Willcox graduated from the University of South Carolina in 1998 and received his juris doctor from the University of South Carolina School of Law in 2004, where he also received the Cali Award for outstanding scholarship in the field of securities regulation.
While in law school Walker also clerked for the Attorney General of South Carolina and was a compliance officer for SRC where he applied federal and state law to the administration of group benefit plans.
Walker is married to Dr. Lori Willcox.
The much-anticipated and much-delayed rules from the IRS on the income tax treatment of deferred compensation are now available. At almost 400 pages, the rules are not exactly light reading for the average taxpayer. Taxpayers have until the end of 2007 to make any necessary changes to their deferred compensation plans.
The Internal Revenue Code has special tax rules for "nonqualified" deferred compensation plans. These are not to be confused with "qualified" employer retirement plans, like a 401(k) plan, or with bona fide vacation leave, sick leave, compensatory time, or disability pay or death benefit plans. The new regulations expand the already broad definition of what constitutes deferred compensation. Essentially, a plan provides for deferred compensation if an employee has a legally binding right during a taxable year to compensation that has not been actually or constructively received and included in gross income, and that is, or may be, payable under the plan in a later year.
The impetus for the new rules was a growing concern that some individuals were deferring money over which they still had control, and which they could receive basically whenever they wanted it. The memories are still fresh of top Enron executives cashing out their deferred compensation early and leaving the company financially floundering. In a nutshell, the new rules accomplish the following:
* limit the flexibility for the timing of elections to defer compensation;
* restrict distributions during employment to fixed dates, certain changes in control, or extreme hardship;
* prohibit acceleration of distributions of deferred compensation;
* prevent key employees of public companies from receiving deferred compensation due to severance from service until six months after severance; and
* require that deferrals of distribution dates or changes in the form of payment be made at least one year in advance of the scheduled distribution date.
If the rules are not followed, the tax consequences are significant. The participant is immediately taxed on the value of the deferred compensation once it is no longer subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture. On top of that, there is a 20% excise tax on the amount that is included as income. For good measure, there is also an interest penalty. To avoid such a scenario, employers and employees with deferred compensation plans should promptly come up to speed on the new rules and get appropriate professional help with making sense of, and responding appropriately to, the new IRS rules for deferred compensation.
EXCLUDED HEIRS MAY STILL INHERIT
Following a long battle, a court has found that Elizabeth is entitled to share in the fortune, notwithstanding the argument by her mother's other heirs that she was not her mother's "child" or "descendant" because she had been adopted out of the family. Looking at the applicable state law when the trusts were created, the court determined that, at such times, nonmarital children could be included as descendants or children of their biological parents for purposes of inheritance. There also was an overarching constitutional issue, as some courts have held that treating children born out of a marriage differently from marital children is a denial of equal protection of the law.
In Elizabeth's case, the issue would have been more clear-cut in her favor had the trust instruments simply included her as a beneficiary, either by more inclusive language or by using her name. Of course, up to a point, the creator of a trust or will has leeway in deciding which of his or her children to include as beneficiaries. But the law has been known to step in on behalf of children to achieve a measure of justice and fairness.
A case in point, which has yet to play out to a resolution, concerns the estate of Anna Nicole Smith. In her will, Smith left all of her estate, which could be greatly enhanced by many millions of dollars from her late husband's assets, to her son. Only months before both Smith and her son died, she gave birth to a daughter. Whether the omission of any future children from Smith's will was intentional or merely a drafting error, it is probable that Smith's daughter will inherit the estate.
Under the "omitted child" doctrine followed by a majority of courts, when a parent has a will and then has children, those children are treated as if they were born prior to the will, and they are afforded the same treatment as any other siblings. If, for whatever reason, the Smith estate passes outside of the will, the daughter still will likely receive the estate.
Update Your Estate Planning Documents
Your estate planning documents should be reviewed with a professional on a regular basis and kept current with your life changes. Birth, death, marriage, and divorce are but a few life changes that can significantly affect your estate planning. Don't wait until it's too late to revise your plans to reflect your wishes and circumstances.
While it may be human nature to want to lay low and take cover when the financial strains mount and you begin to make late payments or miss them altogether, the better course is to be up front about your situation--first, with a legitimate housing counselor, and then with the lender. Communication is the first essential step in climbing out of the hole.
Foreclosure occurs when the borrower defaults on the loan and the lender asserts its right to sell the home to raise money to pay the borrower's debt. It is an outcome to be avoided by the borrower if at all possible. Not only is it an obvious setback to lose one's home, but the negative ramifications of a foreclosure reach far into the future. A foreclosure likely will wreak havoc with your credit rating, and it could also create an impediment to getting a job or insurance.
Among other things, a legitimate housing counselor can offer advice and assistance on avoiding foreclosure. The emphasis should be on "legitimate," because, unfortunately, there are many credit-repair scam artists out there preying on people who can least afford to be ripped off. Consumers can steer clear of such outfits by consulting a list of reputable housing counselors that is maintained by the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development. The advice should be either free or at a low cost.
As for communication with the lender itself, do not give in to any temptation to ignore the lender's telephone calls or to toss its letters. Borrowers under stress may be surprised to learn that prompt and forthright communications with the lender could open the way to refinancing or restructuring the loan with terms that are more manageable and that will allow the borrower to stay in the home. After all, the lender, no less than the borrower, has an interest in seeing that the loan is paid off, one way or another. In the bargain, you just may get to keep the home of your dreams.
Federal trademark law broadly defines a "trademark" as any word, name, symbol, or device, or any combination thereof, that identifies and distinguishes the goods of a person from those of another and indicates its source. Still, according to the PTO, there were two basic problems with attempting to trademark an orange-flavored medicine. First, the orange flavor did not serve as a source identifier, as it did not identify or distinguish the goods of the applicant from the products of others.
Orange flavoring is a common additive in orally administered medicines. The idea, which is not new, is to make the drug more palatable, thereby increasing patient compliance. In the language of trademark law, the applicant could not show that the public associated the orange flavor with the applicant's product to such an extent as to show distinctiveness or "secondary meaning."
Second, it is basic trademark law that a characteristic of a product cannot result in a trademark when it serves an essential functional purpose for the product. An example is the use of a color to make a product more visible. The rationale for this "functionality" doctrine is the goal of maintaining a balance between trademark law and patent law. Trademark law is intended to promote competition by protecting a company's reputation, but it is not the purpose of trademark law to diminish competition by allowing a producer of a product to seize control of a particularly functional product feature. A business should apply for a patent, not a trademark, if its goal is to monopolize a new product design or function for a limited time.
In the case of the orange-flavored pill, the flavor was all about function. At least indirectly, the flavor made the drug work better, because it increased patients' willingness and ability to take it as prescribed. The company's own website was part of the evidence weighing against the application. It touted the fact that the "pleasant orange taste" improved the efficacy of the medication by masking the inherent bitterness found in many therapeutic agents.
Apart from the particular application before it, the PTO expressed doubts as to how any particular taste or flavor could acquire the status of a trademark. Unlike color, smell, and sound, a consumer generally has no access to a product's flavor prior to purchasing the product. As a result, it is difficult to fathom how a flavor can serve as a source identifier, at least in the classic sense, given the definition of a trademark as something that identifies and distinguishes goods and that lets the consumer know their source.
COMPUTER FRAUD AND ABUSE ACT UPDATE
The CFAA applies to all companies and all computers that are connected to the Internet. Potentially, there are multiple, distinct types of violations of the statute that could support a civil action. On a recurring issue in such cases--whether the defendant had authorization for his actions--the courts look at several factors:
* whether the defendant was an agent of the plaintiff's, with particular powers;
* whether an employment contract, such as may have been embodied in company rules and policies, was breached; and
* whether the defendant's use of the computer exceeded normal use that was expected by the plaintiff.
Recent Court Decisions
A real estate business was allowed to proceed with a civil action against a former employee for violations of the CFAA. In violation of his employment contract, the employee decided to quit and start a competing business. Before he returned the company's laptop, he deleted all of the data in it, including data that would have revealed his misconduct. Knowing that "deleted" files can be retrieved, he erased the incriminating data by loading into the laptop a secure-erasure program.
All of this, if proven in court, violated the CFAA as "transmission" of a program that damaged the computer (defined to include files in the computer), and as intentionally accessing the computer without authorization. Although the employee had not yet left his job when he installed the program, by law any authorization he might have had evaporated as soon as he violated the duty of loyalty to his employer.
In another case brought under the CFAA, a tour company secured an injunction against a competing company run by one of its former employees. The ex-employee improperly used confidential information from his former employer to enable his new company to glean pricing data from his former employer's website, so that his new enterprise could effectively undercut those prices.
Although the website was open to anyone, the unauthorized use of the confidential information, combined with the use of a "scraper" software program, violated the CFAA. On top of the injunction, the plaintiff could recover, as a compensable "loss" under the CFAA, the thousands of dollars it had paid in computer consultant fees for diagnostic work after the defendant's conduct was discovered.