I recently had my 341, but unlike a lot of folks here, my trustee did not seem so nice. He seemed to me like a nosy border guard, asking questions like why do I have so many bank accounts, etc. I began answering that question one by one - in one case, I said I kept a checking account at one credit union because they gave me a good deal, to which he responded something like, "that's not a good reason to have a bank account with them" Huh??? I just continued discussing all my accounts, and must have bored him, because he wanted to move on.
Anyway, on my 2009 tax return, I had a certain small amount (i.e., less than $100) listed as estimated tax payments, and the same amount to be carried over to next year's taxes as estimated payments (something I typically did over the last 12 years.) The reason theses amounts were the same was because I had zero tax liability. The panel trustee said something like I would have to get that refunded and surrender it to the estate. I then mentioned that I had received some type of letter from the IRS stating that this was an error (and had not gotten around to calling the IRS about it, and that I had no estimated tax payments, but that I would investigate it ASAP. The same amount was listed the same way on my 2008 taxes (also zero tax liability.)
So when I got home, on a hunch I took a look at the 2007 tax return. Sure enough, this amount was what I had *underpaid* for that year (as opposed to *overpaid*), and I had made a mistake on the 2008 return in putting that down as estimated taxes (which then carried over for 2009.) So the next day, I filed an amended return for both 2008 & 2009, and sent a copy of that, along with the 2007 return, and the IRS letter, and a note explaining the total situation with the estimated tax - i.e., that it was an error going way back that was just recently discovered.
I would hope that the panel trustee would be able to see this mistake, but I wonder if if he would use this as an excuse to deny the petition.
Anyway, on my 2009 tax return, I had a certain small amount (i.e., less than $100) listed as estimated tax payments, and the same amount to be carried over to next year's taxes as estimated payments (something I typically did over the last 12 years.) The reason theses amounts were the same was because I had zero tax liability. The panel trustee said something like I would have to get that refunded and surrender it to the estate. I then mentioned that I had received some type of letter from the IRS stating that this was an error (and had not gotten around to calling the IRS about it, and that I had no estimated tax payments, but that I would investigate it ASAP. The same amount was listed the same way on my 2008 taxes (also zero tax liability.)
So when I got home, on a hunch I took a look at the 2007 tax return. Sure enough, this amount was what I had *underpaid* for that year (as opposed to *overpaid*), and I had made a mistake on the 2008 return in putting that down as estimated taxes (which then carried over for 2009.) So the next day, I filed an amended return for both 2008 & 2009, and sent a copy of that, along with the 2007 return, and the IRS letter, and a note explaining the total situation with the estimated tax - i.e., that it was an error going way back that was just recently discovered.
I would hope that the panel trustee would be able to see this mistake, but I wonder if if he would use this as an excuse to deny the petition.
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