United States v. Samuel Andrew Lindstrom, Jr., United States of America v. Samuel Andrew Lindstrom, Sr.

222 F.2d 761
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 27, 1955
Docket11509_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 222 F.2d 761 (United States v. Samuel Andrew Lindstrom, Jr., United States of America v. Samuel Andrew Lindstrom, Sr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Samuel Andrew Lindstrom, Jr., United States of America v. Samuel Andrew Lindstrom, Sr., 222 F.2d 761 (3d Cir. 1955).

Opinion

MARIS, Circuit Judge.

The defendants, Samuel Andrew Lind-strom, Senior, and Samuel Andrew Lind-strom, Junior, were found guilty by a jury in the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania of wilfully and knowingly attempting to defeat and evade income tax -for the years 1947, 1949 and 1950 in violation of section 145 (b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, 26 U.S.C.A. § 145(b). They both moved for judgments of acquittal in the District Court which were denied. Each has appealed to this court asserting that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s finding of wilful intent to defeat and evade the tax. The facts are fully stated in a careful opinion filed in the district court by Judge Clary. 122 F. Supp. 518. It is sufficient here to say that the Government’s testimony, which was not controverted by the defendants, established the following significant facts:

The defendants, father and son, were equal partners in a business in Lans-downe, Pennsylvania, known as S. A. Lindstrom & Son, involving the erection of structural steel. They also engaged in the rental of construction equipment and *762 the sale of such equipment. In carrying on their business the defendants used five bank accounts, two in the Lansdowne National Bank, one in the Clifton Heights National Bank in Clifton Heights, Pennsylvania, one in the Corn Exchange National Bank in Philadelphia, and one in the Ventnor National Bank in Ventnor, New Jersey. All of these accounts were carried in the individual name of Lindstrom, Senior, except one in the Lansdowne National Bank which was carried in the firm name.

The defendants customarily deposited the receipts of the steel erection business in the firm account in the Lansdowne National Bank and in the account in the Clifton Heights National Bank, the deposits in the latter account being of funds to be disbursed as payroll taxes. Most of the receipts from the rental of equipment were deposited in Lindstrom, Senior’s, individual account in the Lans-downe National Bank. Some of these receipts, however, and receipts from the sale of equipment were deposited in Lindstrom, Senior’s, individual accounts in the Corn Exchange National Bank and the Ventnor National Bank.

Prior to 1941 the accounts of the firm were kept by Frank Deady, an accountant. In that year the firm employed Regina Lindstrom, the widow of a deceased son of Lindstrom, Senior, as bookkeeper and she kept such accounts as were kept during the period here in question. These consisted of cash receipts and disbursements, accounts payable and payroll books for the steel erection business reflecting the transactions included in the firm bank account in Lansdowne and the individual bank account in Clifton Heights. In addition the bookkeeper kept in the check books of Lindstrom, Senior’s, individual account in the Lans-downe National Bank a record of the equipment rentals deposited in that, account. The bookkeeper also when directed to do so by Lindstrom, Senior, made deposits of equipment rental and sales receipts in his' account in the Corn Exchange National Bank but kept no records of that account and had nothing whatever to do with his account in the Ventnor National Bank.

Deady, the accountant who had formerly kept the books, continued to prepare the defendants’ income tax returns during the years here in question. In this connection Mrs. Lindstrom furnished him with the books and records of the steel erection business which she kept and the check books covering the two accounts in the Lansdowne National Bank and the account in the Clifton Heights National Bank. She gave him nothing regarding the accounts in the Com Exchange National Bank and the Ventnor National Bank, the information, if any, which Deady received regarding these accounts being furnished him by Lindstrom, Senior.

The Bureau of Internal Revenue commenced an investigation of the defendants’ income tax liability in February 1951 and discussed the matter with Dea-dy, who on May 31st suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and was thereafter unable to cooperate. The defendants in August, 1951 retained Clement W. Bowen, a certified public accountant, to assist in establishing their tax liability. When he started his audit Mrs. Lindstrom gave him the same records she had furnished Deady but did not tell him of the Corn Exchange and Ventnor accounts. It was not until November 1951 that Bowen learned from Lindstrom, Junior, of those two accounts. He was then able to complete his analysis of the defendants’ tax liability and his figures agreed substantially with those of the Bureau in indicating an understatement of partnership net income of approximately $100,-000 for .1947, $20,000 for 1949 and $30,-000 for 1950. These discrepancies were due partly to understatements of income and partly to overstatements of expense.

The charge made against these defendants is that they wilfully and knowingly attempted to defeat and evade income tax in violation of section 145(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939. They strongly urge that the evidence established merely that their taxable income was understated in their returns but not *763 that they wilfully attempted to evade income tax thereby. Admittedly mere proof of understatement of taxable income without other evidence of wilfullness is insufficient to support a conviction under section 145(b). But we think that as to Lindstrom, Senior, there was in this case other evidence which was sufficient to support a finding by the jury that the understatement was wilful and knowing on his part. For here we have the evidence that a keen, experienced and successful business man withheld the receipts of a substantial portion of the business from being deposited in the bank account handled by the firm bookkeeper or entered by her in the business records which she kept and which were made available to the firm’s accountant, Deady, for the preparation of income tax returns. Moreover the evidence is clear that these particular business receipts were deposited by Lindstrom, Senior, or at his express direction in two individual bank accounts of his own, of which the bookkeeper kept no record whatever, one of them in Philadelphia and the other in Atlantic County, New Jersey.

The defendants argue that the inference of wilfullness which might be drawn from these facts is negatived by evidence that Lindstrom, Senior, himself turned over to Deady the information with respect to these two bank accounts which was needed for the preparation of accurate income tax returns. We cannot agree that there was such evidence, however. The only evidence on the subject was that of Mrs. Lindstrom, the bookkeeper. As to the effect of her testimony we are in complete accord with the following statement by Judge Clary, 122 F. Supp. at page 522:

“The defendants attempt to minimize the effect of this testimony by placing great reliance on the volunteered statement of Mrs. Regina Lindstrom, the bookkeeper, that the information about the two bank accounts was given to Deady by Lind-strom, Sr. Unfortunately, her testimony in that regard does not establish as a fact that Lindstrom ever gave any information about the accounts to Deady. The net effect of her testimony is that whatever information Deady had about these accounts had to come from the Lind-stroms because she knew nothing about them herself. Whether Deady ever received any information about them or knew of their existence is in the state of the record extremely doubtful.

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Bluebook (online)
222 F.2d 761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-samuel-andrew-lindstrom-jr-united-states-of-america-v-ca3-1955.