I have been having an ongoing battle with Intuit regarding their implementation of Form 1041 for a complex trust in Intuit Tax Online. The facts are the following:
Form 1041:
line 1 -- 43
line 2a -- 10,316
line 4 -- 34,538.
line 9 -- 44,897..
line 16 -- 6,025
Schedule B:
line 1 -- 38,872.
line 2 -- 1,557.
line 3 -- 34,538.
line 6 -- -34,538.
line 7 -- 40,429.
line 11 -- 40,000
Tax-exempt interest is the only tax-exempt income. The question is, what goes on line 12 of Schedule B? From the instructions to Form 1041:
"If tax-exempt interest is the only tax-exempt income included in the total distributions (line 11), and the DNI (line 7) is less than or equal to line 11, then enter on line 12 the amount from line 2. If tax-exempt interest is the only tax-exempt income included in the total distributions (line 11), and the DNI is more than line 11 (that is, the estate or trust made a distribution that is less than the DNI), then figure the adjustment by multiplying line 2 by a fraction, the numerator of which is the total distributions (line 11), and the denominator of which is the DNI (line 7). Enter the result on line 12."
From this, we calculate: (line 12) = (line 2) x (line 11)/(line 7) = 1540. Intuit, however, uses the relation: (line 12) = (line 2) x [(line 11) - (line 3)]/[(line 7) - (line 3)] = 1444. I can see no justification in tax law for Intuit's calculation. Can anyone else?
Form 1041:
line 1 -- 43
line 2a -- 10,316
line 4 -- 34,538.
line 9 -- 44,897..
line 16 -- 6,025
Schedule B:
line 1 -- 38,872.
line 2 -- 1,557.
line 3 -- 34,538.
line 6 -- -34,538.
line 7 -- 40,429.
line 11 -- 40,000
Tax-exempt interest is the only tax-exempt income. The question is, what goes on line 12 of Schedule B? From the instructions to Form 1041:
"If tax-exempt interest is the only tax-exempt income included in the total distributions (line 11), and the DNI (line 7) is less than or equal to line 11, then enter on line 12 the amount from line 2. If tax-exempt interest is the only tax-exempt income included in the total distributions (line 11), and the DNI is more than line 11 (that is, the estate or trust made a distribution that is less than the DNI), then figure the adjustment by multiplying line 2 by a fraction, the numerator of which is the total distributions (line 11), and the denominator of which is the DNI (line 7). Enter the result on line 12."
From this, we calculate: (line 12) = (line 2) x (line 11)/(line 7) = 1540. Intuit, however, uses the relation: (line 12) = (line 2) x [(line 11) - (line 3)]/[(line 7) - (line 3)] = 1444. I can see no justification in tax law for Intuit's calculation. Can anyone else?
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