Devolution
Member
Saw "death tax" in title. Knew what to expect.
I'm a tax auditor, so here's my 2 cents on this:
Yes, we pull stuff totally bogus stuff/bills all of the time.
Why do we do this?
Cause either
1)Taxpayer doesn't want to give us any records, so I'm allowed to assume anything I want (ex: "You got nothing? I'll assume your entire tax return is wrong then.) or
2)Taxpayer doesn't agree to our assessments but have no evidence to disprove it. (in this case, the couple refuses to pay the original $17M assessment, probably with no good legal argument against it. That or the regulations are up to interpretation, which means it should be closed sooner and let it go to court anyway)
Obviously we can't go to our supervisor and say "Ok, I can't get anything out of them, so let's assess them with a $0 bill." If that's all we do all day, then every taxpayer/corporation will just do that and get themselves off the hook.
So in those cases we are either forced to:
1)Come to a compromise with the taxpayer (bad for everyone)
2)Force a big assessment based on the wildest assumption, to hope that taxpayers will comply/give records/ try to work with us.
3)Force a big assessment down, wait for the taxpayer to protest and hopefully give us something to prove someone wrong.
4)Force something down so the case can be closed sooner and just go to court and have them figure it out.
The last thing you want is some case staying open forever wasting everyone's money on a he-said/she-said battle.
You lied and got caught. But dont' fess up to it . . . just start with more bullshit.
Yeah, as if we don't have thousands of pages of tax code, thousands of judicial rulings on the tax code, and competent judicial branch where you can argue your case up to the supreme court. Nah . . . just whine that the gubmint' iz teh evil.
If they win their case against the IRS and subsequently sell the piece, then they would presumably be doing so with a basis of $0, and would therefore be taxed on any income they received. The rub here, is that the amount of tax assessed in this situation would be significantly less than what is owed under the estate tax.
What's interesting, is that the IRS seems to be ignoring its own regulations when assessing this piece at such a high value. IRS regs state that:
The fair market value is the price at which the property would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller, neither being under any compulsion to buy or to sell and both having reasonable knowledge of relevant facts. The fair market value of a particular item of property includible in the decedent's gross estate is not to be determined by a forced sale price. Nor is the fair market value of an item of property to be determined by the sale price of the item in a market other than that in which such item is most commonly sold to the public, taking into account the location of the item wherever appropriate.26 C.F.R. § 20.2031–1(b)
I would say that a very relevant fact is that it is against the law to sell the piece, which is why Christie's valued it at zero. Now, we know that the decedent obtained a waiver to possess the piece, but can the heirs obtain a similar waiver to allow them to sell it? If they cannot obtain this waiver, then I think the IRS's assessment of its value is on shakey ground. If, however, they could obtain the waiver but simply do not want to part with the artwork, then I think the IRS stands a strong chance of prevailing on the issue.
Your just the candidate the IRS targets. Have fun with your future audit!
Dude, read this please:
http://www.reddit.com/r/funny/comments/p69fd/the_irs_is_made_of_people/
We often go out of our way to give people money BACK
That's nice. Yet, an audit is hell for people, stressful and hectic. Although, the result is still a nice gesture.
I still believe y'all have more than enough power at your disposal and need no more.
Different stances on the issue.
Interesting (at the part I bolded). There have been a few past cases I've read where it seemed like the IRS would bring up an issue against the defendant in court simply because there was something that the IRS didn't like even with the code supporting the defendants arguments. I don't believe these cases had anything to do with the defendant providing insufficient records either.
I guess what you said brings more clarity to why the IRS acts the way it does in certain circumstances.
if you take off zeros, it's like a story about normal people
Saw "death tax" in title. Knew what to expect.
The IRS can only assess under the law as it is written. The proper method for capturing the lost tax revenue should the law later be amended to make the it legal to sell the artwork, is to tax the income received by the heir when he or she sells that item. Since the FMV of the item is $0 at the time the decedent passed, then that is the basis the heir will have in the artwork.Part of the reason IRS taxes at market value (even illegal value) is that the law can be changed down the line and suddenly they dodged the estate tax that originally gave them the item in the first place.
Please. You guys think it's reasonable to charge $29 million in taxes for something, based on an appraisal by the same people (IRS) who are getting the money, that's actually worth $0? Get your heads out of your asses.
Please. You guys think it's reasonable to charge $29 million in taxes for something, based on an appraisal by the same people (IRS) who are getting the money, that's actually worth $0? Get your heads out of your asses.
I dont understand art
29 mil for that?!
You could buy several old master works for 30 mill. Sketches and miniatures. And it's subjective.Contemporary art dealership is a masturbatory clique for the rich and the ignorant. There to sell mass produced tat and take millions from fools who'll never be able to own priceless works from the old masters.
You could buy several old master works for 30 mill. Sketches and miniatures. And it's subjective.
No, I mean if:
Person A owns the property, passes away, leaves it to Person B
Person B owns the property, passes away, leaves it to Person C
Percon C owns the property, passes away...
within a short span of time.
Would the taxes be paid based on the full value of the property each time?
They are not trying to dodge taxes, which is why they sold over $600M and have paid $471M in taxes on the collection.
In a more relateable example, you have long time farm owners who have their kids inherit the farm when they die - and the kids can't afford to even keep it because they are hit with a big inheritance tax and are forced to sell the farm simply because someone's heart isn't beating anymore.
What about farms and small businesses?Very few family farms and small businesses are affected by the estate tax. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that with a $2 million exemption, only 123 farms per year in the U.S. would owe any estate tax, and the number of small businesses is similarly small. In 2001, the New York Times reported that American Farm Bureau Federation (who was in favor of repealing the estate tax) could not cite a single case of a family farm lost due to the estate tax.
On average, those few small business and farm estates will owe only 14 percent of the estate, so it is unlikely they will have to sell the business or farm. Plus, they can spread any payments over 14 years. They also benefit from special use valuation, and minority interests and marketability discounts.
Moreover, gutting the estate tax would actually hurt family farms. The estate tax helps make family farms more competitive against mega-scale agriculture, because it moderates ever-larger concentrations of wealth and economic clout. Repeal of the estate tax or exempting farms completely will only encourage further concentration of farm ownership, which reduces competition. An unlimited exemption for farm assets could create a giant loophole from the estate tax because wealthy individuals who expect to owe estate tax could use much or all of their wealth to buy farms before they died.
At which point they would then pay tax on the income they received by selling it...Another way of looking at it:
Something might be unsellable atm, but what's to say that it won't gain value in a month or two?
Let this slip by and you set a precedent, enabling people to skip the tax because it "can't be sold" and then have it sell later on.
Please. You guys think it's reasonable to charge $29 million in taxes for something, based on an appraisal by the same people (IRS) who are getting the money, that's actually worth $0? Get your heads out of your asses.
At which point they would then pay tax on the income they received by selling it...
Another way of looking at it:
Something might be unsellable atm, but what's to say that it won't gain value in a month or two?
Let this slip by and you set a precedent, enabling people to skip the tax because it "can't be sold" and then have it sell later on.
This is essentially what happened to me. When my grandmother passed away all the farmland was split up for the grandkids. Each of us got 140 or so acres, which if we could have rented it would have been about 30 grand a year. And I would have gladly accepted paying taxes on that to help jumpstart my retirement savings. Instead, thanks to estate taxes and being cash poor, I ended up selling it all off for way less than it was valued at in the scramble to pay the taxes before I got hit with late penalties. All my cousins had to do the same, so in the end none of us got anything.
Yeah, but then they only need to pay tax once instead of twice, despite their having been two transactions involved.
Welcome to the Republican Party.The estate tax cracks me up. It can largely be avoided with good estate planning (just ask Mitt Romney). And less than 2% of the population will ever be subjected to it yet amazingly wealthy people are able to get idiots like Kosmos to feel sorry for them. LOL.
Welcome to the Republican Party.
Except the only ignorant people in this thread are ones who certainly follow Obama.
So you're saying you haven't read the thread.
Oh I have read the whole thing. Lots of fuck the rich comments and other ignorant statements
I'm all in favor of abolishing the estate tax. What a joke. The IRS is relentless.
That's a work from 1959, I wouldn't really call it contemporary (and it's most certainly not mass produced).Contemporary art dealership is a masturbatory clique for the rich and the ignorant. There to sell mass produced tat and take millions from fools who'll never be able to own priceless works from the old masters.
That is not even what I'm talking about. You cannot give another individual in the United States more than $13,000 a year tax free.
If I wanted to say, give my brother $50,000 this year, to help him buy a house, I would have to pay taxes on that money, again.
I am honestly baffeled by all the people here that hate other human biengs just because they have more then they do.
if I may ask, is everyone here that expressed such opinions from the US?
When you're working your ass off to live on (probably significantly less than) 100k a year its very hard to be emotionally sympathetic to people who's problems are that out of 600 million dollars worth of inheritance they may have some issues with a 39 million dollar chunk of it. Doesn't mean the IRS isn't wrong, mind you.
When you're working your ass off to live on (probably significantly less than) 100k a year its very hard to be emotionally sympathetic to people who's problems are that out of 600 million dollars worth of inheritance they may have some issues with a 39 million dollar chunk of it. Doesn't mean the IRS isn't wrong, mind you.
why? I am a student, and I assure you I make much much less then 100k a year, yet I can sympathize with the couple, paying 65 million dollars for something that can not be sold is a 65 million dollar loss, thats huge, no one, no matter how rich wouldnt mind just losing that sum, can they affored it? probably, I dont see how thats relevant,
these people have been screwed, and I dont see how the fact that they can afford it changes anything
I think that the rich are paying too little in taxes at this point. I don't have issues with the estate tax. This is certainly an example of the IRS being pretty silly, but let's not act like the wealthy don't have the game strongly rigged in their favor. I don't hate rich people for being rich. I hate the fact that the government can be easily influenced by money, and that the very wealthy have things pretty easy because of it.
This isn't me being envious. I'm not too lazy. I am not wealthy, and therefore have fewer opportunities granted to me to amass additional wealth. It's a rigged game. If you want to carry water for this bullshit system be my guest, but it's really ridiculous and most of us are hurt by it.
I wouldn't. Oh I'd fight against it like this couple are doing and the IRS is in the wrong in this case, but its not like if I lost that money my financial comfort has been in any way impacted. If I'm operating on the scale of wealth that involves an inheritance this big than that amount of money falls below my resolution of concern. At this point it really just becomes a numbers game.
But that would mean that you just called Rothko and Pollock a masturbatory clique, and you wouldn't do that, right?
Did he also leave you $2068.sigh, ill give an example similar to one that was given to you before, say a friend of mine dies, as a result the goverment decides the best course of action is to fine me 100$, now I can certainly live with 100$ less, how would you feel about that?
Did he also leave you $2068.
Man your friend died and your worried about money???j/k. It would be shitty, but I'm not going hold a vigil and start a kickstarter.sure, lets say he did , generally 2000$ would be tax exempt, but in this particular case, they take 100$
Man your friend died and your worried about money???j/k. It would be shitty, but I'm not going hold a vigil and start a kickstarter.