Background
Richmond, Gail Levin was born on January 9, 1946 in Gary, Indiana, United States. Daughter of Herbert Irving and Sylvia Esther (Given) Levin.
(The Eighth Edition features expanded coverage of electron...)
The Eighth Edition features expanded coverage of electronic sources, both subscription-based (such as Westlaw, LexisNexis, Checkpoint, CCH IntelliConnect, and HeinOnline) and those available without charge (particularly those provided by the government). It discusses factors to be considered in deciding between print and online research; chapters discussing primary sources illustrate several online sources for finding these materials. This book devotes considerable space to publicly available IRS documents and legislative history materials. The introductory materials illustrate solving a research problem, and there are problems for students to solve throughout the text. The Eighth Edition expands the number of illustrations that complement its textual discussions.
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(Mastering Corporate Tax guides students through the compl...)
Mastering Corporate Tax guides students through the complex tax rules affecting corporations and their shareholders. It describes, and provides comprehensive examples to illustrate, the tax consequences of corporate formations, distributions, stock redemptions, liquidations, and reorganizations. The primary focus is on corporations subject to subchapter C (so-called C corporations). The text also introduces the special stock ownership and income pass-through rules applied to corporations described in subchapter S (so-called C corporations). This text supplements casebook coverage of corporate taxation.
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(The second edition of this unique casebook provides a com...)
The second edition of this unique casebook provides a comprehensive treatment of wills and trusts by examining Florida statutes and judicial decisions in the area. Because the laws governing wills and trusts reflect state law adoption of (or variance from) uniform laws, a state-focused book lets students focus on a coherent set of rules. Florida law is particularly well suited for studying wills and trusts. Florida has a well-developed probate code and its common law wills and trusts decisions address issues in fascinating factual situations that students find engaging. Moreover, in 2006 Florida adopted its version of the UTC referred to as the Florida Trust Code (FTC), effective July 1, 2007, making Florida a perfect platform for studying modern trusts law and practice. Although Florida law is the focus, this casebook includes discussions of the common law from other states and uniform codes (particularly the UPC and UTC), particularly when they differ significantly from Florida law. Demonstrating how Florida law varies from that of other states (or uniform codes) serves a pedagogical purpose. It crystallizes the issues students will face when they practice wills and trusts by allowing them to see how other states may resolve these issues. This casebook may be productively used by students who expect to practice in Florida or in other states. Although the case or statutory law differs from state to state, the concepts and issues students will encounter and ponder are the same. This casebook is also unique in the breadth and depth of its coverage in that it covers trusts as extensively as it does wills. That coverage recognizes modern trends in family wealth planning. It also treats topics that relate to both testate and intestate estates together. Covering topics such as disclaimers, slayer statutes, and simultaneous death together reinforces students' understanding of the statutory rules and when the use of wills or other documents may be employed to achieve different outcomes. It introduces several related topics: durable powers of attorney and designations of health care surrogates; principal and income allocations; estate planning; and the probate process. These introductions are a useful bridge to such advanced courses as Elder Law, Estate Planning, and Probate Practice. Finally, this casebook includes wills and trusts forms, with extensive annotations provided by Northern Trust Corporation. We have found that students learn best when they can see various forms. We have designed this book to encourage students to think about the issues from the standpoint of both planners and litigators. Accordingly, we include numerous questions that require students to think about ways to draft or plan to avoid litigation. Notes accompanying cases suggest related issues and also guide students to think about even more nuanced problems. The second edition expands further on its coverage of new rules governing trusts and trustees and provides increased focus on topical planning techniques involving non-probate assets, elective share trusts, creditor protection planning, and planning for incapacity. This edition includes statutory changes enacted through July 2010 and many recent judicial decisions. The second edition also includes more examples, revised and updated problems, and discussion questions that consider ethical issues and drafting alternatives. The problems are motivating and help make the subject appealing to students. A comprehensive teacher's manual is available. The teacher's manual analyzes all of the cases, discusses issues raised in each chapter, provides solutions to the problems, and suggests teaching methods for coverage of the materials.
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(This unique casebook examines wills and trusts by focusin...)
This unique casebook examines wills and trusts by focusing on Florida law. The laws governing wills and trusts continue to be state-law driven despite widespread adoptions of uniform codes, such as the UPC and UTC. We believe there is much to be gained by studying the laws of one state as a whole, and Florida law is particularly well suited for studying this area of the law. Florida has a well developed probate code and its common law wills and trusts decisions address issues in fascinating factual situations that students find engaging. Moreover, in 2006 Florida adopted its version of the UTC referred to as the Florida Trust Code (FTC), effective July 1, 2007, making Florida a perfect platform for studying modern trusts law and practice. Although Florida law is the focus, this casebook includes discussions of the common law from other states and uniform codes (including the UPC and UTC), particularly when they differ significantly from Florida law. Demonstrating how Florida law varies from that of other states (or uniform codes) serves a pedagogical purpose. It crystallizes the issues students will face when they practice wills and trusts by allowing them to see how other states may resolve these issues. This casebook may be productively used by students who expect to practice in Florida or in other states. Although the case or statutory law differs from state to state, the concepts and issues students will encounter and ponder are the same. This casebook is also unique in the breadth and depth of its coverage in that it covers trusts as extensively as it does wills. That coverage recognizes modern trends in family wealth planning. It also treats topics that relate to both testate and intestate estates together. Covering topics such as disclaimers, slayer statutes, and simultaneous death together reinforces students' understanding of the statutory rules and when the use of wills or other documents may be employed to achieve different outcomes. It introduces several related topics: durable powers of attorney and designations of health care surrogates; principal and income allocations; estate planning; and the probate process. These introductions are a useful bridge to such advanced courses as Elder Law, Estate Planning, and Probate Practice. Finally, this casebook includes wills and trusts forms, with extensive annotations provided by Northern Trust Corporation. We have found that students learn best when they can see various forms. We have designed this book to encourage students to think about the issues from the standpoint of both planners and litigators. Accordingly, we include numerous questions that require students to think about ways to draft or plan to avoid litigation. Notes accompanying cases suggest related issues and also guide students to think about even more nuanced problems.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0890896275/?tag=2022091-20
Richmond, Gail Levin was born on January 9, 1946 in Gary, Indiana, United States. Daughter of Herbert Irving and Sylvia Esther (Given) Levin.
Bachelor of Arts Michigan, 1966. Master of Business Administration, University Michigan, 1967. Juris Doctor, Duke University, 1971.
Accountant, Arthur Andersen & Company, Chicago, 1967-1968; associate, Jones, Day, Cleveland, 1971-1972; assistant professor, Capital U. Law School, Columbus, Ohio., 1972-1973; assistant professor, U. North Carolina Law School, Chapel Hill, 1973-1978; visiting assistant professor, University Texas Law School, Austin, 1977-1978; visiting assistant professor, Nova U. Law Center, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, 1979-1980; associate professor, Nova U. Law Center, Fort Lauderdale, 1980-1981; associate professor, associate dean, Nova U. Law Center, Fort Lauderdale, 1981-1985; professor, associate dean, Nova U. Law Center, Fort Lauderdale, 1985-1993, 95-; professor, acting dean, Nova U. Law Center, Fort Lauderdale, 1993-1995.
(The Eighth Edition features expanded coverage of electron...)
(The second edition of this unique casebook provides a com...)
(Mastering Corporate Tax guides students through the compl...)
(This unique casebook examines wills and trusts by focusin...)
Author: Federal Tax Research, 8th edition, 2010. Co-author: Mastering Corporate Tax, 2009, Tax Planning for Lifetime and Testamentary Dispositions, 1997, A Complete Introduction to Corporate Taxation, 2006, Florida Wills, Trusts and Estates: Cases and Materials, 2007. Contributor articles to professional journals.
President Greater Fort Lauderdale Tax Council, 1987-1988. Trustee Law School Admission Council, 1994-1999, chair audit committee, 1991-1993, chair services and programs committee, 1997-1999. Member American Bar Association (chair commission on individual income, tax section 2001-2003, supervising editor News Quarterly since 2006, chair AMT task force 2003-2004, chair adjunct committee, legal education section 2002-2005), American Association Attorney-Certified Public Accountants (director Florida chapter 1992-1998), Association American Law Schools (chairman audit committee 1992, chair section administration of law schools 1996, president Southeast chapter 1993-1994, secretary Southeast chapter 1995-2002), Southeast Association Law Schools (president 2002-2003, secretary since 2004).
Children: Henry, Amy.