(dissenting).
Because I believe the district court and this court’s majority incorrectly interpret and apply the mens rea elements of the offenses for which defendant was charged and convicted, I respectfully dissent. I believe the matters urged in this dissent are involved in the appeal and required to be *71considered as a result of the defendant’s contentions that the district court’s finding of fact number 17 precludes a determination of guilt.
The defendant is a lawyer. It is undisputed that he was aware of the filing and payment deadlines for his individual Iowa income taxes for the years in question. With respect to his 1978 Iowa income tax return, he filed a request asking that the time for filing be extended from April 30, 1979 to May 31, 1979. At or about that same time, he made a payment of $600 against his 1978 tax liability which ultimately was established to be a substantially greater amount. He did not file his 1978 tax return, pay any more toward his 1978 tax liability, file his 1979 tax return, or pay any of his 1979 tax liability until May 29, 1981. The latter date was several months after the commencement of an investigation against defendant by the department of revenue.
Considerable evidence was presented at trial that, during the period of time involved in defendant’s defalcations, he had become extremely lethargic and his professional work habits had become erratic. A psychiatrist testified at the trial that he had diagnosed defendant’s condition as major depressive recurrent. As a result of such condition, it was the opinion of this witness that defendant lacked volition to accomplish the preparation of his tax returns, either through his own efforts or by marshalling the required information for another tax return preparer.
The district court’s findings of fact lb-19, quoted in full by the majority, indicate rather clearly the rationale under which that court arrived at its determination of guilt. Further discussion of these findings is warranted. Finding of fact number 15 is largely biographical in that it deals with defendant’s volition at some time prior to the time his emotional difficulties commenced. The finding does not contribute significantly to the issue of state of mind at the time of the offenses. Finding of fact 16 and finding of fact 18 merely repeat the stipulated facts with respect to defendant’s awareness of the filing deadlines and his failure to file the required returns or pay the required taxes. Finding of fact number 17 and finding of fact number 19, when considered in conjunction with each other, strongly suggest that the district court believed that “willfully” for purposes of the mens rea element of section 422.-25(5) means other than accidentally or inadvertently. I submit that this represents an incomplete assessment of the term “willfully” as employed in this criminal statute.
We have recognized that the elements of intent or knowledge necessary with respect to a particular offense is to be determined within the context of the particular statute in connection with its manifest purpose and design. Eggman v. Scurr, 311 N.W.2d 77, 78 (Iowa 1981). Different contexts have produced different shadings on the meaning of the word “willfully.” State v. Aldrich, 231 N.W.2d 890, 894 (Iowa 1975) (“an intentional act inconsistent with good faith and good intentions”) and Huston v. Huston, 255 Iowa 543, 548, 122 N.W.2d 892, 896 (1963) (“not only intentionally or deliberately done, but with a bad or evil purpose, as in violation of law”).
To define “willfully” as “a voluntary and intentional violation of a known legal duty,” as done by the district court and this court’s majority is to overly generalize its meaning. As a result, the true meaning of the majority’s definition can only be conveyed by its application to particular factual settings. To the extent that the majority has approved a definition, it is incumbent upon the court to justify the result of the present case by application of that definition to the facts of the case.
The application of the definition which the majority approves requires the State to establish that the omissions involved were “voluntary.” The district court’s findings do not speak directly to that issue. The issue of whether the acts in question were “voluntary” was only considered by the district court to the extent it found that defendant’s omissions were neither accidental nor inadvertent. I submit that, within the context of the criminal statute involved, *72the concept of volition with respect to failure to perform an act involves more than a knowing failure to perform the act. It also embodies the making of a conscious choice not to perform the particular act involved — a choice unhampered by insurmountable obstacles. Pure inertia should not be viewed as a voluntary act in this sense.
In the present case, on the issue of whether defendant’s failure to file tax returns was willful, the district court never made a finding of fact on the volitional issue which was injected into the case as a result of defendant’s expert testimony. A finding by the court that defendant consciously chose not to file the returns may not be implied from the finding that his actions did not occur because of accident or inadvertence. Moreover, a determination that defendant did act with volition is somewhat inconsistent with the district court’s finding that “the defendant had no evil motive, or intent to defraud.” The issue presented is one of fact which should have been specifically addressed by the district court.1 On the issue of defendant’s willful failure to pay the required tax, I believe that, as observed by the Supreme Court in Spies v. United States, 317 U.S. 492, 498, 63 S.Ct. 364, 367-68, 87 L.Ed. 418, 422 (1943), a traditional aversion to imprisonment for debt requires a court to find “some element of evil motive and want of justification in view of all the financial circumstances of the taxpayer,” in order to support a conviction. No consideration was given in the written decision of the district court to the ability of the defendant to make timely payment of the tax owed.
Even if I could accept the majority’s determination concerning the elements of the basic criminal statute, a different test for the mens rea element is mandated in regard to the state-of-mind requirement for determining degree of guilt. In determining degrees of guilt in fraudulent practice offenses, the legislature has established a graduated scale of penalties depending upon “the amount of money or value of property or services involved.” Section 714.10 provides:
Fraudulent practice in the second degree is the following:
1. A fraudulent practice where the amount of money or value of property or services involved exceeds five hundred dollars but does not exceed five thousand dollars.
2. A fraudulent practice where the amount of money or value of property or services involved does not exceed five hundred dollars by one who has been convicted of a fraudulent practice twice before.
Fraudulent practice in the second degree is a class “D” felony.
The meaning of the term “involved” as employed in the various statutes defining degrees of fraudulent practice has never been determined by this court. Commentators in the area are in apparent disagreement over the meaning to be attributed this *73term. In J. Yeager & R. Carlson, Iowa Criminal Law and Procedure § 330 (1979), it is suggested that, based on the legislative history, the amount “involved” means the actual value of property or services obtained by the perpetrator or lost to the victim. In contrast to the views of Yeager & Carlson, Dunahoo, The New Iowa Criminal Code 29 Drake L.Rev. 237, 386-87 (1980), suggests that no actual misappropriation of money, goods, or services need take place in order to establish the value “involved” element.
Whatever the proper interpretation of “involved” in cases involving acts of fraudulent practice described within the four corners of section 714.8, it is apparent that the Yeager & Carlson concept of victim deprivation does not work well in determining degrees of guilt for failure to file tax returns or to timely remit tax payments when due. The gravamen of the offense is failure to file the returns or pay the tax on time. Nor is it consistent with a rational determination of relative culpability in such situations to equate amounts “involved” with the amount of tax ultimately found to be owing when the returns are filed late or the taxes untimely paid.2 When such omissions are willful but without an intent to defeat collection of the tax, the measure of culpability is not fairly reflected by the offender’s tax bracket.3
Such a means of measuring culpability can lead to particularly absurd results when certain of the other offenses embodied in section 422.25(5) are considered. That statute also makes it a crime to willfully file false or fraudulent tax returns. If the amount “involved” for purposes of determining degrees of offense under sections 714.9-.13 is, in cases under section 422.25(5), based on the amount of tax owed, one intentionally filing a late, but accurate, return or making a late payment in the proper amount of tax can be found guilty of a more serious offense than one filing a false and fraudulent return on time. This is true even though in the former situation the offender has no intent to defeat payment of the tax and in the latter situation the offender acts with the express purpose of defeating payment of the tax.
This court has recognized its responsibility to interpret statutes which grade culpability in a sensible manner. State v. Conner, 292 N.W.2d 682, 684 (Iowa 1980). In so doing, it is necessary at times to imply a requirement for a particular state of mind in determining the definition of a criminal offense. Id. The criminal law should grade its penalties in proportion to the harm achieved or sought to be achieved. In the present case, I submit that in determining amount “involved” for purposes of establishing degrees of guilt under sections 714.9-.13, proof of an intent to defeat payment of tax in the specified amount should be required. As one commentator has observed in an analogous context, “absent such a dividing line in the formula for criminal liability, venial ‘sins’ can be transformed into crimes, even though the defendant’s conduct had only a remote causal relationship to the victim’s loss.”4 This principle is equally applicable to attempts to transform minor crimes into major ones through use of an inapt formula for gradation of offenses.
Under the interpretation which I find should be made of the applicable statutes, the district court’s finding of fact number 17 is facially inconsistent with its ultimate determination of defendant’s guilt. For the reasons I have indicated, I would vacate the judgment and sentence imposed *74against defendant and remand the case to the district court for further consideration of those additional elements which I believe the statutes require to be established beyond a reasonable doubt.
. The district court’s decision indicates that the reason for its failure to deal more fully with the volitional elements of defendant’s conduct may have been its belief that this constituted a “diminished responsibility” defense which is not available in a so-called "general criminal intent” offense. This may have been invited by our statements in Veverka v. Cash, 318 N.W.2d 447, 449 (Iowa 1982); Long v. Brewer, 253 N.W.2d 549, 557 (Iowa 1977); and State v. Barney, 244 N.W.2d 316, 318 (Iowa 1976). The most that may be attributed to the statements contained in those cases is that evidence concerning a defendant's inability to form a specific intent provides no defense to a criminal charge which does not require proof of that intent. Where a particular state of mind or mental condition is an element of a crime, a defendant, in defending against the charge, is free to offer competent evidence that he or she was incapable of achieving that state of mind or mental condition. To hold otherwise, would deny the defendant the right to present evidence on a material element of the charge. In the present case, defendant's expert testimony indicated that he was in a state of depression which caused a lack of volition to file the required tax returns or pay the required taxes when due. Under a fair interpretation of the standard of "voluntary and intentional violation of a known legal duty,” this was material evidence on an element of the charges, i.e., whether the omissions were voluntary. The factual issues which were engendered by this evidence should have been decided by the district court.
. Even under the concept of a voluntary and intentional violation of a known legal duty which the majority espouses, a showing of knowing failure to pay a specific amount would seem to be required.
. Because the amount of tax owed and unpaid is the gravamen of the failure to pay counts asserted against the defendant, the use of that circumstance as an element of the failure to file counts causes the former offenses to be included within the latter. As a result, separate convictions and sentences on each would appear to run afoul of the double punishment limitations of the federal constitution. See State v. Whitfield, 315 N.W.2d 753, 755 (Iowa 1982).
.Coffee, From Tort to Crime, 19 Amer.Crim.L.Rev. 117, 165 (1981). See also Robinson & Grail, Element Analysis in Defining Criminal Liability, 35 Stan.L.Rev. 681, 709 (1983).