Insurance, Taxes

A Widow's Cost Basis - 2006-03-27

Last Monday, I wrote about a woman who purchased real estate with her husband in 1975. He died in 1983 and now his widow wants to sell this property. I wrote that to calculate her cost basis for tax purposes, she would add her personal basis (half of the original price) to her husband’s basis at the time of his death, that is, half the value of the property then.

An important case dealing with these facts has since been called to my attention. In Gallenstein v. U. S. (975 F.2d 286, 1992), the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit held that for property acquired prior to 1977, which was held jointly by husband and wife, the basis may be calculated differently, in a way that favors the taxpayer.

The formulas can be complex, but essentially, the case found that if all the money used to purchase the house came from the husband, then the widow would be entitled to a tax basis equal to 100 percent of the value of the house at the time of her husband’s death.

This case affects only houses purchased before 1977 and held jointly by the spouses. But if you are widowed and your home falls into that category, discuss the Gallenstein case with a tax advisor.

Related Article...

5316 - The porkers were back again last year, and with a vengeance. According to the latest tally by the Citizens Against Government Waste, federal appropriators "worshiped at the altar of pork-barrel spending" in fiscal 2001 like never before. Lawmakers brought home the bacon by clearing a record 6,333 projects during the period that couldn't pass the pig sty test: They were requested by only one chamber of Congress were neither specifically authorized, competitively awarded, requested by the President nor the subject hearings greatly exceeded the President's budget request or the previous year's funding, or served only a local or special interest. And 433 of the worst offenders -- the ones that symbolize the "most egregious and blatant examples of pork," said CAGW -- are chronicled in the latest edition of the Congressional Pig Book, aka "The Book Washington Doesn't Want You to Read." Appropriately enough, the cover is pink. Congress "saw the mountain of money created by the budget surplus and grabbed so many of the taxpayers' dollars that they created a new epic, 2001: A Pork Odyssey," said the non-profit group, which is dedicated to educating the nation about waste, mismanagement and inefficiency in the federal government. Read this Nemmar Real Estate Training article at Mortgage Loans, Finance, Economy, Appraisal

 

For more on this subject see last week's article, "Housing Counsel: Don't Forget the Stepped up Basis."

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