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JDB Collecting $5,000.00 Interest During Wage Garnishment

Submitted by on Sun, 01/25/2009 - 02:41
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I defaulted on a second mortgage back in 2006, which was sold to a JDB. They inflated the original debt by $5,000.00, obtained a summary judgment and began garnishing my wages last June. Are they mandated to report the interest collected during this garnishment to the IRS, and can I write it off my taxes?

Thanks


Most states have laws that allow a judgment creditor to charge statutory interest on a judgment balance (usually 9-12%). That interest they are charging is most likely "judgment" interest.

So the question is whether "judgment" interest falls under the scope of 1098 requirement set by the IRS. I would argue "yes".

The IRS defines mortgage interest as any interest charged on a "mortgage". A "mortgage" is any obligation secured by real property. Any interest paid on a mortgage over $600 must be reported to the IRS on Form 1098, and is tax-deductible for the payee.

Since the judgment is based on an underlying mortgage, I will argue that any judgment interest they charge is still considered mortgage interest as defined by the IRS. Although that is just my take.

You might call the IRS and ask them. If they say yes, then the JDB should send you a 1098.


Submitted by DebtCruncher on Sun, 01/25/2009 - 08:43

DebtCruncher

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