Chapter TenOther Aspects of Deductible Giving

  1. § 10.1 Valuation of Property
    1. (a) General Principles
    2. (b) Valuation of Works of Art
    3. (c) Valuation of Other Property
  2. § 10.2 Contributions by Means of an Agent
  3. § 10.3 Gifts for the Use of Charity
  4. § 10.4 Conditional Gifts
    1. (a) Material Conditions—Nondeductibility
    2. (b) Negligible Conditions
    3. (c) Material Conditions—Deductibility
    4. (d) Enforceability of Conditions
    5. (e) IRS Audits Not Conditions Precedent
  5. § 10.5 Earmarking of Gifts for Individuals
  6. § 10.6 Alternative Minimum Tax Considerations
  7. § 10.7 Interrelationship with Business Expense Deduction
  8. § 10.8 Denial of Deduction for Lobbying Activities
  9. § 10.9 Deductible Gifts to Noncharitable Organizations
    1. (a) Conduit Entities in General
    2. (b) Single-Member Limited Liability Companies
  10. § 10.10 Reallocation of Deductions
  11. § 10.11 Charitable Giving and Funding of Terrorism
  12. § 10.12 Statute of Limitations
  13. § 10.13 Concept of Trust Income
    1. (a) Basic Principles
    2. (b) Definition of Income
    3. (c) Capital Gains and Losses
  14. § 10.14 Penalties
    1. (a) Accuracy-Related Penalty
    2. (b) Fraud Penalty
    3. (c) Tax Shelter Promotion Penalty
    4. (d) Aiding and Abetting Penalty
    5. (e) Other Penalties
  15. § 10.15 Transactions of Interest
    1. (a) Successor Member Interests
    2. (b) Asset Dispositions

The complexities of the law of charitable giving are manifold. They are limited only by the intricacies of the federal tax law and the imaginations of gift planners, regulators, and litigants. These other aspects of deductible charitable giving are ...

Get The Tax Law of Charitable Giving, 5th Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.