By Michael Booth | December 17, 2018
The Assembly approved the measure, S-784, in a 79-0 vote. The Senate passed the bill in April without opposition. It now goes to Gov. Phil Murphy, who has not indicated whether he supports the bill.
By New Jersey State Bar Association | December 17, 2018
State bar-drafted double taxation bill heads to full Assembly
By Charles Toutant | December 14, 2018
And when Kentucky's court of last resort reinstated a $100 million verdict against Chicago-based Grant Thornton, the nation's sixth-largest accounting firm, it was more as a deterrent against future misconduct than out of sympathy for the plaintiffs.
By Charles Toutant | December 14, 2018
And when Kentucky's court of last resort reinstated a $100 million verdict against Chicago-based Grant Thornton, the nation's sixth-largest accounting firm, it was more as a deterrent against future misconduct than out of sympathy for the plaintiffs.
By Lloyd Dunkelberger | December 14, 2018
The state's costs for emergency relief and recovery efforts related to Michael, a major storm that struck the Panhandle in October, will exceed the costs for Hurricane Irma, a 2017 storm that damaged a larger portion of the state, the report said.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joseph Lipari and Aaron S. Gaynor | December 13, 2018
Although many of us feel like we practically live at the office, in their Tax Appeals Tribunal column, Joseph Lipari and Aaron Gaynor discuss a recent advisory opinion, in which the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance ruled that a taxpayer's office was not a “permanent place of abode,” and, therefore, the taxpayer was not a resident of New York for tax purposes.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Conrad Teitell | December 12, 2018
In his Estate Planning and Philanthropy column, Conrad Teitell writes: Volunteers who contribute their time to charities certainly aren't motivated by tax breaks. Many probably don't even know they're entitled to deduct the unreimbursed expenses they incur in helping charitable organizations.
By Jim Turner | December 12, 2018
Rep. Halsey Beshears, a Monticello Republican, was selected by Gov.-elect Ron DeSantis to lead the state Department of Business and Professional Regulation.
By Jim Saunders | December 11, 2018
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit on Friday upheld a lower-court decision that dismissed a lawsuit filed by the tribe against the Florida Department of Revenue.
By Greg Land | December 5, 2018
The panel wrote that, while the claims against the county officials in their official capacities were barred by sovereign immunity, they could be sued on their individual capacities for declaratory and injunctive relief.
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