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Wednesday, June 10, 2026

A CPA Takes Tax Advice

 

The facts are not difficult. In fact, they are rather straightforward.

What puzzles me is the player:

Mr. Igboke has been a certified public accountant for more than 30 years and regularly prepares tax returns for his clients. He knows how the federal income tax rules work ….”

I get it: not all CPAs do taxes. Some do taxes, but so few and infrequent as to not count. I used to work with a CPA - since retired - who was a career auditor. He could run circles around me when it came to reports and disclosures and such. He however prepared two returns a year, and his personal return was one of them. He had me review the other.

Mr. Igboke prepared taxes, we are told.

Let’s go through it.

Mr. and Mrs. Igboke (Igboke) lived in Long Beach, California. In 2003 they borrowed from Bank of America. They ran into financial issues not long after, and in 2006 their loan somehow wound up with Select Portfolio Servicing (SPS).

In 2020 Igboke refinanced with a credit union; the mortgage servicing was done by Cenlar.

Let’s go forward one year.

Igboke claimed a mortgage interest deduction of $47,119 on his joint 2021 individual tax return.

Problem: Cenlar issued a Form 1098 for $18,411.

Not the hardest thing for IRS computers to match.

The IRS sent notices. Back and forth they went, to no avail. In 2024 the IRS issued a Notice of Deficiency (called a NOD or sometimes SNOD).

Igboke filed with the Tax Court.

A 30-year CPA with some tax experience. I have no idea if this was his first time in Tax Court, but I am nonetheless expecting a ball with some movement over the plate.

Igboke provided the Court with:

(1)  A “substitute” 2021 Form 1098 from SPS

(2)  An explanatory letter from SPS

Wait, I thought SPS was paid-off in 2020?

Here is the Court on the 1098:

It states in box 1 that Mr. and Mrs. Igboke paid $71,618 of mortgage interest in 2021 …”

Here is the Court on the letter:

Dear Henry Igboke: SPS is in receipt of your recent request for information about the account. Our records show that for calendar year 2021, you paid a total mortgage interest of $31,635.”

I admit: I am not following the numbers:

(1)  The unexplained mortgage interest on the 2021 return was $28,708 ($47,119 – 18,411).

(2)  Then we have a $71,618.

(3)  And next we have a $31,635.

These numbers are parachuting from the sky.

The Court looked closely at the 2021 Form 1098.

All the numbers on the purported 2021 form are identical to those from 2020, including the interest paid and loan balance. But, on the purported 2021 form, the year 2020 has been replaced with 2021, and there appear to be irregular photocopier markings around the year.”

Oh oh.

The Court looked at the SPS letter:

… SPS’s recordkeeper could not find copies of either document in SPS’s records.”

As Ricky would say: someone has some explainin’ to do.

Igboke admitted he had no outstanding loan with SPS and paid no interest in 2021.

Nahhhh, really?

Igboke asserted that SPS sent the Form 1099 because they were unable to deduct the full $71,618 of interest paid in 2020.

QUESTION: How would SPS know this?

SPS told him that he could carry over some portion of that undeducted interest from 2020 to 2021.

COMMENT: And who does he get his medical advice from: Tik Tok?    

Folks, the rules for deducting interest expense can get complicated.

It helps to categorize the interest: investment interest is deducted this way; mortgage interest that way, and vehicle loan interest yet another way. It gives some order to the rules.

Some interest can carry over from year to year. Most interest cannot. You know which interest cannot?

Mortgage interest cannot.

It has been that way since before I heard of accounting.

Here is the 2013 Smoker tax case:

It is well settled that a cash basis taxpayer … is allowed a deduction for interest paid during the year in cash or its equivalent.”

In other words: show me the money.

Back to the Court:

We do not credit Mr. Igboke’s explanation.”

… the discrepancies noted above strongly suggest that these documents are not authentic and were created for the purposes of supporting the Igboke’s claimed deduction.”

This could have gone much worse.

I would have expected heightened penalties for a 30-year CPA.

Maybe a visit from the IRS Office of Professional Responsibility.

Or contact from the California State Board of Responsibility.

Worst case: all of the above.

Igboke lost the deduction, of course, but he may have been lucky to even survive this.

Our case this time was Igboke v Commissioner, T.C. Docket 12275-24, dtd 6.3.26.

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