A man dies suddenly in a car wreck, with zero estate planning.
He has property subject to a mortgage, and an S corp. At time of death
all of his property was for sale for $400,000. It had been on the market
for years, with no hope of receiving the requested sale price. Best offer
he had received was $229,000, and even this was subject to a $175,000
mortgage.
Lawyer filed estate tax return for State of Tennessee, valuing the land at
$400,000, S Corp stock at $75,000, Retirement accounts at $15,000, and
mortgage at $175,000. Net value $315,000.
Estate for two years files losses. Income from S Corp around $6K annual,
interest expense on the mortgage at $12K and another $1K for estate-type
expenses, legal, accounting, taxes, etc. Losses for two-year period are
appx $13K.
S Corp is owned equally by 2 beneficiaries. Retirement accounts have
been depleted to pay debt service. Real estate may be sold soon for
$275,000, some $125,000 LESS than the valuation at death.
Total losses to corpus are thus $138,000. The estate is closing down, with
everything divided equally among the 2 beneficiaries. Now finally comes the
question:
Can this $138,000 in losses be distributed on a K-1 to the beneficiaries?
Beneficiaries did not receive a K-1 the first year because there was no
distribution. I don't know why these losses can't pass through but I'm
sorta uncomfortable with it.
He has property subject to a mortgage, and an S corp. At time of death
all of his property was for sale for $400,000. It had been on the market
for years, with no hope of receiving the requested sale price. Best offer
he had received was $229,000, and even this was subject to a $175,000
mortgage.
Lawyer filed estate tax return for State of Tennessee, valuing the land at
$400,000, S Corp stock at $75,000, Retirement accounts at $15,000, and
mortgage at $175,000. Net value $315,000.
Estate for two years files losses. Income from S Corp around $6K annual,
interest expense on the mortgage at $12K and another $1K for estate-type
expenses, legal, accounting, taxes, etc. Losses for two-year period are
appx $13K.
S Corp is owned equally by 2 beneficiaries. Retirement accounts have
been depleted to pay debt service. Real estate may be sold soon for
$275,000, some $125,000 LESS than the valuation at death.
Total losses to corpus are thus $138,000. The estate is closing down, with
everything divided equally among the 2 beneficiaries. Now finally comes the
question:
Can this $138,000 in losses be distributed on a K-1 to the beneficiaries?
Beneficiaries did not receive a K-1 the first year because there was no
distribution. I don't know why these losses can't pass through but I'm
sorta uncomfortable with it.
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