Thanks in advance for any guidance with this topic. I am working on a 1041 for an estate that will not be closed in 2018. There was very little income from Oil Royalties and huge amounts of Attorney, CPA and tax prep fees. The taxable income on line 17 of the 1041 form is around -23,000. I filled out the 1045 schedule A and backed out all the non business capital losses and non business income. I came up with a NOL of aroond -16,000.
With the new tax law, etc no more carryback which is okay because this is the initial 1041. I scoured the instructions and cannot find much guidance here, other than some folks are saying that just because there are attorney fees, etc that cause a negative taxable income that this doesn't necessarily make an NOL for the Estate.
It seems to me that the attorney fees are a necessary expense for the Estate and could be classified as litigation costs since the estate is in probate.
Any thoughts about creating the NOL for the estate to be carried forward so that the loss can be pass through to the beneficiaries at some point would be appreciated. It is very discouraging that new guidance has not been issued for the distributions of excess deductions to beneficiaries in year of estate termination yet, though it was promised in Notice 2018-61.
Note, my software pulled in all the numbers from the 1041 and I have done that correctly. Attorney and Fiduciary fees are allowed on the 1041.
With the new tax law, etc no more carryback which is okay because this is the initial 1041. I scoured the instructions and cannot find much guidance here, other than some folks are saying that just because there are attorney fees, etc that cause a negative taxable income that this doesn't necessarily make an NOL for the Estate.
It seems to me that the attorney fees are a necessary expense for the Estate and could be classified as litigation costs since the estate is in probate.
Any thoughts about creating the NOL for the estate to be carried forward so that the loss can be pass through to the beneficiaries at some point would be appreciated. It is very discouraging that new guidance has not been issued for the distributions of excess deductions to beneficiaries in year of estate termination yet, though it was promised in Notice 2018-61.
Note, my software pulled in all the numbers from the 1041 and I have done that correctly. Attorney and Fiduciary fees are allowed on the 1041.
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