From Spidell:
Short sale on principal residence means no COD (12-03-13)
The IRS has opined in a Chief Council letter dated September 19, 2013, that the short sale of a California principal residence converts the mortgage to a nonrecourse loan and is treated as a sale, not COD. Under California law, when agreeing to a short sale, the bank may not go after the borrower for any shortfall on the debt.
The letter states that, under the anti-deficiency provision of Code of Civ. Proc. §580e, the debt would be a nonrecourse obligation, and for federal income tax purposes the homeowner will not have COD income. Instead, the full amount of the nonrecourse indebtedness is treated as the sales price.
Because California conforms to IRC §108, with certain unrelated exceptions, California will conform to the IRS letter. (R&TC §17024.5)
Short sale on principal residence means no COD (12-03-13)
The IRS has opined in a Chief Council letter dated September 19, 2013, that the short sale of a California principal residence converts the mortgage to a nonrecourse loan and is treated as a sale, not COD. Under California law, when agreeing to a short sale, the bank may not go after the borrower for any shortfall on the debt.
The letter states that, under the anti-deficiency provision of Code of Civ. Proc. §580e, the debt would be a nonrecourse obligation, and for federal income tax purposes the homeowner will not have COD income. Instead, the full amount of the nonrecourse indebtedness is treated as the sales price.
Because California conforms to IRC §108, with certain unrelated exceptions, California will conform to the IRS letter. (R&TC §17024.5)
Comment