United States v. Lillehei

357 F. Supp. 718
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedApril 20, 1973
Docket3-72 Cr. 114
StatusPublished

This text of 357 F. Supp. 718 (United States v. Lillehei) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Lillehei, 357 F. Supp. 718 (mnd 1973).

Opinion

NEVILLE, District Judge.

Dr. C. Walton Lillehei, formerly a salaried professor in the medical school at the University of Minnesota and now presently and since 1969 in a similar or higher capacity at Cornell University in New York City, was on April 13, 1972 charged in a five-count indictment with wilfully and knowingly filing false and fraudulent income tax returns for the years 1964 through 1968. As a University Professor the doctor was permitted to treat outside patients for fees, which fees did not clear through the University. Such records as the doctor kept were maintained at an office in his home. The government presented evidence that a substantial portion of this outside patient income received in the years involved was not reported on the defendant’s income tax returns; that other items of income were omitted, including intez’est and reimbursed amounts for travel and expenses and that deductions were fraudulently stated and included in the returns. The government presented evidence from which the jury could find that defendant over the five-year period misstated his income (as corrected) by omitting in all some $262,000 of income on which he owed an income tax of (without penalty and interest) $127,437.42.

Both defendant’s 1964 and 1965 returns were late filed and his three returns for 1966 through 1968 were filed simultaneously through the office of his attorneys in May of 1969, testified to by the attorney to have been prepared by him from information furnished by the defendant. All are claimed by the government to be false and fraudulent. They each contained a check mark in the appropriate blank that defendant was reporting on a cash basis, which is the basis used by the government in reconstructing what it asserted to be his corrected income and tax due.

The jury trial consumed some five weeks and a verdict of guilty on all counts was returned on February 16, 1973. The government called some 164 witnesses and the defendant 16. The prosecution case in addition to stressing the failure to report patient fees totalling $210,286.94, for the five years, rested on the failure of defendant to report certain other income known as honoraria and miscellaneous fees for lectures and seminars conducted by the defendant and editing work done for a medical magazine in the amount of $10,725.00, the omission of certain interest income totalling $5,594.00, the failure to report the rather substantial amount of $16,752.00 for reimbursed travel expense for which the doctor had claimed a deduction and more particularly a long list of some 40 or more deductions (some involving the same persons over the successive years) which were mischaracterized and falsely listed totalling in all $14,888.00 as business deductions and $4,588.00 as false charitable contributions.

On the alleged unreported patients fees, one of the government agents testified to two and one-half months spent examining microfilm at the bank where the defendant kept his personal checking account, discovering some 318 checks received from patients and others deposit *721 ed in the account but for which the government could find no entry on the so-called patient cards which the defendant had furnished the government. It became clear that defendant had no books, ledgers or journals as such, but kept track of his receipts from patients only on index-size cards. He had none for 1964, but during the pre-indictment investigation delivered to the revenue agents groups of cards labelled for each of the years 1965 through 1968 purporting to show receipts for each year and on the basis of which he had made up his income tax returns. None of the 318 checks appear thereon but on cross-examination of the revenue agent defense counsel produced several more boxes of similar cards labelled 1969 and following, i. e., beyond the prosecution years, to which the agent had never had access and which he had never seen. With one or two minor exceptions the 318 missing cheeks were found to have been posted thereon.

One of the bulwarks of the defense was, and still is, that the doctor had adopted a method of accounting whereby he did not report any income from any particular patient until he had been paid by that patient in full and then, in such year he purported to report the entire amount. For instance, if the doctor performed surgery in 1965 and billed the patient $1,000, the pattern occurred again and again that a medical insurance company promptly paid a portion of the bill. The balance, to be paid by the patient, very frequently extended over a year or two before being fully paid. So, if the patient made the last payment in 1967, for instance, the doctor’s method called for reporting the entire $1,000 in that year and nothing prior thereto even though substantial amounts on the bill had been received in 1965 and 1966. Clearly this is not a recognized nor authorized method of tax accounting nor of reporting income for tax purposes, but on the question of lack of bad faith and wilful or fraudulent intent counsel obviously attempted to foundation an argument that the doctor was busy, often devoting 12 to 15 hours a day in surgery, was not an accountant, travelled widely, did not realize until his attorneys so advised him in 1969 that he was not using a proper method and that his system after all if faithfully followed would result ultimately in inclusion of all income in one year or another and thus defendant should not be accused of a criminal intent for an ignorant mistake which ultimately did little or no harm to the government. It was at least in part for this reason that it was contended that he had not given the government the patient cards for 1969 and later years, although evidence was received of a fire at his home in 1967 which destroyed or damaged some of his patient cards and that in the move to New York in 1968 or 1969 certain cards — 12 boxes more or less — were packed up and could not be located when the revenue agents requested permission to inspect the records. When the government produced the 318 checks not posted to the records which the agents had been furnished, defendant countered by producing the patient cards labelled 1969 and later to show an actual posting but non-inclusion in prior years income tax returns because at time of receipt of the money and partial payments in the indictment years of 1965 through 1968 the patient had not yet paid in full and thus the cards and the postings representing receipt of moneys were carried over to years beyond the prosecution years here involved.

During the course of the trial and particularly over a weekend the prosecution apparently examined the newly produced patient cards and at following court sessions called two questioned documents examiners, one from the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension in St. Paul, Minnesota, the other an employee of the Treasury Department from Washington, D. C. With enlarged photos, some taken with infra red rays, they gave evidence that as to 32 of the newly produced patient cards which they had examined, all had in fact been altered. For instance, a typical patient card where surgery had *722 been done and some payment had been made in the year 1965 originally showed the final payment in full in 1967 as an example with an entry then made “Balance 0”. At some later date, however, with different ink and a discernible difference in style of writing, etc., the figure “1” was added before the “0” and another “0” added to show a balance of $100.

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Bluebook (online)
357 F. Supp. 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lillehei-mnd-1973.