Blogs

Blog

Articles and updates from our family of firms on tax, probate, business, and related topics.

  • IRS Expands Sec. 9100 Relief for Late Forms 3115

    As innocuous as it sounds, the Form 3115 is a tax form like no other. A Form 3115 that is inadvertently omitted from a tax return filing can result in sizable differences in tax and trigger significant tax penalties and interest. Given the amounts that are often reported on the Form 3115, errors could cost…

    Read more

  • Converting Home to Rental to Get Tax Loss Deduction

    If you move out of a house and rent it to a friend for less than fair market value rent, can you then take a tax loss on the subsequent sale of the house? If the home is not converted to a rental property, the loss is disallowed as a personal tax loss. If the…

    Read more

  • Tax Court Puffery: Exaggeration is Not Evidence

    Every communication makes statements. The statements may be truthful or false. A statement that is misleading or exaggerated is somewhere between these two. There can be significant legal consequences depending on where a statement falls on this continuum. This raises questions as to how precise do the statements have to be to be false? If…

    Read more

  • Funeral Expense Organization Denied Nonprofit Status

    Gargamel, the antagonist in the Smurfs, is the villain. Wile E. Coyote in the Road Runner, Raquelle in Barbie, Lex Luther in Superman, the Joker in Batman, Darth Vader in Star Wars. The list goes on. That is one side of these stories. It’s the side of the story that is presented to us. It…

    Read more

  • Guardianship Claim Bars Probate Claim?

    Guardianship Claim Bars Probate Claim? Imagine that you are owed money by someone who becomes incapacitated and they have a guardian appointed. Your debt is not secured by any property, such as real estate. The guardian sends you a notice to submit your claim for payment. The debtor is of an advanced age or not

    Read more

  • Rejected e-File Return is a Valid Tax Return

    The IRS’s Identity Protection Personal Identification Number (“IP PIN”) is intended to protect those who are victims of identity theft. It does so by making it harder for third parties to file fraudulent tax returns. The IP PIN can also cause problems for taxpayers. This is particularly true for tax returns that are filed close…

    Read more

  • Are Simultaneous Signatures Required for a Will?

    The making of a will is serious. A valid will dictates who gets your property and when they get it. An invalid will can result in your property passing according to Texas intestacy law. It can also set up an expensive probate dispute. This is why estate planning attorneys take such care in helping clients

    Read more

  • Meal & Entertainment: The IRS Auditors “Bread & Butter”

    I once worked with an IRS agent who would only make two types of adjustments. He would make UNICAP/inventory adjustments and meal and entertainment adjustments. If either of these items could be adjusted for a tax return, he would adjust them. It didn’t matter what else was listed on the tax return. It did not…

    Read more

  • The “Discovery Rule” in Probate Disputes

    There are some strict deadlines for contesting a will in Texas. The will contest generally has to be filed within two years of the time the will is admitted to probate. What happens if one of the parties hides the existence of the will and secretly probates the will? What if they make statements to

    Read more

  • Tax on Virtual Currency Received for Microtasks

    Our Federal income tax laws take a broad view of what counts as income and gain. The tax law then imposes a ridged framework for classifying and computing tax on income or gain. By casting the net wide, the tax law is able to capture just about every type of transaction that one could dream…

    Read more