10 years ago I witnessed an agreement and a transaction between 2 of my clients.
Both had been my clients for many years, ie, I prepared 1040 income tax returns for both parties.
After the tax season in 2005, they came in together and asked me what the tax consequences would be if Mom (my client), gave her home to Son (also my client).
Mom was 73 years old at the time, son was 40..
Mom had owned the house for 50 years, it was free and clear.
The agreement was that son would allow mom to live in the house the rest of her life and that son would live there with her and take care of her to any extent necesary.
In exchange for that promise, mom would gift the house to son.
They executed a quit claim deed and the title to the house transferred to son.
In the years that followed, son would come in to have his tax return done and in the process we would talk about how things were going withthe living arrangment.
Mom had no income other than Social Security so she didn't come in to have a tax return done anymore.
In every discussion with Son for the first several years, he reported that all was well, and he confirmed his promise regarding mom being able to live in the house the rest of her life and that he would always take care of her.
After that, the situation changed in that mom and son were not getting along very well, to say the least!
Mom hired an atorney to try and reverse the transfer of the house but she lost, primarily because she ran out of money for the attorney.
She continued to live in the house..
However, Son's brother, also my client, came in recently and tells me that now Son has hired an attorney and is going to evict his now 83 year old mom!!!
She has no money!!
I am sick about this to say the least.
Sorry about the length of this post, but now I come to my question.
I was a witness to the agreement between Mom and Son with respect to his promise that she be allowed to live in that house the rest of her life..
I have offered to testify in an upcoming legal proceeding to fight against the eviction.
Will I be breaking any rules regarding client confidentiality if I testify about what there agreement was?
I have been in the tax business over 30 years, I have a PTIN and an EFIN, however, I am not a CPA, EA or an Attorney.
I passed the test last January to be a RTRP but one week after came the IRS loss on that program and so they never sent me my RTRP certificate.
Any help and insight is helpfull.
Sincerely,
Harvey Lucas
Both had been my clients for many years, ie, I prepared 1040 income tax returns for both parties.
After the tax season in 2005, they came in together and asked me what the tax consequences would be if Mom (my client), gave her home to Son (also my client).
Mom was 73 years old at the time, son was 40..
Mom had owned the house for 50 years, it was free and clear.
The agreement was that son would allow mom to live in the house the rest of her life and that son would live there with her and take care of her to any extent necesary.
In exchange for that promise, mom would gift the house to son.
They executed a quit claim deed and the title to the house transferred to son.
In the years that followed, son would come in to have his tax return done and in the process we would talk about how things were going withthe living arrangment.
Mom had no income other than Social Security so she didn't come in to have a tax return done anymore.
In every discussion with Son for the first several years, he reported that all was well, and he confirmed his promise regarding mom being able to live in the house the rest of her life and that he would always take care of her.
After that, the situation changed in that mom and son were not getting along very well, to say the least!
Mom hired an atorney to try and reverse the transfer of the house but she lost, primarily because she ran out of money for the attorney.
She continued to live in the house..
However, Son's brother, also my client, came in recently and tells me that now Son has hired an attorney and is going to evict his now 83 year old mom!!!
She has no money!!
I am sick about this to say the least.
Sorry about the length of this post, but now I come to my question.
I was a witness to the agreement between Mom and Son with respect to his promise that she be allowed to live in that house the rest of her life..
I have offered to testify in an upcoming legal proceeding to fight against the eviction.
Will I be breaking any rules regarding client confidentiality if I testify about what there agreement was?
I have been in the tax business over 30 years, I have a PTIN and an EFIN, however, I am not a CPA, EA or an Attorney.
I passed the test last January to be a RTRP but one week after came the IRS loss on that program and so they never sent me my RTRP certificate.
Any help and insight is helpfull.
Sincerely,
Harvey Lucas
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