Kiniry v. Degutis

18 Conn. Super. Ct. 186, 18 Conn. Supp. 186, 1953 Conn. Super. LEXIS 62
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1953
DocketFile 84623
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Conn. Super. Ct. 186 (Kiniry v. Degutis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kiniry v. Degutis, 18 Conn. Super. Ct. 186, 18 Conn. Supp. 186, 1953 Conn. Super. LEXIS 62 (Colo. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

Molloy, J.

The plaintiff is, and has been for many years, engaged in the practice of accountancy. The defendant, Anthony J. Degutis, operates a pinball machine and jukebox business; that is, he owns the machines which are placed in such places as taverns, clubs, grills and restaurants where they are put in operation by patrons and the proceeds divided between the owner of the place of business and the owner of the machines. The wife of Degutis is named as party defendant because she made joint income tax returns with him and this whole affair concerns these tax returns.

According to the plaintiff’s bill of particulars, his claim is “For services rendered for Anthony J. Degutis, Taxpayer, in regard to the Intelligence Unit Treasury Department investigation — Mr. Ned *187 Dwyer and Neil Begley, Agents — said investigation being from September 25, 1948 to January 6, 1949. The above period of time involved settlement of the Income Tax Returns for the Years of 1942, 1943, 1944,1945,1946 and 1947. The tax liabilities for the years of 1942, 1943, 1944 and 1945 were left unchanged, by agreement, with no imposition of negligence or fraud penalty. Deficiency liabilities for the Years 1946 and 1947, were closed by agreement, with imposition of negligence penalty instead of fraud. . . . $7500.00.”

In other words, the plaintiff feels that the services, as accountant, which he rendered Degutis, who was being investigated by the intelligence unit treasury department, are worth $7500, and he offers his expert, William B. Carroll, a certified public accountant and attorney at law, to support his position. The defendant Degutis says, through his experts, both certified public accountants, Stanley Ciehowski and Louis Goodman, that the services rendered by the plaintiff were worth $300, as estimated by Cichowski, to $500, as figured by Goodman.

Degutis also pleads in defense that the plaintiff had no legal right or standing before the intelligence unit, treasury department, in matters involving fraud and so any services he performed as regards the fraud charge by the government, before that unit, were “null and void” and based on an illegal contract and so not the basis for a recovery against him.

The court deems it not necessary to attempt an analysis of all the evidence in this rather lengthy trial, as trials go, in order to support the conclusion it has reached. In addition, the issues are not too involved and the questions are clear and definite. Did the plaintiff practice law in handling the case as he did? If he did not, but, on the contrary, confined himself to accountancy alone, then did he give *188 the time he says he did to working ont a solution for Degutis to the situation Degutis found himself in with the intelligence unit of the treasury department; was that time necessary; and finally, were Kiniry’s services worth $7500? Let the court say in the beginning that, assuming he had the right to represent the defendants under the circumstances, and practiced accountancy alone, his services are not proven, on the evidence, to be worth $7500. This may be one of those cases which an accountant gets “once in a blue moon,” as the plaintiff described it, but that occurrence or happening is no justification for “laying it on,” either by tradition in the accountancy profession, as this court has understood that precise and difficult work; by the nature and extent of the work done in this case; or by reason of the fact that the taxpayer, Degutis, found himself under investigation by the intelligence unit of the treasury department.

In the latter part of September, 1948, about twenty customers of Degutis received letters from Edwin F. Dwyer, special agent, intelligence unit, treasury department, informing them that in connection with an income tax investigation being conducted by that office they were requested to advise his office the amount of commission received by them from pinball machines, music players, and other gaming and vending machines installed in their places of business by Anthony J. Degutis, d.b.a. Dursell Novelty Co. It developed that the recipients of these letters were clients of the plaintiff, with the result that they promptly brought the letters to the plaintiff for his advice, because he had done their accounting work. Thereupon the plaintiff contacted Degutis and from this contact, after the latter was duly appraised of the serious nature of the situation by the plaintiff, the latter was engaged to handle the ease. Kiniry says he informed Degutis that good fees usually resulted to an accountant for handling such cases, *189 bnt that they did not agree upon any set basis of compensation for his work. This conference occurred on September 24, 1948. Kiniry asked Degutis for all his records. On September 28, 1948, Mr. Dwyer and another special agent called on Kiniry about the case and asked if Kiniry had the “green card” which would entitle him to practice before the treasury department. He did not have any. In any event the agents told Kiniry to co-operate with them in the investigation and so produce for them all the records Degutis had relating to the matter for the years 1942-1947, inclusive. Finally, after examination of all the records which Degutis had produced and after compiling certain accountancy results and conclusions regarding the status of Degutis with the treasury department, Kiniry turned over all the records he had to the treasury agents on about November 16, 1948. Again on November 26, 1948, Kiniry had another conference with the agents at his office, regarding the situation; again on December 13, 1948, when the agents informed Kiniry they were dropping the individual accounts as they were accepting Kiniry’s figures.

On December 16, 1948, Degutis informed Kiniry that his accountant had returned to town and asked him to withdraw from the case, but upon informing Degutis that a point had been reached in the investigation where the whole matter could be adjusted, Kiniry was authorized to continue. On December 21,1948, the agents again conferred with Kiniry and on the 22nd he reported the results to Degutis. On December 29 Degutis and the agents met with Kiniry at his office where agent Dwyer asked Degutis if he agreed to the terms of the adjustment, which he did. On January 3, 1949, Kiniry went to the office of thé agents in Hartford where further discussions were had when final figures were arrived at and a negligence penalty was agreed upon rather than a fraud *190 penalty, which would be very much heavier than a negligence penalty. A good part of the evidence concerns a maze of figures which need not be gone into in detail; suffice to say the plaintiff says he spent sixty-six days working on the defendants’ case, culminating on January 6,1949, when he and Degutis again went to the agents’ office in Hartford when the terms and figures of the final settlement were gone over and agreed upon. Subsequently Degutis hired another accountant who finally disposed of the matter with the treasury agents.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Conn. Super. Ct. 186, 18 Conn. Supp. 186, 1953 Conn. Super. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kiniry-v-degutis-connsuperct-1953.