Edward S. Canton v. United States

226 F.2d 313
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 15, 1955
Docket15262
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 226 F.2d 313 (Edward S. Canton v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edward S. Canton v. United States, 226 F.2d 313 (8th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

VAN OOSTERHOUT, Circuit Judge.

The appellant, Edward S. Canton, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was found guilty by a jury on a charge by information of violating 26 U.S.C. § 145(b), by filing or causing to be filed a fraudulent income tax return for the year 1947. He appeals from the denial of his motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and from final judgment and sentence on the guilty verdict.

Defendant, who was 53 years of age at the time of the trial, is a high school graduate, and has had one year of college education and a short course at a business school. After working for various employers in the lumber industry, he established the Canton Lumber Sales Company in Minneapolis in 1930. He has been the sole proprietor of this business at all times since, except for a period of about five years ending in 1938 when his brother Paul was associated with him as a partner. At the outset the defendant acted exclusively as a salesman for lumber mills strictly on a commission basis. The bookkeeping then was simple as the mills billed and collected from the customers and paid the defendant his commission. Later his business developed into a wholesale lumber business. The lumber was still generally shipped direct to the customer, but the defendant paid the mill and he in turn billed and collected from his customers. He usually charged a customer five per cent above his cost which was the maximum mark-up permitted by the Office of Price Administration during most of the involved period. The defendant was allowed two per cent cash discount and he allowed his customers a two per cent cash discount for prompt payment.

In 1945 lumber was hard to get. Defendant was unable to supply the needs of his customers. Defendant with Bald-ridge, a man with mill experience, purchased a lumber mill at Drain, Oregon, which was incorporated under the name -of Douglas Timber Corporation, hereinafter sometimes referred to as Douglas. Defendant secured financial assistance for the mill purchase and operation by means of sale of stock and personal loans from many of his customers upon assurance that this would put them in a preferred position to obtain hard-to-get lumber. Baldridge died unexpectedly, so it was necessary for defendant to assume management of the lumber mill and to spend nearly all of his time in Oregon from March 1946 until October 1948 when the mill was sold. Defendant was not an experienced mill operator, and this project created many difficult financial, labor, and other problems which made heavy demands upon the defendant’s time.

During defendant’s absence in Oregon the bookkeeping at Minneapolis was done by his niece, Tanea Canton, since married and now Tanea Bradley. When she started working for the defendant in the *315 fall of 1945, Tanea was 18 years of age and had recently graduated from high school where she had taken a bookkeeping course. During most of the involved period defendant’s other employees in Minneapolis were two salesmen. Tanea’s duties were to compute the profits, do the bookkeeping, make out bank deposit slips, type customers’ invoices, and take care of some correspondence. The defendant had instructed Tanea as to how to handle the bookkeeping. She had written down the instructions which have since been lost. Tanea said that she followed the instructions to the best of her ability and that she was not aware of the fact that any profits were being concealed. The records consisted of a cash book, order books, a car journal, a customers ledger, and invoice files. The cash book was supposed to contain entries showing all profits, including wholesale profits and commissions, and all items of business expense. The only record turned over to and used by Mr. Holl, a lumber dealer who prepared the income tax return in question and defendant’s returns for many prior years, was the cash book. Further facts will be discussed hereinafter.

Defendant in his brief thus states the questions presented for review:

“The return filed for the defendant, a wholesale lumber dealer, reported a net income of $26,105.99. Concededly omitted from gross income were the following items and amounts:
(a) Special 5% discount allowed on purchases from Douglas Timber Corporation $ 5,531.03
(b) Offset of 2% discounts for prompt payment granted to and allowed by the defendant 488.23
(e) An interest check received from Douglas 1,001.39
(d) Direct sales commissions represented by two checks received from Douglas 1,911.01
Total $ 8,931.66
“The omissions represented by items (a) and (b) are reflected in detail in the defendant’s books and records. Those represented by items (c) and (d) are reflected in detail in the Douglas books and records, for which the defendant was responsible.
“Not deducted on the defendant’s return were the following items allowed as deductions by the Government’s agents:
(e) Depreciation (Ex. 105, R. 250) $ 399.33
(f) Miscellaneous expenses, principally living and travel expenses on the West Coast (Ex. 103, R.
248) 11,259.07
Total 11,658.40
“Assuming that there were no omissions from gross income other than items (a) to (d) (and, as will be seen, there were no such other omissions), the defendant’s return overstated his net income by $2,-726.74 unless the cancellation by the defendant’s brother of a $10,000 loan to the defendant represented income taxable to the defendant.
“The principal questions are—
“(1) Whether there is substantial competent evidence from which it could be found beyond a reasonable doubt that cancellation of the $10,000 loan was taxable income.
“(2) Whether, if question (1) should be answered in the affirmative, there is substantial evidence from which it could be found beyond a reasonable doubt that the resulting understatement in net income was due to an intent to evade.
*316 “(3) Whether, if both question (1) and question (2) should be answered in the affirmative, there is substantial evidence of such an overt act reflecting willfulness as is required by Spies v. United States,' 317 U.S. 492 [63 S.Ct. 364] and, in this connection, whether, if there is such evidence, the court erred in refusing to instruct' the jury in the detail set out in the defendant’s first requested instruction.
“If questions (1), (2) and (3) should all be answered in the affirmative, then

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Bluebook (online)
226 F.2d 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-s-canton-v-united-states-ca8-1955.