Philip Stein and Kathryne Stein, Husband and Wife v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

322 F.2d 78, 12 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5545, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4255
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 10, 1963
Docket20011
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 322 F.2d 78 (Philip Stein and Kathryne Stein, Husband and Wife v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) 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
Philip Stein and Kathryne Stein, Husband and Wife v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 322 F.2d 78, 12 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5545, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4255 (5th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

*79 SHEEHY, District Judge.

This is an appeal from a decision of the Tax Court upholding the assessment of income tax deficiencies, against the petitioners because of the action of the Commissioner in disallowing certain gambling losses that the petitioner Philip Stein, hereinafter referred to as Stein, claimed to have sustained during 1952, 1953 and 1954, respectively.

Stein was a professional gambler during the years here involved — 1952, 1953 and 1954. His wife, Kathryne Stein, is involved herein only because she signed joint income tax returns with her husband during those years.

Petitioners filed tax returns showing a net profit from gambling in the sum of $16,141.58 for 1952, $9,561.00 for 1953 and $4,694.00 for 1954. Stein’s actual winnings from gambling were in greater amounts for each of the three years, but in arriving at the above net profit figures, he subtracted certain daily net gambling losses which he claimed to have sustained during those years. The Commissioner disallowed certain of the claimed losses, viz., $34,029.50 for 1952, $29,802.00 for 1953 and $3,932.00 for 1954, and adjusted the net income for the years involved accordingly, with resulting deficiencies in tax which are the subject matter of this action.

Most, if not all, of the income of Stein was derived from his gambling activities, including playing poker and gin rummy, shooting dice and betting on sports events such as football games, basketball games and golf tournaments. While he did not engage in bookmaking and did not operate a gambling establishment of any kind, he traveled extensively during the years in question and engaged in gambling activities in various cities where he stayed for short periods. He gambled individually during each of the years in issue and during 1952 he also gambled with a partner by the name of Beehenberg. 1

At the trial in the Tax Court Stein testified that he had no independent knowledge of his winnings and losses from gambling during the years in question, and that he could not testify as to any of his winnings or losses during those years except as such winnings or losses are reflected by certain notebooks, which he offered in evidence as purportedly summarizing his daily gains and losses during each year. There were four of these notebooks. Two of them purported to show daily gains and losses for the year 1952, one of them purported to show the same information for 1953 and the remaining notebook purported to show the same information for 1954. Of the two notebooks purporting to show such information for 1952, one purported to show such information as to the gambling done by Stein individually during that year and the other purported to show such information as to the gambling done by Stein for the Stein-Bechenberg partnership during that year.

As to the manner in which he kept account of his daily losses and winnings in his gambling activities and as to the manner in which he made the entries in the notebooks, above referred to, Stein testified that, except during such times as he was gambling for the partnership during 1952, he would generally carry two rolls of money — one roll out of which he would gamble in one pocket and one roll out of which he would make personal expenditures in another pocket; that at the starting of a day of gambling he would count .the money in his gambling bankroll and at the end of the day he would again count the gambling bankroll ; that the difference between the amount of money in the gambling bankroll at the beginning of the day and tfie amount of money in the gambling bankroll at the end of the day would be the amount of his winnings or losses, as the case might be, for the day; that he would use slips of paper such as cocktail napkins, match folders, soap wrappers, *80 etc. that might be available and write down the date, the amount of his winnings or the amount of his losses, as the case might be, for the day, placing the letter “W” on the slip of paper in case the amount written thereon represented winnings, or placing the letter “L” on the slip of paper in case the amount written thereon represented losses; that he would place these slips of paper in his pocket and when he returned home, he would place them in a drawer; that these slips of paper so placed in said drawer from time to time would remain in said drawer until the end of the year; that at the end of each year he would take the slips of paper from the drawer and from the information contained thereon make the entries that were made in the notebook for that particular year; that upon that being done, the slips of paper were destroyed; that each entry in the notebooks correctly show the date he gambled, the amount of money he had in the gambling bankroll at the beginning of that day, the amount of money he had in the gambling bankroll at the end of that day and the net amount of money he won or lost, as the case might be that day, with the net winnings being designated as “in” and the net losses being designated as “out”; that, if at any time he did not have enough money in his personal bankroll to pay a personal expense, he would take money from the gambling bankroll to pay the personal expense and would put a slip of paper showing the amount taken from the gambling bankroll for personal expense in the gambling bankroll; and that these last mentioned slips would be placed in the drawer with the other slips, above referred to, and at the end of the year would be taken into account.

Stein further testified that when he gambled for the partnership and also gambled individually, he generally carried three rolls of money — one roll for his individual gambling, one roll for the partnership gambling and one roll for his personal expenses — and that each of said bankrolls was kept in a separate pocket. As to the manner in which he kept up with the partnership daily winnings or losses, and as to the manner in which he compiled the notebook at the end of 1952 showing the partnership winnings and losses, he testified, in effect, that the same procedure was followed that was followed as to his individual gambling.

Stein produced and offered in evidence a box containing a number of pieces of paper of various types, including cocktail napkins, match folders, soap wrappers, cards, etc., which he testified represented the pieces of paper on which he recorded his daily winnings or losses during 1952 and were the records from which he compiled the notebook showing his winnings and losses in his individual gambling activities during that year. He stated that he found the box containing these pieces of paper while cleaning out his garage shortly before the trial. No such slips were produced for either of the other years in question.

The following two entries in the notebook offered in evidence by petitioners as reflecting Stein’s individual winnings and losses for the year 1952 are illustrative of the entries made in the notebooks above referred to;

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Bluebook (online)
322 F.2d 78, 12 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5545, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philip-stein-and-kathryne-stein-husband-and-wife-v-commissioner-of-ca5-1963.