Intent to Deceive
Lacking
7205-
Fraudulent Withholding Exemption Certificate: Intent to Deceive Lacking
[74-2
USTC ¶9548]United States of America, Appellee v. Lyle B. Snider,
Appellant United States of America, Appellee v. Lyle B. Snider, and Sue
T. Snider, Appellants
(CA-4),
U. S. Court of Appeals, 4th Circuit, Nos. 73-1938, 73-1939, 502 F2d 645,
7/2/74
, Rev'g unreported District Court decision
[Code Sec. 7205 and 18 U. S. C. §401]
Crimes: False withholding information: False or fraudulent:
Contempt.--A Quaker was improperly convicted of supplying false
withholding information in claiming three billion dependents when he was
entitled to only four. His conduct was not false or fraudulent in that
the claim was not made with intent to deceive, nor was there any chance
that it could reasonably affect withholding to the detriment of the
government. Moreover, his and his wife's failure to rise upon entrance
and departure of the trial judge did not constitute misbehavior that
obstructed the administration of justice, and they were improperly
convicted of contempt. BACK REFERENCES: 74FED ¶5711A.20.
One
dissent.
William
L. Osteen, United States Attorney,
Greensboro
, N. C., for appellee. Karla W. Simon, Richard D. Hobbet, Hobbett and
Simon, 301 First Union Bank Building, P. O. Box 586, Durham, North
Carolina 27702, for appellant in No. 73-1938, Norman B. Smith, Smith,
Carrington, Patterson, Follin and Curtis, 704 Southeastern Bldg.,
Greensburo, N. C., for appellants in No. 73-1939.
Before
WINTER, CRAVEN and WIDENER, Circuit Judges.
CRAVEN,
Circuit Judge:
In
our view, these are cases of symbolic speech. In No. 73-1939 the
defendants declined to participate in the traditional ceremony of rising
upon entrance and departure of the presiding judge and were cited for
contempt. In No. 73-1938 defendant engaged in hyperbole--claiming 3
billion dependents on a tax withholding form--and was charged with a
violation of 26 U. S. C. §7205. In the latter criminal tax case we hold
the government failed to prove an essential element of the offense. In
the contempt case we hold that refusal to rise is not "misbehavior
[which] obstruct[s] the administration of justice" within the
meaning of 18
U. S.
C. §401. In neither case do we find it necessary to decide whether the
first amendment bars prosecution. Both convictions will be reversed with
instructions to enter verdicts of acquittal.
[Background]
Lyle
and Sue Snider are Quakers. They moved to
North Carolina
in August 1971 after Lyle was employed as a teacher at
Carolina
Friends
School
in
Chapel Hill
. Their Quaker background 1
soon led them to join the Society of Friends Meeting in Durham. 2 They lived an ascetic life--residing in a farmhouse
without running water and subsisting as vegetarians. According to their
testimony and that of other members of the Durham Meeting, their concern
for the consistency of their beliefs with their actions grew. They were
particularly concerned with that portion of the Quaker Discipline 3 which opposed war in any form. The Discipline consisted
of "Queries" and "Advices" which each Quaker was to
read and consider individually. The Query on war asked:
Do
we endeavor to live in the virtue of that light and power that takes
away the occasion of all wars, seeking to do our part in the work of
reconciliation between individuals, groups, and nations? Do we
faithfully maintain our testimony against military participation in war?
Are we trying to build a world order to prevent war and to insure a just
and durable peace?
The
Advice on witnessing for peace 4
admonished:
Take
care in your relationship with others that you respect and cherish each
man for men of all races and nationalities have a glow within their
beings which unites all men as brothers. Take care also, therefore, to
maintain a consistent witness for peace, opposition to war, and to all
acts of violence or coercion, that you may remain in accord with the
timeless guidance of the Inner Light.
Believing
that they could not follow the Advice nor answer the Query in the
affirmative while voluntarily paying taxes, a large portion of which was
used for military purposes, appellants decided that they could no longer
voluntarily pay their taxes. The decision, they testified, was
not made overnight. In college both had participated in protests aimed
at ending the Vietnamese conflict. In March 1972 they sought a refund
for their 1971 taxes on a theory of violation of their "freedom of
religion." 5
On
May 30, 1972
, Snider submitted to his employer an Employee's Withholding Allowance
Certificate (Form W-4) which was dated a day earlier. On line 1, calling
for "Total number of allowances you are claiming," Snider had
written "3 billion." Together with the W-4 Form he enclosed a
letter, addressed to "U. S. Government, Department of the Treasury,
Internal Revenue Service" explaining his claim. It read:
Dear
Friends,
We
are claiming 3 billion exemptions on our W-4 form, because we are
becoming more and more aware of our responsibility to our 3 billion
fellow human beings all over the world. The military establishment of
this country threatens the peace and security of every person on earth.
Our country's military is destroying life on a horrifying scale in
Southeast Asia
, and it threatens to expand this destruction to other areas of the
globe. Our responsibility to our fellow men leads us to resist this
military establishment by refusing to pay willingly any of our
tax money to it. We cannot continue to contribute money to the death and
destruction which our military wreaks in
Southeast Asia
or to the fear which it generates in people the world over.
We
also refuse to pay our taxes willingly to the U. S. Government on
the ground that we are conscientiously opposed to any and all wars. We
have a strong Christian faith which is the basis of our opposition to
war and violence among men. We are conscientiously opposed to the use of
violence to settle conflicts and we are committed to removing the causes
of violent conflict. We cannot in good conscience support a government
which devotes over 60 percent of its resources to war. We must work to
change to priorities of that government and its people. As one of the
most powerful military nations on earth, we must start leading the world
toward peace.
We
are not trying to avoid our responsibilities to the people of this
country and the world by refusing to pay our taxes. We will pay our
share of money and resources to life-affirming, positive programs such
as medical care, welfare, psychological care and counseling, and
education, to name a few. We are called by God to affirm life and love
with our resources and to resist and eliminate war and violence among
men.
"In
peace and love",
/s/ Lyle Snider and Susan Snider
(emphasis added). The letter and the W-4 Form were forwarded by the
school's business manager to the District Director of the Internal
Revenue Service, together with a letter from the business manager
inquiring as to any action which the school should take in the matter.
During the summer, while Snider was working with the American Friends'
Service Committee in
West Virginia
, the school ignored the symbolic claim of 3 billion dependents and
continued to withhold from Snider's paycheck on the basis of four
dependents, the number listed on his previous W-4 Form. Upon his return
at the end of the summer, there having been no reply to the school's
inquiry to IRS, the school returned to Snider the sums that had
previously been withheld. The school's faculty, in its capacity as a
Quaker Meeting, shortly thereafter declared its support of Snider and
its belief his position was one of conscience.
On
December 15, 1972
, after investigation by an IRS Special Agent confirmed that Snider was
entitled to only four allowances (dependents) as previously claimed,
Snider was arrested. Some two months later the grand jury returned an
indictment against Snider, pursuant to 26 U. S. C. §7205, 6
for willfully supplying his employer with "false and
fraudulent" information. 7
After
a plea of not guilty, Snider was brought to trial on
June 12, 1973
. As court was convened, the clerk-crier's command that "All
rise" went unheeded by a number of persons in the courtroom
including the defendant and his wife. Despite the district judge's
explanation of his understanding of the reasons for the rising
requirement and the express request that Mr. and Mrs. Snider stand, each
replied that he could not, in good conscience, do so. 8
Snider was cited a total of 16 times 9
throughout the trial for contempt of court, his wife was cited only at
the initial convening.
During
the trial the motivation for Snider's having claimed 3 billion
dependents became apparent--his religious belief that he could not voluntarily
pay his taxes. The sincerity of his motivation was not seriously
questioned at trial and we have no reason to doubt it. Equally clear,
however, was the fact that Snider submitted the W-4 Form knowing that,
according to the definition of "dependents" on the form, he
was entitled to no more than four allowances. This act was admittedly
deliberate, though, according to Snider's testimony and that of his
wife, he was unsure as to whether the act was protected by that portion
of the first amendment which vouchsafes the free exercise of religion.
After
seven communications to the judge, four returns for reinstruction
(including a dynamite charge after deadlock), and approximately eight
hours of deliberation over two days, the jury found Snider guilty. He
was sentenced to eight months and, after summary contempt proceedings
under Rule 42(a), given an additional 30 days for contempt. Sue Snider
received a ten-day sentence, suspended for two years, for contempt.
[Contentions]
I.
In the tax case appellant Snider contests his conviction under section
7205 on six grounds: (1) that the statute, as applied to him, is
unconstitutional as an infringement of his right to the free exercise of
religion; (2) that it was error for the district judge not to grant his
motion for judgment of acquittal at the conclusion of the government's
case on the ground that the government had failed to prove two essential
elements of the crime charged, viz., that Snider had supplied
"false or fraudulent" information and that he had acted
"willfully;" (3) that the trial judge erroneously charged the
jury as to the meaning of "false" and "willfully" in
section 7205 so as to entitle Snider to a new trial; (4) that the
failure to resubmit the entire charge to the jury upon the jury's
request for reinstruction on the meaning of "false or
fraudulent" was an abuse of discretion and amounted to prejudicial
error because the portion of the instruction which was reiterated was
favorable to the government; (5) that the Allen [Allen v. United
States, 164 U. S. 492 (1896)] charge given to the jury after it
reached a deadlock was coercive, and (6) that the imposition of an
active prison sentence, while within the statutory maximum, was
arbitrary and constituted an abuse of discretion. Because we find the
appellant's second and third contentions to be meritorious we do not
reach the other points of error. 10
We turn, then, to a consideration of the meaning of "false or
fraudulent" and "willfully" in section 7205 of the
Internal Revenue Code.
A.
"False or Fraudulent"
The
district judge's view of the meaning of "false" and
"fraudulent" in 26
U. S.
C. §7205 is reflected in his charge to the jury. "A statement,
including a statement in a claim or document, is 'false,'" he
instructed, "if it were untrue when made, and was then known to be
untrue by the person making it, or causing it to be made. A statement or
claim or document is 'fraudulent' if it was falsely made, or caused to
be made, with the intent to deceive." In so charging, the district
judge rejected defendant's interpretation of "false" as
meaning more than untrue in the sense that the statement must be made
"with an intent to deceive or mislead," an interpretation
offered by defendant both on argument for his motion for judgment of
acquittal and through his proposed jury instructions. 11
Despite the fact that the language of the statute is written in the
disjunctive, the appellant urges that the words "false or
fraudulent" should be read "false and fraudulent" or, to
the same purpose, that "false" be given the restrictive
definition set out in his proposed jury instruction in order to save the
words "or fraudulent" from being surplusage.
[Statutory
Construction]
1.
It is a familiar rule of statutory construction that Congress is
presumed to have used words according to their ordinary meaning, unless
a different signification is clearly indicated. Avery v. C. I. R.
[4 USTC ¶1277], 292
U. S.
210, 214 (1934). Though the first dictionary meaning of
"false" corresponds with the district judge's charge, 12
it is important to note that the word, as judicially construed, means
much more in other statutes. For example, "false" in section
14(a)(2) of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U. S. C. §32(c)(2), which creates an
objection to the discharge of a bankrupt where he makes a
"materially false statement in writing respecting his financial
condition," has been interpreted to mean "more than erroneous
or untrue" and to "[import] an intention to deceive."
Vol. 1A Collier on Bankruptcy §14.40 (14th ed.). See Third
Nat'l Bank v. Schatten, 81 F. 2d 538 (6th Cir. 1936); In re
Rosenfeld, 262 F. 876 (2d Cir. 1919); Doyle v. First Nat'l Bank
of
Baltimore
, 231 F. 649 (4th Cir. 1916). And the use of "falsely" in
section 346(a) of the Nationality Act of 1940, 8 U. S. C. §746 (now
incorporated into Chapter 18 at sections 911 and 1015), to make criminal
the act of knowingly and falsely representing oneself to be a citizen of
the United States was interpreted as follows: "In law this word usually
means something more than untrue; it [false] means something designedly
untrue and deceitful and implies an intention to perpetrate some
treachery or fraud." United States v. Martinez, 73 F. Supp.
403, 407 (M. D. Pa. 1947) (emphasis added). Even 18
U. S.
C. §1001, prohibiting the making or using of "any false,
fictitious or fraudulent statement" within the province of any
government "department or agency," utilizes "false"
in a context that signifies more than mere untruth. Seizing upon the
reference to a "material fact" in the first part of the
statute, 13
courts have developed "materiality" as an element of the
offense. The test for materiality under this statute was explained in Weinstock
v. United States, 231 F. 2d 699, 701-02 (D. C. Cir. 1956), as
"whether the false statement has a natural tendency to influence,
or was capable of influencing, the decision of the tribunal in making a
determination required to be made." In other words, though the
false statement need deceive no one in actuality, Robles v. United
States, 279 F. 2d 401, 404 (9th Cir. 1960), cert. denied 365
U. S. 836 (1961); United States v. Coastal Contracting and
Engineering Co., 174 F. Supp. 474 (D. Md. 1959), it must be
deceptive, "calculated to induce agency reliance or action," United
States v. Quirk, 167 F. Supp. 462, 464 (E. D. Pa. 1958), aff'd
266 F. 2d 26 (3d Cir. 1959). 14
The gloss put upon "false" in various contexts throughout the
United States Code, if not sufficient to demonstrate that the ordinary
meaning of the word in a statutory context is more than untrue and
implies an intention to deceive or mislead, 15
is at least sufficient to point up the ambiguity of the term. We must
accordingly utilize several familiar methods of statutory construction
to arrive at the meaning of the phrase "false or fraudulent"
in section 7205.
[False
or Fraudulent]
2.
We begin with the premise that all parts of the statute must be read
together, neither taking specific words out of context, United States
v. American Trucking Ass'n, Inc., 310 U. S. 534, 542-43 (1940), nor
interpreting one part so as to render another meaningless, Helvering
v. Morgan's, Inc. [35-1 USTC ¶9006], 293 U. S. 121 (1934). Were we
to accept the government's position, as did the district judge, that
"false" means "untrue" and "fraudulent"
means "falsely made . . . with the intent to deceive," then
the phrase "or fraudulent" in 26 U. S. C. §7205 is rendered a
nullity. That which is "fraudulent" within the district
judge's instructions to the jury is also, by definition,
"false;" thus the government need only prove that Snider's
claim was untrue and is relieved of any obligation to show that the
statement is deceptive or that it was made with an intention to deceive.
Such an interpretation not only renders "or fraudulent"
superfluous, it may give the statute "unintended breadth" 16
so as to make criminal an act which the Congress did not considerable
punishable.
On
the other hand, adoption of appellant's view would result in giving
virtually the same meaning to both words, an interpretation which should
also be avoided if possible. Jarecki v. G. D. Searle & Co.
[61-2 USTC ¶9503], 367
U. S.
303 (1961). But, given the meaning attached to "false" in
similar statutes discussed above, it is not unlikely that Congress'
choice of words was indicative either of a cumulative effect, in which
each of several words is used to convey a similar meaning, as in the
"false, fictitious, or fraudulent language" of 18 U. S. C. §287,
18 U. S. C. §1001, and 31 U. S. C. §231 or of a conjunctive
connotation, 17
similar to the meaning of "false and fraudulent" as used in
the Food and Drug Act of 1906, 18
and the interpretation given to the use of "false or
fraudulent" as used at three places within the Corporation Tax Law
of 1909, 36 Stat. 112. 19
[Legislative
History]
3.
That no particular care was given to the choice of the disjunctive form
is further substantiated by the legislative history of the Current Tax
Payment Act of 1943, which adopted the pay-as-you-go (withholding)
method of collecting income tax. Section 470(d) of the Act was
incorporated into the 1939 Internal Revenue Code as section 1626(d) and
became, without material change, section 7205 of the 1954 Code. The
Senate Report on the bill contained the following discussion of section
470(d):
Section
470(d) was a new provision added to the code by the House bill. This
section provides appropriate penalties applicable to employees who
willfully supply false or fraudulent withholding exemption
certificates or who willfully fail to supply information which would
decrease the withholding exemption. The penalty in each instance is a
fine of not more than $500 or imprisonment of not more than 1 year, or
both, and such penalties are in lieu of those provided in section 145(a)
of the code. This provision with minor modifications is retained in your
committee bill as section 1626(d). As amended the statutory language
makes clear that the penalties are applicable in the case of an employee
who willfully supplies false and fraudulent information, or who
willfully fails to supply information, which would require an increase
in the tax to be withheld at source on his wages.
S.
Rep. No. 221, 78th Cong., 1st Sess. 30-31 (1943) (emphasis added). This
interchangeable use of "or" and "and," when
considered in light of the interpretation given to "false or
fraudulent" in prior revenue statutes, is instrutive. The first
employment of the phrase appears to have been in the Corporation Tax Law
of 1909, 36 Stat. 112, which provided for the collection of a corporate
excise tax. The fifth paragraph of section 38 of the Act provided for
the assessment of additional tax within three years after the tax was
due but not paid due to the filing of "false or fraudulent
returns." The phrase was also employed at three other places within
the Act--once to describe the intent necessary for the Commissioner to
add on a 100 percent penalty ("false or fraudulent intent")
and twice to describe an act punishable as a misdemeanor ("make a
false or fraudulent return"). The First Circuit, in a case brought
under section 38, par. 5 of the Act, framed the issue as
whether
"false or fraudulent," in that clause of the fifth subdivision
which authorizes the assessment of additional taxes upon discovery
within three years after the original return, is to be taken as meaning
only such returns as are fraudulently false, or as including also such
returns as are false only in the sense of being incorrect.
Eliot
Nat'l Bank v. Gill, 218 F. 600, 603 (1914).
Noting that the use of the phrase in each of the other three contexts
denoted a penalty, either civil or criminal, and that, in such a
context, "may be taken . . . to mean 'false and fraudulent,'"
the court agreed that in this context, where no penalty was imposed and
no offense created, "false" should properly be interpreted as
"incorrect." Accord, National Bank of Commerce v. Allen,
223 F. 472 (8th Cir.), cert. denied 239
U. S.
642 (1915). Here, like the three other uses of the phrase in Gill,
the purpose is not restitutionary--allowing the Commissioner to recoup
taxes owed but not paid--but rather penal.
After
the reinstitution of the personal income tax in 1913 the phrase found
its way into the revenue statutes. See section 278(a) of the
Revenue Act of 1918; section 276(a) of the Revenue Act of 1936; section
276(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939. Each usage was limited,
however, to a determination of when the statute of limitations was
tolled so as to permit the Commissioner to assess for taxes owed but not
paid or to impose a penalty of civil fraud. None was concerned with
defining a criminal sanction. Subsequent acts have continued to
incorporate a similar provision, the effect of which is to toll the
statute of limitations where a "false or fraudulent return with the
intent to evade tax," 26
U. S.
C. §6501(c)(1), is submitted. Such use of the phrase has been
interpreted to require a clear showing of fraud--the fact that the
return was false, in the sense of incorrect, being insufficient. Mitchell
v. C. I. R. [41-1 USTC ¶9317], 118 F. 2d 308, 310 (5th Cir. 1941); Davis
v. C. I. R. [50-2 USTC ¶9427], 184 F. 2d 86 (10th Cir. 1950). In
Davis
the court stated: "[A] failure to file a correct return does not
necessarily constitute fraud. Fraud implies bad faith, intentional wrong
doing and a sinister motive." 184 F. 2d at 87 (emphasis
added). If such is the content of the "false or fraudulent
return" necessary to show civil tax fraud, we think no less
should be required under the criminal sanction of section 7205, even
though section 6501(c)(1) contains the additional phrase "with the
intent to evade tax." 20
Surely Congress could not have intended to require a showing of fraud, Carter
v. Campbell [59-1 USTC ¶9306], 264 F. 2d 930 (5th Cir. 1959),
merely to toll a statute of limitations for supplying "false or
fraudulent returns" and yet impose a criminal sanction for the
supplying of a withholding certificate that is false only in the sense
of being "incorrect." Nevertheless, the government urges upon
us a position in which a violation of §7205 would require proof only
that Snider submitted incorrect information. 21
We cannot agree. The use of the phrase "false or fraudulent"
throughout the history of the revenue acts as well as in other statutes
belies such an interpretation. So does the existence of adequate civil
sanctions which prevent widespread abuse of the withholding system
through protests of the type attempted by Snider. 22
But neither should we adopt the position advocated by the appellant.
Though an examination of the legislative history of section 7205
together with a consideration of the past usage of similar phrases in
other statutes indicates that "or" may be read
"and," we decline to go so far. To do so would, we believe,
render difficult, if not impossible, the distinction between felony and
misdemeanor which the 1954 recodification of the criminal sanctions was
designed to implement. 23
Instead, we hold that in order for a taxpayer to be convicted of
supplying "false or fraudulent" information contrary to
section 7205 the information must either be (1) supplied with an intent
to deceive, or (2) false in the sense of deceptive--of such a nature
that it could reasonably affect withholding to the detriment of the
government. This interpretation gives meaning to both words and avoids
the judicial rewriting of "or" as "and."
Furthermore, it maintains the integrity of 26 U. S. C. §§ 7201-7207 by
differentiating the section 7205 misdemeanor from the two felony
provisions in much the same way as we believe the Supreme Court in United
States v. Bishop [73-1 USTC ¶9459], 412 U. S. 346 (1973), indicated
the section 7207 misdemeanor should be distinguished from sections 7201
and 7206: by "the additional misconduct essential to a violation of
the felony statutes." 412
U. S.
at 358-59, quoting
United States
v. Vitiello [66-2 USTC ¶9480], 363 F. 2d 240, 243 (3d Cir. 1966).
Finally, such an interpretation is consistent with the rule that
"[t]axing statutes must be applied within reasonable limits and
construed in the light of their purpose." Musselman Hub-Brake
Co. v. C. I. R. [43-2 USTC ¶9666], 139 F. 2d 65, 67 (6th Cir.
1943). We find nothing in the legislative history which might indicate
that a less restrictive definition of "false or fraudulent"
should apply, 24
whereas we believe it reasonable and consistent with past
interpretations that "false" means more than merely
"untrue" or "incorrect."
[Prior
Cases]
4.
We think United States v. Malinowski [73-1 USTC ¶9355], 347 F.
Supp. 347, 351-53 (E. D. Pa. 1972), aff'd [73-1 USTC ¶9199] 472
F. 2d 850 (3d Cir.), cert. denied 411
U. S.
970 (1973), is not necessarily to the contrary. In Malinowski the
defendant filed a Form W-4 claiming 15 exemptions and with it sent a
letter to his employer advising that he had "entered into a
relationship of economic and social dependency with a group of fifteen
persons. . . ." 472 F. 2d at 852. Although Malinowski stated that
one of his aims was to exercise greater control over the use of taxes
and especially that large portion used for war-making, both the district
court, 347 F. Supp. at 352, and the court of appeals, 472 F. 2d at 856,
refused to consider what was characterized as his motivation and held it
to be irrelevant. As we read the opinion of Judge Aldisert, Malinowski's
contention on appeal was that the information was not supplied
"willfully." There was no discussion at the appellate level of
the meaning of "false;" the issue apparently was not raised.
The district court's treatment of the question, hinging on its belief
that a stricter interpretation of "false" would reduce the
withholding system "to a shambles," 347 F. Supp. at 352, is
inadequate. This is especially true in light of the power of the IRS to
treat a claim such as Snider's as constituting no information and
withhold on the basis of zero dependents. I. R. S. Reg. §31.3401(e)-1. 25
Under the test which we adopt today it is entirely possible that a jury
might find a claim of 15 exemptions to be deceptive and capable of
misleading employer and IRS alike as to the amount properly to be
withheld A similar possibility exists under the facts of United
States v. Smith, 487 F. 2d 329 (9th Cir. 1973), where defendants
claimed 10, 10, and 17 exemptions respectively. A claim of "3
billion," on the other hand, could deceive no one. It is purely
symbolic, the attached letter aside. To this extent both Malinowski
and Smith are distinguishable; to the extent that they are not
distinguishable, we decline to follow them.
[Conclusions]
5.
The interpretation of "false or fraudulent" by the district
court constitutes an error of law which is reflected not only in the
jury instructions on the meaning of "false" but also in the
denial of defendant's motion, styled a "motion to dismiss,"
made at the conclusion of the government's case. Treating the motion as
one for judgment of acquittal under Fed. R. Crim. P. 29, we reverse the
district judge's denial of the motion and enter judgment of acquittal.
Whether Rule 29 confines our power of disposition to either grant or
refuse the motion or includes the power to remand for a new trial, 26
this is not a case in which "the defect in the evidence might be
supplied on another trial." Bryan v. United States [50-1
USTC ¶9140], 338
U. S.
552, 559 (1950). Additional facts could not enable a jury to conclude
that the entry of "3 billion" on defendant's W-4 Form was
"false or fraudulent" as we have construed the term. Since the
evidence as to "false or fraudulent" is insufficient and
cannot be cured at a second trial, dismissal of the indictment, rather
than a new trial, is appropriate.
United States
v. Edmons, 432 F. 2d 577, 586 (2d Cir. 1970);
Murray
v.
United States
, 403 F. 2d 694, 696 (9th Cir. 1968); Phillips v.
United States
, 311 F. 2d 204, 207 (10th Cir. 1962). See generally
Griffin
v.
United States
, 269 F. 2d 903 (4th Cir. 1959).
B.
"Willfully"
On
appeal, Snider also urges, alternatively, that he is entitled (1) to
judgment of acquittal on the basis of the government's failure to prove
that he acted "willfully" or (2) to a new trial because of an
erroneous jury instruction on the issue of willfulness. He contends that
his belief that he had a first amendment right to symbolically claim
three billion dependents in protest of the Vietnam War and war in
general could be found by a jury to negate the element of willfulness. 27
In United States v. Bishop [73-1 USTC ¶9459], 412 U. S. 346
(1973), the Supreme Court settled the question of whether the word
willfully has the same meaning in the felony statutes, 26 U. S. C. §§
7201, 7206, as it does in the misdemeanor statutes, 26 U. S. C. §§
7202-7205, 7207. It does. The Court also made it clear that it had
consistently interpreted the word "willfully" to require an
element of mens rea and that "[u]ntil Congress speaks
otherwise, we therefore shall continue to require, in both tax felonies
and tax misdemeanors that must be done 'willfully,' the bad purpose or
evil motive described in [United States v.] Murdock [3 USTC ¶1194]
[290
U. S.
389, 398 (1933)]. . . ." 412
U. S.
at 361. Thus, it is no longer clear, as we would have previously
thought, that the element of willfulness in a tax statute is established
by proof of a voluntary, intentional violation of a known legal
duty--without more. It is possible that purpose and motivation may be
found by a jury to negate willfulness. But see United States v.
Malinowski [73-1 USTC ¶9199], 472 F. 2d 850 (3d Cir.), cert.
denied 411
U. S.
970 (1973), and United States v. Moylan, 417 F. 2d 1002 (4th Cir.
1969), cert. denied 397
U. S.
910 (1970).
Because
disposition of the appeal is sufficiently governed by our holding in
section A with respect to the interpretation of "false or
fraudulent," we need not presently decide this question.
II.
Both Lyle and Sue Snider appeal from their summary contempt convictions
under Fed. R. Crim. P. 42(a). They urge that (1) their conduct, even if
contemptuous, did not merit summary disposition under Rule 42(a), (2)
the failure to rise was not contempt within the meaning of 18 U. S. C.
§401, and (3) even if within the meaning of the statute, their failure
to rise was protected by the first amendment.
A.
Summary Contempt
Assuming
for the moment that appellants' behavior amounted to contempt, the
language of Rule 42(a)--"that he saw or heard the conduct
constituting the contempt and that it was committed in the actual
presence of the court"--would seem to support the district judge's
actions in dealing summarily with appellants. But Rule 42(a) has been
interpreted more narrowly by the Supreme Court. It has thus been said
that the rule was "reserved 'for exceptional Circumstances,' Brown
v.
United States
, 359
U. S.
41, 54 . . . (dissenting opinion) . . . [where speedy punishment may be
necessary in order to achieve 'summary vindication of the court's
dignity and authority.' Cooke v.
United States
, 267
U. S.
517. . . ." Harris v.
United States
, 382
U. S.
162, 164 (1965). Harris' assertion of a fifth amendment privilege not to
testify before a grand jury, like the Sniders' claim of a first
amendment privilege not to stand, was not "such an open, serious
threat to orderly procedure" nor such an "unusual
situation" that "instant action [was] necessary to protect the
judicial institution itself." 382
U. S.
at 167. The length of time between the initial contemptuous behavior by
Snider (the only such behavior by his wife) and the summary punishment
(two days) together with the questionable disruptiveness of the behavior
itself indicate that appellants were entitled to the full notice and
hearing provided by Fed. R. Crim. P. 42(b). Groppi v. Leslie, 404
U. S.
496 (1972); cf. Sacher v.
United States
, 343
U. S.
1 (1952).
B.
"Contempt" within the Statute
The
federal contempt statute, 18
U. S.
C. §401, provides
A
court of the United States shall have power to purnish by fine or
imprisonment, at its discretion, such contempt of its authority, and
none other, as--(1) Misbehavior of any person in its presence or
so near thereto as to obstruct the administration of justice: . .
. (emphasis added).
This
statute rests on the unquestioned premise that courts must be free to
conduct their business without interruption, interference or
obstruction. Wood v.
Georgia
, 370
U. S.
375, 383 (1962). The contempt power which it grants is inherent in all
courts of general jurisdiction, state as well as federal, 28
United States v. Shipp, 203 U. S. 563 (1906), but the fact that
the authority of federal courts to punish contempt has been codified is
recognition of the fact that such a power, unrestrained by judicial
discretion, can encroach upon the very rights and privileges which the
courts are designed to foster. For that reason the language of the
statute defining the authority to use such power must be closely
considered and the judges who are given that authority are admonished to
be "men of fortitude, able to thrive in a hardy climate," Craig
v. Harney, 331 U. S. 367, 376 (1947), and continually "on guard
against confusing offenses to their sensibilities with obstruction to
the administration of justice." Brown v.
United States
, 356
U. S.
148, 153 (1958).
The
record in this case shows no attempt on the part of appellants to make
Snider's trial a forum or a circus for the expression of their own
political or religious beliefs. Never was their conduct anything but
quiet and respectful. Neither by word nor sign did they do anything
"to obstruct the administration of justice"--except they would
not stand. When ordered to do so, their response was a simple "I
cannot, in good conscience, stand" or words of similar content.
Nothing in the record reveals that these words were spoken maliciously,
antagonistically, belligerently or were, in the slightest degree,
disrespectful in tone or decibel volume or by reason of gesture or
demeanor. This case thus presents the bald question whether a failure to
stand [accompanied only by such interruption of proceedings as are
thought necessary by the district judge to explain the consequences of
contempt and cite the alleged contemnor for his actions is
"misbehavior" within the meaning of 18 U. S. C. §401.
We
are inclined to think it is not, but at least one circuit has reached a
conclusion directly to the contrary. 29
In United States ex rel. Robson v. Malone, 412 F. 2d 848 (1969),
the Seventh Circuit, in the context of a refusal to stand, expressed
some doubt that a district judge was empowered to require spectators to
perform "purely ceremonial or symbolic acts," citing West
Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U. S. 624 (1942).
412 F. 2d at 850. Yet the court overcame its doubt and held in a per
curiam opinion, without citation of authority, that a district court may
require such rising and that, if "the requirement is proper, it
follows that it can be enforced." 30
412 F. 2d at 850.
Subsequently,
in United States v. Seale, 461 F. 2d 345, 371 (1972), the Seventh
Circuit recognized that its own prior decisions required "an actual
material obstruction" and in a companion case, In re Dellinger,
461 F. 2d 389, 401 (1972), conceded that a symbolic act such as refusal
to stand, "when not coupled with further disturbance or disruption,
sometimes might not rise to the level of an actual and material
obstruction of the judicial process."
Finally,
in In re Chase, 468 F. 2d 128 (1972), the Seventh Circuit found
that a refusal to stand coupled with what the court deemed to be
necessary interruption of the trial by reason of the time consumed in
citing the defendant for contempt constituted misbehavior obstructing
the administration of justice. 468 F. 2d at 132. The court declined,
however, to create a per se rule that failure to stand was itself
contempt, although the government argued that without such a rule
"that determination of the offense would not rest on the wrongful
character of the conduct, but upon the resulting reaction of the
judge." 468 F. 2d at 133. Under Chase, the same conduct in
one court would be contempt while in another it would not, depending
upon the judge. We find it difficult to accept such a subjective
interpretation of "misbehavior." Either it is or it is not
contemptuous, and such a judgment should rest not on the judge's
sensibility but upon the purposes served by the requirement.
That
the custom of rising contributes to the functioning of the court by
"marking the beginning and end of the session" and by
"serv[ing] to remind all that attention must be concentrated upon
the business before the court," United States ex rel. Robson v.
Malone, 412 F. 2d 848, 850 (7th Cir. 1969), we do not question. But
the words of the clerk or the judge may serve this function as well. The
rising requirement seems to us not essential to the functioning of the
court; as such, the failure to rise does not constitute a material
obstruction. If the failure to rise distracts others, provokes a
reaction on their part or even causes "a failure to become silent
or focus attention on the business before the court," 468 F. 2d at
133, we think the fault may better be resolved by compelling silence and
attention than by coercing a gesture of respect. What others do may
constitute misbehavior on their part, but it does not justify the
finding of criminal contempt as to the person who simply refuses to
stand and does nothing more. Of course, improper language or gestures
accompanying such a refusal may be separately punishable as contempt.
We
share the doubt expressed by the Ninth Circuit in Comstock v. United
States, 419 F. 2d 1128 (1969), that failure to rise per se, whether
stemming from religious belief, conscience or symbolic protest, can be
punished as "misbehavior" within the meaning of 18 U. S. C. §401
without violating the Constitution. Where behavior in the courtroom
reaches the level of speech or expression, it is protected, absent
"an imminent threat to the administration of justice." In
re Little, 404 U. S. 553, 555 (1972); 31
see In re McConnell, 370 U. S. 230 (1962). If Snider's refuasl to
rise constitutes symbolic speech, 32
and if we should construe the statute so as to embrace that rufusal to
rise within the meaning of "misbehavior," a very serious
constitutional question would be presented--not unlike that in West
Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U. S. 624 (1942).
It is not easy to distinguish the rising requirement from the flag
salute. Both seem to require affirmation, if not of a belief, at least
of "an attitude of mind." 33
319 U. S. at 633. As Mr. Justice Jackson said in Barnette,
If
there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is that
no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in
politics, nationalism, religion or other matters of opinion or force
citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein. If there
are any circumstances which permit an exception, they do not now occur
to us.
319
U. S. at 642 (emphasis added).
We
are thus led to the conclusion, and so hold, that the mere failure to
rise upon command of the marshal in a United States courtroom is not
misbehavior within the meaning of 18 U. S. C. §401 and does not
constitute criminal contempt of the court. To so hold will not, we
think, tend to diminish respect for the judiciary and for the
administration of justice. We do not envision, as the result of our
decision today, disorder flourishing in the courtroom. Instead, we
anticipate the custom of rising upon the convening and adjournment of
court will continue and become more significant because wholly
voluntary. There was a time when an unwary parishioner was tapped by the
warden to enforce traditional religious observance, including rising,
the bowing of knee and head. The gestures of piety are still
observed--but without coercion.
We
have no doubt that the judges of this circuit will continue to maintain
order in the courtroom and to conduct business expeditiously. We think
they fully share our belief that "real respect of the citizenry for
the judiciary is earned, not commanded." In re Chase, 468 F.
2d 128, 137 (7th Cir. 1972) (Stevens, J., dissenting).
REVERSED.
1
Though neither is a "birthright" Quaker, both had significant
contacts with that faith before coming to Chapel Hill. Sue had begun
attending a Quaker Meeting during high school in California. Both
attended Swarthmore College, an institution founded by the Society of
Friends, and, shortly after they met each other, Lyle began attending
the campus Meeting with Sue. After marriage and graduation, they taught
at Quaker schools, first in New York and then in Pennsylvania. They did
not "join" a Meeting, however, until moving to North Carolina.
2
As evidence of the high esteem in which he was held by fellow Quakers,
Snider was elected Clerk of the local Meeting, the only office or
position within a Quaker Meeting.
3
Discipline of the North Carolina Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society
of Friends.
4
The theological basis for the Quaker "peace testimony" was
explained by the noted Quaker theologian Rufus M. Jones in "The
Quaker Peace Position," The Survey, XXXIV (1915), 22-23,
quoted in H. Smith, R. Handy, and L. Loetscher, II American
Christianity 397-401 (1963). See also, William Penn, "Primitive
Christianity Revived, in the Faith and Practice of the People Called
Quakers," Chap. XI, para. 3 (1969), quoted in I American
Christianity at 245-46.
5
The basis of the Sniders' claim for refund was explained in a letter
attached to their 1971 income tax return (Government's Exhibit 3). It
read:
Dear
Friends,
As
we file our income tax statement for 1971, we cannot help but be aware
of the purpose to which our tax dollars are put. Approximately
two-thirds of the money is spent for military purposes--debts due to
past wars, costs of present war, and preparation for future war.
Consequently, there is far too little money available to spend for
housing, education, health care, and an unspoiled environment.
Furthermore, it is the high military expenditures, rather than moneys
budgeted for education, social security, etc., which are responsible for
the "cancer of inflation" which the government cannot seem to
stop.
If
the Administration were to set its priorities on programs for life,
rather than death and destruction, there would be ample money for the
real needs of people, and the President would not need to oppose an
increase in Social Security benefits, for example, as
"inflationary."
It
is our conviction that, as Christians, we must follow the teachings and
examples set by Jesus, and refuse to take part in killing. Furthermore,
we cannot in good conscience let our money be used so that others might
have weapons or be paid to kill. Men who are conscientiously opposed to
war may legally perform alternative service to serving in the armed
forces; not to permit this would be a violation of their religious
freedom. Similarly, we hold that our freedom of religion is violated
when our money is spent in war, for we are thereby forced to be
unwilling participants in it.
Therefore,
we claim a tax credit for the full amount of our taxes paid. The money
refunded to us will be used in "alternative service" to the
military purposes for which the government would use it. It will thereby
become an instrument of positive, reconciling action for peace instead
of a weapon harmful to "children and other living things."
6
Section 7205 provides:
Any
individual required to supply information to his employer under section
3402 who willfully supplies false or fraudulent information, or who
willfully fails to supply information thereunder which would require an
increase in the tax to be withheld under section 3402, shall, in lieu or
any other penalty provided by law (except the penalty provided by
section 6682), upon conviction thereof, be fined not more than $500, or
imprisoned not more than 1 year, or both.
7
The fact that the indictment read "false and fraudulent" while
the statute recites "false or fraudulent," aside from
indicating the ease with which "or" and "and" are
interchanged as discussed infra, is of no moment. It is well
settled that the language of the indictment may be conformed to the
language of the statute under which it is brought so long as it details
"the essential facts constituting the offense charged. . . ."
Fed. R. Crim. P. 7(c). United States v. Martell, 335 F. 2d 764
(4th Cir. 1964).
8
Whether aware or not of the precedent, Mr. and Mrs. Snider's refusal to
stand was the counterpart of what two early leaders of the Quaker faith
had done when tried for preaching in the street and causing an unlawful
and tumultuous assembly to disturb the King's peace. The defendants
themselves, William Penn and William Mead, wrote an account of their
trial at the Old Bailey in 1670 which is reported at 6 Howell's State
Trials 951 (1661-1678). Two excerpts are particularly noteworthy:
The
3rd of September, 1670, the court sat.
Crier.
O Yes, &c.
Clerk.
Bring William Penn and William Mead to the bar.
Mayor.
Sirrah, who bid you put off their hats? put on their hats again.
Obser.
Whereupon one of the officers putting the prisoners hats upon their
heads (pursuant to the order of the court) brought them to the bar.
Record.
Do you know where you are?
Penn.
Yes.
Record.
Do not you know it is the king's court.
Penn.
I know it to be a court, and I suppose it to be the king's court.
Record.
Do you not know there is respect due to the court?--Penn. Yes.
Record.
Why do you not pay it then?
Penn.
I do so.
Record.
Why do you not pull off your hat then?
Penn.
Because I do not believe that to be any respect.
Record.
Well, the court sets forty marks a piece upon your heads, as a fine for
your contempt of the court.
Penn.
I desire it might be observed, that we came into the court with our hats
off (that is, taken off), and if they have been put on since, it was by
order from the bench; and therefore not we, but the bench should be
fined.
Mead.
I have a question to ask the Recorder: am I fined also?
Record.
Yes.
Mead.
I desire the Jury, and all people to take notice of this injustice of
the recorder. Who spake to me to pull off my hat? and yet hath he put a
fine upon my head. O fear the Lord, and dread his power, and yield to
the guidance of his holy spirit, for he is not far from every one of
you.
6.
Howell's State Trials at 956.
Penn.
I demand my liberty, being freed by the jury.
Mayor.
No, you are in for your fines.
Penn.
Fines, for what?
Mayor.
For contempt of the Court.
Penn.
I ask, if it be according to the fundamental laws of England, that any
Englishman should be fined or amerced, but it expressly contradicts the
14th and 29th chapters of the Great Charter of England, which say,
"No freeman ought to be amerced but by the oath of good and lawful
men of the vicinage."
Rec.
Take him away, take him away, take him out of the Court.
Penn.
I can never urge the fundamental laws of England, but you cry. Take him
away, take him away. But it is no wonder, since the Spanish Inquisition
hath so great a place in the Recorder's heart. God Almighty, who is
just, will judge you all for these things.
Observ.
They hauled the prisoners into the Bale-dock, and from thence sent them
to Newgate, for non-payment of their fines; and so were their Jury. But
the Jury were afterwards discharged upon an Habeas Corpus, returnable in
the Common Pleas, where their commitment was adjudged illegal.
6
Howell's State Trials 969.
9
Snider was refused permission to avoid further citations by entering
after court was convened and exiting prior to its recess or adjournment.
10
Appellant's claim of unconstitutionality on free exercise grounds in
supported by American Friends Service Committee v. United States,
Civ. No. 70-1405 (E. D. Pa.
Dec. 31, 1973
). The argument, challenging not the power to tax, an issue
foreclosed by Murdock v. Pennsylvania, 319 U. S. 105 (1942), but
the method of taxing, rests upon the so-called "principle of
alternative burdens." Clark, Guidelines for the Free Exercise
Clause, 83 Harv. L. Rev. 327, 348-352 (1969). See Braunfeld v.
Brown, 366 U. S. 599, 607 (1961); Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.
S. 398, 407 (1961). Cf. Wisconsin v. Yoder 406 U. S. 205 (1972). See
also, Giannella, Religious Liberty, Nonestablishment, and
Doctrinal Development: Part I. The Religious Liberty Guarantee, 80
Harv. L. Rev. 1381 (1967); Dodge, The Free Exercise Clause: A
Sociological Approach, 67 Mich. L. Rev. 679, 718-19 (1969). However
interesting the question, we must follow the rules expressed by Justice
Brandeis in Ashwander v. TVA, 297 U. S. 288, 346-48 (1936)
(concurring):
2.
The Court will not "anticipate a question of constitutional law in
advance of the necessity of deciding it." Liverpool, N. Y. &
P. S. S. Co. v. Emigration Comrs., 113 U. S. 33, 39 . . ..
.
. .
7.
"When the validity of an act of the Congress is drawn in question,
and even if a serious doubt of constitutionality is raised, it is a
cardinal, principle that this Court will first ascertain whether a
construction of the statute is fairly possible by which the question may
be avoided." Crowell v. Benson, 285 U. S. 22, 62, . . ..
11
Appellant proposed the following instruction on the meaning of
"false" in §7205:
False,
when used in a criminal statute, does not mean simply incorrect or
untrue. It means deceptive; assumed or designed to deceive; a statement
made with an intent to deceive or mislead. When it is used in connection
with the word fraudulent in a criminal statute, the requirement of
deceptiveness is made even stronger by linking false with fraudulent.
False
in such a context cannot be construed in its ordinary vernacular sense.
You must find that the information supplied by Defendant in his W-4 Form
was not only incorrect but was also deceptive; or that it deceived the
employer and the Treasury into believing the information; or that it was
intended to deceive or mislead the employer and the Treasury. If you do
not find beyond a reasonable doubt that the information on the
Defendant's W-4 Form was intended to or did deceive or mislead his
employer or the Treasury, you must return a verdict of not guilty on the
indictment.
The
court's instruction was resubmitted to the jury, once orally and once in
writing, due to the jury's obvious difficulty with the meaning of the
words "false" and "fraudulent."
12
The first definition given by Webster's Third New International
Dictionary is "not corresponding to truth or reality: not
true," and "intentionally untrue." The second definition,
however, includes the phrase "tending to deceive." It is also
interesting to note that the word is derived from the Latin
"fallere." meaning "to deceive."
"False,"
like "income" in Towne v. Eisner, 245 U. S. 418, 425
(1918), gives rise to Justice Holmes' admonition that:
A
word is not a crystal, transparent and unchanged; it is the skin of a
living thought and may vary greatly in color and content according to
the circumstances and the time in which it is used.
13
18 U. S. C. §1001 reads, in its entirety, as follows:
Whoever,
in any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or agency of the
United States knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals or covers up
by any trick, scheme, or device a material fact, or makes any false,
fictitious or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses
any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any false,
fictitious or fraudulent statement or entry, shall be fined not more
than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
14
Compare the result achieved by the materiality standard in 18 U.
S. C. §1001 with the False Claims Act, 31 U. S. C. §231, which
prohibits "obtaining . . . the payment . . . of any false or
fraudulent claim . . . with intent to defraud the United States."
"False," as used in the False Claims Act, unquestionably means
more than "untrue," despite the use of the disjunctive
"false or fraudulent," because of the addition of the phrase
"with intent to defraud." See also 18 U. S. C. §287,
prescribing a felony for making or presenting "to any person or
officer in the civil, military, or naval service of the United States, .
. . any claim upon or against the United States, . . . knowing such
claim to be false, fictitious or fraudulent." Unlike 18 U. S. C. §1001,
this provision makes no reference to "material fact."
Nevertheless, "materiality" has been required as an element of
the offense in the same manner as under section 1001. "The very
purpose of sections 287 and 1001 is to protect the government against
those who would cheat or mislead it in the administration of its
programs." United States v. Johnson, 287 F. Supp. 273, 278
(W. D. Mo. 1968), aff'd 410 F. 2d 38 (8th Cir.), cert. denied
396 U. S. 822 (1969). Implicit within the utilization of the materiality
standard under 287 and 1001 is the notion that the criminal intent
necessary under the statute includes not only an intention to make the
statement but also an intention to deceive or mislead the person or
agency to whom it is proffered.
15
Two widely used texts support this conclusion. At 35 C. J. S. 614 it is
said:
In
the more important uses [of "false"] in jurisprudence, and
even in its popular application, the word implies something more than a
mere untruth, that is an untruth coupled with a lying intent; and this
is described as the primary meaning of the word, importing moral
delinquency, or somewhat more than the vernacular sense of erroneous or
untrue; and implying an evil, or a guilty intent, an intent to deceive,
or an intention to perpetuate some treachery or fraud, including not
only the element of error, but also that of intentional wrong.
And
1 Bouvier's Law Dictionary 1181 (3d ed. 1914) states: "Applied to
the intentional act of a responsible being, it [false] implies a purpose
to deceive."
16
The maxim noscitur a soius, that a word is known by the company it
keeps, while not an inescapable rule, is only wisely applied where a
word is capable of many meanings in order to avoid giving unintended
breadth to the Acts of Congress.
Jarecki
v. G. D. Searle & Co. [61-2 USTC ¶9503], 367 U. S. 303, 307
(1961).
17
This latter approach, reading "or" to mean "and" is
certainly not unknown. See, e.g., United States v. Fisk, 70 U. S.
445 (1866); De Sylva v. Ballentine, 351 U. S. 570 (1956); United
States v. Moore, 104 F. 78 (D. Ky. 1900). In Ballentine the
Supreme Court stated; "We start with the proposition that the word
'or' is often used in phrases where 'and' would express the thought with
greater clarity." 351 U. S. at 573.
18
See United States v. Roberts Veterinary Co., 104 F. 2d 785 (7th
Cir. 1939).
19
See discussion at pp. 23-25, infra.
20
Section 7205, as noted above, is the direct descendant of section 470(d)
of the Current Tax Payment Act of 1943 (section 1626(d) of the 1939
Code, as amended). Since the 1939 Code punished as a misdemeanor only
the failure to supply information, not the supplying of "false or
fraudulent" information [section 145(a)], the only antecedent of
section 470(d) was the misdemeanor provision of the Corporation Tax Act
of 1909, interpreted in Gill to mean "false and
fraudulent."
21
The United States Attorney admitted on oral argument that the case was
tried on the theory that the statement was "false," meaning
merely "untrue" or "incorrect."
22
See, e.g., the civil collection remedies available in 26 U. S. C.
§§ 6601-6688 and Reg. §31.3401(e)-1, permitting the IRS to treat the
claim of three billion dependents as no information and to withhold on
the basis of no exemptions. Had the IRS bureaucracy simply responded to
the school's inquiry with instructions to continue to withhold from
Snider's wages on the basis of four dependents (or none) that would have
ended the matter and have avoided what seems to us an improvident and
wholly unnecessary criminal proseuction.
23
In United v. Bishop [73-1 USTC ¶9459], 412 U. S. 346 (1973), the
Court distinguished the felony codified as 7201 from the misdemeanor
codified as 7203 on the ground that the former requires commission of an
act while the latter punishes only an omission. 412 U. S. at 359.
Similarly, as we construe §7205, there is no need for the government to
prove in a prosecution for misdemeanor under that section effective
deception as would be necessary for prosecution of the felony under §7201.
24
See H. R. Rep. No. 401, 78th Cong., 1st Sess. 1-4 (1943); S. Rep. No.
221, 78th Cong. 1st Sess. 1-2 (1943).
25
Section 31.3401(e)-1(a) provides:
The
term "number of withholding exemptions claimed" means the
number of withholding exemptions claimed in a withholding exemption
certificate under section 3402(f) or in effect under section 1622(h) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1939. If no such certificate is in
effect, the number of withholding exemptions claimed shall be considered
to be zero.
(Emphasis
added.)
26
Cf. Bryan v. United States [50-1 USTC ¶9140], 338 U. S. 552
(1950), with Sapir v. United States, 348 U. S. 373, 374 (1955)
(Douglas J., concurring) and Forman v. United States [60-1 USTC
¶9287], 361 U. S. 416 (1960). See United States v. Musquiz, 445
F. 2d 963 (5th Cir. 1971), where Judge Thornberry suggested that an
appellate court is without power to order a new trial in the absence of
defendant's motion for such in the lower court. 445 F. 2d at 963. Accord,
C. Wright and A. Miller, 2 Federal Practice and Procedure: Criminal
§470 at 272 (1969). We need not decide whether this view of Forman
and Sapir is correct in view of the fact that we deem dismissal
of the indictment rather than retrial to be the proper course in this
instance.
27
See A. J. Muste [Dec. 24,708], 35 T. C. 913 (1961).
28
But see Bridges v. California, 314 U. S. 252 (1941).
29
We put to one side Comstock v. United States, 419 F. 2d 1128 (9th
Cir. 1969), because the defendant in that case not only refused to rise
but when the marshal took him by the arm to lead him to the bench he
went limp and prostrated himself on the floor. 419 F. 2d at 1131.
Unquestionably such unconventional behavior and the resultant necessity
to remove him from the courtroom constituted misbehavior obstructing the
administration of justice.
30
What the court thought of a contempt citation for refusal to stand is
revealed more by what it did than what it said the 30-day sentence was
reduced to 4 hours actually served.
31
Little, the defendant in a criminal trial, represented himself, and
following the close of the evidence he stated "that the court was
biased and had prejudged the case and that petitioner was a political
prisoner." 404 U. S. at 554. In concluding that this behavior did
not constitute grounds for criminal contempt, the Supreme Court applied
the "clear and present danger" rationale of earlier cases
involving contempt convictions for publications and other forms of
speech made outside the presence of the court. See Bridges v.
California, 314 U. S. 252, 262-63 (1941); Craig v. Harney,
331 U. S. 367, 376 (1946); Wood v. Georgia, 370 U. S. 375, 384-85
(1962). The phrasing was from Craig:
"The
vehemence of the language used is not alone the measure of the power to
punish for contempt. The fires which it kindles must constitute an
imminent, not merely a likely, threat to the administration of justice.
The danger must not be remote or even probable; it must immediately
imperil . . .." Craig v. Harney, 331 U. S. 367, 376 (1947).
404
U. S. at 555.
32
See, e.g., Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School
District, 393 U. S. 503 (1969); Brown v. Louisiana, 383 U. S.
131 (1966); Street v. New York, 394 U. S. 576 (1969); Frain v.
Baron, 307 F. Supp. 27 (E. D. N. Y. 1969).
33
Justice Jackson added:
"The
State announces rank, function, and authority through crowns and maces,
uniforms and black robes; the church speaks through the Cross, the
Crucifix, the altar and shrine, and clerical raiment. Symbols of State
often convey political ideas just as religious symbols come to convey
theological ones. Associated with many of these symbols are appropriate
gestures of acceptance or respect: a salute, a bowed or bared head, a
bended knee."
319
U. S. at 632.
[Dissenting Opinion]
WIDENER,
Circuit Judge:
I
must respectfully dissent.
In
its arrival at the discharge of the defendants in this case, the
majority flies in the face of precedent, undermines statutory law
required for the administration of a voluntary tax system, and in its
reversal of the contempt charges, impairs the administration of justice.
[Tax
Issue]
Although
the reversal of the tax conviction is thinly veiled in the guise of an
improper definition of "false or fraudulent," it is in fact
nothing more nor less than a ruling that a Vietnam War protester may not
be required to be punished for a willful pefusal to pay withholding
taxes on account of a political belief. The real extent of the ruling is
revealed by the dismissal of the indictment, rather than ordering a new
trial under proper instructions, because says the majority, "A
claim of '3 billion,' on the other hand, could deceive no one. It is
purely symbolic, the attached letter aside."
The
statute of which Lyle Snider was convicted, 26 U. S. C. §7205, creates
merely a misdemeanor, and straining to give it other than its literal
meaning in this case is doing a distinct disservice to the purpose for
which the statute was enacted: to enforce the requirement of payment of
withholding taxes in the United States. See United States v. Bishop
[73-1 USTC ¶9459], 412 U. S. 346, 359 (1973).
As
has been noted from time to time by the courts and as a matter of
general knowledge, our system of collecting revenue is largely
voluntary, and a statute making the willful refusal to abide by the
voluntary collection system a misdemeanor certainly is within the power
of Congress. As Bishop notes, §7205 is merely one of a series of
statutes providing penalities suitable to the varying degrees of
delinquency under the income tax laws, p. 359. The suggestion of the
majority that the taxing system of the United States is not voluntary by
its taking into account in its reasoning the power of the IRS to treat
Snider's claim of exemption as "constituting no information,"
and its suggestion that adequate civil remdies were available for the
collection of the tax, flies in the face of the words of Mr. Chief
Justice Warren, in Flora v. United States [60-1 USTC ¶9347], 362
U. S. 145, 176 (1960): "Our system of taxation is based upon
voluntary assessment and payment, not upon distraint."
The
statement in the opinion of the majority that the case was tried on the
theory that "the government need only prove that Snider's claim was
untrue and was relieved of any obligation to show that the statement was
deceptive or that it was made with an intention to deceive," is
refuted by the record, for the district judge, I contend properly,
instructed the jury:
"A
statement, including a statement in a claim or document, is 'false' if
it was untrue when made, and was then known to be untrue by the person
making it, or causing it to be made.
"A
statement, or claim, or document is 'fraudulent' if it was falsely made,
or caused to be made, with the intent to deceive."
The
first place to go for the construction of a statute would seem to be to
the statute itself." . . . [T]he other omission which the statute
denounces in the same sentence . . . aids in ascertaining the meaning as
respects the offense here charged." United States v. Murdock
[3 USTC ¶1194], 290 U. S. 389, 395 (1933). 26 U. S. C. §7205 provides,
in the same sentence, following the clause concerning the supplying of
false or fraudulent information: "or who willfully fails to supply
information thereunder which would require an increase in the tax to be
withheld."
This
last quoted clause of the statute, which has been given no weight by the
majority in its opinion, itself states the proper construction.
The
Ninth Circuit, in United States v. Smith, 487 F. 2d 329, 330
(1973), a case on facts which are indistinguishable from those here, has
articulated the proper rule to apply in this case which is consistent
with that part of §7205 just quoted above:
"In
a misdemeanor prosecution, however, the government need not prove fraud,
loss of revenue, or reliance by the government. The offense is made out
when a person required by law to complete and file a W-4 intentionally
uses the form to supply false information. [Citation omitted] "Our
system of self-assessment and concurrent payment of taxes as income is
earned cannot survive if every taxpayer is permitted to formulate his
own rules. Misdemeanor penalties were provided by Congress with the
knowledge that for certain types of forbidden behavior, even though
criminal conduct is not present, a mild deterrent and the certainty of
punishment are vital to the system. The defendants are free to express
their political discontent in other ways. When they elected to defy the
tax laws, they assumed the burden of the penalites provided by those
laws."
In
arriving at the same result, the Third Circuit, in United States v.
Malinowski [73-1 USTC ¶9199], 472 F. 2d 850, 857 (1973),
specifically rejected the symbolic speech argument adopted by the
majority here:
"Thus
posited, appellant's First Amendment argument is but a suggestion that a
member of society can be absolved of the responsibility for obeying a
given law of the community, state, or nation if he can prove a sincere,
abiding, and good faith objection to the direct or indirect object of
that law. Such a position represents a feeble effort to emasculate basic
principles of civil disobedience, and, simply stated, is invalid. Here,
the actor wants the best of both worlds; to disobey, yet to be absolved
of punishment for disobedience."
Indeed,
this circuit, in United States v. Moylan, 417 F. 2d 1002, 1008
(1969), in an opinion by Judge Sobeloff, has likewise rejected the
proposition that moral disapproval of a policy of the United States is
legal justification for a breach of a statute:
"Among
philosophers and religionists throughout the ages there has been an
incessant stream of discussion as to when, if at all, civil
disobedience, whether by passive refusal to obey the law or by its
active breach, is morally justified. However, they have been in general
agreement that while in restricted circumstances a morally motivated act
contrary to law may be ethically justified, the action must be
non-violent and the actor must accept the penalty for his action. In
other words, it is commonly conceded that the exercise of a moral
judgment based upon individual standards does not carry with it legal
justification or immunity from punishment for breach of the law."
The
dismissal of the charge instead of reversing for a new trial indicates
beyond doubt that the majority has rejected the Moylan reasoning
and established the precedent that political beliefs furnish sufficient
legal justification not only for committing crime but also for not
paying taxes. To neither of these propositions may I concur.
Although
thousands of perfectly well intentioned persons doubtless believe with
all sincerity that the Second Amendment's protection of the right to
bear arms is violated by the Gun Law, e.g., 18 U. S. C. Appendix 1201,
et seq., such a contention would be frivolous as a factual, as
contrasted to a legal, defense to a charge of its violation, and the
defense here that the defendant did not have to comply with the Internal
Revenue statutes is no less lacking in merit. A detailing of other
examples which come to mind would add nothing to the thought, and it
will suffice to say that while a jury has the right to disregard the law
and discharge a defendant, a court may not. Sparf and Hansen v.
United States, 156 U. S. 51 (1895). Is the law to say that because
of a firmly held good faith belief about a political question any person
is to be excused as a matter of law of a violation of statute? I think
not.
The
majority, then, as opposed to the jury, gives no credence to Snider's
own admission on the witness stand as to what he was doing:
"Again
I didn't feel, nor did my wife, that we could say that we were doing all
we could to maintain a consistent witness for peace and opposition to
war if we did not file--if we continued to pay our taxes. In other
words, we either had to say, 'Well, no, I'm not doing all I could,' or
we had to say, 'No, I can't pay my taxes'."
[Contempt]
I
submit the majority's reversal of the contempt convictions of the
Sniders also does not rest on either sound precedent or policy.
The
majority holds that a failure to stand in the courtroom after a
direction by the bailiff, the marshal, and by the presiding judge may
not subject the person failing to stand to contempt of court for it is
"not misbehavior within the meaning of 18 USC §401 and does not
constitute criminal contempt of the court." The majority reasons
"The rising requirement seems to us not essential to the
functioning of the court; as such, the failure to rise does not
constitute a material obstruction. If the failure to rise distracts
others, provokes a reaction on their part, or even causes 'a failure to
become silent or focus attention on the business before the court' . . .
we think the fault may better be resolved by compelling silence and
attention rather than by coercing a gesture of respect." I
particularly note the majority states it does not hold that the failure
of the Sniders to stand is excused on religious grounds as the
defendants themselves claimed.
During
the two-day trial, Snider failed to stand after being admonished by the
bailiff, the marshal, or the court, any or all of them, on 16 separate
occasions. His wife was similarly admonished on one occasion. The
situation was quite different from that normally encountered in criminal
trials. The trial attracted much local interest, and the interior of the
courtroom was packed, while crowds of people milled about the
courthouse, and Snider's supporters outside passed out leaflets
extolling his virtues to spectators and passersby. The finding of the
majority that the Sniders did not make the trial a forum for the
expression of their political or religious beliefs is contradicted in
the record. The district court noted that a leaflet, entitled
"Snider's War Tax Resistance Result of a Strong Faith in God,"
had been taken from a member of another jury panel, and that Snider's
supporters had "clogged the corridors, sat down on the floors, sat
around in a circle right outside the jury room and right outside the
main entrances to this courtroom. . . ." Snider, his wife, and
seven spectators remained seated when the court took its initial recess
on the first day of trial. Snider was then counseled as to the purpose
of the rule and advised that it was a disruptive, distracting factor for
him to disobey the order of the bailiff and the subsequent order of the
court to stand. Snider was told that he could at any tiem purge himself
of the contempt, but he chose not to.
In
this setting, at the conclusion of the trial, the district judge heard
the contempt charges against Mr. and Mrs. Snider and summarized his
findings as follows:
"The
transcript which will be attached hereto and made a part hereof reflects
that the Court warned the defendant, Lyle B. Snider, that his actions
constituted direct contempt, and initially advised the defendant that it
was a disruptive, distracting factor for the defendant to disobey the
order of the bailiff and the subsequent order of the Court to stand.
Also, at the close of the first day of the trial, the Court admonished
the defendant that each contemptuous act was a separate offense, and
also that it was a continuing offense, and that the defendant could at
any time purge himself of the contempt.
"The
Court finds as a fact that the conduct of Lyle B. Snider heretofore set
forth was disrespectful and contemptuous to the Court, and was
calculated to disrupt the order and decorum of the Court. Forcing the
extra burden on the Court of interrupting the trial to repeatedly
admonish and warn the defendant about his disruptive and distracting
behavior served to obstruct the administration of justice while the
Court was in actual session. The Court, therefore, finds that such
conduct constitutes criminal contempt committed in the actual presence
of the Court.
*
* *
"Attached
hereto and made a part of this order will be the transcript of the
pertinent parts of the proceedings, reflecting the imposition of the
extra burden on the Court of explaining the traditions of the Court and
personally ordering her compliance with the rules of the Court.
"The
Court finds as a fact that the conduct of Sue T. Snider heretofore set
forth was disrespectful and contemptuous to the Court, and was
calculated to disrupt the order and decorum of the Court. By her
actions, which necessitated explanation of, and personal requests by the
Court for compliance with, the rules of the Court, Mrs. Snider served to
obstruct the administration of justice while the Court was in actual
session. The Court therefore finds that such conduct constitutes
criminal contempt committed in the actual presence of the Court."
Yet,
the majority has ignored these findings and has declined to say that the
district court abused its discretion, but, instead, holds that
discretion to punish the Sniders' conduct never did exist in the first
instance, apparently because it disagrees with the findings of fact of
the district judge that the behavior of the Sniders was disrupting and
distracting and obstructed the administration of justice.
I
am in disagreement with the majority as it holds that the custom from
time beyond memory of rising upon the opening of each session of the
court may not be punished by contempt, and do not agree with the dictum
that such conduct may be excused on the ground either of symbolic speech
or of religious preference. Such a ruling simply adds another crack in
Mr. Jefferson's wall. "Neither a state nor the federal government
can, openly or secretly, participate in the affairs of any religious
organizations or groups and vice versa. In the words of
Jefferson, the clause against establishment of religion by law was
intended to erect 'a wall of separation between church and state'."
Everson v. Board of Education, 330 U. S. 1, 16 (1947). I am of
opinion the Sniders had no more business regulating affairs in the
courtroom than the judge would have had regulating affairs in the
meeting house.
Directing
the dismissal of the contempt charge places this circuit in conflict on
the merits with two others. See In re Chase, 468 F. 2d 128 (7th
Cir. 1972); United States v. Malone, 412 F. 2d 848 (7th Cir.
1969); and Comstock v. United States, 419 F. 2d 1128 (9th Cir.
1969). The opinion is also in conflict with Chase as to its
procedural dictum as it is with Sacher, supra. Each of those
cases involved summary contempt proceedings under FRCrP 42 where
sentencing on the contempt charge was delayed until after the immediate
proceedings, just as we find it here, and I disagree with the dictum of
the majority that full notice and hearing was required. The conduct of
the Sniders took place in the presence of the court and jury during the
actual trial, and the implied requirement of the majority that the judge
must either punish the offenders on the spot, and perhaps declare a
mistrial, see Sacher, p. 10, or forfeit his power to summarily
punish for contempt, I conceive to be an impermissible hamstringing of
the inherent power of any court to maintain orderly proceedings. 1
Justice is badly served by encouraging a flagrant and deliberate
disregard of the lawful order of a judge in his own courtroom. Each
person, whether he be litigant, lawyer or spectator, so long as he is in
a courtroom, may be required to yield the expression of so much of his
beliefs as not to interfere with the administration of justice. It is
not possible in this land of ordered liberty for all of the thousand
beliefs to be expressed on each occasion. The expression by word or deed
of the private convictions of the Sniders, although they may be deeply
held, should yield, during the trial, to the imperative need of the
community in having an established forum in which controversies between
man and man and citizen and sovereign may be decided in a calm,
detached, neutral atmosphere.
The
district judge to his everlasting credit was a model of decorum,
dignity, and propriety throughout what could only have been a most
unsettling experience. He endured the repeated disregard of his orders
with the patience of Job. I can find no reason in law, fact, or policy
for reversing the judgments of contempt.
I
may not, as my brothers do, cast aside countless generations of
tradition and establish the rule in this circuit that the opening of
court need not be accompanied by the rising of those in attendance.
"Everyone rise," of course, is now removed from the lexicon of
the bailiff, for no order of any court should be made unless it is to be
obeyed. Such could only lead to a further degradation of the courts.
I
find one small solace in the opinion. Since it is not based upon federal
constitutional grounds, it need have no effect upon the various States
in the Circuit.
It
follows that I would affirm the convictions, both as to the tax and
contempt charges.
1
"We hold that Rule 42 allows the trial judge, upon the occurrence
in his presence of a contempt, immediately and summarily to punish it,
if, in his opinion, delay will prejudice the trial. We hold, on the
other hand, that if he believes the exigencies of the trial require that
he defer judgment until its completion he may do so without
extinguishing his power." Sacher v. United States, 343 US 1,
11 (1952).
[74-2
USTC ¶9620]United States of America, Appellee v. Lyle B. Snider,
Appellant United States of America, Appellee v. Lyle B. Snider and Sue
T. Snider, Appellants
(CA-4),
U. S. Court of Appeals, 4th Circuit, Nos. 73-1938, 73-1939, 502 F2d 645,
7/19/74
, Denying rehearing en banc of, 74-2 USTC ¶9548
[Code Sec. 7205 and 18 U. S. C. §401]
Crimes: False withholding information: False or fraudulent:
Contempt.--The judges of the Fourth Circuit denied a suggestion of
one judge that all of them rehear a decision of a three-judge panel that
reversed the conviction of a Quaker on a charge of supplying false
withholding information and that reversed contempt convictions against
the Quaker and his wife. Three judges voted for such a rehearing.
William
L. Osteen, United States Attorney, Greensboro, N. C., for appellee.
Karla W. Simon, Richard D. Hobbet, Hobbet & Simon, Greensboro, N.
C., Norman B. Smith, Smith & Carrington, Patterson, Follin &
Curtis, 704 Southeastern Bldg., Greensboro, N. C., for appellants.
Before
WINTER, CRAVEN and WIDENER, Circuit Judges.
Order
The
court having been polled on the suggestion of one member for rehearing en
banc and a majority of the active members voting against it, the
suggestion fails. Judge Russell and Judge Field join Judge Widener in
voting for rehearing en banc for the reasons stated in Judge
Widener's dissenting opinion and for the reasons advanced by Judge Field
in the attached separate statement.
[Dissenting
Opinion]
FIELD,
Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I
am in wholehearted agreement with the views expressed by Judge Widener
in his able and well reasoned dissenting opinion. Despite the disclaimer
of the majority, it occurs to me that its approach to this case would,
in effect, "reduce the withholding system 'to a shambles'."
Today it is a Quaker with firm convictions about the Vietnam conflict
who disregards the tax laws of the Nation to dramatize his position.
Tomorrow it may be one who elects to follow such a course for any one of
a variety of ideological or political beliefs. As stated by Judge
Aldisert in United States v. Malinowski [73-1 USTC ¶9199], 472
F. 2d 750, 857 (3 Cir. 1973), which the majority is at some pains to
distinguish or, in the alternative, declines to follow, Snider
"wants the best of both worlds; to disobey, yet to be absolved of
punishment for disobedience." Unfortunately, the majority grants
him just such a Utopian choice.
With
respect to the reversal of the contempt charges, I can add little to the
observations of Judge Widener except to say that this is merely one more
regrettable step which undercuts the authority of the already
beleaguered district judges who are charged with the orderly
administration of justice in the trial arena and, unlike us, do not live
in the sterile and sometimes unrealistic environment of the appellate
ivory tower.
I
would grant rehearing and rectify this unfortunate decision.
[79-1
USTC ¶9227]United States of America, Appellee v. Bushnell Best,
Defendant-Appellant
(CA-2),
U. S. Court of Appeals, 2nd Circuit, 78-1320,
12/27/78
, Affirming unreported District Court decision
[Code Sec. 7205]
Crimes: False information: Withholding exemption certificates:
Conviction.--A taxpayer's conviction for wilfully supplying false
information on withholding exemption certificates was affirmed. The
court rejected his contention that his statement that he anticipated no
income tax liability was not false because of the defects in the
American monetary system. No evidence of fraud was necessary where the
taxpayer had wilfully supplied false information.
Robert
B. Fiske, Jr., United States Attorney, New York, N. Y. 10007, for
appellant. Busnell Best, P. O. Box 524, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 12602, for
defendant-appellant.
Before
FEINBERG, MULLIGAN, GURFEIN, Circuit Judges.
This
cause came on to be heard on the transcript of record from the United
States District Court for the -- Southern -- District of New York --,
and was argued by appellant pro se and by counsel for appellee.
ON
CONSIDERATION WHEREOF, it is now hereby ordered, adjudged, and decreed
that the--judgment--of said District Court be and it hereby is AFFIRMED.
This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction entered in the United
States District Court for the Southern District of New York following a
jury trial before Judge Robert L. Carter on two counts of willfully
supplying false information on withholding tax exemption certificates in
violation of 26 U. S. C. §7205 and one count of failure to appear
before the United States District Court in violation of 18 U. S. C. §3150.
Appellant's
main contention with respect to the false information charges is that
due to defects in the American monetary system, it was not false for him
to say that he anticipated no income tax liability. We reject the
contention for the same reasons stated by the Eighth Circuit in United
States v. Rifen, 577 F. 2d 1111 (8th Cir. 1978). Appellant also argues
that there was no evidence of fraud. However, 26 U. S. C. §7205
requires that the information willfully supplied be either "false
or fraudulent," not both. Thus, no showing of fraud was necessary. United
States v. Smith [74-1 USTC ¶9120], 487 F. 2d 329 (9th Cir. 1973),
cert. denied, 416 U. S. 989 (1974).
Appellant
makes numerous other arguments. We have examined them all, and find them
to be without merit. Therefore, we affirm the judgment of conviction.