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CHAPTER FOUR JUDICIAL INTERPRETATIONS. EXPECTED LEARNING OUTCOMES l Understand the following about judicial interpretations: The different types of tax.

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Presentation on theme: "CHAPTER FOUR JUDICIAL INTERPRETATIONS. EXPECTED LEARNING OUTCOMES l Understand the following about judicial interpretations: The different types of tax."— Presentation transcript:

1 CHAPTER FOUR JUDICIAL INTERPRETATIONS

2 EXPECTED LEARNING OUTCOMES l Understand the following about judicial interpretations: The different types of tax cases Their level of authority How they are located How to examine them How to determine their validity How they are cited

3 TYPES OF JUDICIAL INTERPRETATIONS Tax Court District Court U.S. Court of Federal Claims Circuit Court of Appeals Supreme Court Federal Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals

4 Judicial Sources - Primary Sources l Findings have precedential value l Trial courts - Tax Court (do not pay the deficiency), District Court, U.S. Court of Federal Claims (pay first, sue for refund), Small Cases Division l Reg. Tax Law Cases v. Memo Decisions l Appeals - Regional Circuit, Federal uphold, modify, reverse, vacate and remand l U.S. Supreme Court– certiorari needed l All courts must follow SC decisions, not the case for circuits

5 THE AUTHORITY OF JUDICIAL INTERPRETATIONS l Doctrine of precedential authority or stare decisis l The Golsen Rule: follow appellate court rulings for appropriate district.

6 Factors to Consider in Determining Authority l Level of authority: which court issued decision l Jurisdiction of the court l Factual similarity l Code Section at issue: has code changed? l Logic of analysis

7 Structure of a Case l Case title l Housekeeping notations l Attorneys involved l Description of the facts l Identification of the key issues l Court’s opinion: focus here on reasoning and holding

8 Briefing a Case l Case name and cite l Case facts l Issue before the court l Court’s conclusion l Court’s reasoning l Go Over Common Terms: pg. 193-194

9 How to Access Case Law l Online reference Service / Secondary Sources / l Official Reporters l See List on Page 198-199 l Unofficial Reporters United States Tax Cases (CCH) American Federal Tax Reporter (RIA)

10 Citing Cases l Case name, use of Id. And Supra l Volume of reporter l Abbreviation of reporter name l Page/paragraph when case begins – chart on 201-203 l Court and year of decision

11 Citing a Tax Court Case l Regular Decision Lucky Duck, 80 TC 100 (1999) l Memo Decision Lucky Duck, 75 TCM 200 (1999) Lucky Duck, 1999 RIA Memo TC ¶99,500 (1999)

12 Citing a Non-Tax Court Case l USTC Duck v. Commissioner, 99-1 USTC 100 (CA 7) l AFTR Duck v. Commissioner, 75 AFTR99- 2000 (1999)

13 Sources of Case Texts l Print/Paper l CD-ROM l Modem l Web

14 Confirming the Reliability of a Case l Danger of being reversed or overruled l The Citator Organized by taxpayers last name. List in alphabetical order Same name may have three courts that heard cases l Examples on Page 210-211.


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