The Revenue Act of 1951 levied a tax on persons engaged in the business of accepting wagers, requiring such persons to register their names and places of business and residence with the Collector of Internal Revenue. The act also required the disclosure of the name and address of each person receiving wagers for the registrant, or, if the registrant himself received wagers for another, the name of that person. Violations of the act were punishable by fine and imprisonment. Defendant was indicted for willful failure to register and pay the tax. The district court granted defendant\u27s motion to dismiss on the ground that the pertinent sections of the act were unconstitutional as an infringement of the powers reserved to the states by the Te...
A New Jersey statute imposed a tax on domestic stock insurance corporations on the value of intangib...
The respondent, a New York corporation licensed to do retail business in Iowa, did a large mail orde...
In a case decided May 24, 1937, Titles II and VIII of the Social Security Act were challenged. Title...
The Revenue Act of 1951 levied a tax on persons engaged in the business of accepting wagers, requiri...
An accused gambler\u27s claim of constitutional privilege against self-incrimination provides a comp...
In United States v. Carlton, the Supreme Court rejected a Due Process challenge to the retroactive e...
The city of Richmond by ordinance required all solicitors to pay an annual tax before being permitte...
Respondent purchased silver bullion on May 3, 1934, subsequently selling it on May 23 and 24. On the...
Plaintiffs, employees of a United States Naval Ordnance Plant located in an area of exclusive federa...
The 1949 revision of the Michigan Sales Tax Act changed the federal exemption provision so as to per...
In recent years, the U.S. Supreme Court revived the long-dormant equal sovereignty doctrine, which s...
Roy Garner candidly reported substantial income from illicit wagering in his 1965, 1966, and 1967 fe...
The increasing burden of both federal and state taxation during the past decade has multiplied the a...
Defendants were charged with violation of the Federal Regulation of Lobbying Act because of failure ...
For all practical purposes, the Constitution prescribes only one limit on the federal government\u27...
A New Jersey statute imposed a tax on domestic stock insurance corporations on the value of intangib...
The respondent, a New York corporation licensed to do retail business in Iowa, did a large mail orde...
In a case decided May 24, 1937, Titles II and VIII of the Social Security Act were challenged. Title...
The Revenue Act of 1951 levied a tax on persons engaged in the business of accepting wagers, requiri...
An accused gambler\u27s claim of constitutional privilege against self-incrimination provides a comp...
In United States v. Carlton, the Supreme Court rejected a Due Process challenge to the retroactive e...
The city of Richmond by ordinance required all solicitors to pay an annual tax before being permitte...
Respondent purchased silver bullion on May 3, 1934, subsequently selling it on May 23 and 24. On the...
Plaintiffs, employees of a United States Naval Ordnance Plant located in an area of exclusive federa...
The 1949 revision of the Michigan Sales Tax Act changed the federal exemption provision so as to per...
In recent years, the U.S. Supreme Court revived the long-dormant equal sovereignty doctrine, which s...
Roy Garner candidly reported substantial income from illicit wagering in his 1965, 1966, and 1967 fe...
The increasing burden of both federal and state taxation during the past decade has multiplied the a...
Defendants were charged with violation of the Federal Regulation of Lobbying Act because of failure ...
For all practical purposes, the Constitution prescribes only one limit on the federal government\u27...
A New Jersey statute imposed a tax on domestic stock insurance corporations on the value of intangib...
The respondent, a New York corporation licensed to do retail business in Iowa, did a large mail orde...
In a case decided May 24, 1937, Titles II and VIII of the Social Security Act were challenged. Title...