United States v. Heider

231 F. Supp. 223, 13 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 482, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8301
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedMay 8, 1964
DocketNo. C-19115
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 231 F. Supp. 223 (United States v. Heider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Heider, 231 F. Supp. 223, 13 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 482, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8301 (D. Or. 1964).

Opinion

SOLOMON, Chief Judge.

Otto Heider and his confidential secretary, Irene Lawrence, were indicted for wilfully filing false and fraudulent income tax returns on behalf of Heider 1 for the years 1953 and 1954 in their attempt to evade income taxes owing by Heider in the amounts of $141,252.04 and $131,646.38 respectively.

Defendants are residents of the town of Sheridan, Oregon, where Heider was engaged in the practice of law for many years and until the time of his disbarment in 1959. Heider’s primary occupation, however, was money lending. He made some real estate loans, but primarily he made loans on motor vehicles and heavy equipment. He engaged in some flooring arrangements with local retailers, and he handled rental properties. Heider also received income from a garage and repair shop which he operated primarily for the purpose of making serviceable the equipment which he repossessed.

Heider’s books and records concerning the prosecution years were in bad shape. His accountants, as well as the accountants for the Government, were required to construct a set of books, partially from the records which Heider kept but primarily from the original contracts, deposit slips, and cancelled checks. During the two years in question, there were more than 300,000 entries. Subsequent to the indictment, the attorneys and accountants for defendants spent many months with the attorneys and accountants for the Government in an effort to agree upon the authenticity of documents and entries. The results of such meetings may best be illustrated by the schedules on vehicular inventories. These lists contained 1700 items. They agreed on the correctness of all but 16 of them. Had there been no such cooperation, this case probably would have required at least a year to try. Actually, it was tried in 11 trial days.

The evidence showed that Heider was under investigation for tax deficiencies for the years 1939 through 1951. These deficiencies were settled, and defendant paid approximately $300,000.00 in taxes, interest and penalties. Thereafter, an investigation of Heider’s tax returns for the years 1952 through 1954 was commenced. However, prior to the indictment in this case, the statute of limitations for the year 1952 ran. Thereafter, defendant for the first time disclosed a group of contracts totaling $268,000.00 which had been in existence in the year 1952.

The Government relies primarily on the net worth method of accounting to prove non-reported taxable income during the prosecution years. The Government also adduced evidence of omitted as well as falsified items of income. In general, the defendants do not contest the Government’s figures concerning receipts and expenditures; instead, they attack the Government’s opening and closing net worth balances.

It was to defendants’ advantage for Heider to have a high opening net worth and a low closing net worth. As to some items, they contend that Heider was prejudiced by utilizing proper but imprudent accounting methods. As to other [227]*227items which Heider reported, they assert that he was not required to report them or that he failed to take the full deductions to which he was entitled.

From disclosures made by Heider’s attorneys and accountants after indictment but before trial, from Heider’s books and records made available to the Government during and prior to trial, from explanations given on many questioned items of income and expenses, and from evidence disclosed and theories advanced for the first time by defendants during the trial, the Government on numerous occasions revised downward net taxable income, the tax on which Heider is alleged to have evaded. The Government’s latest figures on Heider’s net taxable income are $5,999.70 for the year 1953 and $97,046.95 for the year 1954.

Defendants contend that the Government erred in refusing to allow Heider credit for a $69,800.00 cash hoard which they say Heider had on the day of the opening balance but which he did not deposit until 1954. They also claim that the Government erred in refusing to give Heider a $97,703.74 increase in River Bend Garage inventory as of December 31, 1952.

I shall examine these and other contentions made by the defendants. However, I shall not detail the evidence on the question of the intent of the defendants to cheat the Government. The evidence on this issue was clear and convincing. Defendants Heider and Lawrence kept incomplete books and records; they maintained their own methods of accounting which were often unintelligible to anyone else; they deliberately omitted receipts; and they wrote checks in greater amounts than the payees actually received, and yet recorded the higher amounts as disbursements in their books.

Although there is no evidence that the defendant Lawrence personally profited by such schemes, there is ample evidence that she knowingly participated in them. Heider did not seriously deny such intent, nor has he argued that issue. He merely contends that an examination of all of the transactions during the years 1953 and 1954 will reveal that, regardless of his intent, he did not owe a tax for these years.

CASH HOARD

Defendants contend that the opening net worth balance was understated by $69,800.00, represented by cash which Heider had withdrawn from his business during 1951 and 1952 and had secreted in his basement. They assert that this fund was then re-introduced in his business during the early months of 1954 in the form of false loans from relatives and friends. The Government contends that there was no cash hoard, but that these falsely labeled deposits of 1954 represent undisclosed cash receipts.

Heider and his wife were the only witnesses who testified on this issue. Both are vitally interested in the outcome of this prosecution. Moreover, Mrs. Heider’s testimony was not always coherent. She failed to explain satisfactorily the dates on which the money was withdrawn; why the entries in her household book concerning this cash hoard, allegedly made over a period of months, were made with the same pencil; or why the pages concerning the cash hoard remained in the book while other and more recent household records had been destroyed.

During the investigation leading up to this prosecution, Heider gave Agents Clark and Adams a sworn statement that he had no cash on hand during the prosecution years other than that which he had previously disclosed. Heider first disclosed the cash hoard only after the statute of limitations had run on the years 1951 and 1952 and only after the Revenue Agents had discovered a number of false loans, including one for $9,000.00 allegedly made by Irene Lawrence.

I find that there was no cash hoard and that the opening net worth balance should not be increased.

[228]*228INVENTORY OF REPOSSESSED VEHICLES AND EQUIPMENT

Defendants contend that Heider’s opening net worth is understated by $66,125.00 due to the Government’s refusal to accept book value as the proper valuation for repossessed vehicles and equipment carried forward from December 31, 1951, inventory. Defendants claim that the value of 1951 inventory was $78,275.00, that approximately $10,-000.00 in equipment was sold or scrapped in 1952, and that the value of the inventory still in stock on December 31, 1952 was $68,700.00.

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Related

Underhill v. Commissioner
45 T.C. 489 (U.S. Tax Court, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
231 F. Supp. 223, 13 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 482, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-heider-ord-1964.