[Dixielandjazz] 1099's

Larry Walton Entertainment - St. Louis larrys.bands at charter.net
Wed Feb 22 15:15:33 PST 2006


That's not the way Missouri state does it.  I did taxes for a couple of 
years and these guys would come in with incredible tax bills.  They hadn't 
filed State returns so the state just makes up a figure and tells the people 
to prove they don't owe it.  I know these are guys that were really stupid 
but that was the stares attitude.
Larry
----- Original Message ----- 
From: <tcashwigg at aol.com>
To: <Dixielandjazz at ml.islandnet.com>
Sent: Wednesday, February 22, 2006 2:21 PM
Subject: Re: [Dixielandjazz] 1099's


The guy should have simply informed the idiot IRS auditor that he was a
multi- disciplined artist and it would be perfectly legal to use his
studio office/workspace to practice both disciplines and stood his
ground and made the idiot go back and get help to try and disprove it .
Just because the auditor says it does not make it so. Trust me, Make
them prove every little detail and don't make it easy for them, take no
prisoners and make no unnecessary compromises which is what they want.
  If you give in on any point they will try to ride all over you.  State
your case professionally and defend your position to the end, and
remember you can still file for an appeal if necessary.  As in getting
another auditor and or a second opinion.

I had a wonderful accountant for many years who always wanted to go
represent me and make a compromise, I looked at him and said what are
you nuts I have no intentions of compromising anything, they have to
prove to me that I owe it or I will not give them a dime.   It's my
money not theirs until and if they earn it.

Cheers,

Tom

 -----Original Message-----
 From: Larry Walton Entertainment - St. Louis <larrys.bands at charter.net>
  To: rahberry at comcast.net; Dixieland Jazz
<Dixielandjazz at ml.islandnet.com>
 Sent: Wed, 22 Feb 2006 11:45:51 -0600
 Subject: Re: Re: [Dixielandjazz] 1099's

  I'm not sure if they do that anymore but a friend who has an Art
Studio and plays trumpet was audited some years ago and got his home
office disallowed because he had his trumpet on his desk and the guy
asked him why it was on his desk. He told them that he practiced
occasionally. He had to build a partition so that his studio and
practice area was separate. He then put the music section on the music
C and the studio on the studio form C. Kind of silly but as I
understand it that's how it worked out.

  Home offices are a red button that may not be worth putting on your
1040 but that's a choice everyone has to make.
 Larry.
 ----- Original Message ----- From: <rahberry at comcast.net>
 To: "Dixieland Jazz" <Dixielandjazz at ml.islandnet.com>
 Sent: Wednesday, February 22, 2006 10:23 AM
 Subject: FW: Re: [Dixielandjazz] 1099's

 >
 > -------------- Forwarded Message: -------------- 
 > From: rahberry at comcast.net
 > To: dwlit at cpcug.org
 > Subject: Re: [Dixielandjazz] 1099's
 > Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2006 16:22:20 +0000
  >> I've been advised that one should have the audit, if possible, in
the >> auditor's
  >> office, rather than your own. That way the auditor can't really go
on a >> fishing
  >> expedition to see what else you have. You would be advised in
advance >> what
 >> records to bring with you.
  >> Rae Ann (a degree in Accounting. [ Honest!] Also a Master's in
Social >> Work)
 >>
 >> -------------- Original message ---------------------- 
 >> From: dwlit at cpcug.org
  >> > I was audited in 1988. I had been told by a tax lawyer musician
not to >> > be
  >> > afraid of the audit, but to consider it an educational
opportunity. >> > They
  >> > weren't out to get me, but to determine whether I needed to be
gotten.
 >> >
  >> > The auditor spent 3 whole days *in my office*, even took receipts
with >> > her
  >> > when she left. She examined literally every cent of *all* my
finances. >> > She
  >> > asked questions, gave me a lot of tips. She found only one
taxable
  >> > error--a $250 deduction for food bought on the way to various
gigs.
 >> >
  >> > She was very pleasant, if businesslike, quite attractive, and
sitting >> > as I
  >> > was at my computer table while she sat at my desk, I had a nice
view of
 >> > her veddy nice figure...
 >> >
  >> > So keep all your receipts, bank and credit card statements. and
don't >> > be
  >> > stupid in claiming deductions. As Steve said, deduct
aggressively, but >> > I
  >> > would add: Be able to explain convincingly how every one of them
>> > relates
 >> > to your music business.
 >> >
 >> > --Sheik
 >> > http://americanmusiccaravan.com
 >> >
 >> > Steve Barbone wrote:
 >> > >
  >> > > As Tom Wiggins says, just have the receipts to back up what you
>> > > deduct and
  >> > > declare the income. Be aggressive in you deductions, no harm in
that. >> > > Then
  >> > > if they audit you, they'll just take a few bucks if they
disallow. >> > > And
 >> > > like
  >> > > John McLernan says, DO NOT VOLUNTEER INFORMATION JUST ANSWER >>
> > QUESTIONS
 >> > > ABOUT
  >> > > WHAT IS ON YOUR AUDIT NOTICE. Do not bring all records, just
those >> > > which
 >> > > they ask for.
 >> >
 >> >
 >> > _______________________________________________
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 >> > Dixielandjazz at ml.islandnet.com
 >> > http://ml.islandnet.com/mailman/listinfo/dixielandjazz
 >>
 >>
 >
 >
 >
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