Publication 225 |
2000 Tax Year |
Casualties & Thefts
If your property is destroyed, damaged, or stolen, you may have a
deductible loss. If the insurance or other reimbursement is more than
the adjusted basis of the destroyed, damaged, or stolen property, you
may have a taxable gain.
Casualty.
A casualty is the damage, destruction, or loss of property
resulting from an identifiable event that is sudden, unexpected, or
unusual.
Deductible losses.
Deductible casualty losses can result from a number of different
causes, including the following.
- Airplane crashes.
- Car or truck accidents not resulting from your willful act
or willful negligence.
- Earthquakes.
- Fires.
- Floods.
- Freezing.
- Hurricanes.
- Lightning.
- Storms.
- Tornadoes.
Nondeductible losses.
A casualty loss is not deductible if the damage or destruction is
caused by the following.
- Accidentally breaking articles such as glassware or china
under normal conditions.
- A family pet.
- A fire if you willfully set it, or pay someone else to set
it.
- A car or truck accident if your willful negligence or
willful act caused it. The same is true if the willful act or willful
negligence of someone acting for you caused the accident.
- Progressive deterioration (explained next).
Progressive deterioration.
Loss of property due to progressive deterioration is not deductible
as a casualty loss. This is because the damage results from a steadily
operating cause or a normal process, rather than from a sudden event.
Examples of damage due to progressive deterioration include damage
from rust, corrosion, or termites. However, weather-related conditions
or disease may cause another type of involuntary conversion. See
Other Involuntary Conversions, later.
Theft.
A theft is the taking and removing of money or property with the
intent to deprive the owner of it. The taking of property must be
illegal under the law of the state where it occurred and it must have
been done with criminal intent.
Theft includes the taking of money or property by the following
means.
- Blackmail.
- Burglary.
- Embezzlement.
- Extortion.
- Kidnapping for ransom.
- Larceny.
- Robbery.
- Threats.
The taking of money or property through fraud or
misrepresentation is theft if it is illegal under state or local law.
Mislaid or lost property.
The simple disappearance of money or property is not a theft.
However, an accidental loss or disappearance of property can qualify
as a casualty if it results from an identifiable event that is sudden,
unexpected, or unusual.
Example.
A car door is accidentally slammed on your hand, breaking the
setting of your diamond ring. The diamond falls from the ring and is
never found. The loss of the diamond is a casualty.
Farming Losses
You can deduct certain casualty or theft losses that occur in the
business of farming. The following is a discussion of some losses you
can deduct and some you cannot deduct.
Livestock or produce purchased for sale.
Casualty or theft losses of livestock or produce bought for sale
are deductible if you report your income on the cash method. If you
report your income on an accrual method, take casualty and theft
losses on property bought for sale by omitting the item from the
closing inventory for the year of the loss. You cannot take a separate
deduction.
Livestock, plants, produce, and crops raised for sale.
Losses of livestock, plants, produce, and crops raised for sale are
generally not deductible if you report your income on the cash method.
You have already deducted the cost of raising these items as farm
expenses.
For plants with a preproductive period of more than 2 years, you
may have a deductible loss if you have a tax basis in the plants. You
usually have a tax basis if you capitalized the expenses associated
with these plants under the uniform capitalization rules. The uniform
capitalization rules are discussed in chapter 7.
If you report your income on an accrual method, casualty or theft
losses are deductible only if you included the items in
your inventory at the beginning of your tax year. You get the
deduction by omitting the item from your inventory at the close of
your tax year. You cannot take a separate casualty or theft deduction.
Income loss.
A loss of future income is not deductible.
Example.
An ice storm damaged your standing timber by reducing its rate of
growth and its quality. The storm did not cause any physical damage,
but you determined that the timber will sell for less than you
anticipated because of the reduced growth rate and quality. The loss
of future income is not deductible.
Loss of timber.
If you sell timber downed as a result of a casualty, treat the
proceeds from the sale as a reimbursement. If you use the proceeds to
buy qualified replacement property, you can postpone reporting the
gain. See Postponing Gain, later.
Property used in farming.
Casualty and theft losses of property used in your farm business
usually result in deductible losses. If a fire or storm destroyed your
barn, or you lose by casualty or theft an animal you bought for draft,
breeding, dairy, or sport, you may have a deductible loss. See
How To Figure a Loss, later.
Raised draft, breeding, dairy, or sporting animals.
Generally, losses of raised, draft, breeding, dairy, or sporting
animals do not result in deductible casualty or theft losses because
you have no basis in the animals. However, you may be able to claim a
deduction if either of the following situations applies to you.
- You use inventories to determine your income and you
included the animals in your inventory.
- You capitalized the expenses associated with the animals
under the uniform capitalization rules and therefore have a tax basis
in the animals subject to a casualty or theft.
When you include livestock in inventory, its last inventory
value is its basis. When you lose an inventoried animal held for
draft, breeding, dairy, or sport by casualty or theft during the year,
decrease ending inventory by the amount you included in inventory for
the animal. You cannot take a separate deduction.
How To Figure a Loss
How you figure a deductible casualty or theft loss depends on
whether the loss was to farm or personal-use property and whether the
property was stolen or partly or completely destroyed.
Farm property.
Farm property is the property you use in your farming business. If
your farm property was completely destroyed or stolen, your loss is
figured as follows:
Formula
If your farm property was partially damaged, use the steps shown
under Personal-use property, next, to figure your casualty
loss. However, the deduction limits do not apply.
Personal-use property.
Personal-use property is property used by you or your family
members for personal use. You figure the casualty or theft loss on
this property by taking the following steps.
- Determine your adjusted basis in the property before the
casualty or theft.
- Determine the decrease in fair market value of the property
as a result of the casualty or theft.
- From the smaller of the amounts you determined in (1) and
(2), subtract any insurance or other reimbursement you receive or
expect to receive.
You must apply the deduction limits, discussed later, to
determine your deductible loss.
You can use Publication 584
to list your stolen or damaged
personal-use property and figure your loss. It includes schedules to
help you figure the loss on your home, its contents, and your motor
vehicles.
Adjusted basis.
Adjusted basis is your basis (usually cost) increased or decreased
by various events, such as improvements and casualty losses. For more
information about adjusted basis, see chapter 7.
Decrease in fair market value (FMV).
The decrease in FMV is the difference between the property's value
immediately before the casualty or theft and its value immediately
afterwards. FMV is defined in chapter 12.
Cost of cleaning up or making repairs.
The cost of repairing damaged property is not part of a casualty
loss. Neither is the cost of cleaning up after a casualty. But you can
use the cost of cleaning up or making repairs after a casualty as a
measure of the decrease in FMV if you meet all the following
conditions.
- The repairs are necessary to bring the property back to its
condition before the casualty.
- The amount spent for repairs is not excessive.
- The repairs fix only the damage.
- The value of the property after the repairs is not, due to
the repairs, more than the value of the property before the
casualty.
Related expenses.
The incidental expenses due to a casualty or theft, such as
expenses for the treatment of personal injuries, temporary housing, or
a rental car, are not part of your casualty or theft loss. However,
they may be deductible as farm business expenses if the damaged or
stolen property is farm property.
Separate computations for more than one item of property.
Generally, if a single casualty or theft involves more than one
item of property, you must figure your loss separately for each item
of property. Then combine the losses to determine your total loss.
There is an exception to this rule for personal-use real property.
See Exception for personal-use real property, later.
Example.
A fire on your farm damaged a tractor and the barn in which it was
stored. The tractor had an adjusted basis of $3,300. Its FMV was
$2,800 just before the fire and $1,000 immediately afterward. The barn
had an adjusted basis of $8,000. Its FMV was $25,000 just before the
fire and $15,000 immediately afterward. You received insurance
reimbursements of $600 on the tractor and $6,000 on the barn. Figure
your deductible casualty loss separately for the two items of
property.
| Tractor
|
Barn
|
1) Adjusted basis |
$3,300 |
$8,000 |
2) FMV before fire |
$2,800 |
$25,000 |
3) FMV after fire |
1,000 |
15,000 |
4) Decrease in FMV |
(line 2 - line 3) |
$1,800 |
$10,000 |
5) Loss (lesser of line 1 or line 4) |
$1,800 |
$8,000 |
6) Minus: Insurance |
600 |
6,000 |
7) Deductible casualty loss |
$1,200 |
$2,000 |
8) Total loss |
$3,200 |
Exception for personal-use real property.
In figuring a casualty loss on personal-use real property, the
entire property (including any improvements, such as buildings, trees,
and shrubs) is treated as one item. Figure the loss using the smaller
of the following.
- The decrease in FMV of the entire property.
- The adjusted basis of the entire property.
Example.
You bought a farm in 1960 for $20,000. The adjusted basis of the
residential part is $6,000. In 2000, a windstorm blew down shade trees
and three ornamental trees planted at a cost of $600 on the
residential part. The adjusted basis of the residential part includes
the $600. The fair market value (FMV) of the residential part
immediately before the storm was $30,000, and $26,000 immediately
after the storm. The trees were not covered by insurance.
1) Adjusted basis |
$6,000 |
2) FMV before the storm |
$30,000 |
3) FMV after the storm |
26,000 |
4) Decrease in FMV (line 2 - line 3) |
$4,000 |
5) Loss before insurance |
(lesser of line 1 or line 4) |
$4,000 |
6) Minus: Insurance |
-0- |
7) Amount of loss |
$4,000 |
Insurance and other reimbursements.
If you receive an insurance or other type of reimbursement, you
must subtract the reimbursement when you figure your loss. You do not
have a casualty or theft loss to the extent you are reimbursed.
Do not subtract from your loss any insurance payments you receive
for living expenses. You may have to include these payments in your
income. See Publication 547
for details.
If you expect to be reimbursed for part or all of your loss, you
must subtract the expected reimbursement when you figure your loss.
You must reduce your loss even if you do not receive payment until a
later tax year.
Reimbursement in a later year.
If you figure your casualty or theft loss using your expected
reimbursement, you may have to adjust your tax return for the tax year
in which you get your actual reimbursement.
Actual reimbursement less than expected.
If you later receive less reimbursement than you expected, include
that difference as a loss with your other losses (if any) on your
return for the year in which you can reasonably expect no more
reimbursement.
Actual reimbursement more than expected.
If you later receive more reimbursement than you expected after you
have claimed a deduction for the loss, you may have to include the
extra reimbursement in your income for the year you receive it.
However, if any part of your original deduction did not reduce your
tax for the earlier year, do not include that part of the
reimbursement in your income. Do not refigure your tax for the year
you claimed the deduction. See Recoveries in Publication 525
to find out how much extra reimbursement to include in income.
If the total of all the reimbursements you receive is more than
your adjusted basis in the destroyed or stolen property, you will have
a gain on the casualty or theft. See Publication 547
for
information on how to treat a gain from the reimbursement of a
casualty or theft.
Actual reimbursement same as expected.
If you receive exactly the reimbursement you expected to receive,
you do not have to include any amount in your income or deduct any
loss.
Lump-sum reimbursement.
If you have a casualty or theft loss of several assets at the same
time without an allocation of reimbursement to specific assets, divide
the lump-sum reimbursement among the assets according to the fair
market value of each asset at the time of the loss. Figure the gain or
loss separately for each asset that has a separate basis.
Adjustment to basis.
If you have a casualty or theft loss, you must decrease your basis
in the property by any insurance or other reimbursement you receive
and by any deductible loss. The result is your adjusted basis in the
property. Amounts you spend to restore your property after a casualty
increase your adjusted basis. See Adjusted Basis in chapter 7
for more information.
Deduction Limits on Losses of Personal-Use Property
Casualty and theft losses of property held for personal use may be
deductible if you itemize deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040).
There are two limits on the deduction for casualty or theft loss of
personal-use property. You figure these limits on Form 4684.
$100 rule.
You must reduce each casualty or theft loss on personal-use
property by $100. This rule applies after you have subtracted any
reimbursement.
10% rule.
You must further reduce the total of all your casualty or theft
losses on personal-use property by 10% of your adjusted gross income.
Apply this rule after you reduce each loss by $100. Adjusted gross
income is on line 33 of Form 1040.
Example.
In June, you discovered that your house had been burglarized. Your
loss after insurance reimbursement was $2,000. Your adjusted gross
income is $29,500. Figure your theft loss deduction as follows:
1. |
Loss after insurance |
$2,000 |
2. |
Subtract $100 |
100 |
3. |
Loss after $100 rule |
$1,900 |
4. |
Subtract 10% x $29,500 AGI |
$2,950 |
5. |
Theft loss deduction |
-0- |
You do not have a theft loss deduction because your loss ($1,900)
is less than 10% of your adjusted gross income ($2,950).
If you have a casualty or theft gain in addition to a loss, you
will have to make a special computation to figure your 10% limit. See
10% Rule in Publication 547.
When Loss Is Deductible
Casualty losses are generally deductible only in the year in which
they occur. Theft losses are generally deductible only in the year
they are discovered. However, losses in Presidentially declared
disaster areas are subject to different rules. See Disaster Area
Losses, later.
Leased property.
If you lease property from someone else, you can deduct a loss on
the property in the year your liability for the loss is fixed. This is
true even if the loss occurred or the liability was paid in a
different year. You are not entitled to a deduction until your
liability under the lease can be determined with reasonable accuracy.
Your liability can be determined when a claim for recovery is settled,
adjudicated, or abandoned.
Example.
Robert leased a tractor from First Implement, Inc. for use in his
farm business. The tractor was destroyed by a tornado in June 2000.
The loss was not insured. First Implement billed Robert for the fair
market value of the tractor on the date of the loss. Robert disagreed
with the bill and refused to pay it. First Implement later filed suit
in court against Robert. In 2001, Robert and First Implement agreed to
settle the suit for $20,000, and the court entered a judgement in
favor of First Implement. Robert paid $20,000 in June 2001. He can
claim the $20,000 as a loss on his 2001 tax return.
Net operating loss (NOL).
If your deductions, including casualty or theft loss deductions,
are more than your income for the year, you may have an NOL. An NOL
can be carried back or carried forward and deducted from income in
other years. See chapter 5
for more information on NOLs.
Proof of Loss
To deduct a casualty or theft loss, you must be able to prove that
there was a casualty or theft. You have records to support the amount
you claim for the loss.
Casualty.
For a casualty loss, your records should show all the following
information.
- The type of casualty (car accident, fire, storm, etc.) and
when it occurred.
- That the loss was a direct result of the casualty.
- That you were the owner of the property or, if you leased
the property from someone else, that you were contractually liable to
the owner for the damage.
Theft.
For a theft, your records should show all the following
information.
- When you discovered your property was missing.
- Your property was stolen.
- You were the owner of the property.
Figuring a Gain
If you receive more insurance or other reimbursement than your
adjusted basis in the destroyed, damaged, or stolen property, you have
a gain from the casualty or theft. You generally report your gain as
income in the year you receive the reimbursement. However, depending
on the type of property you receive, you may not have to report your
gain. See Postponing Gain, later.
Your gain is figured as follows:
- The amount you receive, minus
- Your adjusted basis in the property at the time of the
casualty or theft.
Even if the decrease in FMV of your property is smaller than the
adjusted basis of your property, use your adjusted basis to figure the
gain.
Amount you receive.
The amount you receive includes any money plus the value of any
property you receive, minus any expenses you have in obtaining
reimbursement. It also includes any reimbursement used to pay off a
mortgage or other lien on the damaged, destroyed, or stolen property.
Example.
A tornado severely damaged your barn. The adjusted basis of the
barn was $2,500. Your insurance company reimbursed you $4,000 for the
damaged barn. However, you had legal expenses of $200 to collect that
insurance. Since your insurance minus your expenses to collect the
insurance is more than your adjusted basis in the barn, you have a
gain.
1) Insurance reimbursement |
$4,000 |
2) Legal expenses |
200 |
3) Amount received |
(line 1 - line 2) |
$3,800 |
4) Adjusted basis |
2,500 |
5) Gain on casualty (line 3 - line
4) |
$1,300 |
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