Prior year client comes to appointment and announces that she got married last year and her new husband is not sharing any financial information and she is beginning to think she made a mistake. She says that husband told her he was getting his taxes done by his perparer who she says told him he could "file his own return since she didn't change her last name." I explain the rules of married persons and the options of MFJ or MFS. She leaves to discuss with husband.
She calls two weeks later to advise me that husband filed a joint return with his tax perparer and husband told her she didn't need to sign the return and neither did he. This would lead me to think that husband's tax preparer used the tax payer entered PIN method. Of course, wife should have been there to enter her own PIN. I advise client by email that either husband or tax preparer forged her e-signature on the return.
Now she is upset because husband had the refund deposited in his account and she is wondering if that is legal. She is also asking if I will review the joint tax return. Then client's daughter call and leaves me a message to please help her mother.
So, should I offer to review the joint tax return? I am thinking that there is not much I can advise her about it since I won't have any source documents other than her's. Should I report (or advise her to report) the proported misconduct of the other tax preparer?
She calls two weeks later to advise me that husband filed a joint return with his tax perparer and husband told her she didn't need to sign the return and neither did he. This would lead me to think that husband's tax preparer used the tax payer entered PIN method. Of course, wife should have been there to enter her own PIN. I advise client by email that either husband or tax preparer forged her e-signature on the return.
Now she is upset because husband had the refund deposited in his account and she is wondering if that is legal. She is also asking if I will review the joint tax return. Then client's daughter call and leaves me a message to please help her mother.
So, should I offer to review the joint tax return? I am thinking that there is not much I can advise her about it since I won't have any source documents other than her's. Should I report (or advise her to report) the proported misconduct of the other tax preparer?
Comment