Norwitt v. United States

195 F.2d 127
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1952
Docket12909_1
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 195 F.2d 127 (Norwitt 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
Norwitt v. United States, 195 F.2d 127 (9th Cir. 1952).

Opinion

LEMMON, District Judge.

Challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict of guilty on each of three counts of an indictment charging attempts to evade and defeat income taxes, the appellant brings his case to this court.

1. Statement of the Case.

Each count charges that a false and fraudulent return was filed by the appellant on June 23, 1945.

Count 1 alleges that in a return for the fiscal year ending July 31, 1941, the appellant, who was the president of the General Refrigerator Corporation, averred that the net income of the corporation for that period was $317.05, and that the total amount of the tax due thereon was $47.08, whereas, as he well knew, the company’s net income “for the said calendar (sic) year” was $9,905.68, and the total tax due thereon was $2,990.24.

Count 2 recites that the appellant filed a joint income tax return on behalf of himself and his wife, stating that their net *129 income for the calendar year 1942 was $11,540.74 and that the tax due thereon was $2,731.48, whereas their joint net income for that calendar year was $30,808.76, upon which an income tax of $12,744.37 was due.

Count 3 sets forth that the appellant filed a joint income and victory tax return for the calendar year 1943, on behalf of himself and his wife, asserting- that their net income for that year was $28,081.04 and that the tax due thereon was $11,760.88, whereas their joint net income for that year was $46,805.43, upon which there was due an income and victory tax of $24,010.50.

In each count, the required scienter was alleged.

After a jury trial, the appellant was convicted on each of the three counts, and was sentenced to a year’s imprisonment on each count, the sentences to run concurrently, and to pay a fine of $10,000, and costs.

2. Statement of Facts.

From 1937 to 1941, the appellant was president of the General Refrigerator Corporation, with offices in San Francisco. After July 31, 1941, he personally acquired the assets and all the capital stock of the corporation, and conducted the business as a sole proprietorship, although the corporation continued in existence. Until December 30, 1944, Marco Norwitt was vice president and Barney Norwitt was secretary-treasurer of the company. On that date all three officers resigned, the corporation’s capital stock having been theretofore transferred to The Mission Company. On that some date, the attorney for the Refrigerator Corporation was directed to turn over all records and documents of the corporation to the attorney for The Mission Company.

The tax return of the Refrigerator Corporation, which forms the basis of Count 1, was filed, in the language of counsel for the appellant, “under most peculiar and mysterious circumstances”. The return had been prepared in 1941 by William McIntosh, a public accountant, engaged for that purpose by the Refrigerator Corporation. The return bears the signature of McIntosh, who testified as to the appellant’s signature as follows: “I see a faint recollection of him signing. * * The way it seems to me, as I recall, he was standing and he took it (the return) to a desk and sat down and signed it.” This occurred in 1941.

There is no question, however, that the corporate return was signed by the appellant as president and by Marco Norwitt, the appellant’s brother as vice president.

McIntosh “executed the signature as the person who prepared the return and turned it over to” the appellant. Adolph Wash-auer, division chief of the office of the Collector of Internal Revenue at San Francisco, testified that at a meeting in the early part of May, 1945, with Arthur P. Shapro, at that time the appellant’s attorney, Shapro- showed him the 1941 corporate return and said, “Well, we forgot to file”. Shapro turned over this corporate return to Washauer, according to the latter. Later, Nathan Spivock, the appellant’s accountant, asked the Collector’s representatives to let him have the return “so it would be of some assistance to him”, and they complied with his request. Spivock later gave the return back to the revenue men.

The corporate return was filed on June 23, 1945, but the jurat to the signatures of the proper officers was dated June 25, 1945. On cross-examination, Washauer testified that the return was given to him by Shapro' for filing. Shapro, however, denied that the return was ever in his possession. It was the jury’s function to resolve this conflict in the testimony.

The appellant seeks to make much of the fact that Washauer later testified that Shapro gave him the return “as a matter of record” or “as part of the records that he had”. But, as we have seen, the fact remains that both the appellant and his brother swore to the return after it was filed. The appellant himself, in his brief, declares: “The evidence further establishes that this return was not filed until June 23, 1945, and the jurat to the signatures of the alleged president and vice president o-f the corporation is dated June 25, 1945”.

*130 On April 15, 1943, the appellant and his wife filed their joint income tax return for the year 1942, and on June 23, 1945, they filed their amended return for 1942, together with delinquent returns for 1939, 1940 and 1941.

On March 15, 1944, the appellant and his wife filed their joint return for 1943, and on June 23, 1945, they filed their amended return for 1943.

Counts 2 and 3 of the indictment are based upon the amended returns for the respective years named therein. Although the indictment does not use the word “amended”, the filing date alleged therein makes it clear that these two counts relate to the amended returns for 1942 and 1943. The appellant concedes that “the two original individual tax returns filed in 1943 and 1944 by Paul and Freda Norwitt were inaccurate and understated the taxable income,” but points out that he was not on trial for having filed those returns.

Some time before March 15, 1945, the appellant employed Spivock to prepare the 1944 income tax returns for the appellant and his wife. 'Harry J. Stephenson, an employee of Spivock’s, handled most of the details. In the course of his work, Stephenson learned that rental income had been omitted from the appellant’s returns for 1942 and 1943, and he recommended the preparation of amended returns for those years. At about the same time, Stephenson also prepared the appellant’s original individual returns for 1939, 1940 and 1941.

Stephenson learned from the appellant that the latter had been engaged in a business known as the General Refrigerator Corporation. When the accountant asked ■for the records of that business, the appellant told him that they “had been burned in a fire”.

Early in 1945, Washauer commenced an investigation of the appellant’s income tax liability and that of the General Refrigerator Corporation. In the early part of February, 1945, Washauer and Ralphe Mohr, his assistant, visited the offices of the company, looking for the appellant, but they were informed that he “had already sold his place”, and that others had taken over the business about the first of that year. The internal revenue men were shown five or six books lying on a table, which were described as belonging to the old company.

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Bluebook (online)
195 F.2d 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norwitt-v-united-states-ca9-1952.