DocketNumber: Docket No. 12076-78
Judges: Raum
Filed Date: 6/15/1981
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*113
Petitioners' persistent refusal to answer interrogatories or produce documents
*1027 OPINION
The Commissioner determined the following income tax deficiencies and additions to tax against each of the petitioners, husband and wife: Additions to tax, I.R.C. 1954 Year Deficiency Sec. 6651(a) Sec. 6653(a) Sec. 6654 1973 $ 971 $ 171.28 $ 48.55 $ 19.68 1974 1,424 268.66 71.20 31.68 1975 2,648 338.17 132.40 44.82 1976 892 80.50 44.60 0
Petitioners filed a single petition challenging the foregoing determinations.
*114 This case has been the subject of numerous motions, most of which were disposed of prior to May 18, 1981, when the case was calendared for trial in Los Angeles. Petitioners are tax protesters, and in the various materials filed by them they have not squarely addressed the Commissioner's determinations on the merits, but have raised a wide variety of objections based not only upon many provisions of our Constitution, but also upon the Bible, the
Two matters relating*115 to motions remained to be acted upon at the time of the May 18, 1981, calendar at Los Angeles. One, dated March 20, 1981, was a motion filed April 6, 1981, on behalf of petitioners, and asked for summary judgment in their favor. It was utterly without merit and will be denied.
The other matter grew out of respondent's motion, filed January 2, 1981, for an order compelling petitioners to respond to respondent's interrogatories and request for the production of documents; this motion was the subject of a hearing on March 20, 1981, in Los Angeles before Judge Nims of this Court. Petitioner Norman E. McCoy appeared on behalf of both petitioners. He persistently objected to answering the interrogatories or producing the requested documents, asserting his rights under the
Petitioners shall on or before April 9, 1981, answer the interrogatories served upon petitioners October 20, 1980 and produce the documents and things in respondent's request attached thereto, or show cause at the Trial Session of the Court scheduled to Commence at 10:00 a.m. on May 18, 1981, in Room 8541, Federal Building, 300 North Los Angeles Street, Los Angeles, California 90012, why sanctions should not be imposed.
*1029 At the calendar call on May 18, 1981, it appeared that petitioners had failed to respond without evasion or ambiquity to highly significant interrogatories and had failed to produce highly significant documents that were the subject of respondent's request. Mr. McCoy, who appeared on behalf of petitioners, again invoked the
We were thoroughly satisfied that petitioners' *117 stubbornly asserted position constituted a default. The privilege against self-incrimination may be invoked only when an answer to the question posed would expose the petitioner to a real danger of criminal prosecution; remote or speculative possibilities of prosecution for unspecified crimes are not sufficient to justify a refusal to respond. See, e.g.,
It may be appropriate to note further that this Court has been flooded with a large number of so-called tax protester cases in which thoroughly meritless issues have been raised in, at best, misguided reliance upon lofty principles. Such cases tend to disrupt the orderly conduct of serious litigation in this Court, and the issues raised therein are of the type that have been consistently decided against such protesters and their contentions often characterized as frivolous. The time has arrived when the Court should deal summarily and decisively with such cases without engaging in scholarly discussion of the issues or *1030 attempting to soothe the feelings of the petitioners by referring to the supposed "sincerity" of their wildly espoused positions.
1. Petitioners appear to have been residents of a community property State during the years involved, and the Commissioner attributed one-half of the aggregate income and deductions to each of them on the assumption that the receipts and disbursements were to be treated as community items.
In a statement accompanying the deficiency notices, there appear to be certain "Prepayment Credits." Petitioners, of course, will be given the benefit of any such credits in respect of the amounts to be collected as a result of any deficiencies determined in accordance with this opinion.↩