TaxCPANY Posted April 3, 2018 Report Posted April 3, 2018 Father just wrote that, after having claimed (college student) son as dependent on return filed last month, son now "will do his own . . . he likes to take responsibility." Hooray, ;-) . . . But, I have NO time to amend returns before 17th. Should son be advised to file extension, or would late-filing penalty be averted merely by reference to the amended return down the road, or what else? Quote
Yardley CPA Posted April 3, 2018 Report Posted April 3, 2018 I don't think you have any responsibility at all to the son at this point. With the exception of possibly reminding him that he was taken as a dependent on his parents return. He can then take responsibility to find out what that means. Hand back the son's information and then allow him to take care of his own return filing. 2 1 Quote
rfassett Posted April 3, 2018 Report Posted April 3, 2018 Unless I am misunderstanding the facts as stated, the son simply needs to file his own return and not claim himself. No amended return is necessary. 4 Quote
RitaB Posted April 3, 2018 Report Posted April 3, 2018 4 hours ago, TaxCPANY said: Father just wrote that, after having claimed (college student) son as dependent on return filed last month, son now "will do his own . . . he likes to take responsibility." Hooray, ;-) . . . But, I have NO time to amend returns before 17th. Should son be advised to file extension, or would late-filing penalty be averted merely by reference to the amended return down the road, or what else? I am taking this to mean the parents are deciding not to claim the kid and asking you to amend their return to remove him as a dependent. If so, I would explain to them that you can't just decide, his dependency belongs on one return or the other and explain the law. I would file the kid's extension request if he needs one, free gratis, because I'm all about customer service, even though I'm also all about doing things the right way, which is sometimes annoying to clients and bad for business, but it's hard to argue with me. 6 1 Quote
RitaB Posted April 3, 2018 Report Posted April 3, 2018 6 minutes ago, RitaB said: I am taking this to mean the parents are deciding not to claim the kid and asking you to amend their return to remove him as a dependent. If so, I would explain to them that you can't just decide, his dependency belongs on one return or the other and explain the law. I would file the kid's extension request if he needs one, free gratis, because I'm all about customer service, even though I'm also all about doing things the right way, which is sometimes annoying to clients and bad for business, but it's hard to argue with me. Exemption may be the correct word. Y'all know what I'm getting at. Did kid provide over half his own support or not? 2 Quote
RitaB Posted April 3, 2018 Report Posted April 3, 2018 16 minutes ago, Abby Normal said: Dependency exemption Thanks, I need a nap. 2 Quote
Abby Normal Posted April 3, 2018 Report Posted April 3, 2018 Oh man I crashed last night and still was in the office until 10. Two nights in a row, I've had to brake hard for deer on the last mile of my commute home. I can usually see their eyes reflecting my headlights while I'm still a good distance away, but that did not happen on either night. They were younger deer and maybe their eyes aren't as reflective? TWO WEEKS!! 5 Quote
rfassett Posted April 3, 2018 Report Posted April 3, 2018 7 minutes ago, Abby Normal said: Two nights in a row, I've had to brake hard for deer on the last mile of my commute home. I can usually see their eyes reflecting my headlights while I'm still a good distance away, but that did not happen on either night. They were younger deer and maybe their eyes aren't as reflective? TWO WEEKS!! Right there is why I do not like to drive after dark in these parts. I leave the office in time to be home before it gets dark and then work in my office at home until I am through for the day! 3 Quote
Yardley CPA Posted April 3, 2018 Report Posted April 3, 2018 1 hour ago, Abby Normal said: Oh man I crashed last night and still was in the office until 10. Two nights in a row, I've had to brake hard for deer on the last mile of my commute home. I can usually see their eyes reflecting my headlights while I'm still a good distance away, but that did not happen on either night. They were younger deer and maybe their eyes aren't as reflective? TWO WEEKS!! Maybe the older eyes, in this case, were the issue??? Don't blame the "younger deer." 6 1 Quote
JohnH Posted April 3, 2018 Report Posted April 3, 2018 I've never understood why they put those "Deer Crossing" signs along the road where they do. Too many deer get hit there. They should move the signs to a safer place. 3 9 Quote
Gail in Virginia Posted April 3, 2018 Report Posted April 3, 2018 52 minutes ago, JohnH said: I've never understood why they put those "Deer Crossing" signs along the road where they do. Too many deer get hit there. They should move the signs to a safer place. In our area, the deer cross wherever they want to and just ignore the signs. I don't think they understand the pictogram. 2 4 Quote
Richcpaman Posted April 4, 2018 Report Posted April 4, 2018 I killed a deer one day, somewhere else. During the day. After my car was fixed, and it was tax season, I was driving home. Understand, at that time, I had to drive for about 15 minutes on a road that had farm fields on one side, and state park on the other. The deer used the road to relax... So there was this 6-7 point buck in the road. I could see him. I saw him in enough time to slow to walking speed, and waited or him to move.... He didn't. I was in "his road" and he wanted to defend his friend that I had killed about 4 months before. I moved over to the side of the road to pass him. He walked right up to my car and give me a chest bump! "Stay off MY ROAD and LEAVE my friends ALONE!" Left a smell dent on my right front fender. Rich 6 Quote
JohnH Posted April 4, 2018 Report Posted April 4, 2018 I was told many years ago that if you see a deer beside the road always look for its tail if visible. If the tail flicks up, the deer is about to bolt. Is there any validity to that? Quote
rfassett Posted April 4, 2018 Report Posted April 4, 2018 Yes - Great Story Rich! Wild life is very interesting to watch. As to see the reflection of the deer's eyes in your headlights? On my journey home last evening, five deer, in single file format with a second or two between them, jumped off the right hand bank onto the roadway and continued their journey across the road right to left and off into the woods on the left. Not one of those deer looked at me and if I would have been driving in the dark and looking for the reflection of their eyes, this story could have a very different ending. The evening before last, on our trip home, we observed a herd of 16 deer grazing in a field and they were not twenty yards from the road. I love living in rural America! 4 Quote
TaxCPANY Posted April 5, 2018 Author Report Posted April 5, 2018 You're right, Rita & Yardley -- and THANKS. It's in the name of "customer service" that I've been wondering how to mitigate these taxpayers' sudden whim; but ultimately I'd rather have them know me for my technical skill than cuddlesomeness. P.S. Apology for this late response: I don't seem to have received any Notifications when my post was commented upon, only dropped in today with a different question! 2 Quote
TaxCPANY Posted April 5, 2018 Author Report Posted April 5, 2018 My bad: I indeed did get "Notifications" but had not arranged to have those emailed to me. Eric's creation still is perfect. 2 Quote
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