United States v. Earl S. Baird

414 F.2d 700, 24 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5349, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11219
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 4, 1969
Docket33026_1
StatusPublished
Cited by103 cases

This text of 414 F.2d 700 (United States v. Earl S. Baird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Earl S. Baird, 414 F.2d 700, 24 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5349, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11219 (2d Cir. 1969).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Circuit Judge:

On March 13, 1966 the appellant, Earl S. Baird, was charged in a five-count information with violations of 26 U.S.C. § 7203 for wilful failure to file income tax returns, within the required time, for the years 1959 to 1963, inclusive. The jury returned verdicts of guilty on all counts; and on November 15, 1968, he was sentenced to three months imprisonment on each count, the sentences to be served concurrently, and he was also fined $1,000 on each count. The appellant is presently enlarged on bail pending this appeal.

Baird did not dispute the allegation that he failed to file the returns. Rather, his defense at trial was based on (1) a denial that the failure was “wilful” and (2) a claim that, during the years in question, he lacked the capacity either to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law by reason of a mental disease or defect.

The Government’s evidence showed that the appellant actively and successfully carried on his business during the years of his failure to file returns. From 1954 through 1963 he was a partner and floor broker with the New York City securities firm of Baird & Company. He generally received the second largest distributive share of partnership income, ranging from a low of $27,480.-62 in 1957 to $86,646.53 in 1959. This income was supplemented by his trading in the market on his own account through which in 1961 he made as much at $60,668, giving him a gross income for that year of $121,943.58.

On the wilfulness issue, the defense sought to show that Baird was an ill man who innocently assumed that his tax returns were being prepared for him by someone else. Testimony was offered to show that the stock brokerage firm of Brady, Baird & Garvin of which the appellant had been a partner and floor broker on the American Stock Exchange from 1944 to 1954, made it a practice to have its auditor prepare the federal income tax returns of the partners. David G. Baird, senior partner of Baird & Company and older brother of appellant, Earl S. Baird, testified that *703 he noticed that his brother’s health was declining in the early 1950’s and convinced the appellant to join Baird & Company in 1954 where he could be under David Baird’s care. He said the appellant acted as a “special messenger” at the firm, and his work “did not require a great deal of imagination or freedom of action on his part.” David Baird also testified that he observed a deterioration in appellant’s physical condition and working habits in 1957, including severe headaches and loss of vision, as well as nervousness, irritability and uncertainty; and that in March, 1957, in the presence of appellant, he instructed William Brome, one of the partners in the firm, “ * * * to relieve my brother of every possible detail, to take care of his taxes the same as he took care of mine * * * to take care and prepare his taxes as he prepared mine, to do everything that he could to relieve Earl of any detail work or responsibilities as far as humanly possible.”

The defense also presented evidence to show that the appellant was hospitalized during July and August 1958, first at New York Eye and Ear Infirmary and then at St. Vincent’s Hospital because of visual difficulties he was experiencing. On August 2, 1958, the appellant was discharged from St. Vincent’s Hospital with a discharge diagnosis of optic neuritis. Dr. Mortimer R. Cholst, an ophthalmologist, testifying on the basis of his examination of the appellant in the fall of 1964 and the St. Vincent’s Hospital and New York Eye and Ear Infirmary records, concluded that the appellant was suffering from a generalized, slow, progressive circulatory disease which began in 1957 and continued through 1964.

The defense relied primarily on two expert witnesses in its presentation of the criminal responsibility defense based on the standard enunciated in United States v. Freeman, 357 F.2d 606 (2 Cir. 1966). Dr. Peter G. Denker, a psychiatrist, gave his opinion, based on one examination which he made on October 26, 1964 (seven days after appellant filed eight delinquent tax returns, following an interrogation of Baird by the Internal Revenue Service), and which consisted of conversations with the appellant and his brother, David Baird, that the appellant had a “reactive depression.” 1 In response to a long hypothetical question based upon the St. Vincent’s Hospital and the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary records, plus an assumption of the facts claimed to have been proved by the defense case, Dr. Denker stated: “I think he was suffering from a combination of circulatory impairment in his brain with cerebral atrophy, reactive depression.” He added:

“He could do messenger work. He could follow instructions, I presume, from whoever his superior or associates might be. But if it came to individual judgments, responsibilities, I think he would be making errors.”

Dr. Denker’s conclusion was that the appellant lacked substantial capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct and to conform his conduct to the requirements of the income tax laws.

Dr. Denker was also permitted to testify to numerous out-of-court statements made by the appellant during the psychiatric examination. Although the truth or falsity of these self-serving, hearsay declarations was relevant but not generally admissible on the, “wilfulness” issue, they were admitted under the exception to the hearsay rule that it was not for the truth of what the doctors said the appellant said or what *704 Mr. David Baird told the doctors but as a description of the material on which the doctors based their opinions. 2 For example, Dr. Denker testified that the appellant “made no significant attempt to explain his lack of filing income tax returns, tending to shrug the question off, and saying, ‘I took it for granted that all these were being taken care of.’” 3

This theory — that the out-of-court statements were admitted only to establish the foundation for the expert’s opinion, not for their truth or falsity— makes the assumption, as a convenient legal fiction, 4 that the jury is able to ignore the fact that the expert’s report of what the accused said and what David Baird said 5 actually put before the jurors the accused’s own story in defense without his taking the witness stand.

The defense presented the opinions and conclusions of a second psychiatrist, Dr. Morris Herman, whose testimony also related to numerous self-serving out-of-court statements made by the appellant, which were admitted on the ground that they were part of the basis for Dr. Herman’s opinion that the appellant was not criminally responsible. 6

*705

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Bluebook (online)
414 F.2d 700, 24 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5349, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-earl-s-baird-ca2-1969.