United States v. Robert E. Glascott

216 F.2d 487, 46 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1011, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4349
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 4, 1954
Docket11093_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 216 F.2d 487 (United States v. Robert E. Glascott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. Robert E. Glascott, 216 F.2d 487, 46 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1011, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4349 (7th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

SCHNACKENBERG, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment of the District Court entered on the verdict of a jury finding the defendant guilty of wilfully and knowingly attempting to defeat and evade payment of income tax due and owing by him and his wife to the United States for the years 1944, 1945, 1946 and 1947, by filing false and fraudulent joint income tax returns, on February 8, 1949, for the years 1944, 1945 and 1946, and on March 15, 1948, for the year 1947, all in violation of Sec, 145(b), title 26 U.S.C.A. The indictment consisted of one count for each taxable year. A verdict of guilty was returned on each count. Motions for acquittal and for a new trial were overruled and defendant was sentenced to serve six months on each count consecutively.

There was evidence on the trial, which, if believed, tended to prove the facts which we now set forth.

During and for many years prior to the taxable years in question, defendant was a practicing attorney in Michigan City, Indiana. During the years in question he received some rent from subtenants in his office space in addition to professional fees, interest on bank deposits and income from certain interests in partnerships and corporations. The tax returns which he made were upon a cash receipts basis.

*488 During that part of the years here involved ending in March 1946, Elna R. Anderson, his regular secretary, was absent from the office and book records of cash receipts and expenditures used by defendant in making the returns for these four years were not kept, because of difficulty in obtaining competent help and the defendant’s not being present to supervise the office activities. Upon her return, Mrs. Anderson began making entries in the cash books 1 and by 1948 had completed this work. She obtained the information for these entries from slips of paper or “memo” sheets given to her by the defendant. There was also what defendant called a client’s ledger book 2 , consisting of two volumes, as well as a trust book or ledger 3 , which contained debit and credit entries, the latter representing amounts due to people whose money defendant held in trust. Defendant had a trust account at the bank. That account on December 31, 1947, had a balance of about $1,000, while a statement of the balances and the amounts due to persons, according to a statement prepared by defendant based upon the trust ledger, showed a balance due from defendant of some $17,-000. In 1949, defendant explained this situation to Robert A. Inglebright, an agent for the’ Bureau of Internal Revenue, by stating that the difference represented money which he had borrowed from the trust accounts and which was repayable thereto.

In May 1949, Inglebright went to defendant’s office and inquired about his bookkeeping system. Defendant said that he had a cash receipt book which contained his taxable income and that he had expense accounts. When asked specifically if there was some kind of account cards, such as a ledger sheet on each account, or an accounts receivable ledger, he stated that there was none. Defendant turned the cash books over to Inglebright, who examined and checked them against cancelled checks and bank statements. In response to another inquiry about an accounts receivable ledger, defendant stated he had no such record.

Later in the investigation, defendant turned over to Inglebright for inspection the trust ledger, which Inglebright analyzed. About a week after October 26, 1949, while Inglebright was working on the trust accounts, he visited defendant’s office but did not find defendant there. There had been no previous arrangement with defendant with regard to making books available when he was absent. The agent asked for the trust ledger and the office girl telephoned to defendant. She thereupon handed to Inglebright a black ledger book which closely resembled the trust ledger with which he had been working. It was not the trust ledger, but was a ledger with each page showing an account of a client. It appeared to cover accounts alphabetically from “M” to “Z.” He inquired of the girl whether or not there was another book containing “A” through “L.” She said that there was and she produced it. It had a gray binder. Thereafter defendant appeared and, indicating the two books which had been handed to Inglebright, stated that those were not the books he wanted — that he wanted the trust ledger. When asked whether these were not accounts receivables, defendant stated that they were, that they were the records of the accounts of clients, and that they could be accounts receivable records. He answered in the affirmative when asked whether the credit entries in these two books represented receipts from his clients. He permitted Inglebright to take the two books in order to determine the credits therein.

When Inglebright returned the accounts receivable ledgers he pointed out *489 to defendant a substantial difference among the credit entries in these ledgers, the cash receipts entered in the cash books and the amounts deposited in the bank account. When Inglebright inquired whether the credit postings in these ledgers were for payments by clients for services rendered, defendant answered that they were and should be included as taxable income. After analyzing the accounts receivable ledgers. Inglebright asked defendant to submit to a question and answer statement under oath “for the purpose of obtaining his explanation of the records which had not been presented * * * at the time of the first statement.” Defendant replied that, upon advice of legal counsel, he would make “no further statement under oath.”

An analysis of the credit postings in the accounts receivable ledgers, when compared with the cash book and tax returns, showed discrepancies for each of the years in question. Both the cash book and the returns set forth a less amount of income than that shown on the accounts receivable ledgers.

Based upon all of the records submitted to Inglebright, the balances of unreported professional income were: for 1944, $8,516.17; for 1945, $11,674.-69; for 1946, $12,582.90, and for 1947, $10,257.27. There were total fees deposited in the checking and saving accounts of defendant which were not recorded in either the accounts receivable ledgers or the cash receipts journals, amounting to $2,441.41 in 1944, $2,462.-00 in 1945, $1,849.97 in 1946 and $1,-018.13 in 1947.

In December 1948, defendant filed a written application for admission to practice before the Treasury Department. A letter was written to defendant asking whether he had filed returns for 1945 and 1946, and, if not, his reasons for not doing so. In response thereto defendant wrote under date of February 3, 1949, that all of his returns had then been filed 4 and the tax paid thereon. The letter stated that the reason for the late filing was “simply my inability to make payment at the time the tax was due, but I have been fortunate enough to arrange a loan to get the matter cleared up.”

Defendant’s checking account showed deposits for the year 1944 in the sum of $13,261.50, in 1945 in the sum of $23,767.01, in 1946 in the sum of $31,-441.76 and during 1947 in the sum of $32,630.56.

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Bluebook (online)
216 F.2d 487, 46 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1011, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-robert-e-glascott-ca7-1954.