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Full-Text Articles in Law
Crestwood Lumber Company V. Citizens Savings & Loan Association: The Ursury Law And Liquidated Damages In The Sale Of Goods Transactions, Joseph M. Loomis
Crestwood Lumber Company V. Citizens Savings & Loan Association: The Ursury Law And Liquidated Damages In The Sale Of Goods Transactions, Joseph M. Loomis
Golden Gate University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Gain From The Sale Of An Income Interest In A Trust, Douglas A. Kahn
Gain From The Sale Of An Income Interest In A Trust, Douglas A. Kahn
Articles
A tax doctrine that is related to the anticipatory assignment of income doctrine, but yet different from that doctrine is variously referred to as the "substitute for ordinary income doctrine" or the "anticipation of income doctrine." This latter doctrine arises on the sale of an item. The test often utilized to determine whether that latter doctrine applies is whether the sale of an item substantively represents the receipt of a substitute for future income - i.e., are the proceeds of the sale given "in lieu of" ordinary income that the seller would have otherwise received at a later date. The …
Nothing Natural About It: Still Searching For A Solution To The Chapter 11 Stamp Tax Exemption, Lindsay K. Taft
Nothing Natural About It: Still Searching For A Solution To The Chapter 11 Stamp Tax Exemption, Lindsay K. Taft
Seattle University Law Review
In June of 2008, in Florida Department of Revenue v. Piccadilly Cafeterias, Inc., the Supreme Court settled a circuit split and issued a bright line rule stating that asset transfers made prior to the confirmation of a Chapter 11 plan of reorganization no longer benefit from certain tax exemptions. As a result, the cost of selling assets in a bankruptcy case outside of a plan will increase. The provision at issue in the case, which exempts asset transfers and sales from certain state taxes, contains language ambiguous enough that four federal circuit courts have contemplated which types of asset …