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Taxation-Federal Commons

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Taxation-Federal

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Cleveland State University

Corporate tax

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The Future Of Corporate Tax Reform: A Debate, Deborah A. Geier, Omni Y. Marian, David S. Miller, Adam H. Rosenzweig Oct 2013

The Future Of Corporate Tax Reform: A Debate, Deborah A. Geier, Omni Y. Marian, David S. Miller, Adam H. Rosenzweig

Law Faculty Articles and Essays

Professor Geier participated in a Lincoln-Douglas style debate, where the debaters were assigned different roles, so the opinions expressed were not necessarily their own. On the first point debated, Professor Geier was assigned to argue: The Affirmative: We Need to Tax Corporationsat the Entity Level. Others argued the negative: The United States Should Repeal the Corporate Income Tax. On the second point debated, Professor Geier argued the negative, that Dividend Exemption Is NOT the Best Method of Corporate/Shareholder Integration, and is in fact the worst method. On the third point, Professor Geier argued in the affirmative, that the corporate tax …


Recharacterization Of Unreasonable Compensation: An Equitable Mandate, Barbara F. Sikon Jan 2004

Recharacterization Of Unreasonable Compensation: An Equitable Mandate, Barbara F. Sikon

Cleveland State Law Review

This note identifies the inequities inherent in the failure to recharacterize unreasonable compensation payments and proposes that the taxpayer be allowed to present evidence of an alternative characterization after the government determines a reasonable allowance. Part I of this note demonstrates the historical applications of section 162 supporting a purpose of challenging payments disguised as compensation with an accompanying tax advantage. It will explore the legislative history and statutory implications, as well as applications in case law. Part II explains the highly subjective character of the determination of reasonableness and explores the numerous dimensions of that judgment. Part III explains …


Discharge Of Corporate Indebtedness At Less Than Face Value Under The Internal Revenue Code, Harvey Mahlig Jan 1952

Discharge Of Corporate Indebtedness At Less Than Face Value Under The Internal Revenue Code, Harvey Mahlig

Cleveland State Law Review

Prior to 1939 whenever a corporation paid less than the face amount of an obligation in full satisfaction thereof, taxable income was realized to the extent of the difference. In 1939 paragraph (9) was added to Section 22 (b) of the InternalRevenue Code. Therein it was provided that there should not be included in the taxable income of a corporation the amount of income attributable to the discharge of any indebtedness as evidenced by a security, provided at the time of such discharge the corporation was in an unsound financial condition. In orderto obtain the relief provided, the corporation had …