[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference nyoss1::market_investing

Title:Market Investing
Moderator:2155::michaud
Created:Thu Jan 23 1992
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1060
Total number of notes:10477

87.0. "Six year old tax errors?" by SSBN1::YANKES () Mon Mar 02 1992 17:59

	An IRS question was posed to me by someone who has discovered what he
thinks might be a tax error that he made on the order of six years ago.  (He
was reading the directions on the same form this year that he needed to use
six years ago and realized he might have made an error back then.  He did check
and the wording of the two forms is the same, so its not a case of a changed
rule.)  What is the IRS's statute of limitatations on things like this?  Since
this is beyond the range of filing a 1040X, what process does he use?

	Thanks and I'll certainly pass the answer(s) along...

								-craig
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
87.1Unless it was Fraud...SSDEVO::RMCLEANMon Mar 02 1992 21:433
  I think that the answer is Tough Luck.  You can't do much about it.  They
certainly will reject a 1040x and unless there was any fraud involved they won't
even bother to consider anything back that far.
87.2NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Tue Mar 03 1992 19:448
The 1040 instructions say that "generally" a 1040X must be filed within
three years.  Perhaps there are exceptions to this.  I'm pretty sure I
once filed more than three years worth of 1040X's, but the rules may have
changed.  (For the curious, here's what the situation was.  A relative
had purchased some savings bonds in my name without my knowledge.  Interest
could be reported either as it accrued, or when the bonds were cashed in.
Since I had practically no income for some of those years, I filed amended
returns so I could retroactively report the interest as it accrued.)
87.3long time?CSC32::K_BOUCHARDKen Bouchard CXO3-2Tue May 26 1992 22:158
    I think the IRS's statute of limitations is about 10 years.
    (officially) Actually,if your friend is a high roller and somhow ran
    afoul of the feds,the Irs will get revenge no matter what the length of
    time. If your friend is just an ordinary tax-payer like the majority of
    us,he should keep his records until ten years is up then forget it. Of
    course,this is not official advice. For *that*,call the IRS.
    
    Ken