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Articles 1 - 30 of 81
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Minnesota Taconite Production Tax: An Alternative Index, Peter Kakela, Howard Haas, Dena Draskovich
The Minnesota Taconite Production Tax: An Alternative Index, Peter Kakela, Howard Haas, Dena Draskovich
Journal of Natural Resources & Environmental Law
No abstract provided.
Consuming The Benefits Of Copyright: Multijurisdictional Sales Tax Complexity, Adam B. Thimmesch
Consuming The Benefits Of Copyright: Multijurisdictional Sales Tax Complexity, Adam B. Thimmesch
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Legalizing Recreational And Medical Marijuana In The State Of Kentucky: A Tax Revenue Recommendation, Drew Barker
Legalizing Recreational And Medical Marijuana In The State Of Kentucky: A Tax Revenue Recommendation, Drew Barker
MPA/MPP/MPFM Capstone Projects
No executive summary.
An Exploratory Comparison Of Kentucky Public School Districts That Primarily Select The “Compensating Rate”, Andrew J. Wells
An Exploratory Comparison Of Kentucky Public School Districts That Primarily Select The “Compensating Rate”, Andrew J. Wells
MPA/MPP/MPFM Capstone Projects
Public school districts in the Commonwealth of Kentucky are primarily funded from federal, state, and local sources. While the proportion of each of these funding sources differs from district to district, the local property tax is one source that is within the control of locally-elected officials: the members of the local Board of Education. While some Boards of Education choose to increase local tax rates to increase local revenue, others do not. This research suggests that property value assessments and median incomes of districts that choose not to increase tax rates are similar. A majority of the counties studied are …
Consumer Response To Increases In The State Cigarette Tax, Patrick Nolan
Consumer Response To Increases In The State Cigarette Tax, Patrick Nolan
MPA/MPP/MPFM Capstone Projects
In this paper I look at consumer responsiveness to the cigarette tax. Cigarette taxes are motivated by wanting to raise money for the state and wanting to deter smoking in the state’s population. Obviously reducing smoking in the population would reduce the externalities caused by smoking. We know the health effects are completely detrimental to the consumer, and detrimental to those around them. In addition to this we know that tobacco is an addictive substance, meaning than is inherently extremely inelastic.
To find on how consumers respond to tax increases I conducted a difference in difference analysis of tax revenue …
No State Left Behind: An Analysis Of The Post-Egtrra Death Tax Landscape And An Argument For Kentucky To Repeal State Death Taxes, Mary Ellen Wimberly
No State Left Behind: An Analysis Of The Post-Egtrra Death Tax Landscape And An Argument For Kentucky To Repeal State Death Taxes, Mary Ellen Wimberly
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Bringing A Severance Tax On Natural Gas To Pennsylvania: Who, What, Why, When, And How?, Samuel M. Smith
Bringing A Severance Tax On Natural Gas To Pennsylvania: Who, What, Why, When, And How?, Samuel M. Smith
Kentucky Journal of Equine, Agriculture, & Natural Resources Law
No abstract provided.
Commentary: Hospital Tax-Exempt Policy: A Comparison Of Schedule H And State Community Benefit Reporting Systems, Laura L. Hitchcock
Commentary: Hospital Tax-Exempt Policy: A Comparison Of Schedule H And State Community Benefit Reporting Systems, Laura L. Hitchcock
Frontiers in Public Health Services and Systems Research
In Hospital Tax-Exempt Policy: A Comparison of Schedule H and State Community Benefit Reporting Systems, Rosenbaum et aldescribe the numerous variations between current state law in 24 states and federal requirements regarding nonprofit hospitals’ community benefit activities. The potential for nonprofit hospitals to help shape community health is great, and how states choose to address requirements regarding community benefit, and potentially reinforce the new federal requirements to incentivize hospital participation in addressing root causes of poor health, should be of significant interest to the public, policy makers and public and population health experts, given the large percentage of …
Americans' Unwillingness To Pay Taxes Before The American Revolution: An Uncomfortable Legacy, Richard A. Westin
Americans' Unwillingness To Pay Taxes Before The American Revolution: An Uncomfortable Legacy, Richard A. Westin
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
When one reflects on the sorry condition of America’s finances one has to wonder why there is such resistance to fiscal discipline. Is it merely because there is an obstreperous group in the US Congress who cannot abide any tax? Has the public been subtly lobbied into believing that American taxes are high, pointless and intolerable or is there some gene in the America’s body politic that has always been there that expresses itself from time to time in a pernicious cheapness? Perhaps all those things are true, or perhaps none. Nevertheless, a glance backward at Colonial days can stimulate …
Common Sense And The Commerce Clause: Why Elimination Of The Physical Presence Test For Taxation Defies Both, Lucas Humble
Common Sense And The Commerce Clause: Why Elimination Of The Physical Presence Test For Taxation Defies Both, Lucas Humble
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Fading Bright Line Of Physical Presence: Did Kfc Corporation V. Iowa Department Of Revenue Give States The Secret Recipe For Repudiating Quill?, Adam B. Thimmesch
The Fading Bright Line Of Physical Presence: Did Kfc Corporation V. Iowa Department Of Revenue Give States The Secret Recipe For Repudiating Quill?, Adam B. Thimmesch
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Foreword: Rights, Remedies, And Rose, Scott R. Bauries
Foreword: Rights, Remedies, And Rose, Scott R. Bauries
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
In this Foreword to the University of Kentucky’s “Rose at 20” Special Feature, I seek to introduce the three featured articles, as well as to identify two major paradigm shifts in school finance litigation that grew out of the Kentucky Supreme Court’s decision in Rose v. Council for Better Education. The Rose decision is commonly thought of as a bridge between prior education litigation strategies founded primarily on theories of equity or equality and subsequent litigation strategies founded primarily on theories of adequacy. Although the distinction between these two strategies is well-worn, it obscures two important changes to …
The Commerciality Doctrine As Applied To The Charitable Tax Exemption For Homes For The Aged: State And Local Tax Perspectives, David A. Brennen
The Commerciality Doctrine As Applied To The Charitable Tax Exemption For Homes For The Aged: State And Local Tax Perspectives, David A. Brennen
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
This essay examines the question of how state and local government officials should consider federal tax law principles, like the commerciality doctrine, when they challenge state and local property tax exemptions that rely, at least in part, on tax-exempt charitable status for federal income tax purposes. In particular, this essay uses the example of continuing care retirement communities to consider tax-exempt law’s commerciality doctrine in an attempt to discern distinctions between “homes for the aged” that are “charitable,” and thus entitled to exemption, and those that are too commercial, and thus not entitled to exemption. In fact, one might say …
Evaluating Kentucky's Investment Tax Credits In Light Of Cuno V. Daimlerchrysler, Inc., Bradford C. Spencer
Evaluating Kentucky's Investment Tax Credits In Light Of Cuno V. Daimlerchrysler, Inc., Bradford C. Spencer
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Making The Obvious Choice Malpractice: Llps And The Lawyer Liability Time Bomb In Kentucky's 2005 Tax Modernization, Thomas E. Rutledge, Allan W. Vestal
Making The Obvious Choice Malpractice: Llps And The Lawyer Liability Time Bomb In Kentucky's 2005 Tax Modernization, Thomas E. Rutledge, Allan W. Vestal
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Kentucky Taxation Of Banking Institutions (1802-1996): An Historical Overview, Timothy J. Eifler
Kentucky Taxation Of Banking Institutions (1802-1996): An Historical Overview, Timothy J. Eifler
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Kentucky Law Survey: Taxation, Kathryn L. Moore
Kentucky Law Survey: Taxation, Kathryn L. Moore
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
St. Ledger V. Kentucky Revenue Cabinet: The Tax That Would Not Die, Rick Alsip, Jennifer Bailey, Melissa Bowman, William G. Fowler Ii, Trey Grayson
St. Ledger V. Kentucky Revenue Cabinet: The Tax That Would Not Die, Rick Alsip, Jennifer Bailey, Melissa Bowman, William G. Fowler Ii, Trey Grayson
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Kentucky Law Survey: Taxation, Kathryn L. Moore
Kentucky Law Survey: Taxation, Kathryn L. Moore
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
Certainly the most publicized development in Kentucky tax law during the last five years was the series of decisions in St. Ledger v. Kentucky Revenue Cabinet, striking down two of Kentucky's intangibles taxes. The St. Ledger decisions, however, were not the only tax law development to receive attention.
There were a number of legislative developments of some significance. Specifically, Governor Brereton Jones formed a Tax Policy Commission that comprehensively reviewed Kentucky's tax structure. Although the 1996 General Assembly did not fully embrace the Commission's recommendations over the last five years, the General Assembly did enact some significant legislation. For …
State And Local Taxation: When Will Congress Intervene?, Kathryn L. Moore
State And Local Taxation: When Will Congress Intervene?, Kathryn L. Moore
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
This article examines congressional activity in the state and local tax area to determine when, if ever, Congress will enact legislation mandating uniformity in state and local taxation. The article begins by briefly describing our current system of state and local taxation and explaining why we need more uniformity therein.
The article then provides an empirical study of congressional activity in the state and local tax area between January, 1971 and May, 1996. Specifically, it focuses first on four discrete but representative areas in which Congress has enacted legislation regulating state and local taxation, and, second, on four discrete but …
State And Local Taxation Of Interstate And Foreign Commerce: The Second Best Solution, Kathryn L. Moore
State And Local Taxation Of Interstate And Foreign Commerce: The Second Best Solution, Kathryn L. Moore
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
Our current system of state and local taxation of interstate and foreign commerce, simply put, is a mess. First, the mere number of jurisdictions that may impose taxes is seemingly limitless: each of the fifty states, plus the District of Columbia, may impose its own set of taxes. In addition, each state may authorize local government units within the state, such as counties, municipalities, townships, and special districts, to assess and collect taxes. For example, in 1994, well over 6,000 separate jurisdictions were authorized to impose sales taxes.
Second, the states may impose a wide variety of taxes and may …
Kentucky Tax Law, Second Edition, Office Of Continuing Legal Education At The University Of Kentucky College Of Law, Thomas A. Brown, Timothy C. Kimmel, C. Christopher Muth, Douglas P. Romaine, Mark F. Sommer, Randy L. Treece
Kentucky Tax Law, Second Edition, Office Of Continuing Legal Education At The University Of Kentucky College Of Law, Thomas A. Brown, Timothy C. Kimmel, C. Christopher Muth, Douglas P. Romaine, Mark F. Sommer, Randy L. Treece
Continuing Legal Education Materials
A reference for Kentucky lawyers on real and personal property taxation, Kentucky sales and use taxation, Kentucky individual income taxation, corporate income taxation, and procedures before the Kentucky Board of Tax Appeals.
Sales And Use Tax Planning For The Horse Industry, Richard W. Craigo
Sales And Use Tax Planning For The Horse Industry, Richard W. Craigo
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Kentucky Law Survey: Taxation, Frederick W. Whiteside
Kentucky Law Survey: Taxation, Frederick W. Whiteside
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Kentucky Law Survey: Kentucky Taxation, Stephen J. Vasek Jr., C. Craig Bradley Jr.
Kentucky Law Survey: Kentucky Taxation, Stephen J. Vasek Jr., C. Craig Bradley Jr.
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Kentucky Law Survey: Kentucky Taxation, Stephen J. Vasek Jr., C. Craig Bradly Jr.
Kentucky Law Survey: Kentucky Taxation, Stephen J. Vasek Jr., C. Craig Bradly Jr.
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
Certainly the most publicized developments in Kentucky tax law during the current survey period were those legislative reforms adopted by the special session of the Kentucky General Assembly in early 1979. Responding to demands for relief from rising tax burdens, the legislature enacted H.B. 44 to limit the impact of inflation on property taxes. These legislative changes were part of a nationwide wave of tax reform proposals engendered by voter approval of California's Proposition Thirteen in June, 1978. In addition to H.B. 44, this article will examine selected judicial decisions involving the taxation of intercorporate dividends, the sales and use …
Kentucky Law Survey: Kentucky Taxation, Frederick W. Whiteside Jr., John R. Harman
Kentucky Law Survey: Kentucky Taxation, Frederick W. Whiteside Jr., John R. Harman
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Religious Property Tax Exemptions In Kentucky, Paul J. Weber, Janet R. Olson
Religious Property Tax Exemptions In Kentucky, Paul J. Weber, Janet R. Olson
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Cooperative Apartments: A Survey Of Legal Treatment And An Argument For Homestead Protection, Carolyn S. Bratt
Cooperative Apartments: A Survey Of Legal Treatment And An Argument For Homestead Protection, Carolyn S. Bratt
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
“The homestead may be a splendid mansion, a cabin or a tent,” but can it be a cooperative apartment? The supreme courts of both Florida and Georgia recently have answered this question in the negative. The Florida Supreme Court denied to a widow a homestead exemption in her deceased husband's cooperative apartment, ruling that a cooperator has no proprietary interest in the apartment, the building, or the land on which the building is situated. The Georgia Supreme Court denied a homestead tax exemption to cooperators because they lacked the characteristics of ownership needed to bring them within the constitutional exemption …
Kentucky Law Survey: Kentucky Taxation, Frederick W. Whiteside Jr., Edward J. Buechel
Kentucky Law Survey: Kentucky Taxation, Frederick W. Whiteside Jr., Edward J. Buechel
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.