A tax pro friend of mine shared this with me, she had never run into such a thing, neither had I.
Some brilliant Tennessee lawyer (you can cast lots as to whether the antithesis to brilliant is "Tennessee" or "lawyer") came up with this alimony arrangement. Alimony of $$$$$ annually is to be paid until BOTH PARTIES are deceased. Death of either party does not stop the payments.
Sorta blew me outa the chair. Obviously, the taxability/deductibility of the alimony cannot continue if one of the parties dies, but my friend told the client that such an arrangement jeopardized the deductibility of the entire arrangement from day 1. Upon hearing this, the client scurried back to his lawyer to have the divorce papers re-negotiated.
My opinion (for what it's worth) is I would deduct the alimony if the divorce papers were approved by the court retroactive to the date of first payment, but would only deduct future alimony if the arrangement was not retroactive.
Any comments from the group for this situation? I don't think we could ever find an answer in code or regs, and I sorta doubt there has been a court case with this situation.
Some brilliant Tennessee lawyer (you can cast lots as to whether the antithesis to brilliant is "Tennessee" or "lawyer") came up with this alimony arrangement. Alimony of $$$$$ annually is to be paid until BOTH PARTIES are deceased. Death of either party does not stop the payments.
Sorta blew me outa the chair. Obviously, the taxability/deductibility of the alimony cannot continue if one of the parties dies, but my friend told the client that such an arrangement jeopardized the deductibility of the entire arrangement from day 1. Upon hearing this, the client scurried back to his lawyer to have the divorce papers re-negotiated.
My opinion (for what it's worth) is I would deduct the alimony if the divorce papers were approved by the court retroactive to the date of first payment, but would only deduct future alimony if the arrangement was not retroactive.
Any comments from the group for this situation? I don't think we could ever find an answer in code or regs, and I sorta doubt there has been a court case with this situation.
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