among you to post NOW. I will not wait until it's over before choosing to post so
I can pick the winner/loser after the game is over.
The reason for this is there has been considerable discussion about cites and how we align our positions accordingly. Remember the
thread "Don't need no stinkin' cite" recently?
The issue is taking a penalty exception for death on a 1099-R coded "1". This refers to a thread I started on 03/20/13 titled "Commingled
Death Benefit." The numbers are fictitious but the situation is real and the true numbers are even larger than what I portrayed. After
much consideration and reseaching what the code, regs, and TTB had to say, I decided that the taxpayer was entitled to the penalty
exception. The death amount had been commingled with her own IRA, which she totally emptied in 2012 at age 38. Furthermore, I
consulted this forum about the particular issue and most of our best and brightest admonished me that I would be wrong. In fact,
I did not receive a single vote of support.
It is important for me to state that I never claimed exclusion from claiming the income -- only an exclusion for the penalty. I may be wrong, but at this point it remains to be seen. For those of you who are interested, I will keep you informed as the situation unfolds.
Withholding on the amount cashed in was a whopping 40%, so there was a refund. The IRS has not issued the refund and has sent my client an
audit letter. They announced they would be looking at "certain items" but there IS no other item that will be of much concern to them.
I will add that I went through a similar situation with not-for-profit reporting a couple years ago. When I consulted this forum, one of you
told me I was so wrong that I should be punished for perpetrating a fraud. The result was the auditor agreed with me and my client was
off the hook. I'll admit it could have gone either way. But taking your client's position is not equivalent to "fraud."
I'll keep you informed. For those of you so inclined, please wish me the best.
I am facing a situation that I will be forthright among you to post NOW. I will not wait until it's over before choosing to post so
I can pick the winner/loser after the game is over.
The reason for this is there has been considerable discussion about cites and how we align our positions accordingly. Remember the
thread "Don't need no stinkin' cite" recently?
The issue is taking a penalty exception for death on a 1099-R coded "1". This refers to a thread I started on 03/20/13 titled "Commingled
Death Benefit." The numbers are fictitious but the situation is real and the true numbers are even larger than what I portrayed. After
much consideration and reseaching what the code, regs, and TTB had to say, I decided that the taxpayer was entitled to the penalty
exception. The death amount had been commingled with her own IRA, which she totally emptied in 2012 at age 38. Furthermore, I
consulted this forum about the particular issue and most of our best and brightest admonished me that I would be wrong. In fact,
I did not receive a single vote of support.
It is important for me to state that I never claimed exclusion from claiming the income -- only an exclusion for the penalty. I may be wrong, but at this point it remains to be seen. For those of you who are interested, I will keep you informed as the situation unfolds.
Withholding on the amount cashed in was a whopping 40%, so there was a refund. The IRS has not issued the refund and has sent my client an
audit letter. They announced they would be looking at "certain items" but there IS no other item that will be of much concern to them.
I will add that I went through a similar situation with not-for-profit reporting a couple years ago. When I consulted this forum, one of you
told me I was so wrong that I should be punished for perpetrating a fraud. The result was the auditor agreed with me and my client was
off the hook. I'll admit it could have gone either way. But taking your client's position is not equivalent to "fraud."
I'll keep you informed. For those of you so inclined, please wish me the best.
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