"I was not willful" is a defense to a charge, not an affirmative defense. Affirmative defenses are defenses which the defendant must plead or may be deemed to have waived. Those include, on the civil side, some of the matters that must be plead as set out at Rules 8 and 12 of the FRCivPro -- such as limitations, assumption or risk, or lack of personal service, defects in service, etc. Other civil affirmative defenses include accord and satisfaction, arbitration and award, contributory negligence, and so on. At state law, affirmative defenses may include pleadings defects, such as failure to verify a pleading required at state law.mutter wrote:Yup you busted me being a hypocrite. I have read some of your stuff in the past and do think some of it is just word games.LPC wrote:From the Lost Horizons forum on 1/15/2009, from a thread titled "Daniel B. Evans: The Tax Protest FAQ":mutter wrote:Wow Evans you drawl quite a few conclusions about me personally based on lets see, NOTHING.
One can tell someone has nothing of value to say or cant prove their point if they are calling people names. I wont respond to any such posts, so keep it civil.I draw conclusions from what people write, and I call a spade a spade.mutter wrote:If you actually read what he writes with a keen eye you will find he is nothing more than a shill repeating IRS mantras ladden with definded terms that he never defines.
The conclusion I draw from what you've written above is that you are a hypocrite.
However, i am going to re read some(cos theres alot) of it and redraw my conclusions. Everyday I learn more about the law and why people are wrong in their conclusions. You will note I chastised someone for posting something on a common law jury. Which I find to be an oxymoron considering its judges and jurists not juries that create the common law.
In other words I am attempting to learn and keep an open mind
Now if willfullness is not an affirmitive defense then what kind would it be. I mean you are affirming something there. Whats the test for being affirmitive?
In the criminal context, see F.R. Crim Pro. 12 and other sources, such as F Rule Crim Pro 12.2 and FR Evidence 702, which govern the affirmative defense of insanity. See other provisions of Crim Rule 12, including 12.3, for example, governing an affirmative defense of actions with public authority. Wes Serra can give you a better analysis, but I think it correct to say that the burden of pleading affirmative defenses rests more heavily in civil than in criminal contexts.
The burden on the government in criminal cases is to prove the allegations in the indictment beyond a reasonable doubt. The Defendant can remain silent and offer no defense at all and still be found not guilty by the judge (failure to meet the burden) or jury (failure to convince the jury beyond a reasonable doutbt).
(As my responses might suggest, I am a civil trial/bankruptcy lawyer, not a criminal defense lawyer and not a tax lawyers, although I've tried a lot of tax matters in civil courts over the years. I defer to Wes on criminal matters and to the tax experts, like Mr. Evans [to whom we all defer] or Famspear or Dr. C or others on tax questions. Imalawman is, for one example, currently taking an advanced law degree, an LLM, in taxation.)