IRS instructions for issuance of 1099-C for "forgiven debt" include this small jewel that is specifically relevant to millions of borrowers who are rapidly headed toward the edge of the cliff known as foreclosure:
In other words, since there is no penalty, the servicer/lender/trustee's agent actually has the option to report or not when dealing with forgiven debt on most mortgages in this country and the resultant impact it may have on the borrower."Pass-throughs and REMICs. Until further guidance is issued, no penalty will apply for failure to file Form 1099-C, or provide statements to debtors, for a canceled debt held in pass-through securitized debt arrangement or held by a REMIC....
A pass-through securitized debt arrangement is any arrangement in which one or more debts are pooled and held for 20 or more persons whose interests in the debt are undivided co-ownership interests that are freely ransferable."
Herein lies the conundrum - why are servicers, et al., dealt that kind of enormously powerful card (in terms of negotiating terms and conditions in loss mitigation matters like short sales, etc., with a borrower in trouble)?
I've been given one explanation that they won't issue a 1099-C if the amount reported conflicts with the amounts they've been telling the borrower were owed. Knowing how some of these people creatively play with numbers about how much a borrower allegedly owes, something that comes to mind is the inherent difficulty in making the total amounts of all 1099-C's match with the losses reported on the books at year end.
Does anyone have an idea on what the IRS's rationale was in issuing the original guidance they allude to in the instructions?