The purpose of this article is to examine the application of unauthorized practice of law restrictions to certified public accountants engaged in income tax practice. Prior to my admission to the bar, I had been a practicing certified public accountant and, like many of my colleagues, did not believe that the scope of my profession\u27s services in tax matters was subject to serious dispute. However, exposure to attorneys, particularly those not in tax practice, has led me to conclude that the bar has not come to any universally agreed upon conclusions about the role that certified public accountants may properly play in tax matters. Recent events have supported my conclusion
Judicial review of the decision of the Australian Taxation Office (‘ATO’) to lift the Accountant’s C...
This paper has two main aims: first, to show how and why, from a functionalist perspective, income t...
This article expands on the meaning of reasonable time and place and examines numerous other rules g...
The accepted law in the United States is that laymen may not engage in the practice of law. However,...
What constitutes the illegal or unauthorized practice of law by accountants in their tax practice? T...
In Part I, this Article briefly examines the debate over the proper role of the tax professional in ...
The members of Lowell Bar Association brought a suit in equity to restrain respondents, who are not ...
The paper presents an historical summary of the major issues and events which led to the development...
Over the last two decades, the United States Supreme Court has ruled on a number of questions with a...
The paper traces the development of the accounting profession\u27s own standards relating to tax pra...
This article considers existing Internal Revenue Code of 1954 provisions which restrict or regulate ...
Tackling tax avoidance has become a priority for tax authorities. The accounting profession has been...
The principal point of friction between the two professions has been in the phase of federal income ...
The Treasury Department and the IRS have established certain standards for those who are tax practit...
Nestled within the many criminal sanctions of the Internal Revenue Code is a little known, less unde...
Judicial review of the decision of the Australian Taxation Office (‘ATO’) to lift the Accountant’s C...
This paper has two main aims: first, to show how and why, from a functionalist perspective, income t...
This article expands on the meaning of reasonable time and place and examines numerous other rules g...
The accepted law in the United States is that laymen may not engage in the practice of law. However,...
What constitutes the illegal or unauthorized practice of law by accountants in their tax practice? T...
In Part I, this Article briefly examines the debate over the proper role of the tax professional in ...
The members of Lowell Bar Association brought a suit in equity to restrain respondents, who are not ...
The paper presents an historical summary of the major issues and events which led to the development...
Over the last two decades, the United States Supreme Court has ruled on a number of questions with a...
The paper traces the development of the accounting profession\u27s own standards relating to tax pra...
This article considers existing Internal Revenue Code of 1954 provisions which restrict or regulate ...
Tackling tax avoidance has become a priority for tax authorities. The accounting profession has been...
The principal point of friction between the two professions has been in the phase of federal income ...
The Treasury Department and the IRS have established certain standards for those who are tax practit...
Nestled within the many criminal sanctions of the Internal Revenue Code is a little known, less unde...
Judicial review of the decision of the Australian Taxation Office (‘ATO’) to lift the Accountant’s C...
This paper has two main aims: first, to show how and why, from a functionalist perspective, income t...
This article expands on the meaning of reasonable time and place and examines numerous other rules g...