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Supreme Court upholds decision to abide by IRS on mailbox rule for tax refund claims
The Supreme Court let stand an appeals ruling that precluded a tax refund to movie producers Howard and Karen Baldwin, deferring to an Internal Revenue Service regulation that ended the common-law mailbox rule for refund claims, even though Justice Clarence Thomas reversed his position on an earlier case. Read the full article here.TweetShareShare0 Shares
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Mark Chenoweth on Chicago's Morning Answer: Private funding of state AGs creates a bias problem
NCLA Executive Director & General Counsel, Mark Chenoweth, comments on an enormous due process problem for targets of enforcement actions from state attorney general offices filled with special assistants on private payrolls. TweetShareShare0 Shares
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Supreme Court Won’t Review Challenge to Mailbox Rule
The Supreme Court rejected a case involving the producers behind the 2004 movie “Ray,” about the life of musician Ray Charles, involving their fight with federal officials over the rule for assessing the timeliness of a tax filing. Read the full article here. TweetShareShare0 Shares
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Justice Thomas, in Lone Dissent, Thrashes 'Chevron' and His Own 'Brand X' Decision
Justice Clarence Thomas on Monday sharply criticized his own majority opinion in a 15-year-old telecommunications case and an underlying decision that says courts must give deference to agencies interpreting their own regulations, urging his colleagues to reconsider both rulings. Read the full article here. TweetShareShare0 Shares
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Thomas Pushes High Court to Revisit Agency Deference
Justice Clarence Thomas on Monday continued his campaign for the Supreme Court to reconsider a pair of landmark administrative law cases courts have long relied on to evaluate federal regulations. Read the full article here. TweetShareShare0 Shares
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Justices Ceded Too Much Power To Agencies, Thomas Says
Justice Thomas said the court should revisit an earlier decision granting so-called Chevron deference, under which courts must defer to an agency’s interpretation of its regulations if the underlying statute is ambiguous, as well as his own 2005 opinion in National Cable & Telecommunications Association v. Brand X Internet Services, in which he said if…
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