T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
409.1 | it depends... | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Wed Mar 10 1993 10:45 | 12 |
| Did he form a "S Corporation", a corporation or a partnership? I think
that maks the difference. If it is a partnership, he can deduct the
loss from him income and us it to off set his capital gains. If it is
a "S Corporation", he can file it as a partnership for 1992 and deduct
the loss from his income. But, if it is a regular corporation, his
personal liability is shielded from the corporation. Unfortunately, so
is the loss. Then, he can not deduct the loss from his personal income.
I am not an accountant. These are just from my memory. The best is to
consult with an accountant.
Mike
|
409.2 | | VSSTEG::CHENG | | Thu Mar 11 1993 09:15 | 9 |
| re: .1
Since the SCHEDULE K-1 he received is FORM 1120S, I suspect this is
a S Corporation. Does this means that he shoud use SCHEDULE E to report
the loss ? What is " at-risk activity ", " passive and nonpassive "
on SCHEDULE E refers to ?
Thanks.
|
409.3 | Sorry, that's all I know. | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Thu Mar 11 1993 10:34 | 11 |
| re: -1
I was just speaking from memory of reading some books about the
advantages (and disadvantages) of partnership, S corporation and
corporation. I am not really familiar with the different tax schedules.
Sorry, I can't help you further on this. Maybe your brother should
check with his accountant or call the IRS hotline.
Regards,
Mike
|
409.4 | K-1 with loss usually means a paperwork disaster... | SUFRNG::WSA118::SOVEREIGN_S | ...once a knight is enough(?) | Fri Mar 12 1993 16:15 | 16 |
| K-1's are reported on Schedule E.
If the K-1 shows a loss, you have to determine how much of the loss he was
"at risk" for, ie did the money actually come out of his pocket, or out of
his assets?
In other words, where did the money come from that was "lost"?
If the partners (S-corp shareholders) took money out of their own accounts,
or if they are able to be held liable for the businesses loans, then he is
probably "at-risk".
I would urge you to get professional help..."At-risk loss limitations" and
"Passive activity loss limitations" are not for the faint hearted.
SteveSov
|