Kjar v. United States

177 F.2d 630, 38 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 824, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 4300
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 4, 1949
DocketNo. 12939
StatusPublished

This text of 177 F.2d 630 (Kjar v. United States) 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
Kjar v. United States, 177 F.2d 630, 38 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 824, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 4300 (5th Cir. 1949).

Opinion

SIBLEY, Circuit Judge.

The appeal is from a judgment in the District Court dismissing the complaint of appellants in its entirety, the judgment referring to Kjar v. U. S., 69 F.Supp. 406, 108 Ct.Cl. 119, certiorari denied 332 U.S. 768, 68 S.Ct. 79, 92 L.Ed. 353, as the ground of dismissal. The motion to dismiss was based on non-compliance with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 12(f) and Rule 10(b), 28 U.S.C.A. The hearing, however, got around to the question whether the cited judgment of the Court of Claims, admittedly covering the same disputes as to income and liquor taxes, and sought to be attacked and “cancelled” by this complaint, is not binding and conclusive, the District Court having no power to set it aside and retry any of the issues settled by it.

Both in the Court of Claims and in the District Court, though the litigation involved many thousands of dollars, the Kjars had no lawyer, but Mr. Kjar acted throughout for himself and wife, as he has in this court, though admitting that he is not a member of the bar of any court, nor educated in law. The District Judge suggested, indeed insisted, that he get the assistance of a lawyer, but the suggestion was declined. This has resulted in great embarrassment in the District Court, and here, in trying to understand the contentions made and the relief sought. There is no compliance whatever with the rules of pleading, but non-compliance might have been remedied by amendment. It is impossible to tell from the complaint what the case sought to be made is. After dismissal and appeal taken, Kjar sought to specify in his designation of record to be certified by the Clerk a number of documents including some of the record in the Court of Claims, and in his assignment of error he elaborated his contentions. The United States resisted the inclusion in the record of the documents which were no part of the complaint, but the judge after argument ordered that Kjar have 15 days to file the documents with the Clerk and that such as he filed be certified up. Later he ordered them sent up as “original Exhibits”. We have them as such. A lawyer would have amended the complaint by alleging their substance 'and attaching them as exhibits, and we take it that the District Judge intended them to be so treated. We therefore pass upon the case in the light they afford, substituting what they show for the vague and indefinite allusions and scurrilous conclusions of the complaint. The fact findings of the Court of Claims filed Feb. 3, 1947, are thus made available.

We understand that the litigation began before the Board of Tax Appeals over income taxes for the years 1928 to 1932, in which gains arising from sales of distilled spirits figured. The Board’s decision was that the Kjars had overpaid their income taxes by $16,025.59. Refund checks were issued, but were not paid because there had been assessed in 1935 and 1939 certain taxes on distilled spirits in a much larger sum. To enforce collection of the latter the principal wealth of appellants, being stocks and bonds, was seized in 1940 in the hands of their brokers in New York, some sold, and some still held by the Collector. After failure of an effort at compromise, the Kjars filed, probably about 1945, a suit in the Court of Claims against the United States to enforce their adjudged refund of income taxes of $16,025.59. The United States did not dispute this claim, but pleaded as a counterclaim the liquor taxes assessed in Feb. 1935, $18,450, subject to a credit of $2598.60, leaving $15,881.40; and those assessed in April, 1939, $41,049.80, $3,067.00, and $36,712.50, each on a specified number of gallons at $1.10 per gallon and under Sect. 900, R.A. 1926 (meaning Revenue Act of 1926). In the fact findings of the Court of Claims it appears that the assessments were in the amounts and on the number of gallons stated, but in the “Character of Tax and Period Covered” column they are stated to be for D.S. (meaning distilled spirits) imported and diverted, except the last which reads “for DS Dvt. and illegal importation (fraud)”. The first assessment was against several persons besides Kjar, including “Thompson, Mrs. H. L. 1018 Seiler Ave.” None were against Mrs. Kjar. The oredit of $2598.60 on the first which the counterclaim admitted, it is found came from “Mrs. H. L. Thompson in compromise of her distilled spirits liability”, the balance of $15,-881.40 assessed in 1935 being still unsatis[632]*632fied. The documents sent up with this appeal show that on Aug. 1, 1938, Mrs. Thompson offered $5,000 in compromise of an assessment of $18,480. (apparently the same as that made against her, Kjar and others in 1935), and of another assessment of $17,077.50, which offer was approved Aug. 3, 1938, by the Attorney-General. Apparently the $5,000 paid by Mrs. Thompson was prorated between the two assessments against her. The Collector at Atlanta marked the assessment in which Kjar was also involved as cancelled, but the Government was claiming that the compromise was only of Mrs. Thompson’s liability, and the Court of Claims so decided. Kjar’s present contention that the entire assessment was satisfied was thus clearly before the Court of Claims, and decided adversely.

His next great contention, made in a motion in the District Court after dismissal, and sent up as an original exhibit though not marked filed, is that the Court of Claims judgment according to its filed opinion, was in favor of the Kjars for more than $106,685.11 overpaid taxes, instead of against Kjar, and that the judgment recorded in the District Court under 28 U.S.C.A. § 252, (before the revision of Title 281), is plainly wrong. Appellants’ brief here makes this same contention. Appellants wholly misunderstood the opinion and judgment. The Court of Claims allowed as a credit on the liquor taxes the refund on income taxes fixed by the Board of Tax Appeals and in addition what was paid by Mrs. Thompson, and its original judgment of $100,685.11 was for the difference between the aggregate of the liquor tax assessments and these credits, and was expressly against Kjar and not for him. Moreover he and his wife moved for a reconsideration of this judgment. The Court of Claims reconsidered it, acknowledged that it had been misled by its commissioner’s mistaken report in one respect, and although the Kjars had filed no exceptions to the report, because they had no lawyer, it was reexamined, and correction made, the result of which was that Mrs. Kjar was found to have suffered a loss of $6,000 'from proceeds of her property which had been applied to the liquor assessments against Kjar only, and that she was entitled to recover back from the United States $6,000 for which she was given judgment; and by consequence Kjar owed $106,685.11, which is the judgment finally rendered. Kjar alleges that he had filed exceptions and the court lost or suppressed •them, and he makes some ugly inferences; but he had opportunity to file them again if any related to other matters than those reconsidered by the cpurt. And the Court of Claims is the proper tribunal to investigate and reestablish, if need be, anything lost or destroyed from its own records.

It is also insisted that the assessments related only to taxes for illegal importation and diversion to beverage purposes of distilled liquors, and that the Court of Claims had “invented” a new tax without any trial about it, and sustained the assessments in an unlawful manner without notice to the Kjans. There is nothing to this. The counterclaim of the United States expressly referred to the Revenue Act of 1926, Sect.

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Related

James F. Waters, Inc. v. Commissioner
332 U.S. 767 (Supreme Court, 1947)
Kjar v. United States
69 F. Supp. 406 (Court of Claims, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
177 F.2d 630, 38 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 824, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 4300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kjar-v-united-states-ca5-1949.