Don't ask me how this came about - I came on the scene after all the major decisions had been made.
In 1996, clients formed a corporation which bought a commercial property, which has now been depreciated down to $100K.
Client and his wife equally owned the stock in the corp.
Wife has since died, so the stock in the corp is now owned by the client and his wife's trust.
Someone has tentatively offered $1.5 million for the property.
Buyer is not a related party.
Buyer has no interest in buying the corp of course - they only want the property.
I told the client the corp will pay tax on 1.4 million at ordinary corp tax rates, then it will need to be liquidated and the remaining money paid to him and the trust.
He and the trust will be taxed on this distribution as well.
This is all back-of-the-envelope planning, as nobody has put anything in writing.
Anyone disagree with me or have any ideas on how to mitigate some of the taxes?
In 1996, clients formed a corporation which bought a commercial property, which has now been depreciated down to $100K.
Client and his wife equally owned the stock in the corp.
Wife has since died, so the stock in the corp is now owned by the client and his wife's trust.
Someone has tentatively offered $1.5 million for the property.
Buyer is not a related party.
Buyer has no interest in buying the corp of course - they only want the property.
I told the client the corp will pay tax on 1.4 million at ordinary corp tax rates, then it will need to be liquidated and the remaining money paid to him and the trust.
He and the trust will be taxed on this distribution as well.
This is all back-of-the-envelope planning, as nobody has put anything in writing.
Anyone disagree with me or have any ideas on how to mitigate some of the taxes?
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