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Partnership Tax Allocations: The Basics, Walter D. Schwidetzky
Partnership Tax Allocations: The Basics, Walter D. Schwidetzky
All Faculty Scholarship
This article endeavors to help practitioners who are not partnership tax allocation experts identify when they should consult with those with that expertise. The partnership-allocation Treasury Regulations have been called "a creation of prodigious complexity ... essentially impenetrable to all but those with the time, talent, and determination to become thoroughly prepared experts on the subject." This article is written for those, to date at least, without that time and determination. At the same time, the article provides an introduction to the partnership tax allocation rules for those contemplating making the requisite investment of time and determination.
The term "partnership," …
Don’T Dabble In Delaware, Daniel S. Kleinberger
Don’T Dabble In Delaware, Daniel S. Kleinberger
Faculty Scholarship
When a litigator argues for a particular choice of law, the litigator seeks retrospectively the law most favorable to a particular claim or claims. When a business lawyer chooses a state of formation for a business entity, the lawyer seeks prospectively the governing law whose characteristics most favor the client’s interests.
Although in particular situations one characteristic may dominate, in general the business lawyer should look for governing law that is clear, comprehensive, coherent, accessible, and stable (or at least predictable). With these five metrics in mind, this column explains why lawyers forming limited liability companies should not dabble in …
Delineating The Implied Covenant And Providing For “Good Faith”, Daniel S. Kleinberger
Delineating The Implied Covenant And Providing For “Good Faith”, Daniel S. Kleinberger
Faculty Scholarship
This column considers whether an operating or partnership agreement can delineate the implied contractual obligation, comparing ULLCA and the Delaware Act, and then warns of the dangers of carelessly imposing by contract an express requirement of "good faith."