Here is a doozie for you! My client, Joe, owned a small restaurant with his sister. In 2005 they sold the restaurant for $65,000 plus expenses of sale which made the total sales price $70,000. The buyer, Sam, paid $15,000 down payment and was making monthly payments for 7 years.
The first year we claimed on Joe's return half of the $15,000 and 1/2 of the payments made.
The next year when Joe's wife came in, she just said Sam paid them 12 payments of $742.47. So I did the 6252 on that amount.
This year when Joe's wife came in, Sam had sold the restaurant to Bob, who made a down payment and was going to pay it off with payments for 1 year. But they actually paid it off after 3 months. But the sales figures were jiving with the figures I already had.
Then she tells me that after the first year or in Jan of 2006, Joe's sister, Mary, needed some money really bad and wanted her brother to give her some money. Joe said he only had $10,000 to give her. So she took $10,000 and told him that the rest of the restaurant money was his. So now that 1/2 of the $50,000 that was financed that was his sister's share became his share so he owned the whole note. But he got it for $10,000 and it was worth about $23,500.
I have a couple of problems with all of this BUT my question is about his buying out his sister for $10,000 and getting a mortgage worth $23,500. I don't think it changes the profit percentage of the installment sale. But he actually mae $13,500 on buying his sister's half of the mortgage. Is this a taxable situation? If so, how do I handle it?
Ever year you get a totally new situation.Tax work never gets boring.
Linda F
The first year we claimed on Joe's return half of the $15,000 and 1/2 of the payments made.
The next year when Joe's wife came in, she just said Sam paid them 12 payments of $742.47. So I did the 6252 on that amount.
This year when Joe's wife came in, Sam had sold the restaurant to Bob, who made a down payment and was going to pay it off with payments for 1 year. But they actually paid it off after 3 months. But the sales figures were jiving with the figures I already had.
Then she tells me that after the first year or in Jan of 2006, Joe's sister, Mary, needed some money really bad and wanted her brother to give her some money. Joe said he only had $10,000 to give her. So she took $10,000 and told him that the rest of the restaurant money was his. So now that 1/2 of the $50,000 that was financed that was his sister's share became his share so he owned the whole note. But he got it for $10,000 and it was worth about $23,500.
I have a couple of problems with all of this BUT my question is about his buying out his sister for $10,000 and getting a mortgage worth $23,500. I don't think it changes the profit percentage of the installment sale. But he actually mae $13,500 on buying his sister's half of the mortgage. Is this a taxable situation? If so, how do I handle it?
Ever year you get a totally new situation.Tax work never gets boring.
Linda F
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