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How to present Sch L on 1065 when a sale leads to the termination

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    How to present Sch L on 1065 when a sale leads to the termination

    A owns 60% of a partnership & B owns 40%. On 12/31/23 A bought B's 40% through a sale of interest and now owns 100%. The business will now continue on 1/1/24 as an LLC owned entirely by A.

    My understanding has always been that in a case where all the partners agree to permanently shut a partnership down, you report all 0's in the "End of Tax Year" section of Schedule L. However in a case like this where the business will be continuing, am I correct in assuming you would report the "End of Tax Year" section of Schedule L as you would in any other year, showing balances in all of the accounts?​

    #2
    I hate to see a question go unanswered, but this seems like an obscure one. I see it was also asked in another forum, also without much response.

    My only observation, helpful or not, is that Schedule L is the balance sheet per books. I think the accounting shown on a company's books is not tightly constrained by any tax laws, so I don't see why you can't show it consistent with the company's bookkeeping methods. Of course, then you still need to deal with M-1 and M-2 entries.
    "You said it, they'll never know the difference. Come on, we'll paint our way out!" - Moe Howard

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      #3
      It appears to me that the partnership ended as of 12/31/23 and the new sole-proprietorship began as of 1/1/2024. So at the end of 2023, the partnership ceased to exist, and the assets were distributed to the remaining partner. Your balance sheet should reflect zeros. Then on 1/1/24, your new entity begins, with assets contributed by A and that becomes your beginning entry for your new books.

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        #4
        Rapid Robert & Maribeth; thanks for your input!

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