In 1959, Mrs. Ethel West Cotnam of Alabama won a groundbreaking lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service when the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals allowed her to subtract her legal fees, paid to her lawyer on a contingency basis, from her gross income. Mrs. Cotnam sued the estate of her former employer when the administrator refused to honor the decedent\u27s promise to pay her one-fifth of his estate if she would care for him for the rest of his life. Upon the successful disposition of this suit, the Supreme Court of Alabama awarded Mrs. Cotnam $120,000. Of that amount, $50,365.83 went to her attorney, and the Internal Revenue Service determined she owed $36,985.02 in taxes. The Tax Court upheld this decision. Mrs. Cotnam appealed, claim...
Prior to his retirement as a general agent of a life insurance company, the petitioner entered into ...
Attorney and Client - Contracts Restricting Settlement by Client - A contingent fee agreement made b...
Decedent\u27s father, a resident of Massachusetts, by his last will created a trust of the residue o...
This past term\u27s Supreme Court decision in Commissioner v. Banks and Commissioner v. Banaitis dis...
The tax treatment of contingent attorney\u27s fee arrangements has been the subject of much recent d...
Plaintiff, a practicing attorney, undertook on a contingent fee basis to represent a husband and wif...
In early 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court answered a question that had been plaguing courts for years: w...
Lawsuits involving contingent legal fees are reasonably common. This paper focuses on the appropriat...
This Note will sketch the background of the contingent fee in North Carolina and then examine contin...
The taxpayer, a lawyer, had resided in Jackson, Mississippi for approximately thirty-five years, and...
A series of cases by the Tax Court and Courts of Appeal have focused attention on a highly important...
In Kochansky v. Commissioner, the Ninth Circuit held that an attorney was fully taxable on a conting...
If a contract has been performed on one side so that all that remains is an obligation to pay and a ...
This action was brought by the United States Government to compel the application of rental sums, du...
By “tax collection controversies,” I mean cases in which it has been established that the taxpayer o...
Prior to his retirement as a general agent of a life insurance company, the petitioner entered into ...
Attorney and Client - Contracts Restricting Settlement by Client - A contingent fee agreement made b...
Decedent\u27s father, a resident of Massachusetts, by his last will created a trust of the residue o...
This past term\u27s Supreme Court decision in Commissioner v. Banks and Commissioner v. Banaitis dis...
The tax treatment of contingent attorney\u27s fee arrangements has been the subject of much recent d...
Plaintiff, a practicing attorney, undertook on a contingent fee basis to represent a husband and wif...
In early 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court answered a question that had been plaguing courts for years: w...
Lawsuits involving contingent legal fees are reasonably common. This paper focuses on the appropriat...
This Note will sketch the background of the contingent fee in North Carolina and then examine contin...
The taxpayer, a lawyer, had resided in Jackson, Mississippi for approximately thirty-five years, and...
A series of cases by the Tax Court and Courts of Appeal have focused attention on a highly important...
In Kochansky v. Commissioner, the Ninth Circuit held that an attorney was fully taxable on a conting...
If a contract has been performed on one side so that all that remains is an obligation to pay and a ...
This action was brought by the United States Government to compel the application of rental sums, du...
By “tax collection controversies,” I mean cases in which it has been established that the taxpayer o...
Prior to his retirement as a general agent of a life insurance company, the petitioner entered into ...
Attorney and Client - Contracts Restricting Settlement by Client - A contingent fee agreement made b...
Decedent\u27s father, a resident of Massachusetts, by his last will created a trust of the residue o...