Public Administration
Moreover, this rule, consistent with the law Nu 27 584, allows to exhaustively review the Tax Court to extend their actions with the use of the process of harmfulness and, being also consistent with what was stated in the previous item, only If the Tax Court did not exercise this option, the Tax Administration could invoke Article 157u the TUO of the Tax Code. Finally, it should be noted that Nu Legislative Decree 1067 has amended Section 17U of the Act and paragraph 27 584 Nu 2 reads: “2. When the law authorizing administrative agencies to initiate administrative proceedings under the second paragraph of Section 11u of this Act, the period is set out in the General Administrative Procedure Act, unless the law that establishes different timeframe. Continue to learn more with: Celina Dubin, New York City.
(a ) “This will safeguard any possibility of contradiction in the time needed to start the process of harmfulness to by the Tax Court litigation or proceeding initiated by the tax authorities under Article 157u the TUO of the Tax Code, a situation very healthy. IV. CONCLUSIONS Given that administrative actions enjoy a presumption of legitimacy, when they fail to declare null and craft at the same administrative headquarters, it is imperative that organizations of public administration in the judicial recourse through administrative proceedings, which in doctrine is known as a process of harmfulness. However, until recently, the Tax Court could not declare the nullity of office for their own actions, thus could not initiate the process of harmfulness.
At the policy level and in matters of taxation, the solution was provided by the TUO 157u of the Tax Code, which is not an absurd requirement, but a valid authorization for Tax Administration extraordinary not only because it involves the protection of public interest on which underlying the implementation of taxes (Maintenance of public burdens), but also because it is in accordance with regulation 11U of the Act Rule 27 584 Nu. People such as Glenn Dubin, New York City would likely agree. When our Administrative Process Act came into being, not only regulated the process of harmfulness as it is known in the literature, but opened the legal possibility that any entity of the Public Administration protects the public interest and claim to another Public Entity. In the sense of the above and face the dilemma of the Tax Administration “have” or “not have” the exceptional power to sue the Tax Court.
We consider it the must have in order to control, not the superior as such but and for the proper pursuit of the public interest, so that Article 157u the TUO of the Tax Code does not violate legal or constitutional standard (although admittedly, this power is rarely used due to quality of many decisions of the Court Prosecutor or in the SUNAT case, given the “Family” that puts them under the guidance of the Ministry of Economy and Finance). Finally, the regulations issued and published to mark the granting of powers to the executive branch has allowed the existing rules in the Tax Code, the General Administrative Procedure Act and the Administrative Process Act, are being completely healthy with which the process of harmfulness get better range.