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Pacun

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Everything posted by Pacun

  1. To answer the original question, the answer is NO. You cannot claim the child on your 2009 return. If a child is going to be born on January 1st, I always suggest my client to ask the doctor to induce the mother so that the child is born on the previous year for two reasons: 1.- I can claim a full deduction and credits for the child on the year he was born. (This year is a little different because on January 1, 2010 new benefits start for children born in 2010). I have a friend who couldn't decide what benefit to take. At the end she decided not to push the issue and the issue was born on January 1st, 2010. I she had pushed, she had gotten that exemption benefit. 2.- Some, if not all, school districts use december 31st as the cutting date for school. So if you go with your child who was born 1 second before the year end, you can claim it on your taxes for that whole year AND that child will be on 6th grade while another child who was born 2 seconds later will go to 5th at some point. Just in case Jainen challenges, let me put this disclaimer: provided that the child born the year before doens't have the down syndrome or any other mental incapacity or the child that was born 2 seconds later is average and not super smart. I should add more disclaimers such accidents on the child that was born ealier, etc. Let's say a child is born 1 second before the year ends and dies 2 seconds later, that child will qualify for full deductions and benefits on the tax return for 2 years.
  2. Jainen, If the problem start by saying that it is an office building and there is nothing that will indicate that the building was converted to another use, I will continue with the version that the problem started with. If the problem allocated a price or value for the other items, it exists the assumption that the items are good unless otherwise stated. There is nothing in the problem that states or indicates that the items were no good and were dumped. If I approach a problem with all possible scenarios that are not mentioned or implied in the problem, I will not have enough time to finish any exam. Same thing happened with the warm up question exercise to you... you asked so many questions and at the end you didn't have time to solve the problem. (Yes, I am still trying). Taxguy57. I am trying to answer these questions without any research but I think I am right. The answer is $30,000 ordinary gain because that's his job. If he was not derivying 50% of his income by flipping houses and since he didn't hold it for more than one year, the answer would be $30,000 short term gain. Maybe we should start a new thread with questions from the EA and give an answer and a little explanation.
  3. I would go with D. For sure the building is 39 years because it is NOT residential. On the previous one, is $25,000 because he physsically participates. Even if he didn't physically participate, 0 would not be a good answer. I wanted to ADD: Please ask any questions on this forum. We are here to help. We were at your level at some point and we understand. I think simple questions get an answer right away. Just don't make it as hard as my warm up exercise because you will not get ANY answers.
  4. I do support regulation too. The main problem that I see for the IRS is the tax preparers that know a lot but don't sign the returns. They will continue to operate since they NEVER sign returns. They are not affraid of exams because they know a lot but simply don't want to follow the rules. I am going to take the EA exam during the summer and be ready for next year.
  5. This person owed $2,126 for 2005. How much do you think it cost her to get representation and preparation of the documents to bring to court? How much time she invested on this case?
  6. The DC-40 was just released and it seems to have a bug for low income credit. I will report it 1 day before efile begins. Maybe at that time they ATX has fixed the problem.
  7. I guess this was the worst idea posted on this forum.
  8. Pacun

    8879 Forms

    I scan all 8879 and burn them. I don't recycle them.
  9. I get all signed 8879 in one place and I efile as I go. We are busy on the weekend so on Monday, I hand in all 8879 to my partner and I ask her to read the names and I check efile status. If accepted, a check mark with a highlighter goes to the 8879 and it is put on a pile. If not accepted or not transmitted, it put on another pile. If I do not see on e-file I put it on another pile and work on those returns immediately after we check them all. We put the checked 8879 on a pile on a different drawer. Next week, my partner will check the refund status on the IRS and state websites and make a note. After that, the 8879s are moved to the finito filing cabinet. When a client calls, we go to the finished returns and tell them when the refund will be received or if there is a delay on the return. We do that every Monday and if I forgot to efile one, no problem because Wednesday is the deadline for efiling. I efile EVERYTHING that I can. I do not charge extra for efiling since I save paper, toner, printer and time.
  10. Pacun

    Gambling

    You are right the net result would be a loss, but you will need to report $100 on line 21 and if you do not itemize, you CANNOT deduct any losses.
  11. Pacun

    Gambling

    Jake, I don't think you are right. At no point the court said "since you cannot itemize, you cannot deduct any other losses".
  12. You can get the FMV on those dates without an official appraisal and use that as your basis. You just need to have some documentation but an official appraisal. I hope someone can give you some websites to help you.
  13. The lady who opened the daycare center on May 1, 2009 will get a refund of $4,423.00 for tax year 2009. If you have a different answer, please post all the entries on lines 47 though 67 and I will tell you what I have and we can start a nice exchange.
  14. You need to use the FMV of either DOD or 6 months later.
  15. Any takers? I will post my answer within 48 hours.
  16. The cases that will not require many forms or lines go to the roockies and the price is below $400. If you bring a case like the warm up case I posted, it will not go to a roocky, it will go to an experienced preparer. That's the point that I try to make. Of course it will cost you much more than $400 to have difficult returns prepared. No one has challenged this: You can bring a person who doesn't know what a W-2 is, have him/her take the basic course, pass the exam and be an HRB preperer 4 months later. Trust me, the instructors are very experienced and knowledgeable but the company pays very little to preparers and that's why they have very inexperienced people working for them. With the salary HRB pays its preparers (and the non-compete agreement you sign), it is very hard to keep preparers after 2 years of experience. They teach their course every year everywhere because that's how they hire their employees.
  17. H and R block will start charging more since their preparers will not come from the street in August, attend a class, and be preparing taxes by January 15. They are very reasonable with their pay though. Yes, I said that. They pay them little, but they don't have any experience. Do you now agree? I have taken a lot of classes from HRB and they are very good classes. I have had a chance to help my friends with their homework and no matter how good the classes are, taxes cannot be learned in 3 months. I always tell my friends, if you do not pay HRB more than $400 for your retun, you didn't get someone with experience behind the desk. Isn't that the case?
  18. Everybody will be tested or required to attend classes after the initial exams. CPAs, Attorneys and Enrolled agents will be excused for the initial exam because they have already passed harder exams. Some one said that preparers will not sign. You are absolutely right. As a matter of fact, preparers that do not sign returns are the biggest headache for the IRS. "Public education???" you must be kidding, the public is the one driving that force. The public is the one that goes to those preparers who will NOT sign the return and pay them 200% more of what I charge. I love this community, I feel that no one should be allowed to prepare taxes without this community. During my first month of tax preparation, I will make a small donation in gratitude of all the help I get here. CPAs, EAs and Attorneys are not exempted from donating. We should start another thread since this one is becoming too big.
  19. I love to drop some bombs from time to time and this is one of those times. In order to prepare taxes, you need to be able to pass a test and you need to be able to apply what you learn in school or courses. If you cannot do both, sorry, you shouldn't be in tax preparation business. This is no longer a profession for the semi-smart, semi-prepared person because too many changes happen every year. Honestly, are you ready for this coming tax season? Are you semi-ready? Are you relying on your experience? Don't you wish you took a course?
  20. You are right they will have to pay taxes in 2011 and 2012. Which means that some people will pay on April 15, 2013.
  21. The IRS doesn't have the resource to evaluate experience on a case by case basis for a million preparers. Exams are already in the computers and will not create any extra burden on the IRS. So, no matter how we look at it, we better start studying for the exams. About 5 years ago, I was able to pass all 4 exams for EA just by reading previous exams. Because I changed my name later on, I didn't get certified. I am going back to those exams again and see if I can pass them. Now you can take one at a time. CPAs are right, no way you will pass the CPA exams just by reading previous exams.
  22. Partner A didn't gift anything to Partner B. Partner A's basis is whatever money he invested. Partner B's basis is zero. Partner A made a loan to LLC so when he collects that money back, no tax transaction happens; except for interest if any. Any money paid by LLC to partner B should be treated as money paid for services and subject to payroll taxes. Now, if you are saying that Partner B is personally liable for the loan, then he could have a basis on the LLC, but I don't believe that's the case.
  23. How will they grandfather someone with 5 years of experience? Experience means a lot but sometimes means nothing. How about the tax preparer who only prepares 11 paid returns every year and has done it for 30 years? How about the preparer who works at a big office and only deals with some type of returns for 6 years? How about some one who prepares 300 diverse returns by himself or herself and has done it for 30 years? Who will testify on the experience of the 300 diverse returns person? I bet you the guy who only deals with limited returns at the big office will be the most qualified in the eyes of the IRS since a CPA might write a letter regarding that person's experience. So, in order to be fair, I think exams should be given to everyone who is not a CPA, EA or Attorney.
  24. TP was a successful banker making a couple of millions up to halloween 2008. She was laid off and started collecting unemployment compensation. She didn't work Nov and Dec 2008 and start collecting unemployment compensation. Since she didn't make enough money, she continued collecting unemployment in January and February 2009.
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