This Symposium Essay compares current patterns and practices surrounding IRS utilization of IRB guidance (revenue rulings, revenue procedures, and notices) with administrative law doctrine concerning informal agency guidance documents. In administrative law jurisprudence, the distinction between legislative and interpretative rules (and thus whether the Administrative Procedure Act requires public notice and comment procedures) and the determination of whether Chevron or Skidmore provides the appropriate evaluative standard on judicial review both ultimately turn on whether the agency legal interpretation at issue carries the force and effect of law. The precise contours of the force of law concept are unclear, as is whether the force of la...
This Article takes the controversial position that Treasury regulations are entitled to judicial def...
This essay is Professor Pierce’s contribution to the annual Duke Law Journal symposium on administra...
The age of statutes has given way to an era of regulations, but our jurisprudence has fallen behind....
This Symposium Essay compares current patterns and practices surrounding IRS utilization of IRB guid...
The language of the Internal Revenue Code is subject to continuous interpretation by courts and admi...
Under well-known administrative law cases like American Mining Congress v. Mine Safety and Health Ad...
The question of how much deference courts should accord agency interpretations of statutes is a high...
In January, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in yet another tax case raising a question about t...
On September 29, 2009, Treasury issued regulations retroactively extending the six-year limitations ...
Theories of statutory interpretation abound. Scholars, judges and commentators have long puzzled ove...
From the symposium Business Purpose, Economic Substance, and Corporate Tax Shelters
The tax administration is at risk of an overcorrection with respect to its rulemaking process. Tax p...
The coexistence of formal and informal law is a hallmark feature of the U.S. tax system. Congress an...
In its 2011 decision in Mayo Foundation for Education and Research v. United States,\u27 the Supreme...
Tax shelters generally are designed to take advantage of statutory ambiguity in the tax code. In the...
This Article takes the controversial position that Treasury regulations are entitled to judicial def...
This essay is Professor Pierce’s contribution to the annual Duke Law Journal symposium on administra...
The age of statutes has given way to an era of regulations, but our jurisprudence has fallen behind....
This Symposium Essay compares current patterns and practices surrounding IRS utilization of IRB guid...
The language of the Internal Revenue Code is subject to continuous interpretation by courts and admi...
Under well-known administrative law cases like American Mining Congress v. Mine Safety and Health Ad...
The question of how much deference courts should accord agency interpretations of statutes is a high...
In January, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in yet another tax case raising a question about t...
On September 29, 2009, Treasury issued regulations retroactively extending the six-year limitations ...
Theories of statutory interpretation abound. Scholars, judges and commentators have long puzzled ove...
From the symposium Business Purpose, Economic Substance, and Corporate Tax Shelters
The tax administration is at risk of an overcorrection with respect to its rulemaking process. Tax p...
The coexistence of formal and informal law is a hallmark feature of the U.S. tax system. Congress an...
In its 2011 decision in Mayo Foundation for Education and Research v. United States,\u27 the Supreme...
Tax shelters generally are designed to take advantage of statutory ambiguity in the tax code. In the...
This Article takes the controversial position that Treasury regulations are entitled to judicial def...
This essay is Professor Pierce’s contribution to the annual Duke Law Journal symposium on administra...
The age of statutes has given way to an era of regulations, but our jurisprudence has fallen behind....