James C. Dunkel, who decided that income taxes are voluntary and elected not to contribute, was convicted of tax evasion and wilful failure to file tax returns. Consistent with this circuit’s precedents, the district court withdrew from the jury certain defenses that are objectively unreasonable. We affirmed Dunkel’s conviction.
United States v. Cheek,
The government contends that Dunkel’s conviction is not affected by
Cheek.
First, the prosecutor contends, Dunkel waived any objection to the district court’s ruling by burying it in a single unreasoned paragraph of his brief on appeal. A skeletal “argument”, really nothing more than an assertion, does not preserve a claim.
United States v. Giovannetti,
Dunkel’s petition for certiorari challenged this court’s treatment of objectively unreasonable beliefs. The Solicitor General could have resisted this petition by arguing that Dunkel had not preserved the point. Instead he urged the Supreme Court to hold the case for whatever disposition
Cheek
made appropriate. The Court did so and has told us to review the case in light of
Cheek.
The whole process has been so much wasted motion if, as the government now contends, the claim was not properly preserved here. The Supreme Court enforces a rule that claims of waiver must be presented no later than the brief in opposition to the petition for certiorari or are themselves waived.
Canton, Ohio v. Harris,
The prosecutor’s other argument is that the error was harmless, because no rational juror could have believed Dunkel’s claim that he did not know that he was required to file returns and pay taxes. Perhaps so, but directed verdicts are not allowed in criminal cases.
Cheek
holds that our practice removed from the jury's purview one of the elements of the offense. It follows that the error cannot be harmless.
Carpenters v. United States,
It should go without saying that rulings in our original opinion on subjects unrelated to Cheek — such as the search of Dunkel’s garbage — stand, and these subjects may not be reopened in the district court.
The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for retrial.
