Ray C. Ballantyne v. United States

293 F.2d 112
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 11, 1961
Docket18700
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 293 F.2d 112 (Ray C. Ballantyne 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
Ray C. Ballantyne v. United States, 293 F.2d 112 (5th Cir. 1961).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

Charged in an indictment in two counts with willful evasion of income taxes for the years 1953 and 1954, and convicted on both counts, defendant has appealed. Assigning many errors, including that of denying appellant’s motion for judgment of acquittal for want of evidence, appellant presents as his primary claim that the court misconceived the nature of the accusation against the defendant and prevented him from making proof that monies received by him in the tax years in question were not, and were not received as, income, but were repayments of indebtedness owing to him, in short were a return of capital.

If we could agree with appellant that the record supports his claim, we would, of course, agree with him that the judgment should be reversed. The difficulty with defendant’s case is that the record does not support his assumptions. Appellant did not testify, nor did he offer any convincing testimony in support of his claim that the monies he received on account of contracts were not income but were repayment of indebtedness and, therefore, a return of capital. Neither did he make proffer of any testimony which was refused by the district judge.

The claim he urges with such fervor, that he offered to make proof through his bookkeeper, Morrison, of these facts, and the district judge refused to let him do so, is not supported by the record; neither does the record support his claim that the district judge misconceived the nature of the indictment and mis-charged the jury. On the contrary, the court’s instructions showed a complete and correct understanding of the nature of the offense charged and of defendant’s defense to it.

The record showing is voluminous and detailed. This is a sufficient and correct summary of it as to the evasion claimed and proved. Ballantyne entered into a contract with the City of Pasadena, Texas, to furnish concrete pipe. This was done under the assumed name Beco Engineering Specialties Co. Ballantyne made arrangements to buy the pipe from Standard Concrete Pipe Company, who delivered it to the City. Ballantyne opened a bank account in the name of Beco Engineering Specialties Co., indicating to the bank that he had a partner named Orin G. Bennett, though the proof showed, indeed Ballantyne admitted that he was non-existent, and that the company name was registered in the assumed name records. Ballantyne either put the receipts into this account or endorsed the checks over to Standard to pay for the pipe. Ballantyne received the bank statements from his accountants as instructed. No record was made of the receipts. The Beco money was sometimes put by Ballantyne into his corporation, Baleo, Inc. When this was done, the money was shown on the records as a liability to Beco, at Ballantyne’s instruction. This continued from 1950 through 1953. No tax was ever paid by Beco, Ballantyne or Baleo, Inc. on the net income. Ballantyne reported only his salary from Baleo, Inc. on his tax return, which he signed. He advised his bookkeeper that he had no other income in 1953, and this was passed along to the auditors who prepared the return. In 1954, Ballantyne entered into a similar contract with the City of Pasadena as B & B Products Co. Bayou Concrete Pipe Co. furnished the pipe and was paid for it by Ballantyne, who received the one cheek, in the sum of $54,-600, took it to the bank and cashed it, *114 paid for the pipe, and kept the balance, after splitting it up various ways. No record was made of the transaction and the net income was not included on Ballantyne’s tax return for 1954.

The jury was properly instructed and it found on ample evidence that the defendant had received income in the indictment years and had willfully evaded payment of the taxes due on it, and appellant’s claim, that the evidence was insufficient to take the case to the jury and that his motion for new trial should have been granted because the finding was a miscarriage of justice, finds no support in the record, notwithstanding the earnest and fervent assertions in appellant’s brief to the contrary.

While these claims: (1) that it was error to deny appellant’s request for a directed verdict and his motion for a new trial on the ground of lack of evidence to support the verdict against him; and (2) that the district judge, misapprehending the nature of the offense charged and of appellant’s offer of proof that the monies received by him in the tax years in question, which were charged to him as received as income, wei'e in fact received as repayment of indebtedness and a return of capital, and, therefore, were not income; were put forward by appellant and argued as his main ground; appellant did not waive or in any way abandon his many other assignments of error, but, arguing them with apparent conviction, insisted that either standing alone or, in the alternative, together, they were such error as deprived defendant of a fair trial. We cannot agree with this view.

The first of these assignments to be noticed is that, while the district judge, in his order on the application of the defendant for a bill of particulars, restricted the prosecution to proof of specific items of tax income in the years 1953 and 1954, nevertheless, on the theory that the evidence established a pattern of not reporting which had bearing-on the question of willfulness and later evasion, he permitted the government to introduce evidence pertaining to the years 1950 through 1953 as a part of a pattern of not reporting, though the government did not prove that any offense had been committed during the prior years, and, therefore, confused a pattern of conduct with a pattern of evasion.

Insisting that this inquiry was completely irrelevant and highly prejudicial and that, since there was no proof of any tax evasion in the earlier years, the testimony was irrelevant, appellant insists that this ruling and action caused him high prejudice.

The district judge, in his charge, carefully instructed the jury that the evidence as to the earlier years was not admitted as proof of evasion in the tax years but only as bearing upon the existence of a pattern of conduct. It seems to us that it is quite clear that, whether the ruling was correct or incorrect, no prejudice resulted from it. As a matter of fact, since the government had offered the evidence as proof of a pattern of tax evasion occurring in the earlier years, its failure to show such evasion could not have prejudiced defendant but would rather have redounded to his benefit.

We take up next, to reject them, for the reasons following appellant’s objections to the charge.

Of his first objection, to the effect that though the real charge against the defendant was not the failure to report income but willful evasion, the district judge submitted the case to the jury as one of failure to report, we find that an examination of the charge shows that it was not subject to this objection, but that, on the contrary, it carefully, precisely and correctly stated the nature of the indictment and of the proof necessary to sustain it, so that the jury could not have been misled.

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529 P.2d 1134 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1974)
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394 F.2d 922 (Seventh Circuit, 1968)
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Ray C. Ballantyne v. United States
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Bluebook (online)
293 F.2d 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-c-ballantyne-v-united-states-ca5-1961.