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2000

Tax Law

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Articles 1 - 30 of 94

Full-Text Articles in Law

Deferral: Consider Ending It Instead Of Expanding It, J. Clifton Fleming Jr. Dec 2000

Deferral: Consider Ending It Instead Of Expanding It, J. Clifton Fleming Jr.

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Taxation Of Distributions: Distributions From Partnerships And Limited Liability Companies, David W. Larue Dec 2000

Taxation Of Distributions: Distributions From Partnerships And Limited Liability Companies, David W. Larue

William & Mary Annual Tax Conference

No abstract provided.


"Tax Library" Resources For The Small To Medium Sized Cpa Or Law Firm - Roundtable Discussion, Michael L. Layman, Timothy H. Guare, J. Patrick Budd, Gregory W. Geisert Dec 2000

"Tax Library" Resources For The Small To Medium Sized Cpa Or Law Firm - Roundtable Discussion, Michael L. Layman, Timothy H. Guare, J. Patrick Budd, Gregory W. Geisert

William & Mary Annual Tax Conference

No abstract provided.


State Challenges To Related Party Transactions, D. French Slaughter Iii Dec 2000

State Challenges To Related Party Transactions, D. French Slaughter Iii

William & Mary Annual Tax Conference

No abstract provided.


Valuations In The Business Setting, Harold G. Martin Jr. Dec 2000

Valuations In The Business Setting, Harold G. Martin Jr.

William & Mary Annual Tax Conference

No abstract provided.


Who Spilled Coke On My Laptop?, D. French Slaughter Iii Dec 2000

Who Spilled Coke On My Laptop?, D. French Slaughter Iii

William & Mary Annual Tax Conference

No abstract provided.


Enterprise Risk Management: Realizing Profit From Risk, Raymond M. Slabaugh Dec 2000

Enterprise Risk Management: Realizing Profit From Risk, Raymond M. Slabaugh

William & Mary Annual Tax Conference

No abstract provided.


Valuations In The Business Setting: International Glossary Of Business Valuation Terms Dec 2000

Valuations In The Business Setting: International Glossary Of Business Valuation Terms

William & Mary Annual Tax Conference

No abstract provided.


Valuations In The Business Setting: Exhibits Dec 2000

Valuations In The Business Setting: Exhibits

William & Mary Annual Tax Conference

No abstract provided.


The Evoloving Nature Of Tax Practice, Stefan F. Tucker Dec 2000

The Evoloving Nature Of Tax Practice, Stefan F. Tucker

William & Mary Annual Tax Conference

No abstract provided.


The Zen Of Corporate Capital Structure Neutrality, Herwig J. Schlunk Nov 2000

The Zen Of Corporate Capital Structure Neutrality, Herwig J. Schlunk

Michigan Law Review

It is well understood that corporate capital structure affects tax collections. Most basically, corporate interest expense is deductible. With each interest accrual, the corporate tax base shrinks. Thus, there is a broad range of circumstances in which corporate managers are encouraged by the Internal Revenue Code (the "Code") to load their corporate capital structures with debt. But there is little support for the proposition that Conpress desires corporations to adopt such debt-laden capital structures. Indeed, much tax legislation suggests congressional displeasure with the achievable degree of corporate self- integration. On the other hand, corporate equity has its charms: shareholders are …


The Death Of The Income Tax (Or, The Rise Of America’S Universal Wage Tax), Edward J. Mccaffery Oct 2000

The Death Of The Income Tax (Or, The Rise Of America’S Universal Wage Tax), Edward J. Mccaffery

Indiana Law Journal

The killing of the income tax has not been open and notorious: such is not the style of contemporary politics. As with other markers of progressive social policy—the promises of universal health care, Obamacare, come to mind6—the income tax is dying a death by stealth, albeit stealth played out in plain view. The plot lines of the tragedy are apparent. The individual “income” tax has been split in two. One tax, for the masses, is a simple, increasingly formless wage tax. This wage/income tax adds higher brackets onto the payroll tax, the model toward which the wage/income tax aims, to …


After Drye: The Likely Attachment Of The Federal Tax Lien To Tenancy-By-The- Entireties Interests, Steve R. Johnson Oct 2000

After Drye: The Likely Attachment Of The Federal Tax Lien To Tenancy-By-The- Entireties Interests, Steve R. Johnson

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


After Drye: The Likely Attachment Of The Federal Tax Lien To Tenancy-By-The-Entireties, Steve R. Johnson Oct 2000

After Drye: The Likely Attachment Of The Federal Tax Lien To Tenancy-By-The-Entireties, Steve R. Johnson

Scholarly Publications

On December 7, 1999, the United States Supreme Court unanimously decided Drye v. United States, a case likely to be a landmark in federal tax lien law. Drye clarified what had been muddied by previous Supreme Court and lower court decisions: the proper relation between state law and federal law in tax lien attachment cases. That clarification will permit-indeed, compel-greater analytical precision as future courts address tax lien cases. This Article discusses one such line of cases.

It has long been the rule that the federal tax lien does not attach to tenancy-by-the entireties interests when (1) only one of …


Better America Bonds: Better Is In The Eye Of The Beholder, Robert A. Fisher Oct 2000

Better America Bonds: Better Is In The Eye Of The Beholder, Robert A. Fisher

William & Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review

No abstract provided.


Only Congress Can Create Deductions, Deborah A. Geier Oct 2000

Only Congress Can Create Deductions, Deborah A. Geier

Law Faculty Articles and Essays

A series of recent and controversial cases has raised the issue of how plaintiffs must treat attorneys' fees and costs that are paid out of otherwise includable settlement or litigation awards. Everyone seems to agree that under tax policy and theory plaintiffs should not be saddled with this burden. Many have expressed the desire that Congress amend the Code to correct the problem. The more difficult question, which the author addresses, is whether courts can act to protect these plaintiffs in the absence of Congressional action.


Breaking The Glass Slipper: Reflections On The Self-Employment Tax, Patricia E. Dilley Oct 2000

Breaking The Glass Slipper: Reflections On The Self-Employment Tax, Patricia E. Dilley

UF Law Faculty Publications

Lawmakers and their staffs, in drafting tax legislation, often resemble Prince Charming looking for Cinderella with that glass slipper in hand -- rather than start from scratch and draft a completely new tax provision. It is frequently easier, faster, and more reassuring to taxpayers and tax practitioners to use an existing statute or approach and simply amend it slightly to make it fit the need of the new provision. However, problems can arise from this approach.

In the original Grimm Brothers' version of the Cinderella story, for example, the wicked stepsisters were each so anxious to be the chosen one …


Transcript From The Symposium: 'Globalization And The Taxation Of Foreign Investment', Hugh Ault Sep 2000

Transcript From The Symposium: 'Globalization And The Taxation Of Foreign Investment', Hugh Ault

Hugh J. Ault

No abstract provided.


Some Meandering Thoughts On Plaintiffs And Their Attorneys' Fees And Costs, Deborah A. Geier Jul 2000

Some Meandering Thoughts On Plaintiffs And Their Attorneys' Fees And Costs, Deborah A. Geier

Law Faculty Articles and Essays

This article examines statutory interpretation in general and the common-law doctrines at issue in particular (the assignment-of-income doctrine as well as the doctrine first identified in the seminal case of Old Colony Trust). While the author believes that these plaintiffs ought--as a matter of policy and income tax theory--to escape taxation on the amounts paid to their attorneys, she belives that the issue is truly a " deduction" issue, not a "gross income" issue. The article concludes, however, that the ill-fitting application of "gross income" doctrine in this context leads to indefensible distinctions that sound superficially plausible under the rubric …


A Residual Damages Right Against The Irs: A Cure Worse Than The Disease, Steve R. Johnson Jul 2000

A Residual Damages Right Against The Irs: A Cure Worse Than The Disease, Steve R. Johnson

Scholarly Publications

Tax scholarship commonly has emphasized the substantive rules of tax liability, according less than due attention to tax procedure. Recently, however, this imbalance has been partly redressed as a result of the taxpayer rights movement. The major legislative products of the movement have been the Taxpayer Bill of Rights (TBORl) in 1988, the Taxpayer Bill of Rights 2 (TBOR2) in 1996,and the Taxpayer Bill of Rights (TBOR3) in 1998. Congress currently is considering a fourth installment in the series. These measures – especially TBOR3 – have provoked considerable useful commentary from both practitioners and academics.

Nonetheless, much work remains to …


No Hope (Credits) For Louisiana Coffers, Glenn E. Coven, Michael B. Lang Jul 2000

No Hope (Credits) For Louisiana Coffers, Glenn E. Coven, Michael B. Lang

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Tax Liens, Tax Sales, And Due Process, Frank S. Alexander Jul 2000

Tax Liens, Tax Sales, And Due Process, Frank S. Alexander

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Deconstructing The Debate Over State Taxation Of Electronic Commerce, Walter Hellerstein Jul 2000

Deconstructing The Debate Over State Taxation Of Electronic Commerce, Walter Hellerstein

Scholarly Works

Elsewhere on these pages, the distinguished economist Charles McLure begins his contribution to the debate over taxation of electronic commerce by observing that “America is focusing on the wrong issues in debating the taxation of electronic commerce ....” He proceeds to provide a fundamental critique of the states' existing sales tax regimes and he lays out a roadmap for radical reform of the system that would, in the course of curing the basic defects in the existing state sales tax structure, incidentally resolve many of the issues that currently dominate the debate over taxing electronic commerce. I do not disagree …


Policy Issues Relating To The U.S. Taxation Of Foreign Persons Engaged In Business In The United States Through Agents: Some Proposals For Reform, Richard Crawford Pugh May 2000

Policy Issues Relating To The U.S. Taxation Of Foreign Persons Engaged In Business In The United States Through Agents: Some Proposals For Reform, Richard Crawford Pugh

San Diego International Law Journal

This Article will begin by discussing the circumstances under which a foreign person will be deemed to be engaged in a trade or business in the United States and by examining a proposal that would introduce a great level of certainty for tax planners and the IRS. The principal focus of the Article, however, will be on the circumstances under which the United States should impose U.S. income tax on the income of a foreign person from a business conducted, not directly in the United States, but through an agent acting on behalf of the foreign person. The treatment of …


A Framework On Consumption Taxes And Their Impact On International Trade, Jane L. Seigendall May 2000

A Framework On Consumption Taxes And Their Impact On International Trade, Jane L. Seigendall

Penn State International Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Tyranny Of Money, Edward J. Mccaffery May 2000

The Tyranny Of Money, Edward J. Mccaffery

Michigan Law Review

The more things change, the more they stay the same. A human activity almost as venerable as the accumulation and opulent display of vast riches is the condemnation of the accumulation and opulent display of vast riches. People have been busily engaged at each for several millennia now. Both continue in full flower as America races into the twenty-first century with its liberal capitalist democracy ascendant around the world, its rich richer than ever, its less-rich curiously lagging behind. Yet figuring out what, exactly, is wrong with the excessive accumulation and opulent display of wealth, on the one hand, and …


Some Thoughts On The Incidence Of Foreign Taxes, Deborah A. Geier Apr 2000

Some Thoughts On The Incidence Of Foreign Taxes, Deborah A. Geier

Law Faculty Articles and Essays

This 2000 article was prompted by the fact pattern and Tax Court decision in Compaq Computer v. Commissioner, 113 T.C. 363 (1999). While other commentary has focused on the application of the "economic substance" doctrine in this case, this article focuses instead on the ability to take foreign tax credits based not on economic incidence but on legal incidence and how this allows for crediting of foreign taxes economically borne by other actors in the marketplace.


A Wrong Step In The Right Direction: The National Taxpayer Advocate And The 1998 Irs Restructuring And Reform Act, Heather B. Conoboy Apr 2000

A Wrong Step In The Right Direction: The National Taxpayer Advocate And The 1998 Irs Restructuring And Reform Act, Heather B. Conoboy

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Choice Of Small Business Tax Entity, John W. Lee Apr 2000

Choice Of Small Business Tax Entity, John W. Lee

Faculty Publications

This article summarizes parts of Lee’s forthcoming article “A Populist Political Perspective of the Business Tax Entities Universe: Hey the Stars Might Lie But the Numbers Never Do,” 78 Texas L. Rev. 885 (2000). Conventional wisdom, says Lee, holds that the LLC, due to its limited liability and hassle-free single level of taxation, will supplant C and S corporations as the choice of entity for new businesses. In fact, in most jurisdictions corporate formations outnumber LLC formations 2:1 or more, and IRS Statistics of Income (SOI) projects that the S corporation will be the fastest growing tax entity for 2000 …


The Cash Balance Controversy, Edward A. Zelinsky Apr 2000

The Cash Balance Controversy, Edward A. Zelinsky

Articles

No abstract provided.