United States v. DiRico ( 1995 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 94-1471

    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    FRANCIS DIRICO,

    Defendant - Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Douglas P. Woodlock, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Cyr, Circuit Judge, _____________
    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
    and McAuliffe,* District Judge. ______________

    _____________________

    John A. MacFadyen, with whom Harold C. Arcaro, Jr., was on _________________ ______________________
    brief for appellant.
    Rita G. Calvin, Attorney, Tax Division, U.S. Department of ______________
    Justice, with whom Loretta Argrett, Assistant Attorney General, _______________
    Donald K. Stern, U.S. Attorney, Robert E. Lindsay and Alan ________________ ___________________ ____
    Hechtkopf, Attorneys, Tax Division, U.S. Department of Justice, _________
    were on brief for appellee.



    ____________________

    March 11, 1996
    ____________________

    ____________________

    * Of the District of New Hampshire, sitting by designation.












    McAULIFFE, District Judge. Appellant Francis DiRico McAULIFFE, District Judge. ______________

    ("DiRico") challenges a number of rulings made by the district

    court during his criminal trial on charges of false subscription

    to a tax return, as well as the sentence imposed. We limit our

    discussion to the one issue raised by DiRico that has merit.

    While this court was considering the multiple issues

    raised on appeal, the United States Supreme Court issued its

    opinion in United States v. Gaudin, 115 S. Ct. 2310 (1995). That _____________ ______

    decision clarified a point of law relevant to this case.

    Accordingly, the government suggested that the parties file

    supplemental briefs addressing DiRico's claim that when the trial

    judge determined "materiality" under 26 U.S.C. 7206(1) as a

    matter of law, he impermissibly directed the jury's guilty

    verdict, at least with regard to that essential element of the

    crime of conviction.

    The parties were directed to file supplemental briefs

    on that issue by September 15, 1995. Having now considered those

    briefs and the Supreme Court's opinion in United States v. ______________

    Gaudin, 115 S. Ct. 2310 (1995), we find that the challenged ______

    instruction on materiality, although appropriate when given, see, ___

    e.g., United States v. Romanow, 509 F.2d 26, 28 (1st Cir. 1975), ____ _____________ _______

    nevertheless constitutes reversible error under Gaudin, which ______

    decision is applicable to this case. Accordingly, we reverse and

    remand.






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    BACKGROUND BACKGROUND __________

    I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY. I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY.

    On March 30, 1993, a federal grand jury returned a

    three-count indictment against DiRico. Counts One and Two

    charged him with willfully attempting to evade his personal

    income tax liability for tax years 1986 and 1987, in violation of

    26 U.S.C. 7201. Count Three charged him with willfully making

    and subscribing a false corporate tax return for Industrial

    Electric and Electronics, Inc., for the fiscal year ending June

    30, 1987, in violation of 26 U.S.C. 7206(1). After a thirteen-

    day trial, the jury acquitted DiRico on Counts One and Two, but

    convicted him on Count Three.

    II. PERTINENT FACTS. II. PERTINENT FACTS.

    During the relevant tax years, DiRico was president and

    sole shareholder of Industrial Electric and Electronics, Inc.

    ("IE&E"), a cellular communications company. IE&E's employees

    performed routine bookkeeping and accounting functions for the

    company, and Warren Lynch served as the company's in-house

    accountant. IE&E also retained an outside accounting firm to

    review its books and prepare corporate tax returns.

    IE&E managed its financial affairs with the assistance

    of a computer-based accounting system. Each IE&E customer was

    assigned an account number, and each customer's payment was

    logged into the computer system as a credit against the numbered

    account. Most customer account numbers began with the prefix "1"




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    or "2," but several were assigned the prefix "5." These so-

    called "5" accounts were the focus of the criminal prosecution.

    Payments received on the "1" and "2" accounts were

    deposited in an IE&E corporate account at Bank of New England.

    Payments on the "5" accounts, however, were given to DiRico, who

    deposited them at the Abington Savings Bank, where he maintained

    several personal accounts. DiRico converted most of the "5"

    account receipts into cash, money orders, and cashier's checks,

    thereby frustrating any effort to trace the disposition of those

    funds.

    At the end of each month, IE&E employees generated

    reports related to cash flow, accounts receivable, and payments

    received. Those reports were secured in bound volumes and placed

    into storage. Reports related to the "5" accounts were stored

    separately. And, although receipts from all customers, including

    payments to the "5" accounts, were entered into the computer

    system, neither Lynch (who did not know how to operate the

    computer system) nor the outside accountants were aware of the

    existence of the "5" accounts. So, when the outside accountants

    prepared the corporate tax return for the fiscal year ending June

    1987, they did not include monies received from the "5" accounts

    in calculating corporate gross income.

    At trial, DiRico admitted that he knew the accountants

    were unaware of the "5" account receipts. He also conceded that

    he under-reported gross receipts on IE&E's 1987 corporate tax

    return. However, he claimed that despite under-stating its gross


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    receipts, the company actually paid the proper amount of

    corporate tax and, therefore, the return was "correct." He also

    argued that the false information on the 1987 corporate tax

    return was not "material" so long as IE&E actually paid the

    proper amount of federal tax due.

    With regard to the "materiality" element of the false

    subscription charge, the trial judge followed then-existing

    practice and gave the following instruction:


    It also must be a return that's false as
    to a material matter. That is, it was
    untrue when made and then known by the
    defendant to be untrue when he was making
    it. Materiality is a question largely
    for the Court to determine. The question
    of whether or not it is material is one
    on which I will instruct you. And I will
    instruct you that the amount of the gross
    receipts or, more accurately here because
    we deal with an accrual basis taxpayer,
    the sales reported on a corporate return
    is a material matter within the meaning
    of this particular statute.


    (Trial Transcript, volume 14 at 104.) DiRico objected to the

    court's instruction in a timely fashion.

    DISCUSSION DISCUSSION __________

    The Supreme Court's recent opinion in United States v. _____________

    Gaudin, supra, makes it clear that when "materiality" is an ______ _____

    element of a charged crime and takes on a factual aspect, the

    jury must decide whether that element has been proved beyond a

    reasonable doubt. Plainly, an instruction that removes from the

    jury's consideration one of the essential factual elements of a

    crime charged cannot stand. Jury instructions cannot operate to

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    deprive a criminal defendant of his or her constitutional "right

    to have a jury determine, beyond a reasonable doubt, his guilt of

    every element of the crime with which he is charged." Gaudin, ______

    115 S. Ct. at 2320.

    In Gaudin, the defendant was charged with making ______

    material false statements on Department of Housing and Urban

    Development ("HUD") loan documents in violation of 18 U.S.C.

    1001. The trial court instructed the jury that the government

    was required to prove that the alleged false statements were

    material to the activities and decisions of HUD, and further

    instructed the jury that the "issue of materiality . . . is not

    submitted to you for your decision but rather is a matter for the

    decision of the court. You are instructed that the statements

    charged in the indictment are material statements." Id. at 2313. ___

    The jury convicted the defendant, but the Court of Appeals for

    the Ninth Circuit reversed, reasoning that taking the question of

    materiality from the jury violated rights guaranteed to the

    defendant by the Fifth and Sixth Amendments to the Constitution.

    The Supreme Court subsequently agreed, holding that:


    The Constitution gives a criminal
    defendant the right to demand that a jury
    find him guilty of all the elements of
    the crime with which he is charged; one
    of the elements in the present case is
    materiality; respondent therefore had a
    right to have the jury decide
    materiality.


    Id. at 2314. ___



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    In the context of this appeal, we discern no obvious or

    substantive distinction between the "materiality" element of 18

    U.S.C. 1001 and the "materiality" element of the crime with

    which DiRico was charged, i.e., false subscription to a tax ____

    return in violation of 26 U.S.C. 7206(1). See, e.g., Knapp v. ___ ____ _____

    United States, 116 S. Ct. 666 (1995) (remanding case for ______________

    reconsideration of defendant's conviction under 26 U.S.C.

    7206(1) in light of Gaudin); Waldron v. United States, 116 S. ______ _______ ______________

    Ct. 333 (1995) (remanding case for reconsideration of defendant's

    conviction under 18 U.S.C. 1014 (false statements to a

    federally insured bank) in light of Gaudin). ______

    The government concedes materiality is an essential

    element of the crime of false subscription. It argues, however,

    that as a matter of law "gross receipts (sales) are a material ___________________

    matter in the computation of income from a business and the

    amount of tax due on that income." (Supplemental Brief for the

    Appellee, at 11.) Accordingly, the government contends that,

    even in the wake of United States v. Gaudin, a trial judge may _____________ ______

    properly instruct a jury that statements on a tax return

    regarding gross receipts are "material" as a matter of law.

    Given the facts of this particular case, we are constrained to

    disagree.

    DiRico's defense was straightforward: he argued that

    if deductible expenses equaled or exceeded gross receipts, any

    statement of gross receipts could not be material because that

    information could have had no tangible effect on the amount of


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    tax due --- proper calculation of which being the very purpose of

    completing and filing the return in the first place. The

    government responds persuasively by arguing that an accurate

    statement of gross receipts is essential to a correct computation

    of taxable income (as distinguished from simply the taxes due and

    payable). As the government contends, it need not prove an

    actual tax deficiency in any false subscription case in order to ___

    demonstrate that a taxpayer's false statement was "material."

    The government need only prove to the jury, beyond a reasonable

    doubt, that the alleged false statement at issue could have

    influenced or affected the IRS in carrying out the functions

    committed to it by law. United States v. Romanow, 509 F.2d at ______________ _______

    28.1

    It may well be a straightforward matter in this and

    most other cases for the government to produce sufficient

    evidence, possibly through the testimony of a representative of

    the IRS, to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that an incorrect

    gross receipts or taxable income entry has the potential to

    affect a legitimate function of the IRS. Nevertheless,

    "materiality" is both an essential element of the crime of false

    subscription, and a mixed question of law and fact. Accordingly,
    ____________________

    1 In this case, for example, the government might meet its
    burden by satisfying the jury that defendant's false statements
    had "the potential for hindering the IRS's efforts to monitor and
    verify [defendant's] tax liability." United States v. Greenberg, _____________ _________
    735 F.2d 29, 31-32 (2d Cir. 1984); see also United States v. _________ ______________
    Taylor, 574 F.2d 232, 235 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 893 ______ ____________
    (1978); United States v. Fawaz, 881 F.2d 259, 263-64 (6th Cir. ______________ _____
    1989); United States v. DiVarco, 484 F.2d 670, 673 (7th Cir. _____________ _______
    1973), cert. denied, 415 U.S. 916 (1974). ____________

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    the government must prove and the jury (not the court) must

    ultimately find an alleged false statement to be material beyond

    a reasonable doubt in order to convict. In general, to be

    material, "the statement must have a natural tendency to

    influence, or [be] capable of influencing, the decision of the

    decisionmaking body to which it was addressed. " Gaudin, 115 S. ______

    Ct. at 2313 (quoting Kungys v. United States, 485 U.S. 759, 770 ______ ______________

    (1988)). Determining whether a particular statement is

    "material" requires the jury to apply the legal definition of

    materiality to the particular facts of a given case. Id. at ___

    2314.

    In light of the Supreme Court's recent opinion in

    Gaudin, we conclude that in the context of a prosecution for ______

    false subscription under 26 U.S.C. 7206(1), "materiality,"

    being an element of the offense and a mixed question of law and

    fact, is a matter for the jury to decide. While the trial judge

    must properly instruct the jury on the legal definition of

    materiality, only the jury can decide whether the facts proved at

    trial meet that legal standard. That the materiality of a

    statement might appear to be self-evident, or the evidence

    tending to establish that element might seem overwhelming, does

    not empower the trial court to remove consideration of that

    element from the jury. Because the "materiality" issue in this

    particular case was not conceded by the defendant, and in fact

    defendant asked that it be submitted to the jury (before the

    Gaudin decision issued) the jury should have decided the matter. ______


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    The government's argument that the faulty jury

    instruction amounted to harmless error is appealing, but we are

    persuaded that in light of the fact that the trial court's

    instruction was intended to and did effectively direct a finding

    of "materiality," the only proper disposition is to remand.

    Our analysis of this issue begins with the Supreme

    Court's opinion in Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 18 (1967), _______ __________

    where the Court recognized that some constitutional errors in the

    course of a criminal trial may be harmless and, therefore, do not

    require reversal of a conviction. The Court has since explained

    the Chapman harmless error analysis as follows: _______


    Consistent with the jury-trial guarantee,
    the question [Chapman] instructs the _______
    reviewing court to consider is not what
    effect the constitutional error might
    generally be expected to have upon a
    reasonable jury, but rather what effect
    it had upon the guilty verdict in the
    case at hand. . . . The inquiry, in other
    words, is not whether, in a trial that
    occurred without the error, a guilty
    verdict would surely have been rendered,
    but whether the guilty verdict in this ____
    trial was surely unattributable to the
    error.


    Sullivan v. Louisiana, 113 S. Ct. 2078, 2081 (1993) (citations ________ _________

    omitted). While most constitutional errors have been held

    amenable to the Chapman harmless error analysis, others are of _______

    such a fundamental nature that they will always invalidate a

    conviction. Accordingly, "[t]he question in the present case is

    to which category the present error belongs." Id. ___



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    The Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment

    guarantees that no one shall be convicted of a criminal offense

    "except upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact

    necessary to constitute the crime with which he is charged." In __

    re Winship, 397 U.S. 358, 364 (1970). That constitutional ___________

    guarantee is obviously interrelated with the defendant's Sixth

    Amendment right to trial by jury:


    The Sixth Amendment provides that "[i]n
    all criminal prosecutions, the accused
    shall enjoy the right to a speedy and
    public trial, by an impartial jury." . .
    . The right includes, of course, as its
    most important element, the right to have
    the jury, rather than the judge, reach
    the requisite finding of "guilty." Thus,
    although a judge may direct a verdict for
    the defendant if the evidence is legally
    insufficient to establish guilt, he may
    not direct a verdict for the State, no
    matter how overwhelming the evidence.


    Sullivan, 113 S. Ct. at 2080. In Sullivan the Court reasoned ________ ________

    that because the trial court erroneously defined "reasonable

    doubt" for the jury, the harmless error analysis articulated in

    Chapman was inapplicable: _______


    Since, for the reasons described above,
    there had been no jury verdict within the
    meaning of the Sixth Amendment, the
    entire premise of Chapman review is _______
    simply absent. There being no jury
    verdict of guilty-beyond-a-reasonable-
    doubt, the question whether the same ____
    verdict of guilty-beyond-a-reasonable-
    doubt would have been rendered absent the
    constitutional error is utterly
    meaningless. There is no object, so to ______
    speak, upon which harmless-error scrutiny
    can operate. The most an appellate court

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    can conclude is that a jury would surely ____________
    have found petitioner guilty beyond a ___________
    reasonable doubt -- not that the jury's
    actual finding of guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt would surely not have _______________________
    been different absent the constitutional ______________
    error. That is not enough. The Sixth
    Amendment requires more than appellate
    speculation about a hypothetical jury's
    action, or else directed verdicts for the
    State would be sustainable on appeal; it
    requires an actual jury finding of
    guilty.


    Id. at 2082 (citations omitted). So, where a jury has not ___

    rendered a verdict that addresses every essential element of the

    charged offense, and therefore has not rendered a verdict on the

    crime charged, the question of whether the same verdict would

    have been rendered absent the constitutional error is

    meaningless. Here, because the jury did not determine whether

    the government had proved, beyond a reasonable doubt, the

    existence of an essential factual element of the crime of false

    subscription (i.e., materiality), there was "no jury verdict ____

    within the meaning of the Sixth Amendment" and harmless error

    analysis is inapplicable. Id. at 2081-82. ___

    In light of our conclusion that, at least in this case,

    "materiality" was an essential factual element of the crime

    charged, the trial court's withdrawal of that issue from the jury

    constituted a "structural defect" in the trial process, Arizona _______

    v. Fulminante, 499 U.S. 279, 310 (1991), which requires reversal __________

    of DiRico's conviction. Simply stated, we cannot conclude on

    appeal that the government proved "beyond a reasonable doubt that

    the error complained of did not contribute to the verdict

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    obtained," since a verdict of guilt as to every essential element

    was never obtained. Chapman, 386 U.S. at 24. _______

    CONCLUSION CONCLUSION __________

    For the foregoing reasons, defendant's conviction is

    reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings not

    inconsistent with this opinion.










































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