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Full-Text Articles in Law

Tax Treatment Of Employment-Related Personal Injury Awards: The Need For Limits, J. Burke, Michael Friel Dec 2014

Tax Treatment Of Employment-Related Personal Injury Awards: The Need For Limits, J. Burke, Michael Friel

Michael Friel

This article examines Section 104(a)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code and the litigation that has centered on the applicability of this Section to payments in settlement or other resolution of employment-related disputes arising out of an employment relationship and accompanied by charges of tortious conduct leveled at one or more of the parties. Part II reviews the origin of amounts received as damages on account of non-physical injuries. Part III analyzes the application of Section 104(a)(2) focusing on how courts have often blurred the distinction between what non-physical injuries are encompassed by the term “personal injury,” and whether a taxpayer …


Governmental Immunity And Taxation In Florida, David Hudson Nov 2014

Governmental Immunity And Taxation In Florida, David Hudson

David Hudson

In Florida, the ad valorem property tax is the single most important source of revenue for local governments. Considerable revenue is lost to local governments when property that should be taxed is not taxed because of mistaken application of the governmental immunity doctrine. Most governmentally owned property is used by the governmental entity for governmental purposes and remains nontaxable. However, when governmentally owned property is used by a nongovernmental person for a nonexempt use, the property no longer enjoys governmental immunity and is taxable. After all, such property is being used for private, profit-seeking purposes in competition with nongovernmentally owned …


The Non-Sense Tax: A Reply To New Corporate Income Tax Advocacy, Yariv Brauner Nov 2014

The Non-Sense Tax: A Reply To New Corporate Income Tax Advocacy, Yariv Brauner

Yariv Brauner

This Article challenges recent attempts by influential scholars to rationalize the existence of the corporate income tax. The corporate income tax has long been considered unjustifiable on traditional tax policy grounds. The new justifications recognize this, yet argue that the tax is still desirable because it promotes other goals, such as improvement of corporate governance and restraint of undesirable corporate management power accumulation. This Article demonstrates that the existence and magnitude of these alleged benefits of the corporate income tax are doubtful. Yet, the Article argues, even if taken as correct, the recent rationalization of the corporate income tax cannot …


An International Tax Regime In Crystallization, Yariv Brauner Nov 2014

An International Tax Regime In Crystallization, Yariv Brauner

Yariv Brauner

The grand illusion of a single, worldwide, tax system that will eliminate all international inefficiencies, and assist all the nations of the world to maximize their relative advantages, is, as commonly accepted, utopian. The tax, academic and professional, writing in the field of international taxation, and cross-border interaction, between tax systems and jurisdictions has grown, exponentially, in the last decade, but no significant work has been done to prove, or disprove, the naivety of this hypothesis. Some scholars and tax executives, in certain international organizations, have discussed ideas along this line, but no single organization has, seriously, attempted to promote …


Brain Drain Taxation As Development Policy, Yariv Brauner Nov 2014

Brain Drain Taxation As Development Policy, Yariv Brauner

Yariv Brauner

This article examines the potential use of taxation to generate development funds in connection with the immigration of skilled immigrants from developing into developed countries, known as the "brain drain," if designed according to the principles of the new development agenda. It explains that a tax on the brain drain that has been discussed for several decades, yet considered impossible to administer, may be administratively and legally implementable within the framework of the current international tax regime. It argues that designing such a tax according to the principles of the new development agenda, tying together the collection and use of …


The Discursive Failure In Comparative Tax Law, Omri Marian Nov 2014

The Discursive Failure In Comparative Tax Law, Omri Marian

Omri Y Marian

Tax comparatists tend to bemoan the grim status of their chosen field. Complaints are aimed both at the scarcity of decent comparative legal tax scholarship, and at the lack of a theoretical foundation for the study of comparative tax law. The purpose of this Article is to portray a more sanguine, yet critical, view of this field. Sanguine, since a sympathetic reading of contemporary comparative tax scholarship demonstrates that there is more than enough such scholarship to generate a lively debate on comparative tax works and their methodologies. Critical, since all of these works fail to produce even the faintest …