Jacob J. Frohmann v. United States

380 F.2d 832
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 24, 1967
Docket18576
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 380 F.2d 832 (Jacob J. Frohmann 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
Jacob J. Frohmann v. United States, 380 F.2d 832 (8th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

BLACKMUN, Circuit Judge.

Jacob J. Frohmann, after a plea of not guilty, was tried in July 1966 and convicted by a jury on both counts of a two-count information charging him with violating 26 U.S.C. § 7203 in willfully failing to make federal income tax returns for the calendar years 1959 and 1960. Judge Meredith imposed a sentence of one year on each count and directed that the sentences be served concurrently. The defendant appeals.

Reversible error is alleged with respect to the admission of evidence, comment by the trial judge, and the rejection of evidence proffered by the defense. There is no claim that the evidence which was admitted was not sufficient to support the verdict.

In the years in question Frohmann was engaged in the business of developing and dealing in commercial real estate in the Saint Louis area. His federal income tax returns for the calendar years 1958-64, inclusive, were all delinquency filed. The 1958 return was filed in July 1962 after a revenue agent appeared on the scene. An amended return for that year and the returns for 1959-64, inclusive, were filed on December 11, 1965.

Frohmann does not deny that he had income sufficient to require him to file returns for 1959 and 1960 or that he failed to file those returns when they were due. He admitted this on direct examination. 1 He does deny that his failure to file was willful or with any intent to deprive the government of that to which it was entitled.

The defendant’s tax difficulties center in the development and sale of a shopping center in Saint Charles, Missouri, dealings in options, the sale of an apartment, and rental from a bank building.

The government produced witnesses who testified as to the defendant’s business activities and the amounts he received in various transactions. Some of these involved substantial figures. The government’s evidence tended to show that the defendant’s 1959 gross income was $55,502.41 and his 1960 gross income was $36,522.50. The latter figure contrasts with a gross of over $24,000.00 but a net loss of $50,362.63 asserted by the defendant on his 1960 return as delinquency filed. This difference is due to variance in treatment of the apartment sale, and to a rental loss asserted by the defendant on the bank building but claimed by the government to be a corporate and not an individual transaction.

Some emphasis is placed on the defendant’s background. He testified: He was born in Saint Louis in 1910. His parents were European immigrants who were uneducated and spoke little English. He attended school in this country through the fourth grade and then was taken to Europe and apprenticed in a dry goods store there for about five years. He returned to Saint Louis and finished the fifth grade when he was 16 years old. His elementary education was then dis *834 continued and he went to barber school. After barbering for a time he became interested in real estate and, although he was never licensed, went to work as a salesman for real estate companies. In 1942 he started to work for himself. He operated out of his home until 1955 and then took desk space at a real estate office.

There is testimony that the defendant has been substantially blind in one eye since childhood, has been deaf in one ear since 1940, and has had cardiac disease since 1959.

Mr. Frohmann kept no books. His only records are papers relating to his real estate transactions.

A. The testimony of the witness Schneider and the court’s refusal to grant a mistrial.

Edward C. Schneider, an attorney, was a witness called by the government. He testified that in the summer of 1959 he was retained by the defendant to represent him in connection with the acquisition of an apartment house corporation. There were negotiations with the attorney for the seller as to the contents of the sale contract. The transaction was closed in a title insurance company office. On direct examination of Mr. Schneider, the following took place:

Q. Now subsequent to the exchange did you have a conversation with Mr. Frohmann relative to the property, the profits on it? Would that be correct?
A. No. I might say this, well, I will clarify it. My duty was at an end after I assigned the contract over to Mr. James and Effie James.
Q. To Mr. James and Effie James.
A. Then the closing end of the Jennings and West Pine took place after we had consummated. Now as far as the profit was concerned in dollars and cents, I would have no knowledge of that.
Q. Did you have any conversation with him relative to reporting that?
A. Well, I told him this: I was very certain—
Mr. Brown: Wait a minute. I am going to object to any statement he may have made. In the first place, there is no showing he was authorized to act in that capacity, and if he was, he was his attorney. I think counsel knows better than to ask a question like that.

At this point the jury was excused. At the bench the government offered to prove that, after the witness had completed his legal services for the defendant, he conversed with him and told him that, if he had gains from these transactions, they should be reported and “that he had better get himself an accountant and find out what had transpired”. After the noon recess the government informed the court that it would not further pursue this line of questioning. The defense repeated its claim of privilege and moved for a mistrial. This motion was overruled but the court stated, “If you desire any special instruction at this time to the jury or later, I will give it”. No request for an instruction was made and no further question was asked of Mr. Schneider.

The defense claims that the quoted questions and answers show that the defendant could only have received advice from this attorney to report his profit and that this was particularly prejudicial because it was the only direct evidence of advice to the defendant as to the necessity of filing a return and thus seriously affected his defense of nonwillfulness.

We decide this issue against the defendant and do so because we perceive no prejudice. As we have noted, Frohmann himself testified on his direct examination, and thus told the jury, that he knew that a return had to be filed for 1959. Although this came later in the trial than the Schneider testimony, no claim is made that it was occasioned by that testimony or that Frohmann would not have so testified if Schneider had not said what he did. With the duty to file thus conceded, *835 we fail to see how advice from Schneider as to the necessity for filing — if Schneider’s answer can be regarded as stating that much — adds anything at all. Furthermore, our decision is fortified by the failure of the defense to proffer a curative instruction when the court offered to give one if it were desired, and by our awareness that the allowance of a mistrial motion is a matter for the trial court’s discretion. Evenson v.

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Bluebook (online)
380 F.2d 832, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacob-j-frohmann-v-united-states-ca8-1967.