Orlando Sentinel

Owner worried about potential lien on property

- By Ilyce Glink and Samuel J. Tamkin Ilyce Glink is the CEO of Best Money Moves and Samuel J. Tamkin is a real estate attorney. Contact them through the website ThinkGlink.com.

Q: My life partner and I owned our home as joint tenants with rights of survivorsh­ip. We were not married. She died and left me her share of our home. I am the executor of her estate and the home is in Maryland.

I filed her income taxes in the year she died and she owed the IRS and the state of Maryland around $1,500. She only had about $300 to her name at the time of her death, so there was no money to pay her income taxes.

I had the estate attorney inform the IRS and the state department of revenue that her estate could not pay income taxes. It has been nearly three years since her death, and so far I have not heard from the IRS or the state of Maryland. I also have not seen any attempts to lien any of her former properties that are now in my name.

Can the IRS or the state of Maryland place a lien on my property in an attempt to collect income taxes

owed by her from the year before she died?

A:

Thank you for your question and our condolence­s on your loss. Let’s start

with the home. You and your partner owned the home as joint tenants with rights of survivorsh­ip. This means that when either of you were to die, the survivor would become the sole owner of the property.

It appears that upon her death, you became the sole owner of the home and now own the home subject to any liens that attached to the home prior to your partner’s death. If you and your partner took out a mortgage on the home, you’d still be obligated to pay off the mortgage debt. The same goes for real estate taxes. Whether you owned the home jointly with your partner or alone, you owe any real estate taxes that are due on the home.

If your partner had any federal or state income tax liens filed against her while she was alive, those liens would attach to the home as well. Now that you are the sole owner of the home, it’s unlikely that any liens could or would attach to the home for any debts or obligation­s she might have had prior to her death.

If this is keeping you up at night, consult with an estate attorney about your situation. We suspect your partner had a will and that you were named the executor of the will and administer­ed her estate after her death. We wonder whether you probated the will or whether you simply acted as the administra­tor without going through probate court. Depending on where you live, and the value of her estate, including her share of the property, you may not have been required to open probate.

Still, this raises some issues.

You can’t simply say that you were the administra­tor of her estate without some legal authority to do so. If you took it upon yourself to take care of her estate without having a legal right to do it, you could get yourself into trouble. Now, if you did probate the will and the probate court appointed you as the legal representa­tive of the estate, you would have authority to act on behalf of the estate and even sign tax returns for the estate.

As a court-appointed representa­tive, you would have a duty to account for your partner’s assets and determine her liabilitie­s. You would then use whatever assets were in her estate to pay her debts and close out the estate with the probate court and account to the probate court with what you have done.

If you hired a probate attorney to help with the process, talk to the attorney and walk through your concerns. On the other hand, if you did all this on your own, you should call an estate attorney and discuss these matters. While it may not be likely that the IRS or the state would come after you for a small amount of money that was owed, and given what was left in the estate, we are concerned that you might have signed tax returns without proper authorizat­ion.

Still, it’s unlikely the taxing authoritie­s will file a lien on the home now. Nonetheles­s, we think you should talk to an estate attorney to make sure everything was done properly.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Because taxes and real estate can be tricky, an estate attorney is often the best source for help on potential liens.
DREAMSTIME Because taxes and real estate can be tricky, an estate attorney is often the best source for help on potential liens.

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