Edgar L. Grubb v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

315 F.2d 753, 11 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1249, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 5630
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 1963
Docket14744_1
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 315 F.2d 753 (Edgar L. Grubb v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edgar L. Grubb v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 315 F.2d 753, 11 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1249, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 5630 (6th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

McALLISTER, Senior Circuit Judge.

This is a petition for review of the decision of the Tax Court in which it found petitioner liable for income tax deficiencies in the amount of $149,635.08 for the years 1941 to 1945 inclusive, and for fraud penalties in the amount of $74,935.-22 for the same period. Petitioner admitted that the method of preparing his income tax returns showed an understate *754 ment aggregating $81,812.16 for the above period of five years.

The facts, in large part, are similar to those in many cases which have come before this Court, where we have either found the taxpayer liable according to the decision of the court below, or not liable because of failure of the government’s proof. Here the Tax Court found that the Commissioner was mistaken in his determination of petitioner’s cash on hand for each of the five years involved, but found that the burden of proof was upon petitioner to establish what amounts of cash he had on hand during that period. Petitioner contends that since the Tax Court found the Commissioner’s determination was mistaken in the above-mentioned respects, the burden of proof was not upon him to establish the correct amount of tax, his net worth, or his cash on hand during the years in question, and that the decision of the Tax Court should be reversed for this reason. Petitioner further contends that it was not shown by clear and convincing proof that he fraudulently and wilfully intended to evade his taxes.

We shall subsequently refer to the above contentions in a more detailed discussion of the case.

Petitioner was born on a small farm in Tennessee. His father was a farmer and, later, a rural mail carrier. Petitioner graduated from high school in the northern part of Knox County, and then attended the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. He graduated from the Medical College of the University of Tennessee in 1925. During the time he was going to college, he worked on the farm in the summertime. He stated that, on his request, his father let a tenant go, and permitted petitioner to take over the farm work, and that during these years, in the summer, he made $1,600 after working on the farm and selling the equipment; and that that money belonged to him. When he went to medical college, he got a job at the Memphis General Hospital in the Receiving Ward. He worked from four to eight in the late afternoon and early evening and was off from eight to twelve. He went back to work in the hospital from midnight to seven in the morning and, after breakfast, then went to medical school. He actually had only four hours off out of the twenty-four, and slept on a stretcher cot in the hospital during the night when nothing was happening. These remarkable habits of persistence and work that would exhaust most men, as well as his application to his profession, and, in addition, engaging in other gainful pursuits, are characteristic of petitioner from the earliest glimpse of him, in the record, to his successful practice of medicine during the taxable years in question.

Upon completing his internship in 1926, petitioner owned a Ford car, the usual instruments for carrying on the general practice of medicine, a few surgical instruments, a life insurance policy, and, according to his testimony, two or three thousand dollars. He started practice in a lumber camp area at Piave, Mississippi, with another physician who had a contract practice with the lumber company and a large practice covering the countryside. Petitioner received $200 a month from the lumber company’s payments, and half of the other doctor’s receipts from general practice. During one month he remembered receiving, as his share of the income, $550. He lived frugally in a company-owned and furnished hotel for a dollar a day, including board and room. While he was in Piave, he and a Dr. Martin bought a drugstore, in which petitioner’s share was two-thirds and Dr. Martin’s share, one-third. According to his best memory, Dr. Martin paid approximately $3,600 for his one-third share. Petitioner, while in Piave, also bought a house, which was a bungalow with three bedrooms, and had a piece of rental property on it which was developed into an infirmary. Mr. W. P. Smith, of Piave, donated to him all of the operating equipment for the infirmary because of a service petitioner had performed for Mr. Smith: The son of Mr. Smith had frequent convulsions and “after we had given him more than one neurological examination and watched *755 him for a while, we concluded he had an intra-cranial lesion.” Petitioner then communicated with Dr. Walter Daly of Baltimore, who was one of his friends, and they took the boy up for Dr. Daly to check. He agreed with petitioner as to the trouble. Petitioner testified: “We operated the young fellow and removed a cyst, an intracranial cyst, and cured his convulsions,” and, in gratitude, the boy’s father provided all of the operating equipment for a twelve-bed infirmary.

In 1930, after four years of practice in Mississippi, petitioner sold his real estate interest, including the infirmary, collected as many of his accounts receivable as possible, and moved to Memphis, Tennessee. From 1930 to 1932, petitioner served as a resident physician without salary in a hospital in Memphis, developing his specialty as an eye, ear, nose and throat physician and surgeon, and, during this time, his family lived with his mother-in-law in Mississippi. In the summer of 1932, upon completion of his residency, petitioner and his family came to Knoxville, Tennessee, where he has practiced medicine since. During his first two years at Knoxville, petitioner’s family lived with his parents on a farm some miles from that city.

Throughout the taxable years here in question, 1941-1945 inclusive, petitioner employed a receptionist bookkeeper, and a successor bookkeeper, two assistants, at different times, to help with the patients and the office routine, a registered nurse, and afterward an accountant to prepare his income tax returns. With the exception of the accountant, petitioner’s employees assisted in various ways in accepting fees. The bookkeeping work was done, however, by the bookkeeper, and her successor.

The Tax Court found that petitioner failed to keep adequate and complete books and records for his medical practice and for his other income-producing activities during the taxable years; and there is no question that such was the fact.

The net worth statement upon which the Commissioner’s assessment was based, was stipulated to be correct in all but four respects — “cash on hand,” “cattle,” “personal living expenses,” and a claimed loan of $12,500 alleged to have been made to petitioner by his father.

In this case, the only points of dispute are as to the amount in existence of cash on hand, at the beginning of the net worth period, and at the conclusion of the taxable years here involved, and— the fraudulent intention of petitioner to evade payment of his taxes. Petitioner-contended that he had approximately $103,781 in cash in a safe-deposit box on December 31, 1940, the opening date of the net worth period. The Commissioner,, while, in his computation of petitioner’s net income by the net worth method,, showed that petitioner had assets of $44,-958.42 at the opening of the net worth period, and a net worth, at that date, of $36,456.69, nevertheless, found that he had no cash on hand at that time.

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115 T.C. No. 27 (U.S. Tax Court, 2000)
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1974 T.C. Memo. 73 (U.S. Tax Court, 1974)
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United States v. Bolt
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327 F.2d 820 (Fifth Circuit, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
315 F.2d 753, 11 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1249, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 5630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edgar-l-grubb-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca6-1963.