The body of empirical legal research about how judges decide cases continues to expand, adding to the political science literature on the topic. Specifically, much has been written about how judges should interpret the Internal Revenue Code. However, the empirical research has failed to infuse the literature with observations about how judges presently interpret the Code. Indeed, lawyers have provided little empirical work addressing statutory interpretation. Yet different judges theoretically could justify the same result in a particular case either summarily, through reliance on precedent, or by deferral to the Internal Revenue Service. In fact, they actually do justify results for similar cases in different fashions. What leads judges do...
From the symposium Business Purpose, Economic Substance, and Corporate Tax Shelters
This Article reports the results of a survey of a diverse group of forty-two federal appellate judge...
We exploit a new data set of judicial rulings on motions in order to investigate the relationship be...
Judicial decision-making is an important part of the law-making process. The positive research of ju...
Why do judges interpret statutes the way they do? Positivist analyses aimed at answering this questi...
The more interesting features of the non-normative literature on statutory interpretation lie not in...
Debates about statutory interpretation-and especially about the role of the canons of construction a...
Despite the vast number of systematic empirical studies of judicial behavior, we know surprisingly l...
There has been recent discussion of abandoning the literal meaning rule and most of the other rules ...
In the realm of American jurisprudence, little draws more excitement or controversy than investigati...
This article examines the Tax Court and the Internal Revenue Service. Part I discusses the structura...
Does the constitutional requirement that the compensation of federal judges not be diminished dur...
What statutory methods does an appellate court use in reviewing decisions of an administrative agenc...
This Article considers whether differences in methods of judicial selection should influence how jud...
Judges hold a prestigious place in our judicial system, and they earn double the income of the avera...
From the symposium Business Purpose, Economic Substance, and Corporate Tax Shelters
This Article reports the results of a survey of a diverse group of forty-two federal appellate judge...
We exploit a new data set of judicial rulings on motions in order to investigate the relationship be...
Judicial decision-making is an important part of the law-making process. The positive research of ju...
Why do judges interpret statutes the way they do? Positivist analyses aimed at answering this questi...
The more interesting features of the non-normative literature on statutory interpretation lie not in...
Debates about statutory interpretation-and especially about the role of the canons of construction a...
Despite the vast number of systematic empirical studies of judicial behavior, we know surprisingly l...
There has been recent discussion of abandoning the literal meaning rule and most of the other rules ...
In the realm of American jurisprudence, little draws more excitement or controversy than investigati...
This article examines the Tax Court and the Internal Revenue Service. Part I discusses the structura...
Does the constitutional requirement that the compensation of federal judges not be diminished dur...
What statutory methods does an appellate court use in reviewing decisions of an administrative agenc...
This Article considers whether differences in methods of judicial selection should influence how jud...
Judges hold a prestigious place in our judicial system, and they earn double the income of the avera...
From the symposium Business Purpose, Economic Substance, and Corporate Tax Shelters
This Article reports the results of a survey of a diverse group of forty-two federal appellate judge...
We exploit a new data set of judicial rulings on motions in order to investigate the relationship be...