United States v. Freedland

111 F. Supp. 852, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3040
CourtDistrict Court, D. North Dakota
DecidedFebruary 27, 1953
DocketCr. No. 8186
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 111 F. Supp. 852 (United States v. Freedland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. North Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Freedland, 111 F. Supp. 852, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3040 (D.N.D. 1953).

Opinion

VOGEL, District Judge.

This is a proceeding by the United States based upon a petition asking this Court for an order to show cause why the respondent should not be found guilty of criminal contempt. The order to show cause was duly issued and the case was tried to the Court.

The actions of the respondent which the petitioner alleges amounted to criminal contempt arose out of the respondent’s answers to questions put to him by the Court on the voir dire examination'prior to' his service as foreman of the jury in the case of United States v. Waldie, a criminal matter in which the defendant was charged with having attempted to defraud the Government and evade payment of a large portion of his income tax. In that case the defendant was found not guilty. The Court desires once and for all to lay ;the ghost of the Waldie case which has hovered over this entire proceeding.

It has been charged, by inference, that this • contempt case was brought because prosecuting officials and other representatives of the Government were disgruntled at the outcome of the Waldie case and chose this means of punishing one or more [853]*853of the jurors and of intimidating future jurors from holding against the Government. Such charge is, in the opinion of the Court, entirely baseless and unjustified. Furthermore, if anyone could 'be so' foolish as to believe future jurors could be so intimidated or coerced, such person knows not the temper or timber of the jurors in this District.

This is not nor could it he a retrial of the Waldie case. That is a closed and past incident. The defendant was found not guilty by the jury and that finding cannot and will not be disturbed. How the respondent voted in connection with that case is of complete immateriality. What we are trying to determine here is whether or not the respondent was guilty of willfully giving false and/or misleading' answers to the Court in connection with questions asked him pertaining to his qualifications to serve as a juror in the Waldie case.

Under the rules of this Court, the Judge examines all jurors on the voir dire pertaining to their qualifications to serve on the particular case to be tried. Subsequent to the Judge’s examination, counsel are asked and given an opportunity to present any additional questions which the Judge might have overlooked. The answers to questions put by the Court necessarily form the basis for the Court’s excusing a juror on its own motion or challenges for cause by the parties and the exercise of peremptory challenges by each ■side. Necessarily, it is expected and re■quired that jurors in their answers shall be ■completely truthful and that they shall disclose, upon a general question, any matters which might tend to disqualify them from sitting on the case for any reason. It ■therefore becomes imperative that the answers be truthful and complete. False or ■misleading answers may result in the-seating of a juror who might have been discharged by the Court, challenged for cause by counsel or stricken ■ through the exercise of peremptory challenge. Tire seating of such a juror could and probably would result in a miscarriage of justice and therefore courts and attorneys, who are -officials of the court, are ever mindful o'f the importance of jurors’ answers to questions regarding their qualifications.

The petition herein!' which, in effect, takes the place of an information or an indictment, specifically charges:

1. That the respondent’s answers to the following questions were willfully corrupt, false and contrary to his oath:

“The Court: Have you ever had any difficulty in the past or argument about or controversy over your State or Federal income tax returns? A. No, just by a mistake, that’s all.
“The Court: Just by a mistake?
A. Yes.”

2. That the respondent willfully gave a corrupt and false answer to the following question:

“The Court: Do you know of any reason why you- couldn’t act as a fair and an impartial juror? A. No. I don’t.”

The United States claims, and the evidence substantiates the fact, that in the respondent’s income tax return for the year 1944 he understated his net income tax to such an extent that he paid less than 5% of the tax liability thereon, and that on or about the 12th day of February, 1948, after investigation by the Internal Revenue Service of the District of North Dakota and a conference with the respondent and his attorney, the respondent paid an additional tax for the year 1944 amounting to $1,417.90 plus interest and a negligence penalty. The respondent claims in his return to the order to show cause and attempted to support such claim by his own and other testimony that the misstatement of net income was merely a mistake and that when • it was called to his attention and the attention of his attorney it was disposed of without.,argument or difficulty through the payment of- the additional amount due plus interest and penalty.

The respondent is and was at the time in question a farmer and cattle raiser. During the year of 1944 he had purchased cattle which he did not resell by the end of that year. He believed that the money paid in purchase thereof should be deducted as an expense item, failing to rea[854]*854lize that the expenditure for the cattle amounted to a capital investment and not an expense. He also had charged, as repairs, items that amounted to capital investments. The attorney who represented him in 1948 when the adjustment was made testified in his behalf. He stated that he had not prepared the respondent’s income tax return- for the year 1944 but that it had been prepared by another lawyer at Langdon near where the respondent lived at the time in question; that he began doing the respondent’s income tax work in about 1945 or 1946 and that he still does represent the respondent on tax matters; that he was present with the respondent at the time of a conference with a representative of the Internal Revenue Bureau; that when the errors were pointed out to them, they agreed immediately that the 1944 return was incorrect, that it was “just a mistake” and the additional amount plus a negligence penalty of 5% and interest was thereafter paid. The respondent himself testified that he believed he answered the Court's question as to whether or not he had had any “difficulty”, “argument” or “controversy” over his State or Federal income tax returns correctly when he said, “No, just by mistake”; that he did not intend to mislead and still believed the answer to be a truthful one.

In the petitioner’s case in chief there was introduced and received in evidence the original jury summons directing Freed-land to appear in court for jury service. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1.) On the reverse side of such summons there is a questionnaire which jurors are required to fill out and sign and leave with the Clerk of this Court at the time they appear for jury service. One question thereon is as follows :

“Have you ever been convicted of a criminal offense?”

The respondent answered that question by writing “No” as his answer and signing the questionnaire.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 F. Supp. 852, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3040, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-freedland-ndd-1953.