This case returns to us from the Supreme Court with directions to conduct a thorough examination of the record to determine whether or not the defendant’s *973 offer of proof was sufficient to justify the presentation of a “return of capital” theory to the jury. We conclude it was not and affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
The facts of this case have been described fully in prior appellate decisions, 1 so we need not explain the background in detail. In brief, Michael H. Boulware was the president and fifty-percent owner of Hawaiian Isles Enterprises (“the corporation”), a distributor of tobacco, water, coffee, vending machines, and video games. Boulware was initially convicted on five counts of filing a false tax return in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1), four counts of tax evasion in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201, and conspiracy to make a false statement to a federally-insured financial institution in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, all related to his receipt of certain funds from the corporation without disclosing the same on his income tax returns.
On appeal from the first trial, we reversed the tax convictions because of the exclusion of evidence regarding a state court’s adjudication of property rights in funds diverted from the corporation, and affirmed the conspiracy conviction.
Boulware I
,
Boulware was re-tried and convicted on the five counts of filing false tax returns and the four counts of willfully attempting to evade taxes. The government’s theory was that Boulware diverted more than $10 million from the corporation for his personal use, without disclosing those funds in his tax returns. Boulware asserted a number of alternative theories in an attempt to show the diversions were proper, 2 including claiming the distributions were a non-taxable return of capital. To that end, Boulware sought to present evidence, including expert witness testimony, that the corporation had no earnings and profits in the relevant taxable years, so the money distributed by the corporation was, in fact, a non-taxable return of capital up to the amount of his basis in his stock. 26 U.S.C. §§ 301, 316(a).
The government filed a motion in limine to prevent Boulware from presenting evidence regarding the “return of capital” theory. It relied on then-existing circuit precedent that a defendant was required, as a prerequisite to the assertion of the theory, to show that the corporation intended the distribution to be a return of capital.
See United States v. Miller,
The district court granted the motion in limine because Boulware’s proffer failed to satisfy
Miller
and because much of the evidence was excludable as improper legal opinion. After Boulware was convicted a second time, we affirmed the district court’s denial of the proffer because
Miller
required “some demonstration on the part of the defendant or corporation that distributions were intended to be a return of capital.”
Boulware II,
The Supreme Court reversed
Boulware II,
holding that the
Miller
rule upon which the panel was required to rely was incorrect, and concluding that a defendant could establish a return of capital or assert the return of capital theory without a showing of contemporaneous intent to make a distribution. — U.S. -
The Supreme Court agreed, however, that the theory requires more than merely showing that the corporation lacked earnings and the recipient’s stock basis was in excess of the distribution, emphasizing that there must be evidence that the distribution was “with respect to ... stock.” Id. at 1180. The Supreme Court then remanded with instructions for us to reconsider the proffer in light of its decision and the entire record of the case.
We review a district court’s decision to admit or exclude expert opinion testimony under the deferential abuse of discretion standard.
United States v. McCaleb,
II
“Due process requires that criminal prosecutions ‘comport with prevailing notions of fundamental fairness’ and that ‘criminal defendants be afforded a meaningful opportunity to present a complete defense.’ ”
Clark v. Brown,
On remand, the question for us is whether the tender of evidence to support the “return of capital” theory was sufficient to allow the presentation of the evidence and theory to the jury. As we noted in
United States v. Kayser,
The legal standard is generous: “a defendant is entitled to an instruction concerning his theory of the case if the theory is legally sound and evidence in the case makes it applicable, even if the evidence is weak, insufficient, inconsistent, or of doubtful credibility.” United States v. Washington,819 F.2d 221 , 225 (9th Cir.1987). A defendant needs to show only that “there is evidence upon which the jury could rationally sustain the defense.” United States v. Jackson,726 F.2d 1466 , 1468 (9th Cir.1984) (per curiam).
On the other hand, a trial court may preclude a defense theory where “the evidence, as described in the defendant’s offer of proof, is insufficient as a matter of law to support the proffered defense.”
United States v. Dorrell,
In support of his assertion of the return of capital theory, Boulware made an offer of proof as to expert testimony and evidence regarding corporate earnings.
*975 A
We need not consider whether Boulware’s proffer of expert testimony satisfied the requirement that the defendant minimally establish all the elements of the asserted theory because the trial court denied the proffer on alternate and adequate grounds. In addition to precluding the testimony on the basis of
Miller,
the district court excluded the expert testimony because it constituted a legal opinion. It did not abuse its discretion in doing so.
United States v. Scholl,
Here, Boulware’s expert sought to testify that the corporate distributions were legally non-taxable, either because they were loans, monies placed in trust, or returns of capital. The trial court’s exclusion of the expert testimony to the extent that it constituted a legal opinion was well within its discretion.
See Nationwide Transp. Fin. v. Cass Info. Sys.,
B
Boulware sought to introduce other evidence in support of his return of capital theory. Specifically, Boulware wished to introduce evidence that the corporation had over-reported earnings in its tax returns to show that the corporate distributions to Boulware “could be deemed a constructive dividend or return of capital to Boulware which may or may not be income depending on whether [the corporation] had earnings or profits for the years when the monies were obtained by Boulware.”
After a careful examination of the record, we conclude that the district court properly declined the offer of proof as to the return of capital theory because the offer failed to satisfy all the elements of the theory. As the Supreme Court explained in
Boulware III,
the return of capital theory requires: (1) a corporate distribution with respect to a corporation’s stock, (2) the absence of corporate earnings or profits, and (3) the stockholder’s stock basis be in excess of the value of the distribution.
The admission of evidence of corporate earnings, by itself, is plainly insufficient to satisfy the elements necessary to assert a return of capital theory. However, in evaluating an offer of proof on appeal, we are not confined to the four corners of the formal offer, but may evaluate “evidence ... made known to the court.”
Movie 1 & 2 v. United Artists Commc’ns, Inc.,
However, we will not consider any new offers on appeal, as Boulware seems to suggest we should.
See United States v. Lara-Hernandez,
1
The first element necessary to the assertion of a return of capital theory is that the corporate distribution be “with respect to ... stock.”
Boulware III,
This, however, is not the time or place to home in on the “with respect to ... stock” condition. Facts with a bearing on it may range from the distribution of stock ownership to conditions of corporate employment (whether, for example, a shareholder’s efforts on behalf of a corporation amount to a good reason to treat a payment of property as salary).
Id. at 1180-81 (footnote omitted).
Despite the Supreme Court’s rejection of a contemporaneous intent requirement for the return of capital theory, the government contends that we should require the defendant to make some showing of intent before a distribution may be considered to be “with respect to stock.” This suggestion flies squarely in the face of the Supreme Court’s admonition in
Boulware III
that the tax consequences of a corporate distribution should be evaluated “on facts wholly independent of intent.”
As the Supreme Court explained, because a particular corporate distribution with respect to stock may be considered ordinary income, capital gain, or a nontaxable event, depending on corporate earnings and profits and the taxpayer’s basis in the stock,
3
“[t]he determination is computational and not dependent upon intent.”
Id.
(quoting IRS Non Docketed Service Advice Review,
*977 Thus, we reject the government’s attempt on remand to graft on a requirement that the taxpayer establish intent as part of the determination as to whether a distribution “was with respect to stock.” 4
Boulware urges on remand that a taxpayer is entitled to a jury instruction on the return of capital theory if he shows he owned stock, received payments from the corporation, and did not receive those payments in any nonstockholder capacity. Even under this definition, Boulware’s proffer is insufficient. He failed to establish in the record before the district court that he only could have received the distribution in his capacity as a shareholder. To the contrary, Boulware offered evidence and alternate theories that the distribution was a loan or was distributed in trust. Moreover, the proffer only referenced corporate earnings, without any offer to prove that the distribution was “with respect to stock,” or that any nexus existed between the distribution and Boul-ware’s stock ownership. Under de novo review of the offer of proof and the record, absent affirmative evidence of nexus or support for a negative inference we must conclude that the trial court did not err in denying the offer of proof. 5
The Supreme Court declined the opportunity to define the contours of the phrase “with respect to stock,” leaving that for another day. So do we. 6 It suffices, however, to say that at the very least a taxpayer must tender some evidence of nexus between the corporate distribution and stock ownership, or show that there were no other alternate explanations, 7 in order to proceed with a return of capital theory at trial. Boulware did neither, and the district court was justified in declining to allow him to present another alternative theory to the jury.
2
The third element 8 necessary to show that a distribution was a non-taxable re *978 turn of capital is that the stockholder’s stock basis exceeded the value of the distribution. Boulware’s offer of proof did not, on its face, purport to tender evidence on this element. Therefore, we look to the entire record to ascertain whether there was sufficient evidence to make a threshold showing.
The corporate distributions to Boulware totaled $10 million. Thus, in order for the distributions to be considered returns of capital, his stock basis must equal or exceed that amount. There is no formal evidence of Boulware’s stock basis in the record, nor did he make an offer of proof as to the amount. In the record, Boulware testified to spending approximately $2 million purchasing Kona coffee beans for the business. He also claims to have borrowed $1.2 million from the corporation to buy equipment for the water plant, and that the water business was given back to the corporation in return for “30 percent more stocks or something.” From all of this evidence a jury could conclude that Boulware was a shareholder with a stock basis, but the evidence tendered was insufficient to meet the threshold requirement that he have a stock basis in excess of $10 million.
Therefore, Boulware’s tender of proof did not satisfy the requirement that the taxpayer’s basis in stock exceed the corporate distribution, providing an additional justification for the trial court to preclude Boulware from presenting a return of capital theory. 9
Ill
In sum, analyzing the specific offer of proof and the record as a whole, we conclude that Boulware’s offer of proof was insufficient as a matter of law to support the proffered return of capital theory. We also conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding expert legal opinion. Therefore, we conclude that Boulware is not entitled to a third trial. We need not, and do not, reach any other issue urged by the parties.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
Boulware v. United
States, - U.S. -,
. Boulware also argued, as he had in
Boul-ware I,
that the corporate distributions were actually loans,
see
. Under § 301(a), unless the Internal Revenue Code requires otherwise, "a distribution of property ... made by a corporation to a shareholder with respect to its stock shall be treated in the manner provided in [§ 301(c)].” Section 301(c) provides that the portion of the distribution that is a "dividend,” as defined by § 316(a), must be included in the recipient’s gross income; the portion that is not a dividend is, depending on the shareholder’s basis for his stock, either a nontaxable return of capital or a taxable capital gain. Section 316(a) defines "dividend” as a "distribution” out of "earnings and profits.”
. We also reject the government's argument, raised for the first time on remand, that only the government-not the taxpayer-may attempt to characterize a transaction as “with respect to stock” after the transaction has occurred. We previously rejected this argument in
Kay-ser,
holding that nothing precluded a defendant in a tax evasion case “from asserting a defense that is inconsistent with information falsely reported on his challenged tax returns.”
. We recognize, of course, that the argument before the trial court primarily involved the application of Miller and that we are viewing this case in hindsight. However, that fact does not relieve the defendant of making an offer of proof that satisfies all the elements of the theory asserted.
. We also decline, as did the Supreme Court, to consider the implications of
Holland v. United States,
. Put another way, "when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.” Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Tales of Sherlock Holmes: The Sign of the Four, p. 228 (Grosset & Dunlap 1892). Of course, a defendant may pursue alternative theories. However, when one attempts to characterize a transaction solely by negative inference, rather than affirmative proof, one usually must eliminate other possible theories, not prove their viability.
. We need not discuss the second element— the absence of corporate earnings or profit— because it was included in Boulware’s offer of proof.
. We recognize that the government did not raise this objection at trial. Indeed, this issue was first raised by the government in its reply brief to Boulware's petition for rehearing en banc in this court. The Supreme Court noted that the government had conceded that Boul-ware's basis was sufficient in its presentation,
Boulware III,
