A question has been posed by a friend about a real situation. Taxpayer's mother died in Sep 2015. Then the taxpayer's father died in Jan 2016. Father was executor of mother's estate, and taxpayer is executor of father's estate. Parents were very secretive about their finances, but the only assets located so far consist of $1k in a checking account and $20K of equity in a home, which has been sold and the proceeds received & split by the taxpayer and a sibling.
Taxpayer has found Social Security statements for father and mother for 2015, but nothing else. Taxpayer knows father had no other source of income, but is unsure about mother's income. Taxpayer's lawyer has advised that the taxpayer has an obligation to file father's return, but no obligation for mother's return.
Taxpayer wants to simply file father's return as MFS by Oct 17 (an extension was filed) and do nothing about mother's return, since it is not known whether father filed anything for mother between Jan 1, 2016 and date of death in Feb 2016. Tax liabllity is very small on the MFS return for father. FIling his return satisfies the executor's obligation and begins the running of the SOL on the father's tax obligations. This would leave the question of the mother's filing obligations and/or tax liabilities unresolved, but according to the lawyer that isn't the taxpayer's concern.
Anybody have any thoughts on the wisdom (or lack thereof) of doing things this way?
Taxpayer has found Social Security statements for father and mother for 2015, but nothing else. Taxpayer knows father had no other source of income, but is unsure about mother's income. Taxpayer's lawyer has advised that the taxpayer has an obligation to file father's return, but no obligation for mother's return.
Taxpayer wants to simply file father's return as MFS by Oct 17 (an extension was filed) and do nothing about mother's return, since it is not known whether father filed anything for mother between Jan 1, 2016 and date of death in Feb 2016. Tax liabllity is very small on the MFS return for father. FIling his return satisfies the executor's obligation and begins the running of the SOL on the father's tax obligations. This would leave the question of the mother's filing obligations and/or tax liabilities unresolved, but according to the lawyer that isn't the taxpayer's concern.
Anybody have any thoughts on the wisdom (or lack thereof) of doing things this way?
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