In earlier work, I found that more than 40% of Treasury regulations studied are susceptible to legal challenge for their failure to satisfy Administrative Procedure Act rulemaking requirements. Given this finding, why is it that taxpayers rarely raise such claims? The article explores this question and focuses particularly on statutory and doctrinal limitations on pre-enforcement judicial review in the tax context and their role in further limiting post-enforcement challenges. Although the article proposes ways in which the courts could relax the limitations on pre-enforcement judicial review in tax cases, the article also acknowledges that the courts are unlikely to change course and that congressional action may be necessary
This Essay responds to Professor Steve Johnson’s Article for the 2014 Duke Law Journal Administrativ...
This paper explores the possibility of subjecting such an administrative ruling to judicial review i...
To combat abusive tax shelters, the Department of the Treasury promulgated a general anti-abuse regu...
In earlier work, I found that more than 40% of Treasury regulations studied are susceptible to legal...
The Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service have a strange relationship with Administra...
This essay is Professor Pierce’s contribution to the annual Duke Law Journal symposium on administra...
Courts have opened tax guidance to procedural attack. Consequently, taxpayers who are found to owe t...
The Administrative Procedures Act prescribes procedural requirements that govern the rulemaking acti...
The validity of tax regulations has been challenged by taxpayers almost as long as there have been t...
How administrative law applies to tax rulemaking is an open and contested question. The resolution o...
The notice and comment process is often touted as a mechanism for establishing political accountabil...
In the early 1980\u27s, Congress faced the mounting problems of tax shelters and other forms of tax ...
On September 29, 2009, Treasury issued regulations retroactively extending the six-year limitations ...
In its 2011 decision in Mayo Foundation for Education and Research v. United States,\u27 the Supreme...
The tax administration is at risk of an overcorrection with respect to its rulemaking process. Tax p...
This Essay responds to Professor Steve Johnson’s Article for the 2014 Duke Law Journal Administrativ...
This paper explores the possibility of subjecting such an administrative ruling to judicial review i...
To combat abusive tax shelters, the Department of the Treasury promulgated a general anti-abuse regu...
In earlier work, I found that more than 40% of Treasury regulations studied are susceptible to legal...
The Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service have a strange relationship with Administra...
This essay is Professor Pierce’s contribution to the annual Duke Law Journal symposium on administra...
Courts have opened tax guidance to procedural attack. Consequently, taxpayers who are found to owe t...
The Administrative Procedures Act prescribes procedural requirements that govern the rulemaking acti...
The validity of tax regulations has been challenged by taxpayers almost as long as there have been t...
How administrative law applies to tax rulemaking is an open and contested question. The resolution o...
The notice and comment process is often touted as a mechanism for establishing political accountabil...
In the early 1980\u27s, Congress faced the mounting problems of tax shelters and other forms of tax ...
On September 29, 2009, Treasury issued regulations retroactively extending the six-year limitations ...
In its 2011 decision in Mayo Foundation for Education and Research v. United States,\u27 the Supreme...
The tax administration is at risk of an overcorrection with respect to its rulemaking process. Tax p...
This Essay responds to Professor Steve Johnson’s Article for the 2014 Duke Law Journal Administrativ...
This paper explores the possibility of subjecting such an administrative ruling to judicial review i...
To combat abusive tax shelters, the Department of the Treasury promulgated a general anti-abuse regu...