Murray v. United States

117 F.2d 40, 26 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 249, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4176
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 31, 1941
DocketNo. 11712
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 117 F.2d 40 (Murray 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
Murray v. United States, 117 F.2d 40, 26 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 249, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4176 (8th Cir. 1941).

Opinion

GARDNER, Circuit Judge.

Appellant was convicted on an indictment containing five counts, charging a wilful attempt to evade and defeat income taxes due the Government for the calendar years 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937 and 1938, inclusive. The indictment charges that the total net taxable income received by appellant during the period of five years covered by the indictment was $83,550.16, whereas the total net taxable income as reported by him was $17,627.55. Appellant waived trial by jury and was found guilty by the court on all five counts of the indictment, and was sentenced to two years in the Federal Prison on each count, the sentences to run concurrently. He has appealed and seeks reversal on substantially the following grounds: (1) the evidence is insufficient to sustain the conviction because it shows that the alleged income was received as gifts and not as compensation for services; (2) the court [42]*42erred in admitting hearsay evidence by the witness Farrington; (3) the court erred in admitting in evidence a blank form of donee’s or trustee’s information return of gifts; (4) the court erred in admitting in evidence records of the Missouri State Highway Commission.

It will be convenient to refer to the parties as they were designated in the lower court.

Defendant does not on this appeal challenge the correctness of the Government’s claim as to the amount and items of his income, nor did he do so in the lower court. He denies, however, that the excess of his receipts during the years in question over what he reported was in fact income, but claims that these sums were given to and received by him as gifts. The alleged donors were E. L. Schneider, deceased at the time of trial, T. J. Pendergast and John J. Pryor, the latter two being in the Federal Prison at Leavenworth at the time of the trial. The alleged gifts were in the form of cash and Government bonds.

Defendant is fifty-six years of .age and a civil engineer by profession. In 1926, he became Director of Public Works in Kansas City, Missouri, and held that position until June, 1939. On June 1, 1935, he was appointed Administrator of WPA for Missouri and held that position through 1938. As Director of Public Works for Kansas City, his salary was $6,500 per year in 1934, $7,166.58 in 1935, $7,166.61 in 1936, $6,000 in 1937 and $8,000 in 1938. His salary as Administrator of WPA for Missouri was $6,500 a year. Shortly before coming to Kansas City in 1926, he became acquainted with John J. Pryor and became his intimate friend. Pryor was a man of wealth. T. J. Pendergast was one of defendant’s closest friends. Both of these men, because of their connection with certain material and machine companies, were interested in the sale of materials and the rentals of machinery for construction purposes. In his position as Director of Public Works for Kansas City, and as State Administrator for the Works Progress Administration for Missouri, defendant had many dealings with the Ready Mixed Concrete Company of Kansas City, Missouri, in which company T. J. Pendergast was heavily interested, and of which Edward L. Schneider was Secretary-Treasurer, and with the Boyle-Pryor Construction Company of Kansas City, Missouri, and the Dixie Machinery and. Equipment Company, of Kansas City, Missouri, in which John J. Pryor was heavily interested. In his capacity as Director of Public Works for Kansas City, he had charge of the construction of streets, sewers, and practically all city construction work. From 1932 to 1939, $3,793,830.86 was paid through his department, with his approval, to these Pender-gast and Pryor companies, on a total of 3,341 purchase orders, all for less than $2,500 each.

Dividing the purchase orders into amounts of $2,500, or less, was to evade the provisions of the charter of Kansas City to the effect that the purchase of materials or doing of work should be awarded to the lowest and best bidder after competitive bidding, except in case of expenditures of less, than $2,500. Over the period of time covered by the indictment, on one project, the Kansas City Municipal Airport, materials were purchased from the Ready Mixed Concrete Company in the sum of $289,000, upon purchase orders made by the defendant a.s Director of Public Works for Kansas City, in the sums of $2,500, or less. The purchase of materials from the Ready Mixed Concrete Company for the various projects under the Public Works.Department of Kansas City, Missouri, during the period covered by the indictment, was approximately $1,500,000, all made without competitive bidding, upon purchase orders of $2,500, or less. During the same period, this department paid $2,300,000 to the Dixie Machinery and Equipment Company, the Boyle-Pryor Construction Company, and the Missouri Asphalt Products Company (in which Pryor was interested) upon purchase orders running into many thousands of dollars, in sums of $2,500 or less. These payments were made for the purchase of material and the rental of machinery, all by the same evasion of the charter provisions for competitive bidding.

Regulations of the Procurement Division of the Treasury Department provided that if plant mixed concrete, which was more expensive than concrete mixed at the location of the construction, was to be used on any Works Progress Administration projects, the State Administrator must set forth in writing the reasons for its use. As justifying the use of Ready Mixed cement at the Kansas City Municipal Airport, defendant gave as his [43]*43reason in writing to the Treasury Department that “congested conditions” at the site of the work precluded the mixing of concrete there. A witness for defendant testified that the airport site included some 687 acres of land, outside of the levees, warranting a conclusion that with such acreage the alleged congested conditions did not in fact exist.

Defendant admitted during cross-examination that during the construction of the Missouri State Penitentiary, which was paid for from the proceeds of a $10,000,-000 bond issue voted by the people of Missouri, and a $7,000,000 federal grant, the successful bidders having been the Boyle-Pryor Construction Company upon one project in connection therewith, that the Boyle-Pryor Construction Company “cut him in” for one-fourth of the profits, amounting to $30,000, for which he performed no substantial service. In this connection he testified: “The reason Mr. Pryor assigned me a 25% interest in the profits of the prison job was because he came down to Jefferson City and asked me. to advise with him and look after that contract. At that time I was State Administrator for WPA and also Director of Public Works of Kansas City.”

Early in the transactions covered by the indictment, defendant solicited the state officials of the Highway Department for the award of profitable contracts in Barry and McDonald Counties, Missouri, to the Boyle-Pryor Construction Company, in which Pryor was interested. He went to McDonald and Barry Counties with Mr. Boyle and Mr. Pryor for the purpose of being present when an interview was had at the site of the work.

During the period in question, defendant received, directly or indirectly from Pryor and Pendergast, or their companies, upwards of $55,000. He rented a safe deposit box at the Commerce Trust Company at Kansas City, Missouri, and during this period deposited in his account with the Commerce Trust Company $14,160 in cash. This was deposited in twenty-two different deposits, and nineteen of them were made on the same day in which he entered his safe deposit box, and only three deposits were made on days when he did not enter it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 F.2d 40, 26 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 249, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-united-states-ca8-1941.