First Trust & Savings Bank v. United States
Decision Date | 13 July 1953 |
Docket Number | No. 14717.,14717. |
Citation | 206 F.2d 97 |
Parties | FIRST TRUST & SAVINGS BANK OF DAVENPORT, IOWA v. UNITED STATES. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — Eighth Circuit |
Stephen A. Hart, Jr., and Martin F. McCarthy, Davenport, Iowa, for appellant.
Walter H. Beaman, Jr., Special Asst. to the Atty. Gen. (Charles S. Lyon, Asst. Atty. Gen., Ellis N. Slack, Special Asst. to the Atty. Gen., William R. Hart, U. S. Atty., and Cloid I. Level, Asst. U. S. Atty., Des Moines, Iowa, on the brief), for appellee.
Before GARDNER, Chief Judge, and WOODROUGH and THOMAS, Circuit Judges.
This action was brought by Henry A. Kraftmeyer in his lifetime to recover amounts paid by him on account of 50 percent fraud penalties that he claimed were wrongfully assessed against him in respect to deficiencies in his income taxes. On the trial to the court without a jury there was judgment of dismissal at the costs of the plaintiff and he appealed. He died on January 24, 1953, and the administrator of his estate has been substituted as appellant.
The 50 percent "fraud penalties" were assessed on the ground that deficiencies in his income taxes for the years 1937, 1938, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944 and 1945, were "due to his fraud with intent to evade tax" as denounced by Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 293 (b), which provides:
The appellant does not claim that there were no deficiencies in Mr. Kraftmeyer's income taxes for the years in question. Such deficiencies were determined and assessed against him and were paid by him with interest, together with 25 per cent addition assessed for failure to file returns, but it is insisted that the conclusion of the trial court that such deficiencies "were due in whole or in part to fraud with intent to evade tax" was not supported by substantial evidence, was contrary to the evidence, and was induced by erroneous view of the law. Appellant's position is that the taxpayer's civil liability for addition to tax was limited to the 5 per cent and 25 percent additions prescribed by 26 U.S.C.A. § 293 (a) and 291(a), which read:
There was no conflict in the evidence at the trial and the testimony of Mr. Kraftmeyer in his own behalf was apparently frank and candid. He lived at Bettendorf, Iowa, and although he had long received taxable income, he attained the age of 70 years without ever filing any income tax return. The only testimony as to how that came about was the account that he gave himself.
He was in his 71st year when he gave his testimony in this case to the effect that he knew nothing about bookkeeping and had never kept business records and no one ever told him that he had to file an income tax return. He heard of income tax prior to 1945, but thought that he "wasn't making any income" and that "he had no income." He figured that he was paying a general county and city tax and that based on what he had invested the investment wasn't making any particular return. He did not know that he owed any tax; did not know how to figure it out or how to go about it. He never had any fraudulent intent to evade taxes.
Mr. Ryan of the Internal Revenue Collector's office (a witness for the government) first brought the matter of failing to file income tax returns to his attention in a telephone call in which Mr. Ryan asked him to come down and see him. Not knowing what it meant and not realizing the importance of the matter, Mr. Kraftmeyer said he didn't have time. Mr. Ryan advised him that he better have time. So he went.
In the ensuing interview he told Mr. Ryan that he had never filed an income tax return and the seriousness of his predicament was apparently brought home to him. He employed an attorney and cooperated with the revenue agents to produce a full showing of all his money transactions through the years in question. As Mr. Ryan testified, "he made no effort to conceal". It was shown that the way in which he had made money was that he had from time to time through the years acquired pieces of vacant land close to town and had carried on the buying and selling of cattle which he ran for short periods on the lands. He never farmed. Some time before Mr. Ryan telephoned him he had sold one of his pieces of land to the Aluminum Company of America for $66,000, which was much more than it had cost him. That seems to have been his first business transaction likely to attract the attention of the tax authorities. But he had carried on all of his business dealings through banks. He had his cancelled checks and the deposit records were available at the banks. He had never done anything to conceal or disguise the true nature of any of his transactions or hidden anything away, and a record of his income that was 90 percent complete was readily made up. He was duly taxed and statutory interest was added. Twenty-five percent was also added for his failure to make and file returns. He was also informed against criminally under 26 U.S. C.A. § 145(a) for wilfully failing to make the income tax return required of him for the year 1945 and on his plea of guilty was fined and paid $10,000 and was sentenced to imprisonment but was released on probation.
The further 50 percent addition to taxes in the sum of $8,153 assessed against him on the ground that the deficiencies were "due to his fraud with intent to evade tax" is the only part of the $32,203 tax, interest and additions then collected from the taxpayer which was in issue and sought to be recovered in this action.
There was no proof of any wilful commission of any affirmative act of fraud on the part of the taxpayer to evade the taxes which he admitted he owed and ought to have filed return for during the years in question.1 His plea of guilty to the charge of wilfully failing to make and file return was of course evidence against him of the elements of that charge. It was compatible with all the other evidence in the case that his dereliction consisted only in wilful omission and passive neglect to perform the duty of making returns imposed upon him by law.
The position of the appellant is that the two kinds of civil exactions by way of additions to tax, namely, the 5 percent up to 25 percent, and the 50 percent additions which Congress has provided to aid administration of revenue collection are distinguished from each other in the same way as are the two kinds of criminal penalties prescribed to the same end in 26 U.S.C.A. § 145(a) and (b). As to both the civil and the criminal provisions, Congress distinguishes between the taxpayer who is guilty of mere passive failure to perform his duty in respect to a tax owing by him and the taxpayer who is guilty of affirmative attempt or practice of fraud to evade such tax. Though 25 percent addition to tax was correctly added to Mr. Kraftmeyer's deficiencies because he wilfully failed and continued to fail to make returns required of him, the 50 percent assessment was erroneously made because his dereliction was passive and included no affirmative act of fraud that caused his tax deficiencies. His deficiencies were not "due to fraud with intent to evade tax".
Although in the nature of things it must inevitably have happened that many people have failed to file the income tax returns required of them by law, it appears that this is the first case in which any federal court has sustained the assessment of the 50 percent fraud penalty against a taxpayer with no more showing of fraud than his mere failure to file tax returns required of him, which was the only basis for the assessment proved in this case. At least we are not cited to any other such case and we have found none. The cases that are cited to us here and relied on by the government where taxpayers have made false returns and have been held criminally and civilly for "attempt to evade tax" or for "fraud to which tax deficiency was due", are manifestly irrelevant. Of course, the filing of false returns is affirmative fraudulent conduct which is adapted to bring about deficiency of tax and an intent to evade tax may be inferred from it. As the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit succinctly put it, ...
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