June 26, 2013
The Supreme Court decided United States v. Windsor, ruling Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) unconstitutional.
| Name | Type | Mentions | |
|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. Supreme Court | organization | 403 | View Entity |
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This document is page 3 of a 'Tax Topics' briefing dated December 20, 2013, which analyzes recent changes in U.S. tax law. It details the new 3.8% net investment income tax under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), the implications of the Supreme Court's Windsor decision on same-sex marriage for federal taxes, and the troubled rollout of HealthCare.gov. The document is a general overview of tax law and contains no information related to Jeffrey Epstein or associated individuals.
Events with shared participants
Supreme Court case: Freytag v. Commissioner. A unanimous Court ruled on the appointment of special trial judges by the U.S. Tax Court under the Appointments Clause.
1991-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case: Myers v. United States. The President refused to enforce a limitation on his removal power, and the Supreme Court vindicated the President's interpretation.
1926-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case *Myers v. United States*, where the Court vindicated the President's refusal to enforce a law he believed was unconstitutional.
1926-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case *Freytag v. Commissioner*, where the Court ruled on the appointment of special trial judges by the U.S. Tax Court, leading to a concurrence by Justice Scalia on Presidential power.
1991-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case Myers v. United States, where the President refused to enforce a law limiting his removal power, and the Supreme Court vindicated his interpretation.
1926-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case Freytag v. Commissioner, which ruled on the appointment of special trial judges and included a concurrence from Justice Scalia on presidential power.
1991-01-01 • United States
The Supreme Court case Myers v. United States (272 U.S. 52) was litigated. The court struck down a statute limiting the President's removal power as unconstitutional.
1926-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case Myers v. United States, where the court struck down a statute limiting the President's removal power.
1926-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case American Hospital Association v. NLRB (AHA) is cited, where the court upheld the NLRB's health care unit rule.
1991-01-01 • United States
The Supreme Court recognized the practice of presidential signing statements in the case of INS v. Chadha.
1983-01-01 • N/A
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