Harvey Veino v. John L. Fahs, Individually, and as Former Collector of Internal Revenue for the District of Florida

257 F.2d 364, 2 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5179, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5599
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 1958
Docket16719_1
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 257 F.2d 364 (Harvey Veino v. John L. Fahs, Individually, and as Former Collector of Internal Revenue for the District of Florida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harvey Veino v. John L. Fahs, Individually, and as Former Collector of Internal Revenue for the District of Florida, 257 F.2d 364, 2 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5179, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5599 (5th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

CAMERON, Circuit Judge.

The question presented by this appeal is whether the District Court, sitting without jury, was clearly erroneous in holding that the appellant, Harvey Veino, failed to sustain the burden resting on him of proving that the determination of income tax deficiencies for the years 1943 through 1950 was incorrect, and in holding that the 50% fraud penalties were correctly imposed. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue had assessed income tax deficiencies, 25% delinquency penalties, 50% civil fraud penalties, and interest for said years in the aggregate amount of $126,319.94. The amount was paid by appellant, and after his claim for refund had been declined, this action was brought against the Collector. The court below, upon full findings of fact and conclusions of law, entered a judgment in effect denying all the relief sought by appellant. 1

The net worth increases and expenditures method of accounting was used to compute and determine the appellant’s liability. The parties stipulated to a schedule as to all items except $70,050.00 cash found by the Internal Revenue Agent in appellant’s safety deposit box when an examination was made in March, 1951.

Appellant testified that this money was deposited in the box prior to 1943, and had made a like contention in his dealings with the Commissioner. The Commissioner found, however, that the entire $70,050.00 had been placed in the safety deposit box subsequent to 1943. Inasmuch as appellant had made five entries into the box during the tax years, the Commissioner allocated to each entry a deposit of the sum of $14,010.00 arrived at by dividing the number of entries into the total amount found in the box. Since no entries were made into the box subsequent to the year 1946, the entire amount was allocated to that and the preceding years.

The trial court rejected appellant’s testimony that the $70,050.00 had been brought by him from Vermont when he moved from there to Florida about 1922. Appellant testified that the entire amount had been placed in the box in 1937 and that substantially no money had been added to or taken from the original amount placed therein between then and the time it was opened in 1951. The trial court heard his testimony and found it inherently unbelievable and rejected it, cf. Geigy Chemical Co. v. Allen, 5 Cir., 1955, 224 F.2d 110, 114, just as the Commissioner had rejected his statement.

The court’s findings were based upon several grounds, including the unreasonableness of appellant’s testimony in several respects: that he was completely uneducated, not being able to read and write, and had worked in Vermont as a farm hand, later going into the logging and lumber business for himself; that he did not, while there, own a home, but was in such straitened circumstances that his wife had to take in washing and keep boarders. No record was kept of his business operations in Vermont and the testimony wholly failed to show how appellant could have accumulated such a sum of money.

According to appellant, when he moved to Florida about 1922 he engaged in sawmilling and the retail selling of lumber. Proof, made of the income reported to the government from the time he moved to Florida until 1943, reflected less income than would have been necessary to provide the necessaries of life for himself and his wife.

Notwithstanding these facts shown by appellant, he was allowed by stipulation *366 of the parties a net worth at the beginning of the tax period of substantially $99,000.00. With the evident purposé of hinting at the source of some of this money, appellant testified that in 1937 he began gambling operations on a small scale, which became larger. 2 The testimony reflects that appellant’s gambling money was kept in his home, and these operations do not, in any event, begin to account for the large net worth allowed him at the beginning of the tax period. In addition, appellant made several inconsistent statements to the Revenue Agents concerning the amount of money he claimed to have brought from Vermont. 3 Moreover, his wife testified that when she visited the safety deposit box with appellant on December 17,1941, she saw no money in the box.

It is apparent from the court’s findings of fact that it concluded that appellant’s testimony concerning the $70,-050.00 was a complete fabrication. 4 It is apparent further that the court found that appellant’s failure to return the money derived from gambling as taxable income and that his failure to file any tax returns at all for the years 1944 through 1950, though well knowing that he was receiving income in substantial amounts, construed in the light of its other findings, led to the conclusion that appellant’s whole scheme of dealing with the government during the tax years was *367 a deliberate fraud practiced with the view of evading the payment of taxes.

*366 "10. Veino first engaged in gambling in 1937, in a small way, selling numbers on ‘Cuba’ to his sawmill employees as a convenience to them. Ho continued selling to his employees, friends, visitors and others through 1948. In 1945 he began taking small ‘layoff’ bets from other gamblers. In 1946 he began taking no-limit layoff bets from Clifford Proctor, a gambler from Winter Park, Florida. Proctor continued to place layoff bets with Veino until 1951. Raymond Witt, a gambler from Deland, Florida, placed layoff bets with Veino in 1949, 1950 and 1951. Veino was ‘hit’ for $18,000 in 1942, for $10,000 and $8,000 shortly thereafter, and in 1946 he was hit for $50,000. No records were kept of these gambling operations. The gambling proceeds and operating funds were kept in a secret drawer in Veino’s desk at home, separate from all other funds. All of his ‘hits’ (losses) were eventually recouped.”

*367 We are unable to say from a careful reading of the record that the court’s findings and conclusions were clearly erroneous. Once the court had found that appellant had not told the truth about the $70,050.00, and that the circumstances established that it must have been accumulated during the tax period, the residue of its findings and its conclusions followed as a matter of course. The holding of the court below and our acceptance of it are based, as must be true in every ease, upon the facts on which these conclusions are predicated.

Appellant makes an extended factual argument, without citing supporting authority, in which he seeks to demonstrate that all of the conclusions of the agents of the Internal Revenue Service were based upon speculation and fantasy. 5 The trouble with this argument is that the trier of the facts found the testimony of appellant, not the appellee, fantastically unreasonable. The appellee was not called upon to establish the correctness of his figures. A presumption of law did that and appellant carried the burden of demonstrating their unreasonableness.

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Bluebook (online)
257 F.2d 364, 2 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5179, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-veino-v-john-l-fahs-individually-and-as-former-collector-of-ca5-1958.