Under
regular tax rules, when a lender forgives a debt — that is,
relieves the borrower from having to pay it back — the amount of
the debt is taxable income to the borrower.
A
homeowner who has $100,000 in mortgage debt forgiven through a short
sale, for example, would have to pay income tax on the $100,000.
This
“cancellation of indebtedness” rule could have caused enormous
financial hardship to the millions of homeowners whose homes were
“underwater” during the home foreclosure crisis that began in
2007.
To
prevent this, Congress enacted the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief
Act of 2007. This law allowed homeowners to exclude from their
taxable income up to $2 million of debt forgiven on their principal
residence by a lender in a short sale, mortgage restructuring, or
forgiven in a foreclosure.
This
law was never intended to be permanent. It was originally scheduled
to expire at the end of 2009. However, it was extended for an
additional four years. It will now expire at the end of 2013.
The
law could be extended again, but there appears to be little urgency
in Congress to do so. That means starting on Jan. 1, 2014, there is a
good chance that the old rules on forgiveness of home loan debt will
come back into force.
If
this does occur, it appears that the impact on underwater homeowners
could vary greatly from state to state. This is because several
states have enacted anti-deficiency legislation that prevents lenders
from holding a homeowner personally liable and going after his or her
personal or other assets if the proceeds from a foreclosure or short
sale are not enough to cover the amount of the home loan
.
The
California Association of Realtors has projected that even under the
recovering housing market, there may be as many as 55,000 short
sales in California in 2014."
In
a Sept. 19, 2013, letter
to Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., that
has only recently been made public, the IRS says that “if a
property owner cannot be held personally liable for the difference
between the loan balance and the sales price … the owner would not
treat the canceled debt as income.”
The
IRS concluded that because of Section 580e, a California homeowner
who goes though a short sale will not have cancellation of
indebtedness income.
This
is good news for California homeowners. The California Association of
Realtors has projected that even under the recovering housing market,
there may be as many as 55,000 short sales in California in 2014. The
debt forgiven — $60,000 per short sale, on average — could have
been taxable without this clarification.
However,
the IRS was careful to note it its letter that it was only
considering the impact of California’s anti-deficiency statute, and
not that of any other state. Other states with anti-deficiency laws
include Alaska, Arizona, Hawaii, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New
Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota
and Washington.
These
state laws are not all the same and they do not all have a provision
like California’s Section 580e. The extent to which they protect
against having to recognize cancellation of indebtedness income in
the event of a short sale is unclear. For details on state
anti-deficiency laws, see the National
Consumer Law Center Foreclosure Report.
For
more information contact
Jerry
Gusman
The
Gusman Group
(888)
213-4208
Jerryggroup@aol.com
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