United States v. Houston H. Feaster

494 F.2d 871
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 2, 1974
Docket72-2683
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 494 F.2d 871 (United States v. Houston H. Feaster) 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
United States v. Houston H. Feaster, 494 F.2d 871 (5th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

INGRAHAM, Circuit Judge:

Appellant Houston H. Feaster was indicted in eight counts for evading income taxes in the years 1965 through 1968. Counts 1, 3, 5 and 7 alleged that Feaster violated 26 U.S.C. § 7201i. 1 by *872 fraudulently understating his income for the years in question while Counts 2, 4, 6 and 8 alleged that he failed to report as income certain bribes and kickbacks he received during these years in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1). 2 The jury found him guilty under Count 3, 3 and we affirm that conviction.

The facts are summarized in some detail in the district court’s opinion denying appellant’s motion for a new trial, 341 F.Supp. 524 (S.D.Ala., 1972), and we will repeat only those necessary to gain an understanding of the principal issue raised on appeal. When the investigation of Feaster began in the fall of 1970, he was the Director of the Alabama State Docks located in Mobile. A concurrent investigation was also underway into the tax affairs of Marvin Mas-sengale, a local Mobile contractor whose family-owned corporation did a substantial amount of work for the Docks. The investigation of Massengale revealed that between the years 1965 and 1968 he had withdrawn approximately $90,000 from the corporation. There was no indication where this money had gone other than that Massengale had not reported it on his individual return. It also developed that Feaster’s life style, illustrated particulax-ly by his bank deposits and cash expenditures, was not in line with the $15,000 a year salary he was paid as Director of the Docks. Interestingly, Massengale was asked in an initial interview with the IRS who he was “having to pay off to get work;” he replied that he did not “do that sort of thing.”

Both investigations culminated in July 1971 with a recommendation to the In *873 telligence Division of the IRS that criminal tax charges be brought against both Feaster and Massengale. The content of the report on Feaster is pertinent. In addition to listing the Massengale investigation as a related case, the report contains more than passing emphasis on the relationship between these two men. Even a casual reading leaves one with the strong impression that the agents believed Massengale’s withdrawals constituted a probable source for Feaster’s unreported income.

The appropriate IRS officials were apparently convinced that criminal charges were warranted because on August 27, 1971, Feaster and Massengale were afforded separate conferences in the Regional Counsel’s office in Atlanta. At their respective conferences Feaster and Massengale were represented by the same attorney (hereafter Barrister), who held a power of attorney from each. From the record it appears that Feas-ter’s conference amounted to little more than Barrister’s telling the IRS that there was insufficient evidence to successfully prosecute Feaster for income tax evasion. The IRS replied that his guilt could be proven by the bank deposits and cash expenditures method.

Massengale’s conference was somewhat different however. Barrister had prepared a memorandum of law which he submitted in an effort to convince the IRS to forego prosecuting his client Massengale. The thrust of the memo is that a taxpayer paying bribes or kickbacks to another on behalf of a corporation is not taxable for the monies received from the corporation to make the payments. It is in order to quote the first two paragraphs of this document:

“The following is a Memorandum of Law regarding the ineludability in gross income of kickbacks when received by an employee of a corporation and which kickbacks are then paid on behalf of the corporation to an employee of Federal, State or Local Government. For the purpose of this memorandum the following facts are to be assumed. The ‘X’ corporation was desirous of obtaining construction contracts from ABC, a governmental body. The taxpayer was an officer of ‘X’ corporation and made an agreement on behalf of ‘X’ corporation with John Dooks the Chief Executive Officer of ABC. Under the agreement, John Dooks agreed to cause ‘X’ corporation to receive construction contracts from ABC provided that ‘X’ corporation made periodic payments to John Dooks in an amount required by John Dooks. The ‘X’ corporation made the payments to John Dooks through the medium of the taxpayer. The taxpayer upon receipt of the payment from ‘X’ corporation immediately gave it to John Dooks pursuant to the agreement. The taxpayer never kept any of the payments received by him from ‘X’ corporation nor did he ever use any of the payments for his own benefit.
“Under the above facts the payments received by the taxpayer from ‘X’ corporation are not includable in his gross income under Section 61 of the Int.Rev.Code of 1954.”

But the IRS told Barrister that hypothetical examples were not enough, “cold hard facts” were necessary. Barrister responded that without immunity for his client such facts would not be forthcoming. The conference ended on that note, with the IRS intending to transmit both cases to the Justice Department for presentation to the grand jury that was to be convened in Mobile on September 15, 1971.

Although Barrister requested a conference for Massengale at the Justice Department level, nothing was heard concerning this request until 6:30 P.M. on September 15, 1971. Someone from either the Justice Department or the IRS called Barrister at that time and advised him that if he desired a conference for Massengale it would have to be that very evening. Barrister then went without his client to the United States Attorney’s office in Mobile and conferred with officials from the local United States Attorney’s office, the Justice *874 Department, and the IRS regional office in Atlanta. Later that evening Barrister returned to the office with Massen-gale. It was not until this meeting that Barrister decided he could no longer represent Feaster, and the government officials were told that he would be informed of this development the next day.

Earnest discussions then began concerning Massengale’s plight. The government evidently made it clear that unless Massengale produced facts sufficient to absolve himself of tax liability, his case would be presented to the grand jury the next day. Massengale then told his story: the money he had withdrawn from his corporation had been paid to Houston Feaster during the years in question in order to obtain construction contracts from the Alabama State Docks. His statement was reduced to writing in affidavit form the following day. Although Massengale was not given immunity at this juncture, the government agreed not to prosecute him on the basis of this statement and refrained from submitting his case to the grand jury. Feaster was thereafter indicted on September 17,1971.

Feaster’s trial began in January 1972 and lasted for a total of fourteen days.

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Bluebook (online)
494 F.2d 871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-houston-h-feaster-ca5-1974.