Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 23 of 23

Full-Text Articles in Law

Income Tax--Alimony--Payment For Months Prior To Divorce Decree Not Deductible, Arthur Mark Recht Dec 1960

Income Tax--Alimony--Payment For Months Prior To Divorce Decree Not Deductible, Arthur Mark Recht

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Abstracts Of Recent Cases, Aaron David Trub Dec 1960

Abstracts Of Recent Cases, Aaron David Trub

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Taxation-Federal Income Tax-Strike Benefits May Be Gifts, Christopher Cobb Dec 1960

Taxation-Federal Income Tax-Strike Benefits May Be Gifts, Christopher Cobb

Michigan Law Review

Taxpayer received assistance from a labor union while he was participating in a strike called by the union. The area in which he lived had become a distressed area as a consequence of the strike, and the union had established a general program of aid for strikers with no other source of income. Both before and after he joined the union payments were made to taxpayer under this program. Taxpayer sued for a refund of the income tax he payed on the value of the assistance so received, and the jury returned a verdict in his favor, finding the payments …


Taxation - Federal Income Tax- Full Payment A Prerequisite To Refund Suit, Stuart S. Gunckel Nov 1960

Taxation - Federal Income Tax- Full Payment A Prerequisite To Refund Suit, Stuart S. Gunckel

Michigan Law Review

A tax deficiency of $28,908.60 including interest was levied by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue against the petitioner for a single tax year. Petitioner paid $5,058.54 but later filed a claim for refund which was disallowed by the Commissioner. On suit by petitioner in a United States district court for the refund, the court held the petitioner was not entitled to the refund because the claimed losses were actually capital in nature. The Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit reversed and dismissed the complaint on the ground that the district court could not have jurisdiction until there had been …


Constitutional Law - Governmental Immunity - Immunity Of Agent Of Federal Government To State Taxation, Robert M. Steed S.Ed. Nov 1960

Constitutional Law - Governmental Immunity - Immunity Of Agent Of Federal Government To State Taxation, Robert M. Steed S.Ed.

Michigan Law Review

E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company contracted with the Atomic Energy Commission to construct and operate the Savannah River Project for development of the hydrogen bomb for a fee of one dollar. Under the contract du Pont was to purchase all materials and supplies with funds furnished by the United States, title to vest in the government immediately when it passed from the vendor. South Carolina attempted to apply its sales and use taxes to these purchases. In an action by the United States and du Pont before a statutory three-judge district court to enjoin collection of these …


Book Reviews, John F. Bowen, Edwin G. Nourse Oct 1960

Book Reviews, John F. Bowen, Edwin G. Nourse

Vanderbilt Law Review

Book Reviews

Depreciation and Taxes Symposium conducted by the Tax Institute,November 20-21, 1958 Princeton: Tax Institute, Incorporated, 1959.Pp. viii, 248. $6.00

reviewer: John F. Bowen

=================================

Planning for Freedom; The Public Law of American Capitalism By Eugene V. Rostow New Haven: Yale University Press, 1959.Pp. x, 437. $6.00

reviewer: Edwin G. Nourse


Tax And Other Legal Aspects Of The Corporate Practice Of Medicine, Jerry B. Martin Jun 1960

Tax And Other Legal Aspects Of The Corporate Practice Of Medicine, Jerry B. Martin

Vanderbilt Law Review

With the coming of regulations allowing doctors the tax advantages of corporate employees, the doctors will probably be more solidly behind the positions of the AMA in favor of the prohibition against the corporate practice of medicine. For example, at least one state group, the Tennessee State Medical Association, has recently adopted a resolution against practicing medicine in the corporate form, and there have been no recent reports of state associations taking the opposite position. The American Hospital Association which seems to lead the opposition to the corporate practice rule does not attack the rule as being intrinsically bad but …


Income Tax--Loss Incident To "Sale" Involving Oil And Gas Production Payment--Deduction Allowed, C. H. H. Ii Apr 1960

Income Tax--Loss Incident To "Sale" Involving Oil And Gas Production Payment--Deduction Allowed, C. H. H. Ii

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Income Tax--Fair Market Value Of Overriding Royalty Interest--Implied Reserved Economic Interest, M. J. F. Apr 1960

Income Tax--Fair Market Value Of Overriding Royalty Interest--Implied Reserved Economic Interest, M. J. F.

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Proposals For Taxing Interstate Sales In Indiana Apr 1960

Proposals For Taxing Interstate Sales In Indiana

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


The Rights Of A Trustee In Bankruptcy As Against A Federal Tax Lien Apr 1960

The Rights Of A Trustee In Bankruptcy As Against A Federal Tax Lien

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Taxation - Federal Income Tax - Section 355 Held Applicable To The Division Of A Single Business, James N. Adler Apr 1960

Taxation - Federal Income Tax - Section 355 Held Applicable To The Division Of A Single Business, James N. Adler

Michigan Law Review

Petitioner, E. P. Coady, and M. Christopher each owned 50 percent of the stock of the Christopher Construction Co., a corporation engaged for more than five years prior to November 15, 1954, in the conduct of a construction business. On that day the parent, Christopher Company, organized a subsidiary, E. P. Coady & Co., to which it transferred approximately one half of its contracts, equipment, and cash. In exchange, the parent company received all the stock of the subsidiary. Immediately thereafter, the parent distributed to petitioner, one of the two equal shareholders of the parent company, all the stock of …


Deferred Compensation Plans: Qualifying For Non-Qualified Treatment, James F. Neal Mar 1960

Deferred Compensation Plans: Qualifying For Non-Qualified Treatment, James F. Neal

Vanderbilt Law Review

For an important number of people in our "affluent society," the problem of spreading large current earnings, and the federal income tax imposed thereon, over a number of years has taken on sizeable proportions. Only slightly helpful for some of these people are the deferred compensation provisions of sections 401 through 404 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (hereinafter referred to as the Code).'Consequently, many highly paid executives must still resort to other arrangements. The purpose of this paper is to explore the present status, from an income tax standpoint, of those non-qualified arrangements between employers and employees which …


Executive Compensation: The Taxation Of Stock Options, Jack D. Edwards Mar 1960

Executive Compensation: The Taxation Of Stock Options, Jack D. Edwards

Vanderbilt Law Review

The popularity of the stock option as a method of executive compensation results primarily from its favorable tax consequences. Under present law, an executive's ordinary income may be converted into capital gain. These discriminatory provisions provide a fertile field for tax avoidance. The first portion of this paper deals with the history of stock option taxation to date. Much of the earlier law remains applicable. The historical perspective shows the wide latitude for avoidance and the faulty assumptions in which tax treatment has been grounded. The second part deals with the present tax treatment of stock options.


Administrative Law - Administrative Procedure Act- Status Of Tax Court, James Cripe Mar 1960

Administrative Law - Administrative Procedure Act- Status Of Tax Court, James Cripe

Michigan Law Review

Petitioner instituted this action before the Tax Court for a review of rulings by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue determining deficiencies in the payment of his income taxes. The Tax Court held that it was not subject to the Administrative Procedure Act and had no means whatever of bringing before it the entire record, so called, that was before the Commissioner. On appeal, held, affirmed. Judicial review of the "whole record" mentioned in section 10 (e) of the Administrative Procedure Act envisages, in the case of adjudication, a review of the record made in cases governed by sections 5, …


Taxation- Federal Income Tax - Deductible Contributions To Nonqualified Profit-Sharing Plans, Robert M. Steed Mar 1960

Taxation- Federal Income Tax - Deductible Contributions To Nonqualified Profit-Sharing Plans, Robert M. Steed

Michigan Law Review

In 1942 plaintiff employer adopted a profit-sharing plan under which a percentage of each year's profits was to be deposited in irrevocable trusts for distribution to its employees in succeeding years. The plan was not "qualified" under the Internal Revenue Code. Although under the terms of the trusts each employee's rights in the fund vested at the time the contribution was made by the employer, these rights would be forfeited by voluntary resignation prior to a fixed date. In 1945 plaintiff deducted the amount contributed to the trust in that year as a contribution to a non-qualified profit-sharing plan under …


Business Purpose And The Subchapter S Inspired Reorganization, Eugene C. Roemele Feb 1960

Business Purpose And The Subchapter S Inspired Reorganization, Eugene C. Roemele

Michigan Law Review

The potentially advantageous treatment under subchapter S permitting certain corporations to elect to pass through corporate income and losses to the shareholder, and to avoid the corporate tax, is the result of two different pressures. Tax collector and taxpayer have long been at odds over the purported double taxation of corporate earnings. The limited disregard of the corporate entity as a taxpaying entity then becomes another phase in the cycle begun in 1936, when dividends were subjected to full taxation at the shareholder level. The more recent concern for small business and the small business man has resulted in the …


Taxation - Federal Estate Tax - Effect Of Presidential Freezing Orders On The Creation Of Excludable Bank Deposits For Nonresident Aliens, William Y. Webb Feb 1960

Taxation - Federal Estate Tax - Effect Of Presidential Freezing Orders On The Creation Of Excludable Bank Deposits For Nonresident Aliens, William Y. Webb

Michigan Law Review

Decedent, a citizen and resident of France, was the sole income beneficiary of a trust fund held in New York by the plaintiff as trustee. An executive order, issued pursuant to the Trading with the Enemy Act, prohibited remittance of trust income to the decedent from 1940 to the time of her death in 1946. As this income accrued, the plaintiff's trust department transferred it to the plaintiff's general banking department in its own name as trustee and subject to its order out of current banking funds. In an action by the executor of the decedent-beneficiary's estate to recover an …


The Issuance Of Stock Under Section 1244 Of The Internal Revenue Code, Carle E. Davis Jan 1960

The Issuance Of Stock Under Section 1244 Of The Internal Revenue Code, Carle E. Davis

University of Richmond Law Review

The purpose of this brief note is to examine the provisions of section 1244 with a view toward qualifying for the tax benefits of that section.


Recent Decisions, Various Editors Jan 1960

Recent Decisions, Various Editors

Villanova Law Review

No abstract provided.


Suppression Of Evidence In Criminal Tax Proceedings, Jacob W. Mayer Jan 1960

Suppression Of Evidence In Criminal Tax Proceedings, Jacob W. Mayer

Kentucky Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Tax Subchapter S Becomes Clearer, Edward M. Greenwald Jan 1960

Tax Subchapter S Becomes Clearer, Edward M. Greenwald

Cleveland State Law Review

Since the addition of Subchapter S to the 1954 Internal Revenue Code in 1958, many articles have been written on the interpretation and application of the provisions of this Chapter to various factual situations. At the time of their publication, the final Regulations and pertinent Internal Revenue Service Rulings on the subject had not been promulgated. The subsequent promulgation and issuance of these Regulations and Rulings, therefore, had the effect of abrogating many of the proposals which had been advocated in these articles. These Regulations and Rulings did not answer all of the questions, and until such time as there …


Taxation - Federal Income Tax - Contract Right Income To Cash Method Taxpayer Who Refused Cash Offer, Eldon Olson Jan 1960

Taxation - Federal Income Tax - Contract Right Income To Cash Method Taxpayer Who Refused Cash Offer, Eldon Olson

Michigan Law Review

During 1951 petitioner, a cash method taxpayer, executed a mineral lease. As part of the consideration petitioner was to receive an unconditional bonus or advance royalty of fixed amount. The lessee was ready, able and willing to pay the entire amount on execution, but at petitioner's request the contract provided for a small payment on execution with one-half the balance due on January 5th of each of the next two years. About one month before each due date the contract rights were discounted at a bank of which petitioner was a director. The lessee remained ready, able and willing to …