DocketNumber: Docket No. 15131-90
Citation Numbers: 99 T.C. 370, 1992 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76, 99 T.C. No. 20
Judges: Colvin
Filed Date: 9/29/1992
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*76
To corroborate a cash hoard claim, Ps offered into evidence the results of polygraph tests which were administered to them unilaterally, without notice to respondent.
*370 Colvin,
This case is before us on petitioners' offer into evidence of results of polygraph tests and respondent's objection thereto. Both parties called expert witnesses relating to whether polygraphy is generally accepted by the relevant scientific community.
*371 Respondent determined petitioners had a $ 150,000 cash hoard as of December 31, 1985. Petitioners claim that the results of polygraph tests administered to each of them corroborate their claim that they had an $ 800,000 cash hoard.
In this opinion we decide whether the results of polygraph tests administered to petitioners without notice to respondent are admissible. We hold they are not. We will decide the remaining issues in the case by separate opinion.
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code for the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.
1.
Petitioners are husband and wife who resided in Birmingham, Michigan, when the petition was filed. Mr. Conti worked for Ford Motor Co. for over 48 years, retiring in 1985. Mrs. Conti is a high school graduate. She handled*78 the family finances, including banking. During the years in issue, petitioners bought, renovated, and sold real estate.
2.
Petitioners offered into evidence results of polygraph examinations in an attempt to corroborate their cash hoard claim. A polygraph examination measures the examinee's physiological reactions to questions. It measures respiration, perspiration, and heartbeat. The polygraph instrument has a pneumograph, which measures respiration, a galvanometer, which measures skin's resistance to electricity, and a cardiosphygmograph, which measures a combination of blood volume, blood pressure, and heart rate.
Respiration is recorded using two rubber tubes around the upper and lower body. Respiration is measured on both the upper and lower body because people breathe differently. Resistance to electricity in the skin is measured by placing electrodes on two finger tips and passing a small electrical *372 current through the fingers. Cardiovascular activity is measured by using a blood pressure cuff.
These measures are simultaneously recorded by pens on a moving paper chart. The examiner marks the chart to indicate when a question has*79 been asked, and when movements such as coughs occur. The respiratory, galvanic, and cardiovascular scores are combined with the three measures and weighted equally.
The polygraph examiner designs the questions based upon the relevant facts and the examinee's background and verbal skills.
Examiners in tests like the ones given to petitioners use three types of questions: irrelevant (e.g., name), control (relating to the subject of the examination, but not the key question), and relevant or critical questions (e.g., did you rob the store?). The polygraph examiner infers from the scores whether the examinee was deceptive or truthful, or whether the test is inconclusive.
Countermeasures can sometimes be employed by an examinee to affect the examinee's physiological responses to polygraph examination questions. Up to 25 percent of deceptive persons pass, and up to 50 percent of truthful persons fail. An honest subject is more likely to fail (a false positive) than a deceptive person is to pass (a false negative).
There is widespread use of polygraph examinations in and out of government.
3.
Without notifying respondent's counsel, petitioners' *80 counsel arranged for petitioners to take polygraph examinations. They were performed by Lawrence Wasser of Wasser Consulting Services, Inc., on August 6, 1990.
Mr. Wasser is a well-qualified polygraph examiner. He has extensive polygraph-related employment experience in and out of government and numerous leadership positions in national and State polygraphy associations.
Petitioners' counsel told Mr. Wasser about this case and gave him copies of petitioners' tax returns for 1985, 1986, and 1987, the notice of deficiency, and the petition.
Mr. Wasser used the zone comparison technique with control questions. He conducted preexamination interview discussions with petitioners, and then developed the control *373 and relevant questions. He discussed the topics of the control questions with petitioners.
Mr. Wasser concluded that the examinations showed both petitioners were not deceptive. After Mr. Wasser advised petitioners' counsel of his conclusion, petitioners' counsel told respondent's counsel that the examinations had been performed, and showed that petitioners were not being deceptive.
OPINION
To corroborate their cash hoard claim, petitioners offered into evidence the*81 results of polygraph examinations which were administered to them unilaterally, without prior notification to respondent. We hold that these polygraph examination results are inadmissible.
1.
If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise.
Thus, "Opinion testimony of an expert is admissible if and because it will assist the trier of fact to understand evidence that will determine a fact in issue."
This Court applies the rules of evidence applicable in trials without jury in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. Sec. 7453. These include the Federal Rules of Evidence.
In the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia a scientific test must be generally accepted in the particular field *374 in which it belongs to be admissible.
Just when a scientific principle or discovery crosses the line between the experimental and demonstrable stages is difficult to define. Somewhere in this twilight zone the evidential force of the principle must be recognized, and while courts will go a long way in admitting expert testimony deduced from a well-recognized*83 scientific principle or discovery, the thing from which the deduction is made must be sufficiently established to have gained general acceptance in the particular field in which it belongs. [
We disagree with petitioners' assertion that the standard enunciated in
We applied the
The court in
*85 *375 Among these are the distrust of the accuracy of results based upon a nexus between autonomic discharge and veracity, this skepticism being fueled by disagreement among experts in the field. Also, judges loathe the spector [sic] of trial by machine, wherein each man's sworn testimony may be put to the electronic test. Finally, there exists the apprehension that jurors will abdicate their responsibility for determining credibility, and rely instead upon the assessment of a machine.
The proponent must show that the techniques or procedures involved are "reliable and sufficiently accurate."
Deciding credibility of witnesses and weight of testimony is the province of the trial court. It is our task to decide the credibility of any lay or expert witness based upon objective facts, the reasonableness of the testimony, the consistency of the statements made by the witness, and, in some cases, the demeanor of the witness.
Petitioners assert that evidence of general acceptance in the appropriate scientific community may be found in a 1983 Gallup organization survey of a random sample of members of the Society*87 for Psychophysiological Research. Sixty percent of those responding to the survey believed polygraph testing is a useful diagnostic tool when considered with other available information. This poll does not prove general acceptance in the appropriate scientific community as required by
Petitioners argue that the widespread use of polygraph examinations by government agencies and business shows they are reliable. We disagree. We do not believe that wide-spread use of polygraph testing in business and government shows that polygraph testing enjoys general acceptance by the relevant scientific community. Instead, we believe there continues to be a bona fide debate in that community about polygraph accuracy. Therefore, we conclude that petitioners have not shown us that results of polygraph examinations *377 are sufficiently established to have gained general acceptance in the relevant scientific community.
Expert testimony must be relevant.
2.
Even if polygraph testing were generally accepted in the appropriate scientific community, the results*91 here would be inadmissible. That is because petitioners arranged unilaterally to take the polygraph tests without informing respondent. Mr. Wasser concluded the test showed petitioners' cash hoard claim was truthful. Petitioners then reported the results to respondent. While results of polygraph tests may be admissible by stipulation of the parties, admission of polygraph tests administered unilaterally are not admissible.
In
The lie detector*92 does not peer into the mind; it is a test of (relative) anxiety, and if the person taking the test has nothing to lose and everything to gain, he may not be anxious and his passing the test may prove nothing. Whatever the force of this doubt, it is readily allayed by agreeing to allow the government to put the test results, whatever they may be, into evidence if it wants; and a defendant who refuses to make such an agreement is in a poor position to challenge the district court's exercise of its discretion to refuse to admit the results.
Similarly, the court in
Finally, in
encourages discussion and eventual agreement with regard to not only the general subject of the reliability of polygraph testing but also more specific*93 subjects such as the qualifications required of the examiner, the designation of the examiner, the phrasing of the test questions, and the specification of the conditions under which the test is to be given.
We note that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has recently said that
We conclude that the results of the polygraph examinations of petitioners are not admissible. We need not decide whether the procedures used in the actual examinations of petitioners were reliable.
*379 Upon due consideration of the foregoing,
1. This Court has not previously considered the admissibility of polygraph examination results where taxpayers have attempted to show that they meet the criteria in
2. We do not reject the
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