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Articles 31 - 50 of 50
Full-Text Articles in Law
Retroactive Taxation: United States V. Carlton - The Taxpayer Loses Again!, 16 N. Ill. U. L. Rev. 77 (1995), Ronald Z. Domsky
Retroactive Taxation: United States V. Carlton - The Taxpayer Loses Again!, 16 N. Ill. U. L. Rev. 77 (1995), Ronald Z. Domsky
UIC Law Open Access Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Interpreting Tax Legislation: The Role Of Purpose, Deborah A. Geier
Interpreting Tax Legislation: The Role Of Purpose, Deborah A. Geier
Law Faculty Articles and Essays
This 1995 article uses tax cases to explore various methods of statutory interpretation.
Fog, Fairness, And The Federal Fisc: Tenancy-By-The-Entireties Interests And The Federal Tax Lien, Steve R. Johnson
Fog, Fairness, And The Federal Fisc: Tenancy-By-The-Entireties Interests And The Federal Tax Lien, Steve R. Johnson
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Welfare Reform, Child Care Costs, And Taxes: Delivering Increased Work-Related Child Care Benefits To Low-Income Families, Mary L. Heen
Welfare Reform, Child Care Costs, And Taxes: Delivering Increased Work-Related Child Care Benefits To Low-Income Families, Mary L. Heen
Law Faculty Publications
This Article focuses specifically on.tax-transfer integration of work-related child care assistance. Part I discusses the current child care assistance available to low-income workers through direct transfer programs and through the income tax system. Part II describes the need for increased child care funding and the failure of current welfare reform proposals to meet that need. Part III examines the theoretical and practical issues that must be addressed before the tax system is used as a mechanism for delivering increased child care assistance. to low-income families. Part IV critiques a proposed funding mechanism that would redirect tax benefits to lower income …
The Separate Tax Status Of Loan-Out Corporations, Mary Lafrance
The Separate Tax Status Of Loan-Out Corporations, Mary Lafrance
Scholarly Works
When professionals and other persons who offer their goods and/or services to the public conduct their businesses through corporations, the Treasury has acknowledged that for federal income tax purposes it must treat those corporations as separate and distinct from their controlling shareholder-employees, even where there is only a single shareholder-employee, provided that the corporation has a business purpose and the taxpayer consistently respects the corporate form. However, the Treasury has refused to accord equal dignity to incorporated workers who offer their services not to the public at large but to a single recipient or a small number of recipients. The …
Days Of Our Lives: The Impact Of Section 197 On The Depreciation Of Copyrights, Patents And Related Property, Mary Lafrance
Days Of Our Lives: The Impact Of Section 197 On The Depreciation Of Copyrights, Patents And Related Property, Mary Lafrance
Scholarly Works
For federal income tax purposes, owners of intangible property generally must capitalize the costs of creating or acquiring that property. In the past, the tax rules for recovering these capitalized costs through depreciation deductions varied greatly according to the nature of the intangible. Certain types of acquired intangibles--notably, goodwill and going concern value--were nondepreciable. In contrast, taxpayers purchasing interests in copyrights or patents could depreciate those assets under the straight-line method or, in most cases, could opt for more rapid cost recovery under the income forecast method.
In the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, Congress greatly enlarged the class …
American Indian Tribes And 401(K) Plans, Erik M. Jensen
American Indian Tribes And 401(K) Plans, Erik M. Jensen
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Comments On A Revised Filing System, R. Wilson Freyermuth
Comments On A Revised Filing System, R. Wilson Freyermuth
Faculty Publications
Professor Edward Adams's article, both in terms of its basic structure and the myriad of options it offers, neatly highlights the basic dilemma facing the Drafting Committee as it addresses the future Article 9 filing system. As he correctly notes, the filing system's shortcomings are largely due to its continued dependence on paper records, despite the increasing sophistication and availability of computerized information technology for both filing and searching. Should the Drafting Committee maintain the basics of the current system (a public, paper-based filing system) and merely attempt to identify and correct the existing shortcomings in that system, with some …
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.
Health Policy Below The Waterline: Medical Care And The Charitable Exemption, Maxwell Gregg Bloche
Health Policy Below The Waterline: Medical Care And The Charitable Exemption, Maxwell Gregg Bloche
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
For almost one hundred years, America's nonprofit hospitals have enjoyed nearly automatic exemption from federal income taxation. During this time, nonprofit hospitals transformed themselves from resting places of last resort for the sick poor into centers of high-technology intervention for all income groups. The financing of their services evolved in parallel, from primary dependence on the generosity of religious orders and charitable donors, to almost exclusive reliance on payments for services rendered. Meanwhile, the exemption's doctrinal underpinnings were repeatedly reinvented to accommodate change in the hospital industry's financial structure and social role. When Congress first enacted a charitable exemption to …
Can A Deficiency Notice To A Non-Filing Taxpayer Shorten The Time To Claim A Refund In The Tax Court?, Matthew J. Barrett
Can A Deficiency Notice To A Non-Filing Taxpayer Shorten The Time To Claim A Refund In The Tax Court?, Matthew J. Barrett
Journal Articles
Each year, about three million people overpay their federal income taxes but don't file returns. Taxpayers usually have three years to claim a refund. When a non-filer waits more than two years before seeking a refund, the IRS often seeks more tax because the taxpayer has not filed. If the taxpayer appeals to the Tax Court to avoid paying the additional tax, the IRS says the refund period is only two years. Now the Supreme Court decides if a deficiency notice can shorten the time to claim a refund in the Tax Court.
The Limited Liability Company Experiment: Unlimited Flexibility, Uncertain Role, Wayne M. Gazur
The Limited Liability Company Experiment: Unlimited Flexibility, Uncertain Role, Wayne M. Gazur
Publications
No abstract provided.
Taxation Of Damages After Schleier - Where Are We And Where Do We Go From Here?, Douglas A. Kahn
Taxation Of Damages After Schleier - Where Are We And Where Do We Go From Here?, Douglas A. Kahn
Articles
This article will examine the reasoning of the Schleier decision and speculate as to how taxation of pre-1996 damages will likely apply in light of Schleier. First, the article will set forth a very brief history of the judicial and administrative constructions of the statutory exclusion, and explore tax policy justifications for providing an exclusion from gross income for certain damages. These latter two items (set forth in Parts II and III of this article) are areas that have been extensively addressed previously by several commentators, including the author of this article.' The reason for exploring tax policy issues is …
Sex, Tax And The Charter: A Review Of Thibaudeau V. Canada, Lisa Philipps, Margot Young
Sex, Tax And The Charter: A Review Of Thibaudeau V. Canada, Lisa Philipps, Margot Young
All Faculty Publications
Section 15 of the Charter offers the promise of redressing many systemic inequalities in the law. This paper considers the implications of section 15 for the taxation of child support payments, an issue raised in the Thibaudeau case. While endorsing the Federal Court of Appeal's decision that the current tax regime is unconstitutional, the authors take issue with the Court's reasoning in reaching this result. In the first part of their paper, the authors address a number of shortcomings in the Court's equality analysis, arguing that the process employed by the Court ignored critical aspects of equality theory. The process …
The Earned Income Tax Credit: Thou Goest Wither? A Critique Of Existing Proposals To Reform The Earned Income Tax Credit, Regina T. Jefferson
The Earned Income Tax Credit: Thou Goest Wither? A Critique Of Existing Proposals To Reform The Earned Income Tax Credit, Regina T. Jefferson
Scholarly Articles
This article places issues concerning reformation of the EITC in perspective and critiques existing proposals to change the program. This article focuses on proposals advanced by Professors Yin and Forman which range from improving the administration of the existing EITC to completely restructuring the entire program.
Specifically, this article analyzes and responds to their proposals to (1) redesign the Earned Income Tax Credit by creating a system that uses a rebate of employee Social Security payroll taxes in conjunction with a family allowance benefit, and (2) institute an employer credit program as a substitute for the Earned Income Tax Credit. …
Discharging Tax Liability In Bankruptcy, Veryl Victoria Miles
Discharging Tax Liability In Bankruptcy, Veryl Victoria Miles
Scholarly Articles
This article will examine what the answer depends on: The kinds of tax liabilities individual debtors are typically burdened with upon entering the bankruptcy process and the extent to which these prepetition debts are dischargeable or nondischargeable in bankruptcy. The kinds of tax claims discussed in this article are unsecured tax claims. Accordingly, if a tax claim is secured by a lien against the debtor's property the following discussion would not be relevant.
The Virtual Reality Of Eliminating Tax Deferral, Christopher H. Hanna
The Virtual Reality Of Eliminating Tax Deferral, Christopher H. Hanna
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
No abstract provided.
An Open Letter To Congressman Gingrich, Bruce Ackerman, Akhil Amar, Jack Balkin, Susan Low Bloch, Philip Chase Bobbitt, Richard Fallon, Paul Kahn, Philip Kurland, Douglas Laycock, Sanford Levinson, Frank Michelman, Michael Perry, Robert Post, Jed Rubenfeld, David Strauss, Cass Sunstein, Harry Wellington
An Open Letter To Congressman Gingrich, Bruce Ackerman, Akhil Amar, Jack Balkin, Susan Low Bloch, Philip Chase Bobbitt, Richard Fallon, Paul Kahn, Philip Kurland, Douglas Laycock, Sanford Levinson, Frank Michelman, Michael Perry, Robert Post, Jed Rubenfeld, David Strauss, Cass Sunstein, Harry Wellington
Faculty Scholarship
We urge you to reconsider your proposal to amend the House Rules to require a three-fifths vote for enactment of laws that increase income taxes. This proposal violates the explicit intentions of the Framers. It is inconsistent with the Constitution's language and structure. It departs sharply from traditional congressional practice. It may generate constitutional litigation that will encourage Supreme Court intervention in an area best left to responsible congressional decision.
Unless the proposal is withdrawn now, it will serve as an unfortunate precedent for the proliferation of supermajority rules on a host of different subjects in the future. Over time, …
Paint-By-Numbers Tax Lawmaking, Michael J. Graetz
Paint-By-Numbers Tax Lawmaking, Michael J. Graetz
Faculty Scholarship
Although their meaning and contours have long been controversial, the general criteria for evaluating changes in tax law enjoy both stability and consensus. At least since Adam Smith, there has been virtually universal agreement that the nation's tax law should be fair, economically efficient, and simple to comply with and to administer. Tax law changes should be designed to make the law more equitable, easier to comply with, more conducive to economic growth, and less likely to interfere with private economic decisionmaking.
Precisely what these criteria imply for policymaking is controversial, however. Fairness is often said to require that people …
Is Compromise Of A Tax Liability Itself Taxable? A Problem Of Circularity In The Logic Of Taxation., Richard C.E. Beck
Is Compromise Of A Tax Liability Itself Taxable? A Problem Of Circularity In The Logic Of Taxation., Richard C.E. Beck
Articles & Chapters
No abstract provided.