Our client is the executor of an estate. When the lady passed away, the will stated that her nephew (not our client) was the beneficiary. However, the nephew had pre-deceased the aunt and she did not change the will. The nephew had three children. One is of unknown whereabouts. All of this is tied up in the court. There was some real estate in the estate that has been sold and there will be capital gains.
Our client wants to get this finished and have it out of his hands. He was advised that he could put the funds into an escrow account of the court and an interpleader would be responsible until the court can find a way to settle eveything. (he has been told it might be years years). So.... the problem I am trying to research is the court has said to transfer the entire gross receipts from the sale because it is not subject to tax at this point. I disagree with this. I believe the IRS will say that the net after taxes is what can be tranferred. Someone is going to pay taxes on this money!!
Below is an email that gives some more detail. Indentifying info has been changed.
Has anyone dealt with this before?
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Mr Client called me last nite, and said the Judge told his lawyer he could do an "interpleader" and basically give the court the 400,000 to put in escrow until an administrator is appointed for the 3 kids. Their dad died without a will. The attorney said that the judge said Mr. Client would not have to pay income tax on the gain in 2013. It was sold by the estate and is reported in their ein number, about a 300,000 gain. We cannot k1 the kids to pass thru the gain, as there is no will and that will have to be adjudicated. I do not believe that information is correct, that the estate does not have to pay tax on the gain. The money may be held for years by the county court, and they will not pay tax on it, and if distributed, will pass without a long term capital gain, ie would not be taxable to the recepients.
Mr Client is coming in Tues for us to do a rough 1041 so he will know how much tax to set aside. His feeling is, that
if the estate has to pay on the gain, he is keeping the money until he gets papers from an administrator that dictates there is another estate that gets the money. Mr Client is the executor for his aunts estate. The aunt left this money to a nephew, who died. One kid cannot be found, is out in California.
The last question, if the 1041 has to pay on the capital gain, can he hold out the one hundred thousand income tax from the 400,000 that the will says they have coming? Thats all the cash left to liquidate.
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Thanks
Our client wants to get this finished and have it out of his hands. He was advised that he could put the funds into an escrow account of the court and an interpleader would be responsible until the court can find a way to settle eveything. (he has been told it might be years years). So.... the problem I am trying to research is the court has said to transfer the entire gross receipts from the sale because it is not subject to tax at this point. I disagree with this. I believe the IRS will say that the net after taxes is what can be tranferred. Someone is going to pay taxes on this money!!
Below is an email that gives some more detail. Indentifying info has been changed.
Has anyone dealt with this before?
************************************************** *
Mr Client called me last nite, and said the Judge told his lawyer he could do an "interpleader" and basically give the court the 400,000 to put in escrow until an administrator is appointed for the 3 kids. Their dad died without a will. The attorney said that the judge said Mr. Client would not have to pay income tax on the gain in 2013. It was sold by the estate and is reported in their ein number, about a 300,000 gain. We cannot k1 the kids to pass thru the gain, as there is no will and that will have to be adjudicated. I do not believe that information is correct, that the estate does not have to pay tax on the gain. The money may be held for years by the county court, and they will not pay tax on it, and if distributed, will pass without a long term capital gain, ie would not be taxable to the recepients.
Mr Client is coming in Tues for us to do a rough 1041 so he will know how much tax to set aside. His feeling is, that
if the estate has to pay on the gain, he is keeping the money until he gets papers from an administrator that dictates there is another estate that gets the money. Mr Client is the executor for his aunts estate. The aunt left this money to a nephew, who died. One kid cannot be found, is out in California.
The last question, if the 1041 has to pay on the capital gain, can he hold out the one hundred thousand income tax from the 400,000 that the will says they have coming? Thats all the cash left to liquidate.
************************************************** ***********
Thanks
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