Answered step by step
Verified Expert Solution
Link Copied!

Question

1 Approved Answer

Required information Skip to question [ The following information applies to the questions displayed below. ] Diana and Ryan Workman were married on January 1

Required information
Skip to question
[The following information applies to the questions displayed below.]
Diana and Ryan Workman were married on January 1 of last year. Ryan has an eight-year-old son, Jorge, from his previous marriage. Diana works as a computer programmer at Datafile Incorporated (DI) earning a salary of $102,500. Ryan is self-employed and runs a day care center. The Workmans reported the following financial information pertaining to their activities during the current year.
Diana earned a $102,500 salary for the year.
Diana borrowed $13,300 from DI to purchase a car. DI charged her 2 percent interest ($266) on the loan, which Diana paid on December 31. DI would have charged Diana $850 if interest had been calculated at the applicable federal interest rate. Assume that tax avoidance was not a motive for the loan.
Ryan received $2,650 in alimony and $5,800 in child support payments from his former spouse. They divorced in 2016.
Ryan won a $1,030 cash prize at his church-sponsored Bingo game.
The Workmans received $1,150 of interest from corporate bonds and $900 of interest from a municipal bond. Ryan owned these bonds before he married Daina.
The couple bought 76 shares of ABC Incorporated stock for $53 per share on July 2. The stock was worth $73 a share on December 31. The stock paid a dividend of $1 per share on December 1.
Ryan's father passed away on April 14. He inherited cash of $63,000 from his father and his baseball card collection, valued at $3,300. As the beneficiary of his father's life insurance policy, Ryan also received $163,000.
The couple spent a weekend in Atlantic City in November and came home with gross gambling winnings of $2,500.
Diana received $3,000 cash for reaching 10 years of continuous service at DI.
Diana was hit and injured by a drunk driver while crossing a street at a crosswalk. she was unable to work for a month. She received $8,600 from her disability insurance. DI paid the premiums for Diana, but it reported the amount of the premiums as compensation to Diana on her year-end W-2.
The drunk driver who hit Diana in part (j) was required to pay her $3,300 medical costs, $2,800 for the emotional trauma she suffered from the accident, and $7,600 for punitive damages.
For meeting her performance goals this year, Diana was informed on December 27 that she would receive a $6,300 year-end bonus. DI (located in Houston, Texas) mailed Diana's bonus check from its payroll processing center (Tampa, Florida) on December 28. Diana didn't receive the check at home until January 2.
Ryan is a 10 percent owner of MNO Incorporated, a Subchapter S corporation. The company reported ordinary business income for the year of $118,000. Ryan acquired the MNO stock two years ago.
Ryan's day care business collected $100,000 in revenues. In addition, customers owed him $9,500 at year-end. During the year, Ryan spent $12,000 for supplies, $8,000 for utilities, $28,000 for rent, and $1,150 for miscellaneous expenses. One customer gave him use of their vacation home for a week (worth $9,000) in exchange for Ryan allowing their child to attend the day care center free of charge. Ryan accounts for his business activities using the cash method of accounting.
Diana's employer pays the couple's annual health insurance premiums of $12,000 for a qualified plan.
2. Complete page 1 of Form 1040 through line 9 and Schedule 1 for the Workmans (for filing MFJ).
Note: Input all the values as positive numbers. Enter any non-financial information, (e.g. Names, Addresses, social security numbers) EXACTLY as they appear in any given information or Problem Statement. Do not skip rows, while entering in Deductions section of Form 1040 PG1. Assume the dividends are qualified dividends. Neither Ryan nor Diana wish to contribute to the Presidential Election Campaign fund or had any virtual currency transactions or interests. Use 2023 tax rules regardless of year on tax form.

Step by Step Solution

There are 3 Steps involved in it

Step: 1

blur-text-image

Get Instant Access with AI-Powered Solutions

See step-by-step solutions with expert insights and AI powered tools for academic success

Step: 2

blur-text-image

Step: 3

blur-text-image

Ace Your Homework with AI

Get the answers you need in no time with our AI-driven, step-by-step assistance

Get Started

Recommended Textbook for

Income Tax Fundamentals 2013

Authors: Gerald E. Whittenburg, Martha Altus Buller, Steven L Gill

31st Edition

1111972516, 978-1285586618, 1285586611, 978-1285613109, 978-1111972516

Students also viewed these Accounting questions