69-2 USTC P 9441
Fred T. MACKEY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 17200.
United States Court of Appeals Seventh Circuit.
June 4, 1969.
William M. Ward, Robert J. Downing, Chicago, Ill., for plaintiff-appellant; Raskin, Downing & Dammann, Chicago, Ill., of counsel.
Mitchell Rogovin, Asst. Atty. Gen., Tax Division, John M. Brant, Joseph M. Howard, Attys., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., Alfred W. Moellering, U.S. Atty., Fort Wayne, Ind., for defendant-appellee; Alfred R. Uzis, Asst. U.S. Atty., of counsel.
Before CUMMINGS and KERNER, Circuit Judges, and HOFFMAN, District judge.1
HOFFMAN, District Judge.
The question presented for decision is whether a conviction for income tax evasion should be set aside on collateral attack because the trial court admitted into evidence the defendant's federal gambling tax returns which, the Supreme Court has subsequently held, the defendant could not have been required to file over a timely claim of the privilege against self-incrimination. We conclude that the question must be answered in the negative, and affirm.
Defendant was convicted on March 24, 1964, of five charges of income tax evasion committed by means of false and fraudulent returns for the calendar years 1956 through 1960, in violation of Section 7201, Internal Revenue Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C. Sec. 7201. He was sentenced to concurrent terms of five years imprisonment, and a fine of $10,000, on each count. Upon a prior appeal, this Court affirmed the conviction,
The prosecution proceeded upon a net worth theory, predicated upon a showing that defendant's total assets had increased during the period in question by an amount which could not be accounted for by his reported income. In such a prosecution, 'proof of a likely source, from which the jury could reasonably find that the net worth increase sprang,' is an essential element of the case. Holland v. United States,
One type of proof establishing this likely source of unreported income was a series of sixty monthly federal gambling excise tax returns filed by defendant during the years in question. These returns, on Form 730, were required to accompany the payment of the ten per cent excise tax on wagering receipts imposed by Section 4401 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. Sec. 4401; Treas.Reg. Sec. 44.4011(a)-1(a). At the trial, defendant objected to the introduction of these returns on the ground that they were cumulative, since their contents were disclosed by Schedule C to the income tax returns already in evidence, and were prejudicial and inflammatory. The District Court overruled this objection, and this Court affirmed, without specific discussion, finding 'no prejudicial error.'
On January 29, 1968, the United States Supreme Court handed down its decisions in Marchetti v. United States,
I.
At the threshold, we are met by the Government's argument that proceedings under Section 2255 are not a substitute for a direct appeal, and are not ordinarily available to set aside a final conviction on the ground that evidence was erroneously introduced and admitted. That argument, supported by a number of decisions in other Circuits, has been put to rest by the Supreme Court's decision in Kaufman v. United States,
Defendant's motion under Section 2255 rests wholly upon his claim that the reception into evidence of the Form 730 wagering excise tax returns infringed his privilege against self-incrimination conferred by the Fifth Amendment. He did not, however, decline to file the returns, nor did he, when filing them, raise any protest upon that ground. No claim of the privilege was made at the trial, to support his objection to the admissibility of the exhibits, and no question of self-incrimination was presented to this Court in the course of the prior appeal. These failures to invoke the privilege do not work a waiver, in defendant's view, since his silence resulted from reliance upon the Supreme Court's decisions in United States v. Kahriger,
As the District Court demonstrates in its closely reasoned opinion, a careful reading of the authorities casts doubt on this attempted justification. The prior decisions in Kahriger and Lewis involved a different tax from the tax here involved: they held only that the wagering occupation tax (26 U.S.C. Sec. 4411), as distinguished from the excise tax here in issue (26 U.S.C. Sec. 4401), did not violate the privilege against self-incrimination, in part upon the rationale that the occupation tax, to be paid annually in advance, did not involve any possible incrimination for past crimes. See United States v. Kahriger,
II.
There is, however, a more fundamental flaw in defendant's motion. To avoid the consequence of waiver from his failure to claim the privilege, he asserts that the Marchetti and Grosso decisions worked a marked change in the law. That assertion inevitably presents the question whether those decisions should be applied retroactively, as the standard for review of judgments already final when the new principles were declared, or whether the commands should be confined to prospective application. In a line of cases tracing back to Linkletter v. Walker,
Whether the principles of Marchetti and Grosso are to be retroactively applied has yet to be answered directly by the Supreme Court. The criteria which control the question are nonetheless clearly delineated. The retroactivity or nonretroactivity of the decisions is a function of three considerations: '(a) the purpose to be served by the new standards, (b) the extent of the reliance by law enforcement authorities on the old standards, and (c) the effect on the administration of justice of a retroactive application of the new standards.' Desist v. United States,
Foremost among these factors is the purpose to be served by the new constitutional rule. Falling on one side of the line are standards laid down under the Sixth Amendment, intended to protect the integrity of the fact-finding process and the fairness of the trial itself, which have been applied retroactively under this test. Thus a denial of the right to counsel in any stage of the judicial proceedings taints the validity of any action taken, and warrants relief against the consequences. See, for example, Arsenault v. Massachusetts,
Within the scope of the Fifth Amendment, the purpose of the Due Process clause to assure fundamental fairness has been held to require retroactivity for rules concerning the presentation of coerced confessions to the jury, Jackson v. Denno,
Defendant contends, however, that the wagering tax returns constitute coerced confessions, since they were filed under the compulsion of a legal command, and that retroactivity follows automatically once the question is so characterized. But the compulsion which turns interrogation into a violation of the privilege against self-incrimination is not the same as the coercion and intimidation which make a confession involuntary and a denial of Due Process. See, for example, Davis v. North Carolina,
In deciding that the purpose of the rules announced in Marchetti and Grosso (
The factors of reliance and administrative difficulty which control, along with purpose, the prospective or retroactive effect of the new rule lead to the same conclusion of nonretroactivity. An avowed purpose of Congress in enacting the wagering tax system was to provide information to interested prosecuting authorities. Marchetti v. United States,
As a result of such reliance, the burdens which would be imposed upon the administration of justice by retroactive application of the ruling would be formidable. The third factor among the criteria of prospective effect is thus also satisfied. With a rule of retroactivity, every gambling conviction could be reopened upon a claim that disclosures under the federal laws had contributed to the conviction. The rule would require the courts to re-examine the total evidence in each case, and 'would necessarily oblige the state (or federal) prosecuting authorities to establish in each case that their evidence was untainted by any connection with information obtained as a consequence of the wagering taxes * * *.' Marchetti v. United States,
It follows that the District Court correctly denied defendant's motion to set aside the conviction under Section 2255.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Judge Hoffman is sitting by designation from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois
