Search for: "Wyoming v. Oklahoma" Results 81 - 100 of 231
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24 Jul 2018, 5:12 am by Kevin Kaufman
Complete Auto Remains the Rule, As Modified by Wayfair The South Dakota v. [read post]
11 Jul 2018, 6:28 am by Kevin Kaufman
Key Findings: Most states that levy a general sales tax offer an exemption for groceries, thereby removing qualifying “grocery” products from their sales tax base. [read post]
25 Jun 2018, 5:39 pm by John Elwood
Wyoming, 17-532 (a wacky jurisdictional dispute involving Wyoming’s admission to the Union and Indian treaty rights) and Fourth Estate Public Benefit Corp. v. [read post]
8 Jun 2018, 12:30 pm by Dan Ernst
  THURSDAY The Rights Revolution in Action: The Transformation of State Institutions after the 1960sThu, 6/7: 8:00 AM—9:45 AM, Sheraton Centre Toronto, Forest Hill ·         Chair/Discussant—Sara Mayeux, Vanderbilt University ·         Ingraham v. [read post]
23 Apr 2018, 8:28 am by Dan Carvajal
Key Findings Property tax limitations have been adopted in forty-six states and the District of Columbia, though their designs and restrictiveness differ widely. [read post]
12 Mar 2018, 11:57 am by John Floyd
  In macabre detail, the Eighth Circuit issued a March 6, 2018 decision in Bucklew v. [read post]
14 Dec 2017, 6:35 am by Dan Carvajal
Ohio, Texas, and Nevada all adopted gross receipts taxes in recent years, while eight states—California, Louisiana, Missouri, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Wyoming—contemplated their adoption this year. [read post]
4 Dec 2017, 7:15 am by Eugene Volokh
In March, Wyoming law enforcement took $91,8000 from Phil Parhamovich at a roadside stop. [read post]
26 Sep 2017, 6:41 am by Dan Carvajal
Three of these states—Connecticut, New York, and Wyoming—impose taxes mirroring the old Ohio corporate franchise tax, under which businesses pay the greater of net worth or net income liability.[12] Beginning in 2006, Ohio CFT liability declined in increments of 20 percent a year, with firms responsible for 80 percent of their standard liability that year, 60 percent in 2007, and so on until 2010, when the tax was eliminated. [read post]