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Features

Welcoming Ed Wesemann to A&FP's Board Image

Welcoming Ed Wesemann to A&FP's Board

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

<i>Accounting and Financial Planning for Law Firms</i> is pleased to announce that H. Edward Wesemann has joined our Board of Editors.

Tax Shelters: New IRS Disclosure Requirements Carry Serious Penalties Image

Tax Shelters: New IRS Disclosure Requirements Carry Serious Penalties

Thomas C. Welshonce & Julie E. McGuire

Touted as one of the most substantial overhauls of the Internal Revenue Code in years, the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 was signed by the President on Oct. 22, 2004. Like any number of omnibus Congressional tax bills, the "Jobs Act" is a broad-reaching collection of miscellaneous tax provisions. <br>Title VIII of the Act, in Subtitle B ' "Provisions Relating to Tax Shelters," contains new provisions that limit the benefits of tax shelters. Among these new provisions are requirements that govern how certain transactions must be reported to the IRS. While reporting rules existed prior to the Jobs Act, these new requirements carry substantial penalties to encourage compliance and curb participation in abusive tax shelters.

New Tax Rules May Affect Payments To Retiring Partners Image

New Tax Rules May Affect Payments To Retiring Partners

Michael Mooney

One of the most important provisions of the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 establishes a new regime for taxing deferred compensation. Newly created Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code likely will affect every arrangement now in place or hereafter adopted that promises the payment of deferred compensation to current and former employees, directors and other service providers. Such an arrangement may well include a partnership's unfunded retirement program for its partners.

Features

High Court OKs Double Tax on Some Contingent Fees Image

High Court OKs Double Tax on Some Contingent Fees

Tony Mauro

In a pair of cases with potential pocketbook impact on lawyers and their clients, the Supreme Court ruled on January 24th that the contingent fee portion of lawsuit settlements and awards is taxable to the client, even if the money goes directly to the attorney. But initial reaction to the 8-0 decision was more muted than expected because a law passed by Congress last fall limits the ruling's implications, and the decision won't doom the contingent fee system, which fuels a broad range of private litigation.

Features

Can Your Firm Serve Small Clients Profitably? Image

Can Your Firm Serve Small Clients Profitably?

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

In one chapter of his 2004 book, <i>The First Myth of Legal Management is that It Exists</i>, Ed Wesemann argues that small clients disproportionately drain the resources of law firms while providing a disproportionately small contribution to firm profits. He proposes ways to help firms focus on serving larger clients, while also improving the profitability of small clients who stay with the firm.

Features

Development Image

Development

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent rulings of importance to you and your practice.

Features

Index Image

Index

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Everything contained in this issue in an easy-to-read list.

Cooperatives & Condominiums Image

Cooperatives & Condominiums

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent rulings you need to know.

Landlord & Tenant Image

Landlord & Tenant

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

The latest rulings for your review.

Features

What Counts As an Exaction? Image

What Counts As an Exaction?

Stewart E. Sterk

In <i>Nollan v. California Coastal Commission</i>, 483 US 825, and <i>Dolan v. City of Tigard</i>, 512 US 374, the United States Supreme Court established that constitutional scrutiny of government exactions is more stringent than constitutional scrutiny of other land use controls. Last month, the New York Court of Appeals addressed an issue not fully resolved by Nollan and Dolan: What counts as an exaction for takings clause analysis?

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