Nancy Rendleman is a partner in Williams Mullen's Litigation and Tax Law sections. Ms. Rendleman was admitted to the bar in 1977 and has been engaged in the state and local tax practice area since 1980. Her experience includes extensive involvement with sales and use taxation, corporate income taxation, franchise, license, intangibles and property taxation, including litigation of 4R cases for the railroad industry involving both the valuation and equalization of railroad property. She has successfully litigated cases involving the valuation of real and personal property and successfully defended a wide variety of tax assessments.
Education
University of North Carolina School of Law, J.D.
University of North Carolina, B.S.
Professional Affiliations
American Bar Association
- Taxation Section
American Property Tax Counsel
Institute for Professionals in Taxation
North Carolina Bar Association
- Estate Planning & Fiduciary Law Section Council (1990 - 1993)
- Estate Planning & Fiduciary Law Legislative Committee Chair (1993 - 1995)
- Taxation Section
Awards and Honors
American College of Trust and Estate Counsel
North Carolina State Board of Legal Specialization Certified Specialist: Estate Planning and Probate Law (1987 - 2002)
Order of the Coif
Phi Beta Kappa
Publications
State & Local Tax Law Alert - November 2007
North Carolina's New Tax Assessment, Refund and Appeal Procedures
- State & Local Tax Update - October 2006
- "Property Tax Exemptions and Exclusions," April 2006
- "Property Tax in North Carolina - Property Tax Assessment of Business Personal Property," April 2006
- "Property Tax in North Carolina - Property Tax Assessment of Real Estate," April 2006
- "Property Tax in North Carolina - The Concept of Business Value in the Income Approach to Value," May 2005
- "Property Tax in North Carolina - The Discovery of Unlisted and Underlisted Property," May 2005
- "North Carolina Property Tax Assessment and Appeals Procedures," North Carolina State Bar Journal, Winter 2001
- "Toward a Better Understanding of Value-In-Use," August 1998
- "Care in Classifying Computer Software Can Avoid or Reduce Property Taxes," Journal of Multistate Taxation, No. 1, 1995
- "Can Contingent-Fee Property Tax Audits Be Challenged On Due Process Grounds?," Journal of Multistate Taxation, No. 2, 1994
- "Sales and Use Taxation of Computer Software," Journal of Multistate Taxation, No. 5, 1992