lustergirl
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2005
- Messages
- 7,596
Payback: cash the check
First of all, is it large enough that you'd have to claim it on your taxes and pay taxes on it?
If so, then I'd probably just send it back. Not worth it.
If not, then I'd probably put it into my kids' college accounts. Or failing that, I'd donate it to Wounded Warriors or an abuse victim's shelter.
So my DH had a very physically abusive childhood. His dad walked out when he was 13 and while they struggled to even have enough to eat , it may have been the best thing for them. He and one other sibling managed to find success and happiness in life, while the others struggle with substance abuse, law enforcement issues, losing their children etc.
Dh's father called last year (after nearly 40 years) and apologized and my DH was cordial, accepted apology on the surface but hasn't responded to any other contact.
Dh 's father was a soldier and dh knows he had mental health issues which contributed to his abusive behavior, but it doesn't mean he wants him in his life.
So we got a Christmas card today, with a large (and random) amount in the form of a cashiers check. DH doesn't want to deal with it, and told me to do whatever I think is right with it.
I don't believe DH's father has this kind of money to give. If it were a regular check, we wouldn't cash it, and would have written a note to let him know.
I imagine it is another way for DH'S father to try to establish contact and to apologize. For my DH this just opens wounds.
I certainly could find use for the money, either for our kids or some charity, but perhaps there is some cause or something where it could also bring my dh some peace. Also wondering about an appropriate way to respond to DH's father. I know he is older now and has many regrets, but some wounds can't be healed, at least enough for a relationship.I don't want to hurt him, but I don't want to encourage him either.
The recipient of a gift does not need to report it as income on their return. The giver of the gift is responsible for reporting the gift (if it meets the threshold) and any gift taxes.
There is always strings attached where money is concerned. I wouldn't take the money unless I wanted him back in my life.
No, there is a lifetime exclusion that everything over the annual exclusion can eat into so to speak. However, you need to file gift tax returns to document the fact that you are eating into the exclusion. Unless you have a very large estate, gift taxes are really irrelevant for most people anymore.This is so strange that it works this way. So, if I gave each of my kids 20k, I would have to pay taxes on everything over 14k (which I think is the limit of a gift annually)? I would be taxed on 12k of the gifts?
Thanks for clarifying!
I would not cash it.
I, personally, don't equate giving money with making amends for childhood abuse. What would be appreciated is a heartfelt apology--that would further the relationship, not a random check in the mail.
Dh's father called last year (after nearly 40 years) and apologized and my DH was cordial, accepted apology on the surface but hasn't responded to any other contact.
So my DH had a very physically abusive childhood. His dad walked out when he was 13 and while they struggled to even have enough to eat , it may have been the best thing for them. He and one other sibling managed to find success and happiness in life, while the others struggle with substance abuse, law enforcement issues, losing their children etc.
Dh's father called last year (after nearly 40 years) and apologized and my DH was cordial, accepted apology on the surface but hasn't responded to any other contact.
Dh 's father was a soldier and dh knows he had mental health issues which contributed to his abusive behavior, but it doesn't mean he wants him in his life.
So we got a Christmas card today, with a large (and random) amount in the form of a cashiers check. DH doesn't want to deal with it, and told me to do whatever I think is right with it.
I don't believe DH's father has this kind of money to give. If it were a regular check, we wouldn't cash it, and would have written a note to let him know.
I imagine it is another way for DH'S father to try to establish contact and to apologize. For my DH this just opens wounds.
I certainly could find use for the money, either for our kids or some charity, but perhaps there is some cause or something where it could also bring my dh some peace. Also wondering about an appropriate way to respond to DH's father. I know he is older now and has many regrets, but some wounds can't be healed, at least enough for a relationship.I don't want to hurt him, but I don't want to encourage him either.
How do you know the check isn't fraudulent? There are lots of scams around involving genuine looking cashier's checks.
The recipient of a gift does not need to report it as income on their return. The giver of the gift is responsible for reporting the gift (if it meets the threshold) and any gift taxes.
This is so strange that it works this way. So, if I gave each of my kids 20k, I would have to pay taxes on everything over 14k (which I think is the limit of a gift annually)? I would be taxed on 12k of the gifts?
Thanks for clarifying!