Situation: am working on a 2004 income tax return. Client donated car to charity on Dec. 31, 2004. Signed receipt from charitable organization. Client stated that the blue book value of vehicle was $1,800. said he looked it up.
I did a Google search on Kellys Blue Book, if car sold person to person. It stated the value at $1,095.
When I asked client about this he reaffirmed the value of $1,800. was correct.
What would be the proper response to this? Use the $1800. based on his value?
2: Client stated that he paid $33,000. in sales tax. I asked about this extremely high sales tax amount. He stated that they had bought a new house in 2004 and purchased
all new furniture & decorations etc.
Asked client if he had receipts to back this up, because there would be an audit. Response was, no problem, he had receipts.
Later found out that the $33,000. figure was not sales tax but gross purchases, including
sales tax, that client had made during year. He got this figure by totalling up his checks
that he wrote for the year. From this figure, then, to back out the sales tax paid.
Would it be the best just to call the client and tell him he needs to total the sales tax from the actual receipts he has or just forget it and use the chart?
By the way, this is a new client that just came in a few days ago.
Thanks for your suggestions.
I did a Google search on Kellys Blue Book, if car sold person to person. It stated the value at $1,095.
When I asked client about this he reaffirmed the value of $1,800. was correct.
What would be the proper response to this? Use the $1800. based on his value?
2: Client stated that he paid $33,000. in sales tax. I asked about this extremely high sales tax amount. He stated that they had bought a new house in 2004 and purchased
all new furniture & decorations etc.
Asked client if he had receipts to back this up, because there would be an audit. Response was, no problem, he had receipts.
Later found out that the $33,000. figure was not sales tax but gross purchases, including
sales tax, that client had made during year. He got this figure by totalling up his checks
that he wrote for the year. From this figure, then, to back out the sales tax paid.
Would it be the best just to call the client and tell him he needs to total the sales tax from the actual receipts he has or just forget it and use the chart?
By the way, this is a new client that just came in a few days ago.
Thanks for your suggestions.
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