OPINION OF THE COURT.
This is а series of consolidated petitions to review decisions of the Tax Court which determined deficiencies in the 1947 individual tax return of petitioner Thomas Worcester, and in the 1948-52 joint returns of Thomas Worcester and wife, and upheld the Commissioner’s impositions of fraud penalties and interest. A number of sources of income were involved, all of which relate essentiаlly to the husband, and the asserted fraud was wholly his.
The facts are these. Thomas Worcester, Inc. (TWI) was incorporated in Mas *715 sachusetts in 1946 to engage in the business of performing architectural and engineering services and construction work. During the years in question Worcester and his wife owned a majority of the voting stock. Worcester was the principal officer, and one Murphy was comptroller. Ross Turner & Company (RT) was a partnership, formed in 1949, of which Worcester and Murphy held themselves out as the active partners, and the income of which was divided equally between them on the partnership tax returns. Allegedly it was a sales agency. State Street Sales, Inc. (SSS) was a Massachusetts corporation formed in 1950, authorizеd to perform architectural, engineering and construction work, and to operate a restaurant. During 1950 Worcester acquired all of its stock.
Four categories of payments are involved, all, initially, from TWI: (1) Payments to Worcester allegedly for travel and entertainment expenses; (2) Payments to RT and SSS that were retained by them; (3) Payments made to RT and SSS which werе subsequently turned over by them to Worcester; (4) Payments made to various individuals and allegedly passed on to Worcester. No accounting questions are involved, 1 but matters of more general substance.
(1) With respect to the expense allowances not reported in petitioners’ returns as income, TWI had a general account for employee expenses, which may, or may not, have included Worcester. In addition, it made $100 weekly payments to Worcester, commencing in 1947, allegedly for travel and entertainment expenses, that were increased to $150 weekly in February 1949 and thereafter. The first nine weeks were in varying amounts, but averaged out to exactly $100. There were no written records or vouchers of any sort, and in oral testimony Worcester could describe only a relatively small amount of alleged actual expenses. While this is understandable, particularly in the days when taxpayers often kept few such records, we cannot say as matter of law that petitioners sustained their burden of showing the Commissioner’s assessment erroneous. Welch v. Helvering, 1933,
(2) Some $100,000 was paid by TWI to SSS in the years following its formation, allegedly for services although it rendered none, which was retained by it.
2
Since Worcester was the controlling stockholder of both corporations, this was income to him. Biltmore Homes, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 4 Cir., 1961,
(3) More substantial quеstions arise with respect to payments which TWI made to RT and SSS, again for services not performed, and which, in turn, were shown to have been paid over to Worcester. We need not trace the course which *716 such funds thereafter allegedly followed in and out of Worcester’s safe deposit box. Worcester’s position is that they were not income to him because he was a mere “conduit” through whom, by way of Murphy and a deceased individual named Norton, payments were made to public officials to advance TWI’s business interests. We are not unimpressed by some of the evidence which petitioners marshal to support this position. However, we cannot rule as matter of law that the evidence favorable to Worcester went further than the recognition which the Tax Court in fact afforded it. The burden was upon petitioners. Perhaps not surprisingly, even the testimony favorable to them was not always consistent and above criticism. Wherever the line may be at which the Tax Court is required to accept a taxpayer’s evidence, it is not here. Having wet his feet by, at lеast impliedly, confessing to bribery, it was to Worcester’s advantage to claim that everything he took was thus paid out. The court was not obliged to believe him, particularly where he had shown himself not to have been entirely honest with the government in other respects.
Petitioners seek to claim that the government is collaterally estopped from disputing Worсester’s testimony that he paid out these receipts to or through Murphy and Norton. This claim is based upon the following circumstances. Before the tax case was initiated the government brought a criminal proceeding against Worcester, charging the filing of false joint income tax returns for the years 1950, 1951 and 1952 with the intent to evade taxes. The factual assertions made by Worcester in defense of that case are essentially the ones made here in this. Worcester was convicted on all counts. Thereafter, as a result of a deal proposed by the district court and accepted, discussed
infra
in another connection, Worcester was sentenced to jail, but the execution of the sentence was suspended and he was placed on probation upon the condition that he should give “full, candid testimony” if requested by any proper investigative body. See United States v. Worcester, D.Mass. 1961,
Worcester assumes that the district court probation revocation findings went to the extent of endorsing the correctness of all of his prior testimony, even as to dollar amounts. We do not think so. 3 The revocation issue was in muсh broader focus. The court was not trying over again the issue of whether there had been any willful understatements in the returns, but was considering simply the overall truthfulness of Worcester’s grand jury testimony.
However, even if we consider that the court had duly found, in terms, that it believed that Worcester had not retained a penny of what he received from RT and SSS, we note two things. In the first place, the burden was on the government in the probation proceedings to prove Worcester wrong. The decision
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in Worcester’s favor meant only that the government had failed to persuade the court to disbelieve him. In the ease at bar, the burden was on Worcester to show error on the part of the Commissioner. The difference in burden of proof is imрortant. See Developments in the Law— Res Judicata, 65 Harv.L.Rev. 820, 878 (1952). Cf. Helvering v. Mitchell, 1938,
(4) No question can arise with regard to some relatively small payments which the government traced from TWI to employees of TWI, notably Murphy and one Bullock, and from them to Worсester. This was a straight question of fact, and the Tax Court’s resolution was not plainly wrong.
We turn to the question which underlies the government’s entire case, namely, the issue of fraud. The burden was upon the government to prove by clear and convincing evidence, Drieborg v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 6 Cir., 1955,
When it came to the years 1950, 1951 and 1952, although the conduct which it found to show fraud in the prior years continued, the court made no finding of fraud therefrom. Instead, it relied solely upon collateral estoppel. The government argues that we need not follow this course, since the court could have found fraud on the evidence without calling upon this principle. However, it is not our province to support a decision by saying that findings could have been made when they were not. Helvering v. Rankin, 1935,
We cannot accept the Tax Court’s ruling that Worcester’s conviction for filing willfully false returns with an intent to avoid tax can form the basis for collateral estopрel in the present proceedings. Whatever may be the merits of this contention in the ordinary case, see Moore v. United States, 4 Cir., 1965,
The court was without right to bargain thus with the defendant, or to put a price on an appeal. A defendant’s exercise of a right of appeal must be free and unfettered. Just as it is unfair to handicap him because of his poverty, cf. Coppedge v. United States, 1962,
Were the rule otherwise, we can only too readily envisage the possibilities of abuse. A judge who fears he has committed reversible error during the trial, and does not like the thought of being reversed, informs the defendant that he is considering a substantial sentence, but that if the defendant will demonstrate his repentence, or his good citizenship, by waiving appeаl, he will suspend it.
It may well be that in the present case the judge’s principal concern was to obtain consent to the proposed condition of the probation that Worcester testify, if called upon to do so by a proper tribunal, regarding the matters involved in the case (which we in no way suggest was an improper condition, cf. Kaplan v. United States, 8 Cir., 1956, 234 -F.2d 345), and that the waiver of appeal was added because he wanted to get on with it. However, it was added. Furthermore, we cannot try the mind of the judge, to assess whether his motives in offering the defendant a valuable consideration to waive appeal (and we can think of little more valuable than not going to jail) were good or bad. To use the power of sentencing to obtain an undertaking to which the court was not entitled was necessarily a misuse of that power.
The interference with Worcester’s right of appeal in some degree tainted the finality of the criminal judgment. It is true that this was by no act of the government. Nonetheless, it would compound the impropriety of the decision that Worcester, as defendant, was re *719 quired to make, 6 if the government could take affirmative advantage of it. The Commissioner must prove fraud without reliance on this judgment.
We will mention only briefly petitioners’ contention that because of the varying position that embezzled funds have occupied, tax-wise, compare Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Wilcox, 1946,
As to the claim by petitioners for certain tax credits, it is clear that the Tax Court is without power to grant such relief, Taylor v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 2 Cir., 1958,
With respect to the years 1947, 1948 and 1949 we find no error, and the orders of the Tax Court must be affirmed. With respect to the years 1950, 1951 and 1952, the orders must be vacated for lack of adequate fraud findings. We leave to the Tax Court’s discretion what further proceedings, consistent with this opinion,'and the scope thereof, it chooses to engage in.
Notes
. In the preparation of this opinion we reviewed the Tax Court’s arithmetic and were not always able to achieve the same results. Possibly the error was ours. In any event, petitioners make no claim on this score, and any differences are not great.
. A small amount was also so paid to, and retained by, ET. This raises no separate question.
. Our conclusion is buttressed by the fact that although slightly over $275,000 was paid into RT and SSS, more than $100,-000 of this was retained by thеm, as is conceded by Worcester. Had the amount of Worcester’s alleged bribe payments been litigated in the revocation proceedings, the undisputed facts would have shown a maximum of $175,000 allegedly paid out by Worcester, rather than $275,-000 mentioned in the course of the opinion. See
. Most of the years required proof of fraud in order to avoid the stаtute of limitations, and all of the years required proof of fraud to sustain the Commissioner’s imposition of penalties under Int.Rev. Code of 1939, § 293(b) (now 26 U.S.C. § 6653(b)). In this latter connection, as in the first, Lowy v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 2 Cir., 1961,
. We cannot find any cases on this exact situation. From this void we draw no inference unfavorable to Worcester.
. Actually, the choice which Worcester exercised has proved to be not even the choice that he realized. In 1961, when he elected not to appeal, the Tax Court’s view was that a conviction for filing a false return with intent to evade tax did not form the basis for collateral estoppel. Meyer J. Safra, 1958,
. It is questionable, at best, whether petitioners can so characterize their failure to rely on this defense, assuming, which we in no way intimate, it could have been valid. The latest of the cited cases was decided three years prior to the trial in the Tax Court.
