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Weird Phone call must share while fresh in my mind

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    Weird Phone call must share while fresh in my mind

    We issued a 1099-misc on behalf of one of my business clients. The mom of one of the independent contractors calls me and tells me she is experienced in preparing individual and corporate taxes and told me we issued the 1099-Misc incorrectly. I replied how is that. She said the amount should have appeared in box 3 vs. box 7 for I don't have a box 7 on my Tax Act software. I told her Tax Act is lower priced software and is probably limited but you are free to report as other income. Then I said if you have experience preparing taxes, you should be familiar with Schedule C. Her reply, my daughter does not have an EIN #. I replied you don't need to have an EIN for a Sch C, it will default to the taxpayers SS#. Her reply, she does not have enough to itemize. I told her Sch C and itemizing are unrelated. Her reply, your not very nice and hung up.

    #2
    And she prepares corporate taxes? My, my.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by AZ-Tax View Post
      We issued a 1099-misc on behalf of one of my business clients. The mom of one of the independent contractors calls me and tells me she is experienced in preparing individual and corporate taxes and told me we issued the 1099-Misc incorrectly. I replied how is that. She said the amount should have appeared in box 3 vs. box 7 for I don't have a box 7 on my Tax Act software. I told her Tax Act is lower priced software and is probably limited but you are free to report as other income. Then I said if you have experience preparing taxes, you should be familiar with Schedule C. Her reply, my daughter does not have an EIN #. I replied you don't need to have an EIN for a Sch C, it will default to the taxpayers SS#. Her reply, she does not have enough to itemize. I told her Sch C and itemizing are unrelated. Her reply, your not very nice and hung up.
      Well, truth is you're not very nice.. Sometimes telling people the truth isn't very nice as far as they're concerned, especially when they want to hear something else. Guess we will all have to keep not being very nice from time-to-time.
      "The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth Galbraith

      Comment


        #4
        Weird phone call

        I have received calls from people saying I do my own taxes but I have one question. Do I just add my 16 year olds W-2 to my tax return?
        They should not be doing their own taxes.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by ruthes View Post
          I have received calls from people saying I do my own taxes but I have one question. Do I just add my 16 year olds W-2 to my tax return?
          They should not be doing their own taxes.
          I'm not sure I could manage more of a response on that than "no."

          Comment


            #6
            Not the software fault

            Originally posted by AZ-Tax View Post
            We issued a 1099-misc on behalf of one of my business clients. The mom of one of the independent contractors calls me and tells me she is experienced in preparing individual and corporate taxes and told me we issued the 1099-Misc incorrectly. I replied how is that. She said the amount should have appeared in box 3 vs. box 7 for I don't have a box 7 on my Tax Act software. I told her Tax Act is lower priced software and is probably limited but you are free to report as other income. Then I said if you have experience preparing taxes, you should be familiar with Schedule C. Her reply, my daughter does not have an EIN #. I replied you don't need to have an EIN for a Sch C, it will default to the taxpayers SS#. Her reply, she does not have enough to itemize. I told her Sch C and itemizing are unrelated. Her reply, your not very nice and hung up.
            FWIW: TaxACT has the same option (for Form 1099-MISC) for both Box 3 and Box 7 of a Form 1099-MISC. They take you directly to a Sch C (or Sch F) input page. . . . .and Box 3 gives you the additional option of linking to Form 1040 line 21 worksheets. But anyone with reasonable tax knowledge can get to those same locations without dealing with any tax software "Q&A scenarios."

            FE

            Comment


              #7
              The older I get

              Originally posted by David1980 View Post
              I'm not sure I could manage more of a response on that than "no."
              Yes, the older I get, the less I say to these people. I do a whole lot of nodding and ignoring when clients say, "Here's all my medical expense, and my real estate tax, and the remodeling on my house, and..." You pick your battles. And I do a lot of white flag waving. Callers frequently get, "No," and eye rolls.
              Last edited by RitaB; 04-01-2014, 10:16 AM.
              If you loan someone $20 and never see them again, it was probably worth it.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by RitaB View Post
                Yes, the older I get, the less I say to these people. I do a whole lot of nodding and ignoring when clients say, "Here's all my medical expense, and my real estate tax, and the remodeling on my house, and..." You pick your battles. And I do a lot of white flag waving. Callers frequently get, "No," and eye rolls.
                Lady got mad at me when I explained she couldn't deduct sending her dog to a kennel while she was out of town for work. Somehow she came to the conclusion the IRS thought it was reasonable to leave the dog at home alone if they weren't willing to give her a deduction.

                Haven't heard from her this year yet, hoping she's moved on to another preparer. I get 4-5 calls during the year asking if things are tax deductible that make absolutely no sense why they would be.

                Comment


                  #9
                  I heard THAT

                  Originally posted by Roberts View Post
                  Lady got mad at me when I explained she couldn't deduct sending her dog to a kennel while she was out of town for work. Somehow she came to the conclusion the IRS thought it was reasonable to leave the dog at home alone if they weren't willing to give her a deduction.

                  Haven't heard from her this year yet, hoping she's moved on to another preparer. I get 4-5 calls during the year asking if things are tax deductible that make absolutely no sense why they would be.
                  I hate those calls; it is so hard to prove a negative. And I hate the thought of them thinking I must be wrong. Let it go, Rita. Let. It. Go.

                  On the other hand, we subsidize low skill and/or low ambition and/or cheaters having children, which makes zero sense. And I'm still mad about my pastor getting to deduct his housing costs. And double dipping with the mortgage interest and property tax on Sch A. So I guess the only stupid question is the one you don't ask. Or check out online with Google and without calling me. Please.
                  If you loan someone $20 and never see them again, it was probably worth it.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Mine this year was from a long-term client. She got her tax return (had to mail out of state) and couldn't understand why her refund wasn't more. She retired, no earned income, and the only withholding was out of her pension(s) = $209. I pulled the return and told her she got back everything she paid in, so that was that.

                    "But", she says, I had a LOT of deductions this year."
                    "Yes, and I took all those. That is why you got it all back." (Actually, she didn't even need to itemize, but I didn't get into that.)
                    "But, I don't understand why I only got $209."
                    "Well, it's because that is all you paid in. You can't get back more than that."
                    "I guess I just don't understand taxes. I had all those contributions.....etc, etc."

                    And on and on we went. I said "You do understand you are getting back the money you paid in, and you got all of it, right?"

                    No, she still does not have a clue.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Have a Neck Problem?

                      Years ago - I had a client come to my office with a bunch of questions before I started in with the tax prep.
                      To every question I nodded no.
                      The client then asked whether I had a problem with my neck.
                      Uncle Sam, CPA, EA. ARA, NTPI Fellow

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Hahahaha

                        Originally posted by Uncle Sam View Post
                        Years ago - I had a client come to my office with a bunch of questions before I started in with the tax prep.
                        To every question I nodded no.
                        The client then asked whether I had a problem with my neck.
                        Crying. That's when I would have nodded "yes", and said, "You are a pain in it."
                        If you loan someone $20 and never see them again, it was probably worth it.

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