Real Property Law
Cal. Real. Prop. Journal 2019, VOL. 37, NO. 3
Content
- Message from the California Tax Lawyer Editor-in-Chief
- 2019-2020 Executive Committee of the Taxation Section
- The Section 199A Deduction: Concepts & Examples
- MCLE Self-Study Article: Qualified Opportunity Zones: An Uneasy Path to Significant Tax Benefits
- Excerpt of 2019 California Documentary Transfer Tax Table
- 2018-2019 Executive Committee of the Real Property Law Section
- Feds To the Rescue: 2019 California Transfer Tax Update
- Availability of the Welfare and Other Property Tax Exemptions in Real Property Leasing Transactions
- Message from the California Real Property Journal Editor-in-Chief
- Message from the Outgoing Real Property Section Co-Chairs
- Table of Contents
- 2018-2019 California Taxation Editorial Board
- 2018-2019 California Real Property Journal Editorial Board
- In Further Defense of the "Rushmore Approach" to Account For Intangible Property in Real Property Assessments
MCLE Self-Study Article: Qualified Opportunity Zones: An Uneasy Path to Significant Tax Benefits
Check the end of this article for information on how to access one MCLE self-study credit.
Alexander Y. Loshiloff and Kyle J. Recker
Alexander Loshiloff is special counsel at Coblentz Patch Duffy & Bass LLP in San Francisco, with over 20 years of general, transactional, and international tax experience. He was previously Senior Director for Tax Planning at one of the largest computer technology companies in the world and a tax partner at a large international law firm. Alex received his J.D. from the University of South Carolina School of Law.
Kyle Recker is a partner at Coblentz Patch Duffy & Bass LLP in San Francisco, where he advises institutional lenders, owners, developers, and investors in finance and real estate transactions. Kyle received his J.D., magna cum laude, from the University of Michigan Law School.