United States v. Mirror Lake Golf and Country Club, Inc.

232 F. Supp. 167, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8636
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedJuly 29, 1964
Docket21640-1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 232 F. Supp. 167 (United States v. Mirror Lake Golf and Country Club, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Mirror Lake Golf and Country Club, Inc., 232 F. Supp. 167, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8636 (W.D. Mo. 1964).

Opinion

JOHN W. OLIVER, District Judge.

Introduction

This jury-waived case involves a sixteen count indictment against defendants Mirror Lake Golf and Country Club, Inc., Edward P. Osadchey, William R. Osadchey, Roy Osadchey, Marco M. Filardo and Victor J. Vogliardo.

Count I alleges a violation of Section 371 of Title 18 United States Code. All defendants are there charged with a conspiracy to commit the substantive offenses alleged in the other counts of the indictment.

Counts II through VII allege that the defendant Club and the three Osadcheys violated Section 5117(a) and 5687 of Title 26 United States Code.

Count XIV charges the defendant Club with a violation of Section 5124 and 5603(a) of Title 26 United States Code.

Count VIII charges defendants Filardo and Vogliardo with a violation of Section 203(c) (1) and 207 of Title 27 United States Code. Counts IX and X charge those two defendants with violations of Section 5691(a) of Title 26 United States Code.

Defendants Filardo and Vogliardo are also charged with violations of Section 5603(a) of Title 26 in Counts XII and XIII.

The Government has moved to dismiss Counts XI, XV and XVI. That motion will be sustained. A description of those counts is redundant.

The parties entered into four stipulations of fact that susbtantially shortened the length of trial. We have studied the stipulations and the exhibits attached thereto, we heard and have since studied the transcribed testimony of the fifteen witnesses called by the Government and that of the five individual defendants; we have considered the written suggested-findings of fact and suggested conclusions-of law submitted by the parties.

We shall first make general findings-of fact in narrative form applicable to1 all counts of the indictment. Additional findings of fact and conclusions of law will then be made in connection with each of the separate counts. After discussing each of the separate counts and our indication of the verdict in connection with each, we will direct further proceedings in this case.

Findings of Fact Applicable to All Counts

Defendant Mirror Lake Golf and Country Club, Inc., originally incorporated under pro forma decree in 1952 as Lakeside Country Club, Inc., was organized at the instance of defendant Edward P. Osadchey, his brother, defendant Roy Osadchey, and its then attorney, Louis Wagner. From its outset the defendant Club paid the special tax required of a Retail Liquor Dealer. The operation of the defendant Club throughout the period of the indictment was pursuant to an agreement under which defendant Edward P. Osadchey rented all of the physical facilities to the Club in consideration of receiving all moneys earned in its operation.

Defendant Edward P. Osadchey and a family partnership composed of him, his brother, defendant Roy Osadchey, and his wife Vearl Osadchey, faced difficulties in connection with liquor because of the location of the Club in the county and the consequent inability to obtain a liquor license from the State of Missouri. Sales to unlicensed liquor dealers are illegal.

It became therefore imperative some sort of an arrangment be established under which liquor could be obtained for sale to club members that would violate neither the Federal nor the State liquor laws.

In a rather transparent manner, the Board of Directors of the defendant Club on June 2, 1953, shortly after its organization, passed a resolution that went. *170 through the motions of creating a “liquor club” to be composed of such members of the corporation who were desirous of joining. In substance, that resolution authorized the collection of a single $2 fee with which liquor supposedly was to be purchased for the use of members of the corporation. The resolution, however, made clear that each member was to “pay for each drink served upon the premises of this corporation” and that the “proceeds derived therefrom to be used to replenish stock, mixers, ice, fruit, broken glasses, and for service.”

It is undisputed that during the indictment period the purchases of liquor were not from any separate “liquor pool” account but that they were made from a general account fund maintained by the Osadchey partnership and that the receipts from all sales of liquor were deposited in the general operating fund controlled by that partnership.

fe We note in passing that the evidence shows that new counsel were employed in August of 1961 and that since their employment, substantial changes were made in the manner in which liquor is purchased for the use of members of the defendant Club. We, of course, do not have before us the legality or illegality of the present arrangement, and therefore are not required and do not pass judgment on the present arrangement. The fact that new counsel recognized the necessity for a change, however, is not without significance in this case and tends to confirm our findings in regard to the arrangement in operation during the indictment period.

Prior to September 4, 1959, one Sam A. Morris, joined as a co-conspirator but not as a defendant in Count I of the indictment, was the source through whom the Osadchey partnership was able to obtain liquor for the defendant Club, The method by which Sam A. Morris, an employee of both Kennedy Stubbers Distributing Company of Kansas City, and of the defendant Club, was patently illegal. In an administrative action, Morris’ car was seized in September, 1959, under a forfeiture proceeding maintained on the ground that his car was being used in violation of the Internal Revenue laws arising from unlawful sales of liquor to the defendant Club, Other civil penalties were imposed on Morris. '■

All defendants had knowledge of those facts shortly after their occurrence. The detailed circumstances of how defendant club received its liquor prior to September 4, 1959, are unimportant except as background evidence in this case and except for the fact that it makes obvious the fact that the supply of liquor to the defendant Club was terminated so far as Morris was concerned and that a new source of supply had to be developed for the defendant Club,

The evidence is a bit vague and uncertain as to wbo said what to whom at what particular time in regard to how the new source of liquor supply was to be established for the defendant Club; but the evidence establishes beyond reasonable doubt that shortly after the Mor1-is source of supply was terminated, a new source of supply was developed under which defendants Marco M. Filardo and Victor J. Vogliardo became the new source of liquor supply for defendant Club.

The actual sales made from that new source are stipulated. The methods of operation under which Maynard J. Mitchell and Elmer F. Hogan, named as co-conspirators but not as defendants in Count I, and defendant William R. Osadchey, served as errand boys for the purpose of physically transporting the liquor from Broadway Liquors, defendants Filardo’s and Vogliardo’s place of business, to the defendant Club is likewise uncontroverted.

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Related

United States v. Johnson
334 F. Supp. 982 (W.D. Missouri, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
232 F. Supp. 167, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mirror-lake-golf-and-country-club-inc-mowd-1964.