Sentences with phrase «tangible personal property as»

Not exact matches

In general, if your company is a manufacturer or a processor of tangible personal property, and if your project involves the acquisition or construction of assets related to manufacturing or processing (such as the purchase of land or equipment), then you are eligible.
Tangible personal property includes most physical goods, such as furniture, clothing and electronics, but there are some exceptions.
It is the Registrant's view that Bitcoins should not be regarded as coins, or otherwise as collectibles, for purposes of section 408 (m), because Bitcoins are a virtual, rather than a fiat currency (see «Bitcoin Value,» above) and, as such, do not take the form of tangible personal property, in contrast to a coin or any of the other items defined as a «collectible» under Section 408 (m).
However, Canadian residents who are not US citizens are only taxed on certain US properties, such as US real property, shares of US companies, tangible personal property located in the US and debts issued by US residents, including the US government.
Personal property, as defined in and covered by the policy, is tangible.
Your expectation of privacy in an unlocked smart phone flows from your exclusive possession of the phone as a piece of tangible personal property containing information, and not just from the password protection.
Basically, all personal injury and wrongful death lawsuits (such as medical malpractice, product liability, defamation, wrongs involving tangible or intangible property, unfair competition, etc.) are litigated as a tort.
In determining whether a defendant has substantial liquid assets, the judge shall not consider up to Ten Thousand Dollars ($ 10,000.00) in tangible personal property, including motor vehicles, household goods, or any other assets exempted from seizure under execution or attachment as provided under Section 85 -3-1.
Tangible personal property: All property, except land and buildings, that can be physically touched, such as furniture, jewelry, cars and clothing.
Adverse possession of tangible personal property is also possible, although it comes up less often in legal proceedings since it usually isn't worth litigating over and the record keeping to prove a claim usually isn't as good.
Personal property, as defined in and covered by the policy, is tangible.
PASSIVE ASSET - real or personal property, both tangible or intangible, that increases or decreases in fair market value because of forces like supply and demand, as opposed to active forces, such as performance or conduct.
Assets may include real estate, bank accounts, vacation pay, stock options, businesses and business interests, and tangible personal property, such as automotive vehicles, collector's items, and pets.
The type of property that is typical to be divided consists of real property (such as land and the buildings on it), tangible property (cars, jewelry and furniture for example) and intangible personal property (such as bank accounts, stocks and bonds, vested pensions and life insurance).
The issues that are typically addressed in mediation are issues related to children: legal custody and residential custody, visitation, child support, allocation of college expenses for the children, health insurance, life insurance; alimony and spousal support; division of real property, including the family home; division of tangible personal property including motor vehicles, boats, furniture, furnishings, art work, etc.; disposition of other property accumulated during the marriage, including bank accounts, investment accounts, pension / profit - sharing / retirement accounts, etc.; payment of credit cards and other debts, and tax matters including decisions relative to filing joint or separate tax returns and claiming the children as dependency deductions.
Since the beneficial interest is considered to be personal property, it is treated in much the same manner as a car or other tangible asset, therefore making it so much simpler to sell, borrow against or transfer than a parcel of real estate.
Full Expensing: A taxpayer can write off the full cost of tangible business - use personal property assets, such as heavy equipment, farm machinery, vehicles, and hotel furniture for the year the assets are placed in service.
The major change to the 1031 code is the removal of tax deferral treatment for tangible and intangible personal property, including assets such as collectible cars, aircraft, gold and silver bullion, equipment, cars and trucks, franchise fees and licenses.
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Section of the tax code is used by taxpayers who own real and tangible and intangible personal property such as vacation and commercial property, aircraft, equipment, collectible vintage cars, artwork or franchise rights, that is held in the productive use of a business or for investment.
Any tangible personal property, such as aircraft, furniture, cars, trucks, equipment, railroad cars and locomotives, livestock, artwork, gold and silver bullion, vintage sport cars and collectibles, are eligible for the tax deferral.
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