OPINION
Hawk was charged with willfully failing to file federal income tax returns for the years 1966, 1967, 1968, and 1969 in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7203. 1
Hawk, an experienced attorney, admitted knowledge of his obligation to file returns and failure to do so. His excuse was that in the first years he was confronted with serious personal problems which left his affairs in disarray; thereafter, he said he “had a mental block about it” and that “he just sort of stuck his head in the sand.” The jury found him guilty on the counts covering 1968 and 1969 and acquitted him as to the two previous years. We affirm.
Instructions on Willfulness
The trial judge instructed the jury that the defendant’s failure to file would be willful if the “failure to act was voluntary and purposeful and with the specific intent to fail to do what he knew the law requires (sic) to be done; that is to say, with the bad purpose to disobey or disregard the law . ”
2
This followed word for
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word an instruction requested by Hawk except for one omission: in the last clause, Hawk’s requested instruction read, “that is to say, with the bad purpose
and/or evil motive
either to disobey or disregard the law.” (Emphasis added.) Hawk argues that United States v. Bishop,
In reversing a decision of this court,
ciously or with a careless disregard whether one has the right to act.”
E. g.,
Abdul v. United States, 9 Cir.,
The Government contends that Bishop does not compel an instruction using the “evil motive” language on the narrow ground that the Court’s decision was limited to the two criminal tax statutes before it — § 7206(1), the felony of willfully subscribing to a false return, and § 7207, the misdemeanor of willfully “delivering” a false statement. But as the quoted statement above indicates, and as the remainder of the opinion makes crystal clear, 4 the Court’s opinion ex *368 tends to the definition of willfulness in the other criminal tax statutes in which it is an element, §§ 7201-7207, including, of course, the provision under which Hawk stands accused, § 7203. The reason Bishop does not compel inclusion of the term “evil motive” is much simpler: an issue concerning the necessity of employing that language was not presented in Bishop. The Court was confronted only with the permissibility of the two-level definition of willfulness, and beyond that nothing in the case related to the precise form of words necessary to convey the meaning of willfulness.
Still, a nagging question remains as to Justice Blackmun’s reference to “evil motive”; was it the unstated intent of the opinion to require inclusion of those exact words? We think not. The statement in the opinion is that willfulness is to be uniformly defined to require the bad purpose or evil motive
described
in Murdock v. United States,
However, neither bad purpose nor evil motive is an independent element of a willful failure to file under § 7203. The term “evil motive” is merely a “convenient shorthand expression to distinguish liability based on conscious wrongdoing from liability based on mere carelessness or mistake.” Boardman v. United States,
A number of cases, in accord with this reasoning, have rejected claims that willfulness instructions must include the terms bad purpose or evil motive.
5
In
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United States v. DiVarco,
Here too, the inclusion of the two words “evil motive” in the instructions was unnecessary. While the use of such terms is often helpful, all that is required are instructions which communicate the proper notion of specific intent in understandable terms. The instructions here were adequate to that purpose.
Evidence of Reporting Discrepancies
After being informed that he was under investigation, Hawk had returns prepared and filed by an accountant for the years in which he was delinquent. The accountant was given most, but not all, of Hawk’s records and computed Hawk’s gross income 6 on the basis of deposit slips for Hawk’s commercial checking account plus an additional amount that Hawk estimated he received in cash and did not deposit. Subsequent investigation revealed his gross income to be substantially greater than had been reported, largely for two reasons: (1) because Hawk’s estimate of cash received but not deposited was less than his books showed; and (2) because certain of his income was withdrawn from a different account, a trustee account, and was not reported — probably because the accountant was never given the records for this account. Evidence of these discrepancies was introduced at trial over the objection of Hawk’s attorney. Hawk complains that since he was accused of a failure to file, not tax evasion, the evidence was irrelevant.
The evidence, though not very relevant, was material nonetheless on the issue of willfulness.
See
United States v. MacLeod,
Hawk’s argument that he merely gave the records to an accountant and thus could have had no knowledge of the understatements is unpersuasive. He failed to adequately inform the accountant of or supply the necessary records relating to the understatements, and the jury could have inferred that this was intentional. We conclude the evidence was properly admitted.
Prosecutor’s Comment
At one point during the trial, the prosecutor, in discussing an evidentiary point with the judge, asked the court to reserve its ruling “and strike it if it is not tied up, if the defendant goes on the stand.” The comment was obviously inadvertent, and the judge immediately instructed the jury to disregard it. Even assuming it was a
prejudicial
comment on the accused’s right to remain silent — which we doubt,
see
United States v. Altavilla,
Appellant’s other contentions are without merit.
Affirmed.
Notes
. That section provides in pertinent part:
Any person required under this title to pay any estimated tax or tax, or required by this title or by regulations made under authority thereof to make a return . . ., keep any records, or supply any information, who willfully fails to pay such estimated tax or tax, make such return, keep such records, or supply such information, at the time or times required by law or regulations, shall, in addition to other penalties provided by law, be guilty of a misdemeanor. . . .
. The charge as relevant to willfulness was: Now, we come to specific intent and willfulness. The specific intent of willfulness is an essential element of the crime of failing to make an income tax return. The term “willfully” used in the statute . . . means voluntary, purposeful, deliberate, and intentional as distinguished *367 from accidental, inadvertent, or negligent. Mere negligence, even gross negligence, is not sufficient to constitute willfulness under this criminal law.
. . . The failure to make a timely return is willful if the defendant’s failure to act was voluntary and purposeful and with the specific intent to fail to do what the law requires (sic) to be done; that is to say, with the bad purpose to disobey or disregard the law that requires him to disclose to the Government facts and (sic) material to the determination of his income tax liability. .
There is no necessity that the Government prove that the defendant had the intention to defraud it or to evade the payment of any taxes for the defendant’s failure to file to be willful under this provision of law. That is, the intention to avoid the law or to pay the taxes constitutes the crime charged by each of these counts as long as it is willful and knowing as I have defined the term for you. On the other hand, the defendant’s conduct is not willful if you find that he failed to file a return because of negligence, inadvertence, accident, or due to his good faith misunderstanding of the requirements of the law, if there was such misunderstanding.
. United States v. Haseltine,
. The opinion broadly disapproves of our decisions applying the two-level definition of willfulness,
see
. A few cases, it is true, have quoted lower court instructions using, or have themselves employed, both the “bad purpose” and “evil motive” language.
See e. g.,
United States v. Klee,
. Gross income is the only figure relevant since it is the measure of who must file. See 26 U.S.C. § 6012.
. We add a note of caution. Evidence of such limited relevance must be admitted with care. In some instances, the potential for prejudice as well as the dangers of consuming undue time and confusing the jury may be so great as to warrant its exclusion.
