Court Opinion

ID: 4595866
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:15:54.984455+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:51:31.241603
License: Public Domain

Fred N. Acker, Petitioner, v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, RespondentAcker v. CommissionerDocket No. 45575United States Tax Court26 T.C. 107; 1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 217; April 17, 1956, Filed *217 Decision will be entered for the respondent.  Held, that each of the deficiencies here involved is due to fraud with intent to evade tax, and that the addition to the tax provided by section 293 (b) of the Internal Revenue Code (1939) has been properly applied; held, further, that the additions to the tax provided by section 291 (a) for failure to file returns, by section 294 (d) (1) (A) for failure to file declarations of estimated tax, and by section 294 (d) (2) for substantial underestimates of estimated tax have likewise been properly applied.  Held, further, that the concurrent imposition of such additions to tax does not violate the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.  Fred N. Acker, pro se.James F. Kennedy, Esq., for the respondent.  Pierce, Judge.  PIERCE *107  This proceeding involves deficiencies in income tax, and also several additions to the tax, determined by the respondent, under the Internal Revenue Code (1939), as follows:Addition to taxAddition to taxAddition toAddition tofor failure tofor substantialYearDeficiencytax for fraud,tax for failurefile declarationunderestimatesec. 293 (b)to file return,of estimatedof estimatedsec. 291 (a)tax, sec. 294tax, sec. 294(d) (1) (A)(d) (2)1941$ 51.77$ 25.89$ 12.9419457,307.273,653.641,826.82$ 730.73$ 438.4419463,985.491,992.75996.37398.55239.13The petitioner elected, in his petition to this Court, to waive any question as to the deficiencies and as to the additions to the tax under section 291 (a) for failure to file returns.The issues for decision*219  are whether each of the other above-mentioned additions to tax should be approved; and whether concurrent imposition of all the additions to tax determined by the respondent would contravene the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.FINDINGS OF FACT.Certain facts and exhibits have been stipulated, and these are incorporated herein by reference.Petitioner is an individual with his principal residence in Cleveland, Ohio.  He did not file an income tax return in respect of his income for any of the years involved.Petitioner was born in 1895.  He is a graduate of Ohio Northern University and of John Marshall-Cleveland Law School.  He was admitted to the Ohio bar in 1921, and actively engaged in the practice *108  of law until about 1930.  Thereafter, until 1945, he practiced less actively but continued to maintain a law office; and in the latter year he became a member of a law partnership under the name of Easly, Wursthorn & Acker.In 1929 petitioner suffered severe losses in the stock market and incurred large debts, some of which remained unpaid for many years.  In 1938 his net asset position was a deficit of between $ 40,000 and $ 50,000.  In 1939 he began*220  to realize gains from stock market transactions; and he then proceeded to liquidate some of his debts and, with additional funds borrowed from banks, he acquired interests in two Cleveland enterprises, Ohio Loan & Discount Company and Royal Brass Company.  Beginning in about 1943 or 1944 and during the subsequent taxable years here involved, he was an investor in and an executive of two other Cleveland enterprises, Zenith Plastics Company, and Universal Machine Company which later became Cleveland Hydraulics Company.  In 1946 he also became an investor in and an executive of Triad Metal Products Co. of Cleveland.  Also in 1945 he contributed capital, in the names of his children, to a partnership known as Peter Pan Novelty Company.Petitioner had a good working knowledge of accounting and of the Federal income tax laws.  Early in his career, he had acquired knowledge in these fields while employed in the offices of two large corporations.  Later, as an executive of the above-mentioned Cleveland companies, he had participated in the preparation of partnership income tax returns for some of said companies, and had signed certain of these returns.  As a lawyer, he had handled negotiations*221  with the Bureau of Internal Revenue on behalf of clients.  In 1946 he was admitted to practice before this Court.Petitioner filed no income tax return in respect of his income for any taxable year from about 1929 to and including at least the year 1946, which is the last of the years here involved.  Also, he did not file any declaration of estimated tax for either of the years 1945 and 1946 which are here involved.  He thought that for each of the years 1929 through 1938, the amount of his gross income was insufficient to require the filing of returns.  But he knew and has conceded that for the years 1939 through 1949, the amount of his gross income was sufficient to require the filing of returns; and that at least for the years 1945 and 1946, he not only had gross income sufficient to require the filing of returns but also had net income subject to income tax. He was aware that the time for filing returns for each of the years involved was on or before March 15 of the following year; but he consciously, knowingly, and deliberately let such filing dates pass without filing returns, making any declaration of estimated tax, or making any payment of the tax.*109  The stipulated*222  amounts of petitioner's gross income, deductions, and taxable net income for each of the years here involved, were as follows:194119451946Dividend income$ 7,589.10$ 2,734.13$ 5,133.15Capital gain (taxable)2,216.636,363.33Salary income10,384.463,850.00Partnership income16,563.767,658.17Rental income800.00744.00Total gross income$ 9,814.73$ 30,382.35$ 23,748.65Deductions6,477.085,456.137,399.23Taxable net income$ 3,337.65$ 24,926.22$ 16,349.42The foregoing income was used by petitioner principally in making personal expenditures on behalf of himself and his family, in making payments to banks and others to whom he was indebted, in purchasing securities, and in making investments in various business enterprises.Petitioner maintained no books of account as such, from which the amounts of his gross income for any particular year could be determined.  Certain items of his gross income were disclosed on information returns, withholding tax returns, and partnership returns, filed by third parties; but other items of his income were not so disclosed, either because information returns with respect to them*223  were not filed, or because certain real estate and securities which produced part of the income were held either in the name of a joint owner, or in the name of one of the companies in which petitioner was interested, or in the names of brokers' nominees.  Also, as before stated, his investment in Peter Pan Novelty Company was in the names of his children, and this interest was not disclosed on the partnership returns of that company.In 1943 a representative of the Bureau of Internal Revenue called on petitioner and requested that he prepare and file income tax returns for the preceding years; but he refused to do so.  Also, on numerous other occasions up until the issuance of the notice of deficiency herein, petitioner was further requested to file income tax returns for the several years here involved; but such requests likewise were refused.Beginning in about 1946, petitioner was requested by respondent's representatives to furnish statements respecting the amount of his assets at the beginning and close of years subsequent to 1938.  Although he objected to such statements, he informed respondent's representatives that he had made arrangements with an accountant to prepare them. *224  But such statements were never submitted.  Also, he refused repeated requests for informal self-determinations of his income on a year-to-year basis, although he did disclose the principal *110  sources of his income and did submit certain canceled checks, bank statements, and brokers' statements.  These records, however, were incomplete as to any particular year.  He promised to procure and submit complete records from his banks and brokers; and he urged that these third parties be not interviewed, on the ground that they might close his accounts and cut off his credit.In 1948, after petitioner had failed repeatedly to comply with requests for the production of such additional records, respondent's representatives issued summonses to three banks and a broker. Thereupon, petitioner submitted a considerable number of additional records; but these were still incomplete.In 1950 petitioner was tried before a jury in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, and convicted on an indictment charging him with willful failure to file a Federal income tax return for the year 1946 in contravention of section 145 (a) of the 1939 Code.  This conviction was affirmed*225  per curiam by the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit on December 4, 1950.  Petitioner was sentenced to imprisonment; but, upon his assuring the Court that his tax liabilities would be paid, no monetary fine was imposed.In 1951 petitioner still had not submitted any formal or informal self-determination of his income for any of the preceding years, and had not supplied sufficient records from which his income could be determined.  Respondent's representatives then presented him with transcripts of his bank accounts, and asked him to explain the deposit items.  But, although he then did furnish some additional information, it still was incomplete.In May 1952, a jeopardy assessment was made against petitioner on the basis of such data as was available.  Petitioner regarded the assessment to be grossly excessive; and immediately thereafter, he produced a substantial number of the missing records.  On the basis of all records produced and with the cooperation of petitioner in numerous conferences, the deficiency notice here involved was then prepared and issued.At least a part of the deficiency for each of the years involved is due to fraud with intent to evade tax. *226  OPINION.Petitioner has not challenged the deficiencies.  He disputes only the imposition of the several additions to the tax; and even as to these, he waived in his petition any question respecting those imposed under section 291 (a) for failure to file returns, and he indicated at the hearing that he does not seriously question those imposed under section 294 (d) (1) (A) for failure to file declarations *111  of estimated tax. His principal objection is to the additions to the tax for fraud, under section 293 (b).  But he further contends that, in any event, the additions under section 293 (b) for fraud and those under section 291 (a) for failure to file returns, cannot be imposed concurrently; that, similarly, the additions under section 294 (d) (1) (A) for failure to file declarations of estimated tax, and under section 294 (d) (2) for substantial underestimate of estimated tax, cannot be imposed concurrently; and, finally, that if all the additions to tax determined by the respondent are imposed concurrently, then these, together with the criminal penalty imposed upon him, would result in the infliction of "cruel and unusual punishments" in violation of the Eighth Amendment*227  to the Constitution of the United States.I.As to the additions to the tax for fraud, imposed under section 293 (b), petitioner's basic position is that, not having filed a return, he made no affirmative misrepresentation of any material fact; that the making of such a misrepresentation is generally regarded to be an essential element of fraud at common law; and that the same should be true here.  In short, he contends that where no return has been filed, there can be no "fraud with intent to evade tax," within the meaning of section 293 (b); and that the only addition to the tax which can be applied in such situation is that provided by section 291 (a) for failure to file a return.  We do not agree.Here, we are not dealing with common law fraud; but rather with the statutory concept of "fraud with intent to evade tax" -- an offense for which Congress has provided one of the several sanctions that are embodied in the Internal Revenue Code for the purpose of promoting the orderly and punctual administration of the Federal income tax system.  In Spies v. United States, 317 U.S. 492">317 U.S. 492, the Supreme Court said:The United States has relied for the*228  collection of its income tax largely upon the taxpayer's own disclosures * * *.  This system can function successfully only if those within or near taxable income keep and render true accounts.  In many ways taxpayers' neglect or deceit may prejudice the orderly and punctual administration of the system as well as the revenues themselves.  Congress has imposed a variety of sanctions for the protection of the system and the revenues. * * *The penalties imposed by Congress to enforce the tax laws embrace both civil and criminal sanctions.  Invocation of one does not exclude resort to the other.  Helvering v. Mitchell, 303 U.S. 391">303 U.S. 391. The most severe of the civil sanctions is that imposed under section 293 (b) for fraud.  A taxpayer's failure to perform any of his duties incident to the system, even through negligence, may bring into play one or more of the lesser sanctions; but when such breach of duty is combined *112  with a willful and positive attempt to defeat the statute or evade tax, in any manner or by any means, then there exists an offense of much more serious character, which Congress has designated in section 293 (b) by the term "fraud*229  with intent to evade tax." The sanction imposed for this offense, by which there is added to the tax an amount equal to 50 per cent of the total amount of the deficiency, is the capstone of the system of civil sanctions. 1Such willful attempt to defeat the statute or evade tax may be inferred from any conduct calculated to mislead or conceal; and it may be found not only in a situation where one of the methods employed was to file an intentionally false return, but also where the method involved a willful failure to make*230  any return whatever.  This Court has, in a number of cases, approved the imposition of the sanction under section 293 (b), where no return was filed.  See, for example, A. Raymond Jones, 25 T. C. 1100; Arthur M. Slavin, 43 B. T. A. 1100, 1110; Ollie V. Kessler, 39 B. T. A. 646; Pincus Brecher, 27 B. T. A. 1108.In the instant case, after hearing petitioner's testimony and considering all the evidence, we have no doubt that respondent correctly applied the provisions of section 293 (b).  Petitioner is an alert, intelligent, and well educated man.  He was, during the years involved, an attorney at law, and also an officer or principal partner in several business organizations.  He had a good working knowledge of accounting; was familiar with the Federal income tax laws; and was fully aware of his duties and obligations thereunder.  He knew and concedes that he knew that, at least as early as the year 1939 and for each of the 10 years thereafter, his gross income was sufficient to require the filing of an income tax return, and that for each of the years here involved*231  he had taxable net income in respect of which he was obligated to, but did not, make any self-disclosure or pay any income tax. At the hearing before this Court, he said:The record is also clear that in 1939, '40, '41, '42, '43, '44, '45, '46, '47, '48 and '49, I made enough gross income to have at least * * * filed a return.* * * *The record shows that I have taxable income in 1941, very small amount; [and] in '45 and '46; and while it is only stated generally in the record, I had taxable income in '47, '48 and '49. * * ** * * *now it can be admitted that I knew that March 15 was here in each one of these years, and that I consciously, knowingly and deliberately let it pass by.*113  He also testified:if I made a return, for instance, in 1944 I had to say when I made my last return and I was deeply conscious that when I had set the die in 1939 when I had that taxable income, that being a human being I knew I was in danger, and like any human being I shrug from danger, but I nevertheless persisted on principle. * * *This statement is, in itself, an admission that one of the reasons for his continued failure to file returns was to conceal his prior years' defalcations. *232  We reject petitioner's assertion that his motive for such willful conduct was not to evade tax, but merely to give effect to a deep-seated conviction, previously expressed in after-dinner speeches, that the rates for income taxes as fixed by the statute were confiscatory and unconstitutional.  There is no indication that he at any time took any action, either in this Court or in any other court, to contest the amount of his tax; and the fact is that he did not take even the preliminary step of disclosing his income, so that the applicable rates could be determined and applied as a basis for any such contest.  Likewise, in the present proceeding, he has not contested the deficiency or the rates used in computing the amount thereof.  Moreover, the evidence shows that this excuse was not asserted until nearly 5 years after respondent's representatives had begun their examination.  We regard it to be a mere afterthought.We reject, also, petitioner's further contention that he cannot be regarded as having intended to evade tax, because he knew that respondent's representatives probably would discover his defalcations sooner or later, and that he then would be compelled to pay the tax. *233  It is no defense that he realized that his concealment might not be complete, and that his attempt to defeat the statute might fail.  He was relying on the hope that, by not filing returns, discovery would be less likely and perhaps less complete; and that, in any event, he could in the meantime continue to employ for his own personal or business uses, the amounts which he knew should have been paid for taxes.  Each year he attempted to conceal his misconduct of the prior years by again not filing a return; and even after respondent's representatives began their examination, he repeatedly refused to make any return or self-determination of his income for any year.We are convinced, from an examination of all the evidence, that petitioner did willfully attempt, in respect of each of the years involved, to defeat the statute and evade tax; and that at least a part of the deficiency for each of such years "is due to fraud with intent to evade tax." We recognize that the burden of proof with respect to this issue was on the respondent; and we hold that such burden has been met.  Also, we find no evidence in the record of any irregularity or impropriety on the part of the respondent in*234  determining the additions *114  to tax under section 293 (b), as suggested in petitioner's pleading.  Said determinations of the respondent are approved.II.As regards respondent's determinations with respect to the several other additions to the tax, these also are approved.Section 291 (a) provides an addition to the tax for failure to make and file an income tax return, unless it is shown that such failure is due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect. The petitioner, as before stated, has waived any question with respect to the application of such sanction.  The offense is separate from that provided for under section 293 (b); and we have heretofore held, contrary to the petitioner's contention, that sanctions under both of these sections may be imposed concurrently. Pincus Brecher, 27 B. T. A. 1108. We here reaffirm that holding.Section 294 (d) (1) (A) provides an addition to the tax for failure to make and file a declaration of estimated tax, unless such failure is shown to be due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect. Petitioner, as before stated, has indicated that he does not seriously object to the imposition*235  of this sanction; and we believe there is no ground on which such an objection could properly be based, for petitioner's failure was willful and not due to any reasonable cause.Section 294 (d) (2) provides an addition to the tax for substantial underestimate of estimated tax. In G. E. Fuller, 20 T.C. 308">20 T. C. 308, we approved the regulation (Regs. 111, sec. 29.294-1 (b) (3) (A)), which provides that in the event of a failure to file the required declaration, the amount of the estimated tax for the purposes of the above-mentioned section is zero; and we there approved also the imposition of sanctions under both section 294 (d) (2) and section 294 (d) (1) (A).  We here follow our decision in the Fuller case.We hold also, contrary to petitioner's contention, that respondent is not precluded from imposing the sanctions provided under section 294, concurrently with the sanction provided under section 291 (a).  Cf.  Pincus Brecher, supra.III.Finally, petitioner contends that imposition of all the additions to tax determined by respondent would, when added to the interest on the deficiencies and his imprisonment pursuant*236  to the criminal statute, violate the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution.Such contention is without merit.  The Eighth Amendment provides that "Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted." This Amendment is directed only to courts of the United States exercising criminal jurisdiction. Ex Parte Watkins, 7 Pet. 568, 573. The Tax *115  Court does not exercise criminal jurisdiction; and proceedings before it are civil in character.  Charles E. Mitchell, 32 B. T. A. 1093.Moreover, additions to the tax are remedial in character, not penal or punitive; they are provided primarily as a safeguard for the protection of the revenue and to reimburse the Government for the expense of investigation and the loss resulting from taxpayers' neglect or deceit.  Spies v. United States, supra;Helvering v. Mitchell, supra. In the light of the evidence here presented, we do not regard the additions to the tax here involved to be excessive, or their imposition to be inequitable.Decision will be entered*237  for the respondent.  Footnotes1. At the hearing before the Senate Finance Committee on the Revenue Act of 1921, Dr. T. S. Adams, an advisor to the Treasury Department, testified that what "is really meant to be provided for [by section 205 (b) of the 1921 Revenue Act, which was similar to section 293 (b) of the 1939 Code] is, attempts to defeat or evade the statute." Hearings, Revenue Act of 1921, Senate Finance Committee, 67th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 255.  See also Spies v. United States, supra↩.