The 1099-C is not old (2015) but the loan story is very old. Original loan was 1996 - taxpayer and ex-wife signed loan. Divorce occurred in 2006 and decree states wife got the house (and the loan). Wife defaulted, but of course the bank doesn't care -- they have BOTH signatures in blood.
1099-C is for the amount of the original loan, not the amount defaulted, unless the bank is able to add interest and late charges to the principal. 1099-C lists the social security # of the husband, not the wife who was awarded the home and responsibility for the loan.
I am amazed that a situation this old gets resurrected for an attempt to ring up income for 2015, but not aware of anything (such as a statute of limitations) which prevents them from doing this.
Do any of you have any practical advice as to how to approach this? Please don't send a link to 275 pages of code and regs unless you accompany it with observations or comments.
Thanks, Snag
1099-C is for the amount of the original loan, not the amount defaulted, unless the bank is able to add interest and late charges to the principal. 1099-C lists the social security # of the husband, not the wife who was awarded the home and responsibility for the loan.
I am amazed that a situation this old gets resurrected for an attempt to ring up income for 2015, but not aware of anything (such as a statute of limitations) which prevents them from doing this.
Do any of you have any practical advice as to how to approach this? Please don't send a link to 275 pages of code and regs unless you accompany it with observations or comments.
Thanks, Snag
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