My client inherited a automobile worth $10,000 she sold it to the deceased's son for $1200. She thinks she has an $8800 capital loss. Can the sale of an inherited car be considered a capital loss?
Is sale of an inherited automobile a capital loss?
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If it is sold to a unrelated party and the vehicle was never used for personal use, it should be a deductible loss.
If either of those are not true, the loss is non-deductible. -
Thanks for your help,
My client is the long time girlfriend of the deceased. They did not live together. FMV is accurate. The purchaser is the deceased's son. Not related to my client. The question then is 'is this an arm's length transaction?' Based on the difference between FMV and the sales price, would the IRS say they are related parties?Comment
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Question - Inherited Party receives the vehicle via Trust/Estate/Will - Would this not be a Personal Use Vehicle in the hands of the Inherited Party Did the Inherited party use the vehicle for business?
Second Question - Does the deceased son qualify as a "related party" transaction?
SandyLast edited by S T; 02-09-2017, 05:52 PM.Comment
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I withdraw may original statement that it is deductible, and I agree with Burke. I forgot about the "arms length transaction".Comment
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Is this personal loss deductible is the question. I say no. Why would she sell a 10K vehicle for 1200 if it is worth 10K? If she chose to sell low because of who she was selling it to then I still say no.Believe nothing you have not personally researched and verified.Comment
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I would think an apprasial would be required to prove the value and then the girlfriend of the would have to prove that the vehicle is an investment. Were it a classic car the value would be way higher. What does it take to prove this was an investment rather than just a used car?Believe nothing you have not personally researched and verified.Comment
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