| LLM
118 - Tax 2: Accounting, Deferred Comp. & Other Issues,
Diamond
Graduate School of Law
LL.M.
Program
Syllabus
for Tax
2
Spring
Semester only – 16 weeks and an exam week
February
1st week until last week May
I.
COURSE DESCRIPTION
Tax
2 (3 cr. Spring only): The
first part of the three part course of US Tax III addresses the
federal income tax aspects of the deferred payment transactions,
like-kind exchanges and moves into the design and operation of
employee benefit plans, such as: qualified pension and profit
sharing plans; non-qualified plans; and taxation of distributions.
The second part covers tax accounting issues. The final
third continues the second part but moves into complex structured
finance transactions, with special emphasis on economic substance
jurisprudence. Structured
financial transactions covers instruments and transactions,
including bonds, options, forward contracts, straddles, hedges,
swaps, and repurchase transactions.
Prerequisites
are Tax Procedure or Tax I unless the student is an experienced tax
practitioner and receives permission from the Director.
II.
PURPOSE
Tax 2 is an LLM
executive level course. This
course will be taught at the executive level and will employ case
studies beyond IRC analysis.
- 3 credits
- required
for US concentration
- Prerequisites:
either
Tax I or Principles of International Tax
III.
COURSE PROCEDURE
This course will involve fourteen weekly modules that are
delivered through on-line instruction pursuant to current program
specifications. Each
module will contain text material, study guide instruction, and
weekly interactive participation.
Text material may contain a combination of code sections,
cases, and commentary materials.
Study guides will contain commentary materials upon the text
materials with imbedded exercises and assignments to be completed
either independently or within a group of two to five persons.
Assignments may be submitted directly to the Instructor or
submitted to the classroom.
Each module, selected students may be called upon to deliver answers
in the Internet based classroom to questions posed by the
instructor. Questions
may be posed in case study form or in issue form.
Answers may be short (one page) form or long form (five page
analysis).
During the semester, module based audio and videotape lecture
construction will be explored as well as the provision to students
through streaming technology.
During the sixteen-week semester, the students will have two
technology skills and control weeks.
The first week of the course, the student will spend the time
acquiring and testing the necessary accessing components of the
course, including: blackboard skills, database access, proxy server
access, material download, and other technical issues.
Also, students will introduce themselves and identify with
each other (camaraderie and network building).
During the third week, students will be given another
breather week to check the quality of their acquired technology
technical skills and offsite database access in order to identify
any problem areas that require immediate correcting.
During the semester, each student will receive at least two
detailed feedback sessions from the Instructor through the detailed
marking of his/her/group study guide assignments and/or class
participation. Separately,
the Instructor is available for office hour private counseling
through email, telephone, and by residential office appointment.
Other assignments may receive feedback and will receive a grade,
recorded in the online grade book that students may assess their
performance.
IV.
ATTENDANCE AND PARTICIPATION
This
online course requires attendance which is measured by (1) the
modular-weekly interactive participation opportunities in the
classroom, (2) mandatory weekly participation through being called
upon to address the class for certain modules as well as (3) modular
study guide assignments. Missing
mandatory weekly participation assignments is the equivalent of
being not prepared in class and will result in a zero for that
assignment. Not
turning in study guide assignments will result in a zero for that
assignment.
V.
EVALUATION OF STUDENT PERFORMANCE
Grades will be determined through a combination of factors,
as follows:
final
exam – 50%;
weekly
study guide assignments – 25%
weekly
participation – 25%
VI.
REQUIRED TEXTS
Electronic
texts edited and authored by the Instructor, supplemented by
reference materials. Reference
materials will include source materials and secondary materials.
VII.
REFERENCE MATERIAL
Research is
conducted using the Internet WWW as well as, and most importantly,
value added databases, such as
-
Lexis-Nexis
US and foreign materials; Tax Treaties
-
BNA US and
foreign materials; especially the country by country tax
materials
-
BNA
International
-
CCH
International databases jurisdiction by jurisdiction, and its
global treatises
-
CCH USA
databases
-
Butterworths
UK and international materials, especially
Commonwealth/Caribbean case law
-
QuickLaw,
especially Canadian and Commonwealth/Caribbean case law
-
Checkpoint-RIA-WGL-Gee,
especially the treatises that explain planning techniques by
topics, such as estate planning, for jurisdictions
-
Westlaw US
and foreign materials
-
Tax
Analysts, especially its superior tax treaty database, foreign
law and global tax update magazines
-
Foreign Law
Publishers - all foreign statues in English
-
World
Compliance database
-
LLM and PhD
thesis and dissertation databases
-
historical
tax research using databases such as Hein and CCH
-
Matthew
Bender databases
-
Lois Law
e-libraries
-
amongst
other databases that we subscribe to for you (see the external
links in the classroom for details).
Also, the
student should use the electronic book libraries and research the
titles available. Finally, the student is encouraged to use online legal research resources or university library or another library through a University library exchange program.
VIII.
WEEKLY SYLLABUS
Module 1:
Time
Value of Money - Butler
Module 2:
Cash Method of Accounting - Butler
Module 3:
Accrual Method of Accounting -
Butler
Module 4:
Section 83 - Butler
Module 5:
Interest
Deductions - Butler
Module 6:
Original Issue Discount - Butler
Module 7:
Bond Premiums and Discounts - Butler
Module 8:
Below Market Loans - Butler
Module 9:
Deferred Payment Sales - Butler
Module 10:
Sale of Business - Butler
Module 11:
Liabilities in Property Transactions - Cantley
Module
12:
Losses - Cantley
Module 13:
Cancellation of Indebtedness - Cantley
Module 14:
AMT
- Cantley
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