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November 20, 2023
Question

Received a 1099-misc for lawsuit for loss of capital / investment. How do I show the loss from the investment to counter the income on 1099-misc?

  • November 20, 2023
  • 1 reply
  • 0 views

I have a 1099-misc from a lawsuit against a company for a fraudulent investment where we did not get our money back, and if we do get any money back it will not be near what we paid. I should be able to counter the income from the 1099-misc with the losses on the investment. I had not written off the investment yet since we will at some point get part of the money back. This 1099-misc will not make us whole so there will be some more losses once we know how much might get returned to us. Where do I, and how do I show theses losses. I don't want to write off all the losses since we might get some of it back. How can I show the losses for the amount of the lawsuit in turbo tax where they will cancel each other and the IRS will know the lawsuit was for loss of our capital on an investment? Thank you. 

    1 reply

    Employee
    November 20, 2023

    Your question is still a bit unclear.

     

    You made an investment.  When, how much, what kind of company?  Were you a partner, a shareholder, an investor only?

     

    You received a partial settlement, and the company sent a 1099-MISC?  

     

    You expect to receive more money in the future, but you expect the total received will be less than the amount invested?

    carlwhAuthor
    November 20, 2023

    In 2014, we bought 3 $20K life settlements from Pacific West Capital Group. California shut them down for fraud. You can google it if you need more info, class action lawsuit  SEC v. Pacific West Capital Group, Inc.

    We were part investors in these 3 life insurance policies.

    We will receive a 1099-misc for $7683 for 2023 in Jan 2024 from the PWCG 

    All the life insurance policies for all investors were put into a conservatorship and are being managed until the policies still active pay out. We will get our share when they pay out. There were policies lost before they were put in the conservatorship, so we will not receive our total $60K.

    I have already bought 2023 TurboTax to calculate our total income for 2023 to determine how much I can do in Roth conversions. So I need to know if I will be able to write off this income with losses from these investments, and how to show this in TurboTax so the IRS will know this income was loss of capital from these investments? 

    Employee
    November 21, 2023

    @DoninGA  @rjs  @TomD8 

     

    This is a bit of a puzzle.  You are getting 1099-MISC from the state, presumably, because the state is managing the payments.  Here are my thoughts, but I welcome the advice of other experts.

     

    The payments are not taxable income at the time they are received, until and unless they exceed the amount you originally invested.  There is a way to zero them out in Turbotax so they won't be added to your income, but you will want to have an explanation prepared in case the IRS asks questions.  

     

    Then, whenever you receive the final payment and the resolution fund is closed, with no more payouts coming, one of two things will happen.

     

    a. This is an investment loss.  At the the time the final investments become worthless or the resolution fund is closed, you will report a capital loss on schedule D.  You will report the amount of the original investment, and report it as a "sale", using the date the resolution fund closed, and the selling price is the amount of proceeds you received over time.  You will be able to deduct the remaining capital loss against future capital gains.  But you can't declare any investment loss until the final amount is known.

     

    b. This is a theft loss.  For 2018-2025, theft losses are not tax deductible.  You simply collect whatever restitution you can get, and walk away.  The restitution is not taxable income, but the remaining loss is not deductible.  However, if the tax law changes, and the final loss occurs in a year when theft losses are deductible, you might be able to deduct the theft loss.  (On the other hand, if the theft occurred between 2018 and 2025, the loss might never be deductible even if the law is different when the final payments are made, I'm not sure on this point.)  (Since there is a fraud conviction, I think it is more likely the IRS will want you to treat this as a theft loss than an investment loss.)

     

    Note that if you received periodic payments from this investment, and paid income taxes on those investment "gains" (which later turned out to be fake), you have a Ponzi scheme loss, not an ordinary theft loss, and Ponzi scheme losses are still deductible under current tax law (because you paid income tax on money that was never really yours).  However, deducting Ponzi losses is complicated and you may need to see a tax professional.