where everybody went to. Looks like the whole bunch is or has been here.
Nice ambience. Thanks for the invite, Bees. In deference to your request I didn't mention you on QF (although some others did today), but still, as a fledgling business, I know y'all must need support (aka: money) pretty quick. Therefore, I'm sending my order for the Deluxe and All States books and implore others who want this place to keep breathing to do the same ASAP.
Say, Armando; I note that Snag and Bees are picking on you about your partnership
stance again; that is, the question of whether or not a 1065 is "to be or not to be." Although I've traditionally been on the "nay" side, I always sympathize with the underdog. Therefore, since my granddaughter and her little friend are opening a lemonade stand, I intend to file a partnership return for them as a symbolic gesture to validate your position. Come to think of it, they also do a little yard work--do you suppose if I made two C corps out of them, they would qualify as a brother-sister controlled group? As I recall there's $102,000 of S-179 to split between them and which would let them write off both their tablecloth and weedeater right away.
Oh well, enough folderol; on to "tax focus" before I get deleted. Does anybody here know offhand what the current rule is on the recapture of depreciated property when it's sold on the installment plan, like say, a $30,000 machine with no basis left in it and
the installment payment is only like $5,000. Does the $30,000 have to be recaptured in the year of sale or is spread out over the life of the contract? I should know this and have done it a few times, but for some reason it keeps slipping my mind. I believe the rules have been changed a few times, once in '84 seems like, but anyhow, what is it now?
Sandy: after reading your post under "My CPA said this" about the guy who filed a 1040X and got a refund from IRS for the death exclusion, I really probably should not even bother to ask the above question and just go ahead and do it whatever way I want. I suspected they weren't "minding the store," but that's one of the most astounding lapses into complete ignorance that I've ever heard of. No wonder we can't tell anybody you can't do this or that and make it stick. Things like that make us look like incompetent fools. Ah, well; virtue is its own reward (or something like that) and such is life, etc. etc.
Nice ambience. Thanks for the invite, Bees. In deference to your request I didn't mention you on QF (although some others did today), but still, as a fledgling business, I know y'all must need support (aka: money) pretty quick. Therefore, I'm sending my order for the Deluxe and All States books and implore others who want this place to keep breathing to do the same ASAP.
Say, Armando; I note that Snag and Bees are picking on you about your partnership
stance again; that is, the question of whether or not a 1065 is "to be or not to be." Although I've traditionally been on the "nay" side, I always sympathize with the underdog. Therefore, since my granddaughter and her little friend are opening a lemonade stand, I intend to file a partnership return for them as a symbolic gesture to validate your position. Come to think of it, they also do a little yard work--do you suppose if I made two C corps out of them, they would qualify as a brother-sister controlled group? As I recall there's $102,000 of S-179 to split between them and which would let them write off both their tablecloth and weedeater right away.
Oh well, enough folderol; on to "tax focus" before I get deleted. Does anybody here know offhand what the current rule is on the recapture of depreciated property when it's sold on the installment plan, like say, a $30,000 machine with no basis left in it and
the installment payment is only like $5,000. Does the $30,000 have to be recaptured in the year of sale or is spread out over the life of the contract? I should know this and have done it a few times, but for some reason it keeps slipping my mind. I believe the rules have been changed a few times, once in '84 seems like, but anyhow, what is it now?
Sandy: after reading your post under "My CPA said this" about the guy who filed a 1040X and got a refund from IRS for the death exclusion, I really probably should not even bother to ask the above question and just go ahead and do it whatever way I want. I suspected they weren't "minding the store," but that's one of the most astounding lapses into complete ignorance that I've ever heard of. No wonder we can't tell anybody you can't do this or that and make it stick. Things like that make us look like incompetent fools. Ah, well; virtue is its own reward (or something like that) and such is life, etc. etc.
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