This title is a part of our CasebookPlus™ offering as ISBN 9781634601726. Learn more at CasebookPlus.com. This casebook has helped law students learn about income taxation since 1998, presenting the materials in an engaging, appealing, and humorous format. It introduces students to many of the materials used by working tax lawyers, including cases, public and private rulings, committee reports, Joint Committee Prints, and a Congressional colloquy. New materials include two cases on the intersection of tax and intellectual property, and a truly shocking innocent spouse case.
This problem set is designed to accompany the McDaniel, Repetti and Coron's Federal Wealth Transfer Taxation, 4th law school casebook, although the problems can be used with any other casebook. The problems help students master the important material in each chapter, help focus classroom discussion, and provide a helpful roadmap of the course to students.
One law school professor called the First Edition "the best book I have ever used!" The new Second Edition of this popular law school text continues its innovative "building-block" format, leading students from the basic elements of the federal income tax
This concise casebook distills the major themes of taxation. It offers well-developed problems and discussion questions in every chapter. The book is designed to help teachers and students make sense of both law and policy, and demands that students read the Code in addition to the text. Like the first edition, this edition develops a running analysis of income-tax and consumption-tax elements in the Code. It also focuses on the social policy effects of the tax law. The second edition is fully updated through the 2009 Stimulus Act.
The third edition of The Fundamentals of Federal Taxation is a problem-based, transaction-oriented treatment of the basics of federal taxation. It features a balanced approach toward tax planning and tax policy and is structured for easy accessibility through the use of forty-two chapters, each of which can readily be covered in one, or occasionally two, class sessions. A new chapter in this edition brings together the various exclusions, deductions and credits concerning education. This is a topic of particular relevance to students that often receives scattered treatment in other books. Thoroughly up to date, this edition incorporates the changes arising from the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012, the so-called ¿fiscal cliff¿ legislation. The authors also prepare an annual supplement each August. The first half of the book provides students with an understanding of the overall structure of the federal income tax. This part culminates in two major review problems that assist students in integrating the knowledge gained. Thereafter, the book covers various major topics of taxation¿including real estate taxation, intellectual property taxation, family taxation, tax consequences of litigation, and deferred compensation -- with an emphasis on tax planning. It is designed to give students an appreciation for how the law of taxation connects with everyday events of American life. The book also contains chapters on corporate and partnership income taxation, international income taxation and the federal wealth transfer taxes in order to introduce students to those important areas of tax law. In this cogent, straightforward treatment of a complex subject, the topics, the selection of cases, and the design of the problems are all calculated to make tax fun and thought-provoking. This edition is available in both hard copy and electronic versions. A teacher¿s manual with complete solutions to all of the problems is available.
This book serves as an introductory or supplemental teaching tool on the federal tax system. It can be used for a variety of course or seminar topics, including civil tax practice, criminal tax practice and procedure, and tax ethics.
This book deals with the federal income tax as it bears on gratuitous transfers and with the federal wealth transfer taxes. The federal wealth transfer taxes presently consist of a partially unified estate and gift tax and a generation-skipping tax. The federal transfer tax system is separate and apart from the federal income tax. Features: Emphasis on text, statutes, and regulations, rather than cases (especially cases that involve routine application of law to facts) "Building block" organization (simple to complex estates), rather than segmented organization according to Code sections. Extensive use of questions and problems to aid students High-profile authorship in Joseph M. Dodge (a highly regarded tax specialist), Wendy C. Gerzog, and Bridget J. Crawford (both well-established in the field) The book reconstitutes the Estate and Gift tax course from the ground up in light of modern estates practice. For example, special valuation rules are treated as basic, as opposed to being just "tacked on" as other books treat them. More emphasis on valuation and use of FLPs than in other books. Valuation is introduced early on and integrated with other material Integration of related income tax materials, including income taxation of estates and trusts Relation of tax doctrine to tax planning strategies Focus on doctrine that influences the practice of estate and trust law, rather than doctrine for its own sake Reference to state law (including recent developments) as it bears on transfer tax issues, with full coverage of issues raised by community property systems
If you want to take a problem approach to estate and gift taxation, be sure to consider this new casebook. Federal Taxation of Wealth Transfers emphasizes planning and integrates problems with statutes, regulation cases and administrative regulations to create a teachable, accessible casebook. Instructors will appreciate the casebookiquest;s logical, flexible organization: Begins with general introductory chapters covering history and policy, income tax issues, and valuation and calculation of the tax. Discrete sections address gift tax, estate tax, deductions and credits, and generation-skipping tax. Each part of the book is self contained for easy reorganization to fit various teaching approaches. the author encourages student comprehension: Ample textual material puts the cases and problems in context. Problems have been extensively class-tested for effectiveness. Emphasis on problem-solving, statutory construction, and policy analysis skills. the casebook is the ideal length for a three-credit basic wealth transfer tax class. Problems foster discussion not only of rules, but also of policy and planning issues. an in-depth Teacher's Manual includes analysis of the cases and problems. For a modern exposition of the full range of tax implications involved in the transfer of wealth, turn to Federal Taxation of Wealth Transfers: Cases and Problems .