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Full-Text Articles in Law

Back To The Future: Marriage And Divorce Under The 2017 Tax Act, Mark W. Cochran Jan 2019

Back To The Future: Marriage And Divorce Under The 2017 Tax Act, Mark W. Cochran

Faculty Articles

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (the 2017 Tax Act) significantly altered the federal tax consequences of marriage and divorce by mostly eliminating the so-called "marriage penalty" from the individual income tax rates and abolishing the deduction for alimony payments. These changes represent the latest congressional tinkering with issues that have persisted since the earliest days of the modem income tax, turning back the clock with regard to taxation for both married and divorced couples. For the first time, since the enactment of the Tax Reform Act of 1969, the rate brackets for married taxpayers filing joint returns …


Economic Justice And The Internal Point Of View, Adam J. Macleod Jan 2013

Economic Justice And The Internal Point Of View, Adam J. Macleod

Faculty Articles

The West is in a tumult about money. In the United States, the Tea Party movement and the Occupy Wall Street movement captured the public's attention, sounding themes of fiscal irresponsibility and material inequality, respectively. Political negotiations over the so-called "fiscal cliff," the debt ceiling, taxes, and entitlement spending, have kept these themes before the public eye. In Europe, the protests have been more dramatic, and the declarations of national leaders that the European Union is in no danger of disintegrating have sounded at times suspiciously forceful.

Despite all of the exhortations that lawmakers should do something, the public debates …


A Resource Guide To Tax Law Careers, Robert H. Hu Jan 2003

A Resource Guide To Tax Law Careers, Robert H. Hu

Faculty Articles

This Guide is designed to assist law students and attorneys in the pursuit of careers in tax law. It is also intended for librarians and career counselors to readily find tax law career information so that they can assist their clients effectively. It includes resources in both print (for example, books and articles) and electronic formats (for example, Web sites). Each item included has a brief annotation so that the user can quickly decide the relevancy and value of that item.


1969: The Birth Of Tax Reform, Mark W. Cochran Jan 1994

1969: The Birth Of Tax Reform, Mark W. Cochran

Faculty Articles

This narrative poem framed from Robert Penn Warren’s epic poem, “Brother to Dragons,” transforms Warren’s poem into a satirical take on tax reform covering the origins, implementation, effectiveness, and future of American tax reform legislation. The poem begins by highlighting economic, political, social, and pop culture events from the American 1960s. The author discusses the emergence of and reasons for tax reform detailing the policy behind reform along with the positive and negative aspects of the original Tax Reform Act of 1969. The first reform attempted to curtail tax shelters by limiting risk write-offs, but exceptions in the reformation allowed …


The Infield Fly Rule And The Internal Revenue Code: An Even Further Aside, Mark W. Cochran Jan 1987

The Infield Fly Rule And The Internal Revenue Code: An Even Further Aside, Mark W. Cochran

Faculty Articles

Baseball’s infield fly rule and certain provisions of the Internal Revenue Code are similar. The purpose of the infield fly rule is to prevent the defense from making a double play by subterfuge, at a time when the offense is helpless to prevent it.

In baseball, as in life, fairness is an elusive concept that defies precise definition. Considering the infield fly rule, the “unfairness” derives from the infielder’s ability to manipulate a situation without incurring any risk. Federal tax law, like the rules of baseball, recognizes and responds to the “manipulation without risk” phenomenon. Section 267 of the Internal …


Should Personal Injury Damage Awards Be Taxed?, Mark W. Cochran Jan 1987

Should Personal Injury Damage Awards Be Taxed?, Mark W. Cochran

Faculty Articles

The exclusion of personal injury damage awards from gross income is inconsistent with established principles of taxation. Section 104(a)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code excludes from gross income “the amount of any damages received . . . on account of personal injury or sickness.” While the existence of Section 104(a)(2) traditionally has been justified as a humanitarian gesture, more logical explanations have been offered.

Damage awards cannot accurately be characterized as a return of capital. Nor does the involuntary nature of the transaction justify the exclusion. While so-called imputed income is not taxed, the reasons supporting its non-taxability do not …


Looking A Gift-Horse In The Mouth: Some Observations And Suggestions For Improving Internal Revenue Code Section 1244, Henry F. Johnson, Mark W. Cochran Feb 1986

Looking A Gift-Horse In The Mouth: Some Observations And Suggestions For Improving Internal Revenue Code Section 1244, Henry F. Johnson, Mark W. Cochran

Faculty Articles

Most investors who contemplate a new business venture concentrate on the positive financial aspects of the business. Few investors realize that a thorough tax plan for a prospective business must also account for the contingency of failure. Since the failure of a business venture will, in some way, result in a taxable event, the conscientious corporate planner must devise a strategy that will utilize the losses incurred in order to achieve the most advantageous tax result. Internal Revenue Code section 1244 is not new, not particularly complex, and not fraught with misfortune for taxpayers failing to meet its provisions. This …