My office made a mistake by creating a return using the Payer’s Social Security from a 1099 MISC to create the tax return for the Recipient. The payer is the grandmother of the recipient. He is a minor and owed some SE tax and his parents wrote a check and sent it with the voucher. Of course, since the tax return had the incorrect social, so did the voucher and that led to the check for payment including the grandmother’s social security number.
When I e-filed the grandmother’s return it was rejected due to her social security number already used. I still did not realize it was due to our error. We paper filed the grandmother’s return with 14039 Identity Theft form. The grandmother received a letter from IRS stating she had filed two returns and they combined the two returns and added the Schedule C to her return. I was really surprised they combined the two returns after sending a letter acknowledging they received the 14039.
I plan to amend the grandson’s return with the correct SS# and send proof of the payment and asking it be credited to grandson’s account. The canceled check has the grandmother’s SS# on it.
I plan to send a letter for the Grandmother stating the income is not hers and should not have been combined with her original return, the originally filed return is correct and asking that the grandson’s payment be applied to his social security number instead of hers.
What are the chances IRS will actually credit the grandson with the payment? Is there a better way to straighten this out?
Thanks!
When I e-filed the grandmother’s return it was rejected due to her social security number already used. I still did not realize it was due to our error. We paper filed the grandmother’s return with 14039 Identity Theft form. The grandmother received a letter from IRS stating she had filed two returns and they combined the two returns and added the Schedule C to her return. I was really surprised they combined the two returns after sending a letter acknowledging they received the 14039.
I plan to amend the grandson’s return with the correct SS# and send proof of the payment and asking it be credited to grandson’s account. The canceled check has the grandmother’s SS# on it.
I plan to send a letter for the Grandmother stating the income is not hers and should not have been combined with her original return, the originally filed return is correct and asking that the grandson’s payment be applied to his social security number instead of hers.
What are the chances IRS will actually credit the grandson with the payment? Is there a better way to straighten this out?
Thanks!
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