271 F. 942 | 3rd Cir. | 1921
The Pioneer Overall Company was engaged in the manufacture of overalls. Jacob S. Levy was its treasurer. Under circumstances relevant to the issue and properly submitted to the jury, but not necessary to repeat in this review, Levy, in September, 1918, made a return of income and excess profits taxes owing by his corporation for the year 1917. In form it was a new return; in name an “amended return.” In this corrected or amended return, Levy showed that the amount of the inventory at the end of the tax year was $76,925.39 and the tax due was $595.03. Internal Revenue officers, after investigating the corporation’s accounts, were of opinion that the inventory should have been $122,359.33 and that the tax due was upwards of $24,000. . Levy explained that the item of $76,925.39 in the return was the value of the inventory at cost, that $100,125.39 was the inventory at market value, and that onjhis basis the tax return was right. In this situation, clouded by facts indicating intent to evade the tax, Levy was arrested, and on indictment charging different offenses by two counts he was tried, convicted and sentenced. Thereupon he sued out this writ of error.
The offense charged by the second count was that Levy willfully and unlawfully attempted to defeat and evade the income and excess profits tax imposed by statute, in violation of the Act of Congress of September 8, 1916, as amended by Act Oct. 3, 1917, 40 Stat. 325, c. 63, § 1004. The material part of the applicable section reads as follows:
“ * » * Whoever evades or attempts to evade any tax imposed by this Act * * * shall be subject to a penalty. * * * ” Coinp. St. 1918, | 5890b.
While falsity in the amended, return was an element of the offense, perjury was not involved; the essence of the offense was an act with intent, together amounting to an attempt, to defeat and eva.de a tax assessment by a false and fraudulent return. This offense embraces an attempt to defeat or evade a tax yet to he assessed as well as an attempt to defeat or evade a tax already assessed. We are of opinion that in the trial on this count the court committed no error in its rulings on evidence and instructions on the law and that the facts are sufficient to sustain the verdict.
The jury returned a verdict of “guilty on every count” and the
Therefore the judgment of the court below is to this extent affirmed.