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| The IRS offers guidance on
unforeseen circumstances. |
From The Tax Adviser:
Neighbors
Hostility Allowed Partial Gain
Exclusion on Residence Sale
RC section 121(c) allows a partial exclusion
of gain from the sale of a principal residence for
taxpayers who fail to meet the ownership, use and
frequency-of-sale tests to qualify for the maximum
exclusion under section 121(b) ($250,000 if single;
$500,000 if married filing jointly). The IRS recently
offered guidance on qualifying for the reduced exclusion,
of which CPAs should be aware.
BACKGROUND
Temporary regulations
section 1.121-3T(b) states that, for a taxpayer to claim
a reduced maximum exclusion under section 121(c), the
sale or exchange of the taxpayers residence must be
due to a change in place of employment or in health or
due to unforeseen circumstances, which depend on the
facts and circumstances. One key requirement to qualify
for the unforeseen circumstances exception is
that the circumstances which gave rise to the sale or
exchange of the residence must not have been reasonably
foreseeable when the taxpayer began using the property as
a personal residence.
Under temporary regulations section
1.121-3T(e)(2)(iv), the IRS is authorized, from time to
time, to provide guidance on unforeseen
circumstances. It now has done so.
FACTS
In letter ruling
200403049, the taxpayers, husband and wife, owned and
resided in a home (House 1). While residing there,
another family member, A, committed a crime; this
criminal was placed on probation and required to spend
one year at a rehabilitation facility. During this period
the couple relocated to a different neighborhood, sold
House 1 and purchased a replacement residence (House 2).
The ruling indicates the taxpayers did
not expect A to live with them in House 2 permanently.
However, during the second month of the couples
residency, A lived there under a court-ordered house
arrest and continuing rehabilitation counseling.
According to the ruling, the
couples neighbors did not welcome the former
jailbird. Rather, they purportedly made threats against
A, interfered with As attempts to find employment
and objected to the former criminals spending time
in the yard outside the couples house. In addition,
As probation officer was said to believe A would
have a better chance of reducing the period of house
arrest and probation if the couple sold the house and
moved.
IRSs
RULING
The ruling held the
taxpayers primary reason for selling House 2 was an
unforeseen circumstancethe neighbors
hostility. Because of this, the couple could exclude part
of the gain on sale. The rulings facts are not
inconsistent with the fact patterns of the six examples
in temporary regulations section 1.121-3T(e)(3), which
illustrate circumstances that might be
unforeseen and so qualify a taxpayer for the
section 121(c) reduced maximum exclusion.
For more information, see the Tax
Clinic, edited by Terence Kelly, in the May 2004 issue of
The Tax Adviser.
Lesli Laffie,
editor
The Tax Adviser
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