In: Accounting
Reba Dixon is a fifth-grade schoolteacher who earned a salary of $38,000 in 2019. She is 45 years old and has been divorced for four years. She receives $1,200 of alimony payments each month from her former husband (divorced in 2016). Reba also rents out a small apartment building. This year Reba received $50,000 of rental payments from tenants and she incurred $19,500 of expenses associated with the rental.
Reba and her daughter heather (20 years old at the end of the
year) moved to Georgia in January of this year. Reba provides more
than one-half of heather’s support. they had been living in
Colorado for the past 15 years, but ever since her divorce, Reba
has been wanting to move back to Georgia to be closer to her
family. luckily, last December, a teaching position opened up and
Reba and heather decided to make the move. Reba paid a moving
company $2,010 to move their personal belongings, and she and
heather spent two days driving the 1,426 miles to Georgia.
Reba rented a home in Georgia. Heather decided to continue living
at home with her mom, but she started attending school full-time in
January and throughout the rest of the year at a nearby university.
She was awarded a $3,000 partial tuition scholarship this year, and
Reba out by paying the remaining $500 tuition cost. If possible,
Reba thought it would be best to claim the education credit for
these
expenses.
Reba wasn't sure if she would have enough
items to her benefit from itemizing on her tax return. However, she
kept track of several expenses this year that she thought might
qualify if she was able to itemize. Reba paid $5,800 in state
income taxes and $12,500 in charitable contributions during the
year. she also paid the following medical-related expenses for
herself and heather:
insurance
premiums $
7,952
medical care
expenses $
1,100
prescription
medicine $
350
nonprescription
medicine $
100
new contact lenses for
heather $
200
Shortly
after the move, Reba got distracted while driving and she ran into
a street sign. the accident caused $900 in damage to the car and
gave her whiplash. because the repairs were less than her insurance
deductible, she paid the entire cost of the repairs. Reba wasn’t
able to work for two months after the accident. fortunately, she
received $2,000 from her disability insurance. her employer, the
central Georgia school district, paid 60 percent of the premiums on
the policy as a nontaxable fringe benefit and Reba paid the
remaining 40 percent portion.
A
few years ago, Reba acquired several investments with her portion
of the divorce settlement. This year she reported the following
income from her investments: $2,200 of interest income from
corporate bonds and $1,500 interest income from city of Denver
municipal bonds. overall, Reba’s stock portfolio appreciated by
$12,000 but she did not sell any of her
stocks. Heather
reported $6,200 of interest income from corporate bonds she
received as gifts from her father over the last several years. this
was heather’s only source of income for the year.
Required:
Complete pages 1 and 2, Schedule 1, and Schedule 3 of Form 1040 for Reba.