Elton Silkman appeals his conviction for tax evasion in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201. Silkman, a former South Dakota farmer, did not file .federal income tax returns for the years 1981 through 1985 and ignored numerous IRS inquiries about his failures to file. In March 1991, the IRS issued a notice of deficiency reciting that Silkman owed $282,-515 in taxes for those five years, plus accrued penalties and interest, and advising he had ninety days to petition the United States Tax Court for redetermination of the asserted deficiency. See 26 U.S.C. §§ 6212-6213. Silkman instead responded with letters stating, “I am not a ‘taxpayer’ as that term is defined within section 7701 ... of the [Internal Revenue] Code,” and, “If I do not hear from you within 3Q days from the receipt of this letter, I will presume that you have no intention of following the Internal Revenue Service procedures outlined above and I will take appropriate action.” Later that year, Silkman sold his farm, equipment, cattle, grazing rights, and grain and transferred most of the substantial proceeds to European bank accounts in the names' of various trusts, where he now claims the money disappeared.
In September 1991, the IRS assessed the asserted tax deficiencies.
See
26 U.S.C. §§ 6201-6203; 26 C.F.R. § 301.6203-1. After efforts to collect the assessments failed, the government indicted Silkman on five counts of tax evasion, one for each of the five tax years. Tax evasion is defined in § 7201 as willfully attempting “in any manner to evade or defeat any tax imposed by this title or the payment thereof.” The elements of this ciime “are willfulness; the existence of a tax deficiency; and an affirmative act constituting an evasion or attempted evasion of the tax.”
Sansone v. United States,
Tax evasion is a felony, a serious offense that is “the capstone of a system of sanctions which singly or in combination were calculated to induce prompt and forthright fulfillment of every duty under the
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income tax law and to provide a penalty suitable to every degree of delinquency.”
Sansone,
The issue in this case — one of first impression — is whether an IRS tax assessr ment that is administratively final for purposes of the agency’s civil collection remedies is also conclusive proof of the tax deficiency in a tax evasion prosecution. The district court reasoned that this criminal trial was not the appropriate forum to contest the IRS assessments after Silkman slept on his- right under-the tax laws to challenge them administratively or by Tax Court litigation. But Silkman was not charged with willfully refusing to obey an agency order; in that type of case, the criminal defendant may be barred from attacking the validity of the order he disobeyed.
Compare Cox v. United States,
The government has no authority for its startling contention that an IRS assessment is conclusive proof in a criminal trial that taxes were in fact owing. The government cites
Dack, 14, 1
F.2d at 1174, and
United States v. Daniel,
We agree with the analysis in
Voorhies
— a formal tax assessment that has become administratively final is prima facie evidence of the asserted tax deficiency, and if unchallenged, it
may
suffice to prove this element of the crime. But the assessment is only prima facie proof of a deficiency. The assessed deficiency may be challenged by the defendant accused of tax evasion, and the issue is one for the jury. As the Supreme
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Court said in
United States v. Martin Linen Supply Co.,
overriding responsibility is to stand between the accused and a potentially arbitrary or abusive government that is in command of the criminal sanction. For this reason, a trial judge is prohibited from entering a judgment of conviction or directing a jury to come forward with such a verdict, regardless of how overwhelmingly the evidence may point in that direction.
(Citations omitted.) This conclusion is consistent with
United States v. England,
where the government conceded that proof of a valid assessment was essential to its evasion case, and the court held it was error to instruct the jury the assessment was valid as a matter of law.
We find further support for this conclusion in the Supreme Court’s cases dealing with the validity of presumptions in criminal cases. The government argues, in effect, that the alleged tax deficiency may be conclusively presumed from an administratively final assessment. But conclusive presumptions are invalid in criminal cases because they “conflict with the overriding presumption of innocence with which the law. endows the accused and which extends to every element of the crime, and would invade the factfinding function which in a criminal case the law assigns solely to the jury.”
Sandstrom v. Montana,
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that one accused of tax evasion must have the opportunity to prove, however unlikely the proposition may be, that an administratively final tax assessment does not accurately reflect the existence of a tax deficiency. Therefore, Silkman is entitled to a new trial at which he may introduce evidence relevant to whether there was in fact a tax deficiency in one or more of the tax years in question.
Silkman raises three additional issues on appeal that require little discussion. First, he argues he is entitled to a judgment of acquittal because the government failed to prove tax deficiencies. We disagree. The formal assessments were prima facie evidence of tax deficiencies. - When combined with the other evidence that Silkman consciously refused to file returns, ignored numerous IRS inquiries, evasively responded to the notice of deficiency, and then purposefully concealed his assets overseas, we think the trial record was more than sufficient to permit the jury to find tax deficiencies and the other elements of tax evasion beyond a reasonable doubt.
Second, Silkman argues the district court erred in excluding Exhibit 106, a document purporting to show that the deficiencies asserted in the IRS assessments were determined in an arbitrary or unreliable manner. The court excluded this evidence as part of its overall ruling that the assessments were conclusive proof of tax deficiencies. At a new trial, where the fact of tax deficiencies will be an open issue, we assume that, if Exhibit 106 is offered, the district court will consider its relevancy in the context of that trial. Third, Silkman argues the district court erred in excluding Exhibit 107, documents purporting to show the IRS did not properly assess deficiencies according to its own procedures. This contention is based
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upon Silkman’s theory that proof of a valid assessment is essential when the defendant is accused of evading
payment
of a tax. However, we agree with cases holding that, while an assessment
may
be used to prove a tax deficiency in a payment evasion case, an assessment is not a necessary element of a payment evasion- charge.
See Hogan,
The judgment of the district court is reversed, and the case is remanded for a new trial.
Notes
. By contrast, a taxpayer can be convicted of the misdemeanor of willfully failing to file an income tax return' without proof that any tax was assessed or owing.
See
26 U.S.C. § 7203;
United States v. Richards,
