Top: Regional: North America: United States: Government and Politics: Judicial Branch: Tax Court


[ history ]

General Information

The U.S. Tax Court is a Federal court of record established by Congress under Article I of the Constitution of the United States. Congress created the Tax Court to provide a judicial forum in which affected persons could dispute tax deficiencies determined by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue prior to payment of the disputed amounts. The jurisdiction of the Tax Court includes the authority to hear tax disputes concerning notices of deficiency, notices of transferee liability, certain types of declaratory judgment, readjustment and adjustment of partnership items, review of the failure to abate interest, administrative costs, worker classification, relief from joint and several liability on a joint return, and review of certain collection actions.


[ history ]

Judges

The Tax Court is composed of 19 presidentially appointed members. Trial sessions are conducted and other work of the Court is performed by those judges, by senior judges serving on recall, and by special trial judges. All of the judges have expertise in the tax laws and apply that expertise in a manner to ensure that taxpayers are assessed only what they owe, and no more. Although the Court is physically located in Washington, D.C., the judges travel nationwide to conduct trials in various designated cities.

Judges:
Joel Gerber, Chief Judge
Carolyn P. Chiechi
Mary Ann Cohen
John O. Colvin
Maurice B. Foley
Joseph H. Gale
Joseph Robert Goeke
Harry A. Haines
James S. Halpern
Mark V. Holmes
Diane L. Kroupa
David Laro
L. Paige Marvel
Stephen J. Swift
Michael B. Thornton
Juan F. Vasquez
Thomas B. Wells
Robert A. Wherry, Jr.

Senior Judges:
Renato Beghe
Herbert L. Chabot
Howard A. Dawson, Jr.
Julian I. Jacobs
Arthur L. Nims, III
Robert P. Ruwe
Laurence J. Whalen

Special Trial Judges:
Peter J. Panuthos, Chief Special Trial Judge
Robert N. Armen
Lewis R. Carluzzo
D. Irvin Couvillion
John F. Dean
Stanley J. Goldberg
Carleton D. Powell


[ history ]

Life Cycle of a Tax Court Case

A case in the Tax Court is commenced by the filing of a petition. The petition must be timely filed within the allowable time. The Court cannot extend the time for filing which is set by statute.

A $60 filing fee must be paid when the petition is filed. Once the petition is filed, payment of the underlying tax ordinarily is postponed until the case has been decided.

In certain tax disputes involving $50,000 or less, taxpayers may elect to have their case conducted under the Court's simplified small tax case procedure. Trials in small tax cases generally are less formal and result in a speedier disposition. However, decisions entered pursuant to small tax case procedures are not appealable.

Cases are calendared for trial as soon as practicable (on a first in/ first out basis) after the case becomes at issue. When a case is calendared, the parties are notified by the Court of the date, time, and place of trial. Trials are conducted before one judge, without a jury, and taxpayers are permitted to represent themselves if they desire. Taxpayers may be represented by practitioners admitted to the bar of the Tax Court.

The vast majority of cases are settled by mutual agreement without the necessity of a trial. However, if a trial is conducted, in due course a report is ordinarily issued by the presiding judge setting forth findings of fact and an opinion. The case is then closed in accordance with the judge's opinion by entry of a decision.



 All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyright Policy for details.) 
© Open-Site Foundation, Inc.
Hosted by Android Technologies, Inc. the medical robotics news source.
Visit our sister sites dmoz.org | mozilla.org | chefmoz.org | musicmoz.org