I am POA/Trustee of Trust for my brother. At present he is perfectly capable of signing his tax form after his preparer does them; that may change in the future.
I am getting conflicting info from what I read on IRS site and what his CPA tells me.
The CPA tells me that I will be able to sign his tax form for him without doing form 2848 (the IRS special POA form), which my brother signs to allow me to sign for him. The CPA says that my POA is so complete that I could "sell the fillings out of his teeth" so to speak.
But when I read the POA stuff on the IRS site it says they do not accept POA and you MUST do the form 2848.
Just trying to think ahead. Anyone know for certain or does this warrant a call to the IRS?
Government positions on these kinds of issues unfortunately aren't always subject to common sense or practices used by businesses.
I used to e-mail the IRS to get answers in writing in case someone later overturned a decision.
But I would just complete the form and get it over with.
I am always wondering why a professional would counsel against just following the rules, even if you could fudge it. Why risk it.
Alva, I would call the IRS and verify if he even needs to file. My dad doesn't have to file any longer and he gets substantially more ss and some monthly income from a piece of property he has sold and is carrying the note. When in doubt go to the horses mouth. In writing via email is a great idea.
by the way, as. Trustee of trust you are typically a person who has authority to sign the Trust tax return without POA. Trustee for certain activities trumps POA.