Circular 230 – the final rules governing practice before the Internal Revenue Service and how practitioners are responding*By Elizabeth M. PerryOctober 2005Final regulations published under Treasury Circular 230 on December 20, 2004, and generally applicable after June 20, 2005, provide attorneys, certified public accountants, enrolled agents, enrolled actuaries, and appraisers with guidance as to the best practices to be used when rendering advice to taxpayers relating to Federal tax issues or submissions to the Internal Revenue Service (the “Service”), and set forth the standards to be adhered to for written advice.
The doctrine of merger: Real estate contracts and tax prorationsBy Steven B. BashawNovember 2005The law in Illinois is well settled that the doctrine of merger provides that in the absence of an express provision otherwise in a contract, all agreements between a buyer and seller of real estate that are not “collateral and independent” of the deed merge into the deed when it is delivered to the buyer at closing and cannot thereafter be a basis for a cause of action.
An early autumn miscellanyBy Gary R. GehlbachOctober 2005As fall begins, we look forward to reports from the Internal Revenue Service about changes in the standard mileage rate, the annual gift tax exclusion, the special use valuation rate (which, incidentally, plays a role in farmland assessed valuations), and other minutiae. In this issue we have some early answers and projections.
Editor’s noteNovember 2005As of about a month ago, the Governor had signed 677 new laws! Tracking the numerous bills, submitting them to the appropriate ISBA section councils and committees for positions, presenting the organized bar’s positions on these bills, and then providing the members with the status of new laws, consitute a major task of the ISBA.
Editor’s noteBy Gary R. GehlbachOctober 2005With apologies for the tardiness of this issue (which, if timely submitted, would have featured a late summer miscellany rather than an early autumn miscellany), this issue presents a wide range of topics, with the hope that readers will find several of interest.
Editor’s noteJune 2005One of the unintended benefits of editing this publication (and, indeed, most publications with any pretense toward erudition) is expanding my vocabulary.
Editor’s noteMarch 2005Jack Murray, one of the most prolific real estate authors in Illinois and perhaps the nation and a frequent contributor to this publication, has teamed with Greg Thorpe in presenting an article that clarifies the subtle distinction between an equitable mortgage and a sale-leaseback.
Editor’s noteFebruary 2005This issue features the annual report of IRELA, the Illinois Real Estate Lawyers Association, and two timely articles, one on the recent amendments to the Illinois Real Estate Transfer Tax Law and amendments to the Department of Revenue's rules, and the other on many of the unresolved issues with tenancies by the entirety.
Food for thought: land law and public policyBy Howard SamsonJune 2005Long ago, the social philosopher and economist Henry George proposed a "Single Tax" that shifted the incidence of taxation entirely onto ground rent.
Legislative updateBy James K. Weston, Sr.November 2005The General Assembly adjourned its Spring Session at the last minute of May, only a few days after its original scheduled end.
The new statutory Residential Tenants’ Right to Repair ActBy Jack H. TibbettsJune 2005The ISBA Real Estate Law Section Council this year worked with legislative leaders and their staff to draft a new statute to create a limited right for residential tenants to deduct from rent the cost of repairs required by the lease or law.
Quiet title (not the library, silly)By Hal R. MorrisMarch 2005Title to real property is typically not loud, but nonetheless even a quiet dispute over title can be resolved by an action to quiet title.
The Series LLC: new Illinois law provides avenue for asset protectionBy Ted M. Niemann, Sr. & Melinda S. MadisonNovember 2005Asset protection is a concern to many real estate clients. In various situations, asset protection is not only beneficial but often necessary for businesses to thrive and survive or for investments to truly pay off.
Unresolved issues concerning tenancy by the entiretyBy Richard F. BalesFebruary 2005Since 1990 married couples have had the option of owning their marital home as tenants by the entirety (735 ILCS 5/12-112; 750 ILCS 65/22; 765 ILCS 1005/1c).
What you should know about the Service Members Civil Relief ActBy William W. AustinOctober 2005This article is intended to provide a general background and offer a synopsis of selected provisions of the Act that the author believes may be of interest to the real estate practitioner in particular.
When is a sale-leaseback an equitable mortgage?By Gregory A. Thorpe & John C. MurrayMarch 2005When two sets of sophisticated real estate investors represented by experienced counsel say something is a duck-and it quacks and swims with its webbed feet-is it a duck?