ILLMAS Posted March 9, 2012 Report Posted March 9, 2012 I have TP that recieved a letter from the IRS letting him know they accepted his "S" status however that he needs to draw a salary. 2011 went by and he never drawed a salary but withdrew money as if he was self-employed. Now my question is would it be safe to file a zero and final return for the 1120S and report all the income and expenses on Sch C, using the name of the corp and FEIN assigned to the 1120S? Thanks MAS Quote
OldJack Posted March 9, 2012 Report Posted March 9, 2012 Would it be all right if I reported zero income on my return and put my income on your tax return? If the S-corp had transactions in its name how could you ignore those? Quote
ILLMAS Posted March 9, 2012 Author Report Posted March 9, 2012 True, I just feel uneasy the way the account was handled, hardly any checks were written from the account and everything was paid with cash. Quote
Lion EA Posted March 9, 2012 Report Posted March 9, 2012 You can decline the engagement. Offer to put the company on extension while he searches for a new preparer. Quote
OldJack Posted March 9, 2012 Report Posted March 9, 2012 hardly any checks were written from the account and everything was paid with cash. It would only have to have 1 check or 1 cash associated with the corp to require a 1120S reporting. Actually the corp has to show liquidating transactions in order to file a final return and those would have to have been dated in the final calender year. Maybe there is a good reason not to pay a salary. Quote
Randall Posted March 10, 2012 Report Posted March 10, 2012 A lot of people just don't understand what a corp or LLC is about. They are separate entities. Sometimes it seems absurd to file more returns and such, but they should realize what their form of business is and how it is to be reported. If they want to change it, do the proper procedures for dissolving the entity, etc. But until then, you have to file the proper forms. Quote
the boss Posted March 11, 2012 Report Posted March 11, 2012 There is a popular restaurant in town where all of the transactions are handled in cash, no credit cards. They must have a hard time finding a someone to prepare their return, right? :-). Quote
OldJack Posted March 11, 2012 Report Posted March 11, 2012 handled in cash, no credit cards. Not uncommon for many business such as bars, some gas stations, chiropractors, barber shops, and etc. The IRS doesn't like it but that is their problem. Quote
ILLMAS Posted March 11, 2012 Author Report Posted March 11, 2012 There is a popular restaurant in town where all of the transactions are handled in cash, no credit cards. They must have a hard time finding a someone to prepare their return, right? :-). Receiving payments in cash is not a problem, but using cash to pay for stuff is a bigger problem, there might be a lack of controls, where as a using a checking account. But having receipts for your cash purchases helps One might think that a business that only accepts cash might be under reporting sales, but a lot do that to avoid having to pay credit card processing fees, which is a fee that is not tack on to the customer. Quote
jainen Posted March 13, 2012 Report Posted March 13, 2012 >>would it be safe to file a zero and final return for the 1120S and report all the income and expenses on Sch C<< Not safe for YOU. Who's going to get blamed when someone sues him personally because he didn't operate his corporation as a separate entity? File the corporation return with no salary, since that is what really happened. If the IRS dings him for payroll taxes or something, that's not your problem--he was warned. Quote
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