This Recent Development advocates that courts adopt the Ninth Circuit\u27s Roemer approach to determine the nature of dam-ages for injury to reputation by focusing on the attack rather than the effects of the injury, but suggests that courts replace the Ninth Circuit\u27s reliance on state law with a uniform standard. Part II of this Recent Development traces the evolution of the personal in-jury exemption and the confusing judicial treatment that courts have accorded economic damages which result from personal injuries. Part III of this Recent Development discusses the most recent treatment of economic damages by examining the Tax Court\u27s decisions in Glynn, Roemer, and Church and the Ninth Circuit\u27s decision in Roemer. Part IV advoc...
The author explains that in recent court opinions and commentaries concerning whether punitive damag...
More neglected perhaps than any other area of tax law that comes to the attention of the practicing ...
For years, American libel law has been soundly criticized as inefficient and overly complicated. Alt...
The scope of the personal injury exclusion under Internal Revenue Code § 104(a)(2) has been signific...
The Internal Revenue Code (Code) sweeps into gross income all income from whatever source derived, ...
The Internal Revenue Code enacted in 1954 has continued the 1939 Code provision of law that damages ...
The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has held that in personal injury actions tr...
Since the adoption in 1919 of the Revenue Act of 1918, damages received on account of personal injur...
In Roemer v. Commissioner, the Ninth Circuit turned to California law to locate the meaning of pers...
The practical aspects of instructing a jury that the amount of its verdict in a personal injury case...
The income tax status of damage awards in personal injury actions assumes greater importance as liti...
This Note compares recent circuit cases reaching different opinions on whether punitive damages rece...
This paper will examine the history of damage award taxation beginning with the earliest income tax ...
This article discusses the traditional law of defamation, with particular emphasis on standards of l...
The exclusion of personal injury damage awards from gross income is inconsistent with established pr...
The author explains that in recent court opinions and commentaries concerning whether punitive damag...
More neglected perhaps than any other area of tax law that comes to the attention of the practicing ...
For years, American libel law has been soundly criticized as inefficient and overly complicated. Alt...
The scope of the personal injury exclusion under Internal Revenue Code § 104(a)(2) has been signific...
The Internal Revenue Code (Code) sweeps into gross income all income from whatever source derived, ...
The Internal Revenue Code enacted in 1954 has continued the 1939 Code provision of law that damages ...
The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has held that in personal injury actions tr...
Since the adoption in 1919 of the Revenue Act of 1918, damages received on account of personal injur...
In Roemer v. Commissioner, the Ninth Circuit turned to California law to locate the meaning of pers...
The practical aspects of instructing a jury that the amount of its verdict in a personal injury case...
The income tax status of damage awards in personal injury actions assumes greater importance as liti...
This Note compares recent circuit cases reaching different opinions on whether punitive damages rece...
This paper will examine the history of damage award taxation beginning with the earliest income tax ...
This article discusses the traditional law of defamation, with particular emphasis on standards of l...
The exclusion of personal injury damage awards from gross income is inconsistent with established pr...
The author explains that in recent court opinions and commentaries concerning whether punitive damag...
More neglected perhaps than any other area of tax law that comes to the attention of the practicing ...
For years, American libel law has been soundly criticized as inefficient and overly complicated. Alt...