Originally posted by Roland Slugg
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Is it OK not to claim Schedule A deduction?
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Doug
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Here in CA
there is withholding when you sell real estate...I had a client who did not call me when she sold her rental and the State withheld $12K from her proceeds...There is a form to fill out if you think there will be no substantial gain to be reported from the sale, and had she contacted me, I could have saved her that $12K withholding...Anyway, what she did not know is that she would be due a Sec 121 exclusion since she had lived in this property more than 2 out of the last five years and the gain turned out only to be to the extent of depreciation previously taken...
Long story short, she got all of the $12K refunded, and I did not claim this State withholding on Schedule A, only their W2 state taxes...This $12K would have been a lot of $$'s to claim as income in the next year...No AMT was involved even if I had claimed it...I felt it was the prudent thing to do...As it never should have been withheld in the first place had she contacted me...The increase in Fed refund was not that great, sooo not worth it to me...
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1099-g
Myers, will she get a 1099-G (State income tax refund) from California anyway, whether you elect to deduct the 12K or not?
If she gets one, my experience has been IRS will calculate an amount due based on having to claim the 12K as income. I'm not maintaining that you can't win on this, but perhaps only after letters and explanations...
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I will do
a calculation next year based on whether or not she got a benefit of the deduction for the $12K, my software asks what the deduction for taxes was on the prior year return and will calculate the benefit based on what was claimed vs what the refund was...I have seen it work with other clients so that only the portion of the refund that did result in a benefit will be added as income for 2008...
It all hinges on the tax benefit doctrine...
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Originally posted by dtlee View PostI do not presume to know more than NY Enrolled Agent or Solomon, but I am leaning to supporting the Maule article after reading this citation and that article. The inclusion or exclusion of state and local income tax really has no impact on the actual AMT Liability (known as the Tentative Minimum Tax) in the case cited.
The tax return was selected for examination due to large amounts of Education Expenses claimed. The taxpayer felt that once the Education Expenses were documented there should be no further change to the return. The taxpayer argued that this case was related to hie Education expenses and that the IRS should not have included the Alternative Minimum Tax calculation as part of their computation because that was not what the examination was about. Further, the taxpayer claimed that he properly excluded certain state and local income taxes from the total itemized deductions, so there would be no liability for the Alternative Minimum Tax. In other words, the taxpayer decided that the exclusion of State and Local Income Taxes removed him from being subject to the AMT. This is quite an oversimplification of the AMT rules and totally wrong in this situation.
In the decision, though, the court used the following phrase:
Since it does not clearly elaborate what that statement means, I am interpreting this as saying, that the AMT does apply in this situation (not necessarily due to the inclusion/exclusion of State and Local Taxes). In other words, the plaintiff is complaining but doesn't know what he is talking about.
From my perspective, the taxpayer submitted a defective tax return (are all of them?). He reported the following:
Code:AGI 67490 Deductions 26681 Exemptions 3000 Taxable Income 37809 Liablity 6559 AMT Income 0 Tent Min Tax 0 AMT 0 Withholding 10303 Refund 3744
Code:AGI 67490 Deductions 31839 Exemptions 3000 Taxable Income 32651 Liablity 5168 AMT Income 66400 Tent Min Tax 7969 AMT 2801 Withholding 10303 Refund 2334
Code:AGI 67490 Deductions 26681 Exemptions 3000 Taxable Income 37809 Liablity 6559 AMT Income 66400 Tent Min Tax 7969 AMT 1410 Withholding 10303 Refund 2334
I don't doubt that NY Enrolled Agent and Solomon could be correct, but I am having trouble accepting this particular citation as supporting that perspective. I believe the decision was that the taxpayer is subject to the AMT (I agree) and that the IRS computation is correct. I do not believe it is saying that the IRS is offering the only correct way to compute the AMT. They did not discuss the computation of AMT as it would have been done in using the original deductions since that was not offered by the taxpayer.
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Originally posted by Zee View PostHow did you post that information with the scroll box?
I have found that the best way to defeat that is to use bbcode tokens for code (i.e., programming code) to keep the text from being run together. You do this by proceding the text with square brackets around the word "code" and then the following the text with a square brackets around the command "/code"
Anything between the two commands retains its format and is displayed in courier.
The example below isi approximately what it would look like. I have extra spaces in the brackets that you would need to omit.
[ CODE ]Text you want to keep     formatted[ /CODE ]
would display as:
Code:Text you want to keep formatted
      Text you want to keep formattedDoug
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Originally posted by Snaggletooth View PostMyers, will she get a 1099-G (State income tax refund) from California anyway, whether you elect to deduct the 12K or not?
If she gets one, my experience has been IRS will calculate an amount due based on having to claim the 12K as income. I'm not maintaining that you can't win on this, but perhaps only after letters and explanations...
Enter the income tax refund from Form(s) 1099-G (or similar statement). But do not enter more than the amount of your state and local income taxes shown on your 2006 Schedule A, line 5 . . . . . . . .JG
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I’m not suggesting that this is a reason for not having to deduct all itemized deductions, but when IRS files a tax return for a non-filer, they choose Married Filing Separate and give you the standard deduction.
Seems rather hypocritical for IRS to do that to a non-filer, but then require you claim all itemized deductions when someone files their own return.
I don’t think there is any consistency or principle that can apply to all deductions. There are specific rules that say you have to take all possible deductions when it comes to EIC, and self employment tax, as mentioned before. However, court case citations can only apply to the specific set of facts presented in the case. Unless someone comes up with a court case citation or regulation that specifically mentions you are required to deduct ALL taxes paid if you itemize, I would tend to agree the taxpayer has the option to pick and choose which deductions to claim on Schedule A, if any.Last edited by Bees Knees; 07-07-2008, 07:49 AM.
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Once you are in AMT, there is a seesaw effect between regular tax and AMT. Decrease taxes paid or misc deductions and AMT decreases, but regular tax increases by the same amount. I suggest doing planning in December...should he postpone payments until January as suggested in an earlier post or take them in this year? Once you are on the AMT seesaw its hard to get off, unless you decrease deductions drastically (but usually regular tax increases by more than the amt decreases if you get out of AMT) or your income goes up so far you are no longer subject to AMT. But there is no sense in throwing estimated tax payments or RE taxes into a year in which you get no tax benefit.
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Yes, a seesaw, but a wobbly seesaw...
Originally posted by joanmcq View PostOnce you are in AMT, there is a seesaw effect between regular tax and AMT. Decrease taxes paid or misc deductions and AMT decreases, but regular tax increases by the same amount.
Also, if the deduction for state income tax were to be limited to the amount of state income tax liability, then at least as far as regular tax is concerned the tax benefit rule would make any refund of excess state income tax paid not taxable, nor part of the AGI, during the following year. Almost everyone realizes that holding down the AGI often has tax benefits in and of itself (but those are tax benefits occuring during a different tax year).
The tax benefit rule does, though, have to be applied to the total tax including AGI, not just to the regular tax alone.
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IRS stumped? I emailed a question (a week ago) regarding this topic of selective deductions on Sch A and finally got a response today. Response is that because of the nature of the question more time will be required for an answer. Will post it when it arrives.
BTW, I also requested Sch C as well as an authoritative cite for both answers.Last edited by solomon; 07-14-2008, 11:07 AM.
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