Good day!
A deceased client (died April 2024) was the sole owner of his S corp. His surviving spouse asked me to file the S corp paperwork however she isn't listed on the legal paperwork. Should I file the FinCEN BOI document as if he is alive? Not sure how to proceed with this.
Thanks!
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I would kick this to the estate attorney since there are probably legal hoops to jump through. My guess: the S Corp shares need to be transferred by probate, then the "new owners" (maybe wife or maybe wife and other heirs) have a shareholder meeting to elect a board or appoint an officer who can then issue a corporate resolution to change the signer on the bank account. Also, likely a different path if this is an LLC electing to be taxed as an S Corp instead of an actual S Corp. But these are all lawyer things, not accountant things.
For BOI, I remember seeing an announcement that changes have to be reported within 30 days of the settlement of the deceased's estate but I don't remember those rules contemplating the situation before the initial report is filed (another reason to get a legal opinion).
Thanks for the reply.
The wife is trying to gain access to the business bank account. Other than that, everything is held jointly. Except the S corp which has no mention of her other than profits / K-1 included on a joint return.
I think I'll sit down with her and have her fill out the online docs.
Thanks!
I would kick this to the estate attorney since there are probably legal hoops to jump through. My guess: the S Corp shares need to be transferred by probate, then the "new owners" (maybe wife or maybe wife and other heirs) have a shareholder meeting to elect a board or appoint an officer who can then issue a corporate resolution to change the signer on the bank account. Also, likely a different path if this is an LLC electing to be taxed as an S Corp instead of an actual S Corp. But these are all lawyer things, not accountant things.
For BOI, I remember seeing an announcement that changes have to be reported within 30 days of the settlement of the deceased's estate but I don't remember those rules contemplating the situation before the initial report is filed (another reason to get a legal opinion).
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