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Articles 1 - 12 of 12

Full-Text Articles in Tax Law

How Long Can This Go On? The Controversy Over The Application Of The Statute Of Limitations To S Corporations And Their Shareholders, J. Marcus Sommers Nov 2012

How Long Can This Go On? The Controversy Over The Application Of The Statute Of Limitations To S Corporations And Their Shareholders, J. Marcus Sommers

Pepperdine Law Review

No abstract provided.


Constructive Dividend Doctrine From An Integrationist Perspective, Anthony P. Polito Jan 2012

Constructive Dividend Doctrine From An Integrationist Perspective, Anthony P. Polito

Akron Tax Journal

A long standing feature of U.S. corporate taxation is a group of doctrinal devices serving to prevent taxpayer attempts to avoid double taxation of corporate earnings. This Article refers to these devices collectively as the constructive dividend doctrine (hereinafter “CDD”) and analyzes the extent to which the CDD ought to be set aside as counterproductive.

This analysis is grounded in contrasting views of the normative tax treatment of corporate enterprise. On the one hand is the perspective in which the double income taxation of corporate income is normative (the “Double Tax Perspective”). The Double Tax Perspective calls for taxation of …


I.R.C. Section 1014(E) And Gifted Property Reconveyed In Trust, Mark R. Siegel Jan 2012

I.R.C. Section 1014(E) And Gifted Property Reconveyed In Trust, Mark R. Siegel

Akron Tax Journal

The taxpayer’s method of property acquisition is significant in determining the proper income tax or adjusted basis in the property. Distinct adjusted basis rules apply to the transferee of property acquired by purchase, gift, and inheritance. A buyer who purchases property for cash receives an adjusted basis in the property acquired equal to its cost. For property acquired by gift, the general rule is that the donee’s adjusted basis equals the donor’s adjusted basis immediately prior to the transfer. A third income tax basis regime applies to the taxpayer who happens to acquire property by inheritance upon the death of …


Penalty Protection Opinions And Advisor Conflicts Of Interest, David T. Moldenhauer Jan 2012

Penalty Protection Opinions And Advisor Conflicts Of Interest, David T. Moldenhauer

Akron Tax Journal

This article has five parts. The second part describes the statutory and regulatory standards for taxpayers seeking to rely on tax advice to avoid penalties. The third part describes the cases where a taxpayer has sought to rely on the opinion of a tax advisor with a conflict of interest. Those cases involve three types of situations: (1) tax advisors acting as promoters or brokers of a tax shelter; (2) tax advisors with referral arrangements with tax shelter promoters; and (3) tax advisors that are developers or implementers of a tax strategy. Typically, in the first two types of situations, …


Failing Corporate Tax Transparency And The Immediate Need To Reduce Overburdening Duplicative Tax Reporting Requirements, Ilya A. Lipin Jan 2012

Failing Corporate Tax Transparency And The Immediate Need To Reduce Overburdening Duplicative Tax Reporting Requirements, Ilya A. Lipin

Akron Tax Journal

The benefits to corporate taxpayers from the continuing additions to disclosure requirements have not been obvious. Despite expenditures by corporate taxpayers on compliance, there is evidence that the Service has not been using all of the information it receives from additional disclosure forms.28 Duplicative disclosures of the same or similar tax information that lead to additional costs are of immediate concern to the corporate taxpayer.29 The estimated corporate taxpayers’ compliance tax burden is summarized in Appendix 1. Part II of this article describes in detail key existing reporting requirements such as reportable transaction disclosure statement and Form 8886, disclosure statements …


Achieving Meaningful Civil Tax Penalty Reform And Making It Stick, Jeremiah Coder Jan 2012

Achieving Meaningful Civil Tax Penalty Reform And Making It Stick, Jeremiah Coder

Akron Tax Journal

This essay examines the historical use of penalties within the tax code, reviews a number of reports that led to the last round of significant penalty reform legislation, and considers existing problems of penalty administration. Several proposals are outlined to ensure that if and when Congress acts to simplify and revise the penalty regime, the reforms will have lasting impact. Part II covers the growth of penalties in the tax system from its original simple form through its significant expansion to the time that the IRS and Congress worked to cut back the complexity of the civil tax penalty regime …


The Forgotten Taxation Landmine: Application Of The Accumulated Earnings Tax To Irc Sec. 831(B) Captive Insurance Companies, Beckett G. Cantley Jan 2012

The Forgotten Taxation Landmine: Application Of The Accumulated Earnings Tax To Irc Sec. 831(B) Captive Insurance Companies, Beckett G. Cantley

Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business

No abstract provided.


What Do Courts Have To Do With It?: The Judiciary's Role In Making Federal Tax Law, Leandra Lederman Jan 2012

What Do Courts Have To Do With It?: The Judiciary's Role In Making Federal Tax Law, Leandra Lederman

Articles by Maurer Faculty

The Internal Revenue Code is an important source of federal tax law, but it is not the only source. The U.S. Department of the Treasury and Internal Revenue Service issue important guidance, and federal courts interpret all of these authorities. This essay provides an overview of federal tax litigation, at both the trial and appellate levels, and discusses the interplay among Congress, the Treasury, and the judiciary in developing federal tax law.


Personal Foul…Roughing The Taxpayer: The Irs’ Triple Penalty On Hardship Distributions, Michael Flynn, Craig C. Minko Jan 2012

Personal Foul…Roughing The Taxpayer: The Irs’ Triple Penalty On Hardship Distributions, Michael Flynn, Craig C. Minko

Fordham Journal of Corporate & Financial Law

Everyone knows of someone, a family member, a co-worker, a neighbor or just an acquaintance, who has been adversely affected by the downturn in the economy. For many, this means dipping into retirement accounts to help out others, to fund college tuition, to pay for unexpected medical bills or just to make ends meet. Then the surprise hits. The retirement account funds, filled with money that each participant paid in for reasons just like these, are not readily available. To the extent that they are available, the funds come at a steep price even though the participant is in desperate …


Subsidizing Hate: A Proposal To Reform The Internal Revenue Service's Methodology Test, Alex Reed Jan 2012

Subsidizing Hate: A Proposal To Reform The Internal Revenue Service's Methodology Test, Alex Reed

Fordham Journal of Corporate & Financial Law

Although a wide variety of organizations may qualify as tax-exempt public charities, reform is needed to ensure that hate groups masquerading as educational organizations do not receive preferential tax treatment. Since 1986, the Internal Revenue Service has utilized a methodology test to determine when advocacy of a particular viewpoint may be deemed educational so as to qualify the underlying organization as a public charity. Because Service has been reluctant to apply the test rigorously, however, a number of hate groups have been able to obtain charitable status under the guise of operating as legitimate educational organizations. This Article argues that …


Some Realism About Responsive Tax Administration, Leigh Osofsky Jan 2012

Some Realism About Responsive Tax Administration, Leigh Osofsky

Articles

No abstract provided.


A New Paradigm For Irs Guidance: Ensuring Input And Enhancing Participation, Leslie Book Dec 2011

A New Paradigm For Irs Guidance: Ensuring Input And Enhancing Participation, Leslie Book

Leslie Book

This article highlights how, in light of the increasing role that the IRS plays in the lives of poorer and marginalized individuals, when promulgating rules, the IRS will have to go beyond the mechanism of the APA notice and comment regime to ensure robust public participation. While others have discussed the IRS’s approach to the notice and comment regime, commentators generally have overlooked the problems associated with lower income taxpayers’ lack of voice in the rulemaking process. To remedy that shortfall, I call for changes in agency conduct to encourage public participation in formulating rules. I build upon a model …