United States v. Samuel L. Ambrose Martha M. Ambrose Mary Selak Harold Williams, Treasurer, Trumbull County, Ohio, Defendants-Appellees,cross-Appellants

782 F.2d 1044
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 1985
Docket84-3965
StatusUnpublished

This text of 782 F.2d 1044 (United States v. Samuel L. Ambrose Martha M. Ambrose Mary Selak Harold Williams, Treasurer, Trumbull County, Ohio, Defendants-Appellees,cross-Appellants) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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 L. Ambrose Martha M. Ambrose Mary Selak Harold Williams, Treasurer, Trumbull County, Ohio, Defendants-Appellees,cross-Appellants, 782 F.2d 1044 (6th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

782 F.2d 1044

Unpublished Disposition
NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
SAMUEL L. AMBROSE; MARTHA M. AMBROSE; MARY SELAK; HAROLD
WILLIAMS, Treasurer, Trumbull County, Ohio,
Defendants-Appellees,Cross-Appellants.

84-3965, 84-3984

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

12/16/85

Before: LIVELY, Chief Judge; WELLFORD, Circuit Judge; and, BROWN, Senior Circuit Judge.

PER CURIAM:

Defendant Samuel L. Ambrose owes the government back taxes for the years 1970, 1971, and 1972.1 The government sought to collect these back taxes by foreclosing upon two pieces of real estate located at 1007 North Ward Avenue and another at 725 Esme Drive in Girard, Ohio. The district court enforced the government's action against the Esme property but rejected its request for judgment regarding the Ward property.

During the past fifteen years, these two properties have been formally conveyed to relatives of Samuel Ambrose and his wife. The government contends that these conveyances were sham transactions, without economic substance, and conducted by Samuel and Martha Ambrose to avoid the aforesaid tax liabilities. Accordingly the government petitioned that the court set aside these conveyances and determine sufficient title in the properties to Samuel Ambrose and thus subject to levy and sale for the benefit of the government to satisfy the long-standing tax liability.

Samuel L. Ambrose, the principal defendant, is a Youngstown-Warren, Ohio, native. Except for military service, and a period from 1955 through 1963 when he lived in Florida, he has lived in the Youngstown-Warren area all his life. He pled guilty to two counts of income tax evasion on January 14, 1974.

Mary Selak, also a defendant in this lawsuit, is Samuel Ambrose's mother. Martha M. Ambrose is Samuel Ambrose's wife of over 30 years. Alma Silvis, Martha Ambrose's mother, died in September 1968, following her husband's death in 1954. Samuel and Martha Ambrose have two children, William, born on August 15, 1954, who during 1970 was involved in a serious auto accident, and later received a payment on his insurance claims. William was married for a brief period of time but was divorced in June 1976. The other child, Deborah Caisango, is married to Robert Caisango.

THE WARD AVENUE PROPERTY

During the relevant years, there were six transactions involving the Ward Avenue property. The basic factual outline of these transactions sketched by the district court is not in dispute. We summarize these transactions:

1. During 1964, Samuel and Martha Ambrose purchased the property. At that time it consisted of four lots with a house built on one of the lots. The Ambroses purchased the property subject to an $18,500.00 mortgage held by Trumbull Savings & Loan Company. The Ward Avenue property served as a personal residence of Samuel and Martha Ambrose, their children, William and Deborah, and Mrs. Ambrose's mother, Alma Silvis.

2. On January 31, 1966, Samuel and Martha Ambrose conveyed the property to Alma Silvis by a quit claim deed. There was no consideration given in exchange for this conveyance. The Ambroses continued to live in the house along with Alma Silvis. Samuel Ambrose continued to pay the real estate taxes and the mortgage on the property.

3. Records indicate that on August 29, 1968, one month before her death, a formal conveyance of the Ward Avenue property from Alma Silvis to her granddaughter, Deborah Caisango, took place by a quit claim deed without consideration. At that time, Deborah was 18 years old and was living in the home on the property together with her husband and two year old child.

4. During February 1971, the property was replatted into three lots. The family home was on one lot and the other two lots were free of structures. During the late fall of 1972, the two unimproved lots were sold to Alfred W. Weavers and Robert T. Moosally. All of the negotiations surrounding this transaction were conducted by Samuel Ambrose himself.

5. On December 8, 1972, Deborah Caisango conveyed the remaining property to her brother William again without consideration. Following this transaction, Samuel Ambrose still continued to pay the real estate taxes and utilities expense on the property. Further, William Ambrose, the legal title holder for the property, paid rent to Samuel Ambrose while he and his parents lived in the house.

6. On February 13, 1979, William Ambrose conveyed the property to co-defendant Mary Selak, Samuel Ambrose's mother. There was no consideration for this conveyance and Mary Selak did not even know that the conveyance was taking place at that time. Following this transaction, Samuel and Martha Ambrose continued to live in the Ward Avenue house. Mary Selak did not collect any rent or pay any of the expenses or taxes on this property

THE ESME DRIVE PROPERTY

On November 15, 1972, William Ambrose purchased the Esme Drive property, which was then a vacant lot, for approximately $4000.00. He was a minor at the time and paid for the property in cash.

During 1973, a house was built on the Esme Drive property at a cost of $30,000.00. William Ambrose took no part in the construction, and his father Samuel made the contacts and arrangements with the builders. Samuel Ambrose frequently signed William's name to documents involved in the construction and many of the payments made for the construction were made in cash by Samuel. Deborah Caisango, her husband, and their children have lived in the Esme Drive property from that time until the present.

On February 10, 1979, William Ambrose conveyed this Esme Drive property and improvements thereon to Mary Selak by a quit claim deed without consideration. Prior to the conveyance, Mary Selak had no knowledge that she was going to become the owner of the Esme Drive property.

The principal contention of Samuel and Martha Ambrose is that the bulk of these transactions were financed through funds held by and later inherited from, Alma Silvis. They contend that Alma Silvis kept nearly $70,000.00 in cash in a metal strongbox under her bed in the Ward Avenue home. They asserted that Silvis used this cash for loans to Samuel Ambrose in the early 1960s. Ambrose therefore purportedly made the 1966 conveyance of the Ward Avenue property to Silvis as security for these loans. After Alma Silvis' death, the remaining cash in the cashbox was allegedly divided between Deborah and William, each receiving about $30,000. William Ambrose paid for the Esme Road construction using this cash, handled by his father. The husband of Deborah Caisango allegedly gambled away her share of the 'inheritance.'

Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose also attempted to provide an explanation for the sources of mother-in-law Silvis' cashbox reserve. She allegedly inherited a net estate of less than $5,000 at her husband's death in 1954. The Ambrose defendants, however, presented testimony that Mrs.

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782 F.2d 1044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-samuel-l-ambrose-martha-m-ambrose-mary-selak-harold-ca6-1985.