The income tax status of damage awards in personal injury actions assumes greater importance as litigation in this area increases and the monetary value of judgments and settlements escalates. If the United States experience has any predictive value for Canadian trends, the statistics are ominous indeed. During the last decade alone, medical malpractice cases, which represent but one segment of personal injury actions, have witnessed an increase in the average quantum of damages from $62,151 to $350,000, while the total payout in New York State went from $1.4 million to $17 million.1 If, as Street had commented, . . . the importance of a topic is to be judged by the number of writs issued, then actions for personal injuries are as importan...
In Roemer v. Commissioner, the Ninth Circuit turned to California law to locate the meaning of pers...
The author examines the admissibility of evidence showing the effect of the exemption from federal i...
The real issue in personal injury cases is often damages. Our concepts and law relating to negligenc...
The income tax status of damage awards in personal injury actions assumes greater importance as liti...
The exclusion of personal injury damage awards from gross income is inconsistent with established pr...
This paper will examine the history of damage award taxation beginning with the earliest income tax ...
The Internal Revenue Code (Code) sweeps into gross income all income from whatever source derived, ...
Since the adoption in 1919 of the Revenue Act of 1918, damages received on account of personal injur...
The Internal Revenue Code enacted in 1954 has continued the 1939 Code provision of law that damages ...
This Note compares recent circuit cases reaching different opinions on whether punitive damages rece...
The author explains that in recent court opinions and commentaries concerning whether punitive damag...
This article examines Section 104(a)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code and the litigation that has cen...
The scope of the personal injury exclusion under Internal Revenue Code § 104(a)(2) has been signific...
This Recent Development advocates that courts adopt the Ninth Circuit\u27s Roemer approach to determ...
Part I of this article traces the evolution in the tax treatment of litigation damages from 1918 thr...
In Roemer v. Commissioner, the Ninth Circuit turned to California law to locate the meaning of pers...
The author examines the admissibility of evidence showing the effect of the exemption from federal i...
The real issue in personal injury cases is often damages. Our concepts and law relating to negligenc...
The income tax status of damage awards in personal injury actions assumes greater importance as liti...
The exclusion of personal injury damage awards from gross income is inconsistent with established pr...
This paper will examine the history of damage award taxation beginning with the earliest income tax ...
The Internal Revenue Code (Code) sweeps into gross income all income from whatever source derived, ...
Since the adoption in 1919 of the Revenue Act of 1918, damages received on account of personal injur...
The Internal Revenue Code enacted in 1954 has continued the 1939 Code provision of law that damages ...
This Note compares recent circuit cases reaching different opinions on whether punitive damages rece...
The author explains that in recent court opinions and commentaries concerning whether punitive damag...
This article examines Section 104(a)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code and the litigation that has cen...
The scope of the personal injury exclusion under Internal Revenue Code § 104(a)(2) has been signific...
This Recent Development advocates that courts adopt the Ninth Circuit\u27s Roemer approach to determ...
Part I of this article traces the evolution in the tax treatment of litigation damages from 1918 thr...
In Roemer v. Commissioner, the Ninth Circuit turned to California law to locate the meaning of pers...
The author examines the admissibility of evidence showing the effect of the exemption from federal i...
The real issue in personal injury cases is often damages. Our concepts and law relating to negligenc...