Mitchell Et Ux. v. United States

213 F.2d 951
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 6, 1954
Docket13884_1
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 213 F.2d 951 (Mitchell Et Ux. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell Et Ux. v. United States, 213 F.2d 951 (9th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

*953 LEMMON, Circuit Judge.

It is familiar technique for an appellant to seize upon every peccadillo committed by the lower court and magnify it until it becomes a blunder of major proportions.

The present case is no exception.

Although nine errors have been specified in this appeal, only three need be discussed.

The most serious objection is that the trial judge did not allow appellants’ counsel to cross-examine one of “the prosecution’s key witnesses”.

The appellee replies that, on the contrary, there was full cross-examination by the defense. It is pointed out that the witness in question was friendly to the appellants, and that the lower court limited the appellants’ use of leading questions addressed to her.

Properly to evaluate this asserted error, it must be considered in its factual setting.

1. Statement Of The Case.

The indictment was based upon 18 U.S.C.A. § 371 and 26 U.S.C.A. § 145(b). The appellant Vaughn H. Mitchell was convicted on three counts. Counts 1 and 2 charged him with attempting to defeat and evade a large part of an income tax due by him and his wife, Dorothy Mitchell. Count 5 charged that he and his wife conspired to evade and defeat a part of their income tax. Counts 3 and 4 charged Dorothy Mitchell with attempting to defeat and evade a large part of her income tax, and Count 5 charged her with conspiracy, as above stated. She likewise was convicted on the three counts in which she was accused. All five counts of the indictment related to the income tax for the calendar year 1947. In round figures, it was alleged that $26,000 of net income was concealed and $18,000 of tax was evaded. The indictment was filed on August 21, 1952.

Named in the indictment as a conspirator but not as a defendant was Iris M. Cowart, whose testimony, which will be fully discussed hereinafter, played an important part in the case. On August 11, 1950, she was notified by the Bureau of Internal Revenue at San Francisco that “This office has under consideration a recommendation involving the institution of criminal proceedings against you.”

2. The Evidence.

Only so much of the evidence will be summarized as will indicate the importance of the testimony as to which it is complained that full cross-examination was not permitted.

Dr. Vaughn H. Mitchell, one of the appellants herein, is a practicing physician and surgeon in San Francisco. Mrs. Cowart was his employee from 1943 to 1948. During the crucial year of 1947, she “took care of the Kardexes, * * the billing and the banking,” handling the money and making deposits, and “keeping the accounts”. She said that she was “not a bookkeeper”.

Mrs. Cowart testified that in 1947, probably in January, she had a conversation with Mrs. Mitchell “with respect to keeping two records of the books or giving her some money * * *. She was to get the morning receipts, and I also confirmed it with Dr. Mitchell. * * * I asked him if it was correct that I was to give Dorothy some money from the office, and he said that was correct and to keep a record of it.”

Mrs. Cowart added that she and Mrs. Mitchell “discussed keeping the morning receipts as she (Mrs. Mitchell) was to have them, and then to keep a record of it in a receipt book and to put my initials on the book of the money” that she gave Mrs. Mitchell. The witness’ best recollection was that Dr. Mitchell told her to keep the morning receipts in one set of books, and to change in the middle of the day, although she was not sure whether she got “that impression from the conversation with Dorothy Mitchell”.

At any rate, Mrs. Cowart recalled Dr. Mitchell’s saying that “he wasn’t putting all the money in one account in the bank, that Dorothy Mitchell was to have some of the money”. '

*954 The witness said that she kept “two receipt books”, “one for the morning receipts and one for the afternoon receipts.” At about 1 o’clock in the afternoon, she “switched receipt books”, “from the morning book to the afternoon book”. “The money from the morning book was given to Mrs. Mitchell, and the afternoon book was deposited as it always had been.” Mrs. Mitchell would come to the office once a month or once every six weeks to pick up the money.

Mrs. Cowart continued to hand money to Mrs. Mitchell throughout the year 1947, during which time the witness delivered “not over $15,000” to the doctor’s wife.

This unique system of “double entry bookkeeping” ended in December, 1947. In the latter part of January or February, Mrs. Cowart took the six or seven “morning receipt books” to Mrs. Mitchell at the latter’s apartment. Mrs. Cowart had planned to leave Dr. Mitchell’s employ at the end of December, 1947, but there was difficulty in getting a girl to replace her, and she actually quit at the end of February, 1948.

The appellee not only concedes that Mrs. Cowart was an important witness against Dr. Mitchell, but it emphasizes the damaging nature of her testimony. In its brief, the appellee says:

“At the trial the • testimony of Mrs. Cowart established Dr. Mitchell’s participation in every important phase of the scheme — its initiation * * *, suspension during Mrs. Cowart’s vacation * * *, termination at the end of the year * * *, and delivery of the hidden set of cash receipt books to Mrs. Mitchell * *

3. The Trial Judge Did Not Unduly Restrict Defense Counsel’s Cross-Examination of Mrs. Cowart.

In the official transcript of record before us, defense counsel’s entire questioning of Mrs. Cowart is labeled “Cross-Examination”. This, of course, is not conclusive that the Court permitted an adequate cross-examination of the witness. To determine this question, a careful analysis of the queries propounded to her is necessary, as well as some examination of the factual background.

Mis. Cowart had testified before the grand jury that had brought in the present indictment, and at the trial was called as an adverse witness by the ap-pellee. Dr. Mitchell was her physician, and she was a close personal friend of Mrs. Mitchell, whom she had known for fifteen years. Mrs. Mitchell herself testified regarding the relationship between the two women: “We are exceptionally good friends”. It will be observed that Mrs. Mitchell here used the present tense, and was not referring merely to the feeling that existed between the two women before the income tax troubles arose.

Defense counsel examined Mrs. Cow-art at great length. After the questioning had proceeded for several minutes— represented by ten pages of the printed transcript — Mrs. Cowart was excused from the stand when a message was received by the Court that her husband was in a dying condition at a local hospital.

Eight days later, the examination was resumed, continuing for 12 more transcript pages before it was interrupted by counsel for the appellee. It should be noted that from the very beginning of his questioning of the witness, up to the time of the interruption, the defense attorney himself had repeatedly referred to his queries as “cross-examination”.

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Bluebook (online)
213 F.2d 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-et-ux-v-united-states-ca9-1954.