United States v. Estate of Stonehill

660 F.3d 415, 108 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6436, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 19709, 2011 WL 4470644
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 28, 2011
Docket10-35789
StatusPublished
Cited by119 cases

This text of 660 F.3d 415 (United States v. Estate of Stonehill) 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.

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United States v. Estate of Stonehill, 660 F.3d 415, 108 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6436, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 19709, 2011 WL 4470644 (9th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

W. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:

Harry Stonehill and Robert Brooks (“Taxpayers”) appeal the district court’s denial of their Rule 60(b) motion to vacate a 1967 tax judgment against them. Based on evidence discovered through the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), Taxpayers argue that the government committed fraud on the court during their 1967 suppression hearing, United States v. Stonehill, 274 F.Supp. 420 (S.D.Cal.1967) (“Stonehill /”), and their subsequent appeal to this court, Stonehill v. United States, 405 F.2d 738 (9th Cir.1968) (“Stone-hill II ”). We conclude that, although the evidence uncovered by Taxpayers shows some misconduct on the part of the government, it is insufficient to demonstrate fraud on the court. Taxpayers also argue that the judgment should be vacated under United States v. Throckmorton, 98 U.S. 61, 25 L.Ed. 93 (1878), because William Saunders, Taxpayers’ business associate who sometimes served as their attorney, gave information to the government. Because Taxpayers have not shown Saunders was their attorney rather than their business associate at the time he informed on Taxpayers, we reject Taxpayers’ Throckmorton claim.

As will become apparent during the course of this opinion, this litigation has been extraordinarily protracted. We have written an unusually detailed opinion in the hope that we may thereby finally lay this litigation to rest. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court.

I. Background

We begin with a general overview of the facts and procedural history. We then discuss in more detail the evidence uncovered at each stage of the litigation.

A. General Overview

Harry Stonehill was stationed in the Philippines during World War II. During *418 and shortly after the war, Stonehill made tens of thousands of dollars buying and reselling army surplus cars, and importing Christmas cards from the United States. After the war, Stonehill briefly returned to his native Chicago, but returned to the Philippines several years later. Upon his return, Stonehill began what became an enormously successful business career, eventually becoming Robert Brooks’s partner.

The Philippines became independent on July 4,1946. The early years of Philippine independence were notable for their tumultuous politics and extensive corruption. Taxpayers began their business ventures during these years. Taxpayers eventually owned sixteen different corporations in the Philippines, the most prominent of which was the United States Tobacco Company (“U.S. Tobacco”). U.S. Tobacco was the first company to produce Ameriean-style cigarettes in the Philippines. U.S. Tobacco’s success was aided by the Philippine government’s drastic limitation of the importation of American cigarettes in 1949. Stonehill, not surprisingly, supported (and, according to some, purchased) this limitation. U.S. Tobacco, as well as Taxpayers’ many other business ventures, were extremely successful, and Taxpayers became wealthy and influential figures in the Philippines.

Taxpayers’ success attracted attention from both Philippine and U.S. authorities. The U.S. State Department became interested in Stonehill’s operations as early as 1950. The State Department requested that the U.S. Embassy in Manila conduct a “discreet investigation” into Stonehill’s operations. In its report to the State Department, the Embassy observed that Stonehill’s businesses were conducted “just within or just beyond the limits imposed by law,” and that Stonehill “has the reputation of not paying his full income tax.” Over the next decade, U.S. authorities became convinced that Stonehill did not pay income taxes he owed to the United States. In 1960, the IRS sent Stonehill’s 1958 tax return for audit to Robert Chandler, the IRS representative to the Far East stationed in Manila. However, Chandler took no action because he had insufficient resources to conduct an extensive investigation.

Philippine attention to Taxpayers began in the late 1950s. It intensified after the election of President Diosdado Macapagal in 1961. Macapagal was elected on a reformist, anti-corruption platform. Although, as we discuss below, Macapagal and his party were not free from corruption themselves (including corruption involving Stonehill), Macapagal focused, at least rhetorically, on rooting out the influence of corrupt foreign businessmen. During this period, the Philippine government conducted wiretaps of Taxpayers’ activities.

In late 1961, Menhart Spielman contacted Robert Hawley, an FBI agent stationed as the Legal Attache in Manila. Spielman had been the Executive Vice President of U.S. Tobacco, but had recently resigned from that position after a violent altercation with Taxpayers. Spielman told Hawley that he had confronted Taxpayers about massive illegalities in U.S. Tobacco. It is equally or more likely, however, that Spielman had attempted to blackmail Taxpayers by threatening to go to the authorities if they did not give him an ownership share in the company. Either way, Taxpayers responded by beating Spielman unconscious, resulting in his hospitalization.

Spielman told Hawley that he could give the FBI information concerning illegal activity at U.S. Tobacco. Hawley concluded that, to the extent Spielman’s information suggested violations of U.S. law, it was U.S. tax law. Hawley therefore asked if *419 Spielman would speak to IRS Agent Chandler. Spielman agreed to do so. Although Spielman’s information suggested violations of U.S. tax law, it primarily suggested violations of Philippine law. Chandler and Hawley therefore told Spielman that he should talk to the Philippine National Bureau of Investigation (“NBI”), the Philippine equivalent of the FBI. Spielman was reluctant to do so for fear that the NBI was in league with Taxpayers. Spiel-man said that if Taxpayers found out he was talking to the authorities, they would kill him.

Hawley and Chandler eventually convinced Spielman to talk to Colonel Jose Lukban, the Director of the NBI. In a series of discussions at Chandler’s house, Spielman gave Lukban significant information about where Taxpayers kept records and illegally imported material for making cigarettes that would demonstrate various violations of Philippine law. Some of these meetings were attended by Philippine Secretary of Justice Jose Diokno. The information provided by Spielman eventually led to a massive NBI raid on all of Taxpayers’ businesses on March 3,1962. Approximately two hundred NBI agents raided approximately seventeen different corporations.

After the raid, the NBI made many of the seized documents available to U.S. officials. The extent of U.S. access to the documents is contested, and we discuss the evidence concerning U.S. access in detail below. The documents to which U.S. officials had access were analyzed by Chandler, with William Ragland, an IRS Agent, and Sterling Powers, an IRS Assistant Revenue Service Representative. Ragland and Powers had been sent to Manila shortly before the NBI raid specifically to aid Chandler in the Stonehill investigation.

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660 F.3d 415, 108 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6436, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 19709, 2011 WL 4470644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-estate-of-stonehill-ca9-2011.