Humphreys v. Commissioner

42 B.T.A. 857, 1940 BTA LEXIS 939
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 1940
DocketDocket No. 87899.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 42 B.T.A. 857 (Humphreys v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humphreys v. Commissioner, 42 B.T.A. 857, 1940 BTA LEXIS 939 (bta 1940).

Opinion

[862]*862OPINION.

TdsnnR:

The issues in this case are issues of fact and the conclusions reached are drawn from the testimony of certain witnesses and supporting documentary evidence. The testimony of some of the witnesses is conflicting and can not be reconciled. Other witnesses were greatly agitated and from their manner on the witness stand and their testimony as it was given the conclusion was inescapable that they were not telling the whole truth, if in fact they were telling the truth at all.

Except for a deduction described as “Business Auto Expenses” which the respondent has disallowed, all items in issue are items of additional income claimed by the respondent to have been received by the petitioner during the years in question and not reported in his returns. All such items were included by the respondent in his determinations of deficiency except the $50,000 kidnaping ransom, which was set up affirmatively in his amended answers. With respect to all such items of additional income, it is petitioner’s contention either that he did not receive such income or it was included in the unidentified income shown on his returns. In his returns filed for 1930,1931, and [863]*8631932, the years before us, he reported gross income in the amounts of $10,360, $25,380, and $20,800, respectively, but, except for $1,500 received from General Market House in 1930 and $1,300 received from the same source in 1931, the source or sources of income reported were not shown, neither was there any disclosure of the consideration or the nature of the services, if any, for which the income was received. At the hearing petitioner made no serious effort to explain or identify all of the income reported, nor did he submit evidence which would permit us to make any accurate check of his claim that all of his income was reported. He asks us, however, to take his word that the various items of income now admitted by him were included in the lump sums shown on the returns filed. He denied all knowledge or ownership of the M. L. Brunswick bank account and has undertaken by other witnesses to show its ownership in another person. He also denied participation in the Fitchie kidnaping and called several witnesses for the apparent purpose of discrediting the Government witness who testified that he saw petitioner take the said $50,000 of ransom money.

Petitioner was generally regarded as a gangster and racketeer and on the record here we are unable to reach a contrary conclusion or to find that he was engaged in any legitimate business. On his returns he has described his occupation, profession, or business variously as “Restaurant”, “Inspector”, “Superintendent”, and “Executive”, but obviously it was not intended by his returns to make a frank disclosure of his activities or to furnish the Government any basis for checking their accuracy. He was not even frank with the accountant who prepared the returns. When during the latter part of 1931 and the early part of 1932 Janzen was preparing petitioner’s returns for 1931 and prior years, petitioner advised Janzen that he could not remember any source of income other than General Market House, and yet he now admits that during the period when Janzen was preparing the returns he was receiving $50 to $100 per -week from the Hew Drexel Cleaners and $100 to $150 per week from a man referred to as Ben Swieg.

Petitioner’s testimony at the hearing is little more enlightening. In 1928 ho was receiving $50 per week for “just hanging around with this Dave Ostran and them.” During 1929 and part of 1928 he was running a restaurant wherein he sold beer and liquor. In 1930 he described himself as an “arbitrator” for the six dry cleaning establishments enumerated in our findings, but, except possibly for some activity in connection with a strike at the Michigan Cleaners in the spring of 1930, he does not make the subject matter of his “arbitrating” definite or clear. His testimony with respect to the “services” rendered the Hew Drexel Cleaners in 1931 and 1932 is too indefinite to be of any assistance here. He was definite, however, about calling at the plant each week for his pay. During 1931 and 1932 petitioner states that he [864]*864was also receiving weekly payments from Ben Swieg, but in so far as we can determine, and to borrow the expression used by petitioner in describing his activities during part of 1928, the weekly payments in 1931 were for “just hanging around.” In 1932 he claims to have been looking after Swieg’s “interests” in the Meadowmoor Dairy, of which enterprise petitioner claimed to be the “brains.” During the course of his testimony he talked of “this deal” and “that deal”, which may at times have referred to the arrangement with the six cleaners or that with the Hew Drexel Cleaners in 1931 and 1932, but even on his own testimony we are not justified in concluding that he was not engaged in other “deals” which have not been accounted for. In the fall of 1932 he claims to have been interceding with the Chicago Teamsters Union in behalf of a coal concern on some matters involving the dumping of coal, but we are not further advised as to the nature of the “deal” or what remuneration, if any, was received in connection therewith. Petitioner also testified to numerous conferences at the Mailers Building and various hotels, including conferences for which he used Swieg’s suite at the New Southern Hotel and which would sometimes occur “every day for a month straight.” The testimony of representatives of the six cleaners tends to support the conclusion that most, if not all, of these conferences must have had to do with activities of petitioner other than the “deal” with the said cleaners and New Drexel. The impression from these witnesses is that there was no occasion for them to do anything but pay.

Aside from the nature of his activities, however, a stock answer of petitioner concerning unexplained income was that such amounts were in fact gifts. To illustrate: One man “gave” him a 12-cylinder Cadillac costing $3,900; another “paid” some $3,700 to $4,200 on a 16-cylinder Cadillac; while still another “paid” approximately $3,300 for furniture for petitioner’s apartment; and Ed Oslan “gave” him a one-third interest in the New Drexel Cleaners.

We followed petitioner’s story attentively and carefully while he was on the witness stand and we have since reviewed his testimony in detail, but it is too indefinite, vague, and evasive to be of material assistance to us in determining the merits of his contentions. The petitioner does not lack intelligence and we are convinced that he had sufficient understanding of the matters to be determined in this proceeding to realize the necessity for giving a frank and complete story of his activities during the years in question and of the remuneration received therefor if there was a basis in fact for his contentions. Such frankness as was displayed, however, was in the main directed to those matters with respect to which the respondent’s determination was supported by conclusive or irrefutable evidence and not to matters which would supply us with facts sufficient for determining his true income. Under [865]*865the circumstances we find it impossible to place reliance on any of his testimony except such portions as may be corroborated by other and credible evidence, or such as may be in the nature of admissions. Various inconsistencies and contradictions in his testimony will become more apparent as the specific issues are disposed of.

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Humphreys v. Commissioner
42 B.T.A. 857 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
42 B.T.A. 857, 1940 BTA LEXIS 939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphreys-v-commissioner-bta-1940.