178 Ky. 250 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1917
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Tlie indictment against tlie appellant, Joe Allen, accused him of the offense denounced by section 1967, Kentucky Statutes. A trial upon the indictment resulted in a verdict of guilty by the jury, and the imposition, of a fine, in accordance with the verdict, in the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled, and being dissatisfied with the judgment, he has brought it by appeal to this court for review. The grounds relied upon for a new trial contain several formal grounds,- but the ones, which appellant urges as sufficient to require the reversal of the judgment, and to entitle him to a new trial, are as follows:
First: The court erred to his prejudice in overruling a general demurrer to the indictment.
Second: The court failed to instruct the jury as to the entire law of the ease.
(a) Section 1967, Kentucky Statutes, so far as is pertinent to the questions in hand, is as follows:
“Whoever shall suffer or permit any game or table, bank, machine or contrivance mentioned or included in section 1960, of this chapter, to be set up, conducted, kept or exhibited in any house, boat or float, or on any premises in his occupation or under his control, or shall lease the same or any part thereof for that purpose, shall be fined from two hundred and fifty dollars .to five hundred dollars for each offense.....After proof of setting up, conducting, keeping or exhibiting of such table, bank, machine, contrivance or game in any such house, boat or float or place, it shall be presumed to have been with the permission of the person occupying or controlling the same, unless the contrary be proven. ’ ’
It is necessary to look to section 1960, supra, to ascertain what machines and. contrivances or games, the suffering or permission of which, are denounced by section 1967', supra. The games, tables, banks, machines and contrivances mentioned and included in section 1960, supra, are keno banks, faro banks, or other machines or contrivances “used in betting, whereby money or other thing may be won or lost, or a game of cards, oontz, or craps, whereby money or other thing may be won or lost.” The two statutes must be read together.
In the accusative part of the indictment, in the instant case, the offense charged is “suffering a gaming machine on premises,” and in the descriptive portion of the indictment, the machine is described as a “certain mar-chine and contrivance commonly known as a slot machine, and which machine and contrivance is ordinarily used for gambling for money and property, and for cigars, tobacco and soft drinks, and other things of value,” and after alleging that appellant suffered and permitted such a machine to be conducted on his premises, it was alleged, “whereby and at and on which machine and contrivance money and property, cigars, tobacco and soft drinks and other things of value were then and there won and lost, and with the permission, consent and procurement of said Joe Allen.” The demurrer, as we understand it, is directed to the insufficiency of the description of the offense as charged in the accusative part of the indictment, and, also, to the effect, that in the descriptive portion of the indictment, the machine, alleged to have operated, is not such a one, as the operation of which is
(b) Objection is not made to the instructions, which, were given, but it is complained, that a substantial prejudice to appellant’s rights occurred, by a failure, to give-an instruction, which defined the meaning of the words “suffer” and “permit,” as used, in the indictment, and,, in the first instruction given. The first instruction, in substance, directed the jury, that, if it believed from the-evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the .accused: suffered or permitted a machine or a contrivance, known, as a slot machine, and which was usually used for gambling, by which money or property was bet and won or lostr to be set up and conducted on his premises, and that by the use of the machine, so set up and operated on his-premises, money or property was bet and won or lost, to find the accused guilty. It is insisted, that in addition to this instruction, one should have been given, which defined the words “suffer or permit,” as used in the instruction, to mean, that the accused allowed or permitted the machine to be set up and conducted with the knowledge that money or property was, or was to be, bet and-, won or lost, thereon. It is true, that in Bunnell v. Commonwealth, supra, a conviction for a violation of section 1378, Kentucky Statutes, was reversed, because of' the failure to give an instruction, which defined the words- ‘ ‘ suffer or permit, ’ ’ as used in that statute. In that case,, the game, which was proved to have been played, continued, only, one afternoon, and in a lot, in the open, and was a game plaj^ed by throwing and attempting to hit dummy figures with a ball. Such an instruction was approved in Ruh v. Commonwealth, 141 Ky. 585, which was,, also, an indictment for a violation of section 1978, supra.. The game suffered or permitted, in that case, was a game-of cards. Neither the game of throwing balls at dummy figures nor a game of cards is per se unlawful or wrong. The one was a game of skill and the other one a game of amusement, and neither necessarily involved the vice of gambling, and, in neither case, were the games conducted ' by the accused. The court properly held, that the accused ought not to be convicted, unless the gambling, at these games, was done with his knowledge, because the' playing of a game by throwing a ball at a dummy does.' not necessarily imply a wager and the same may be said of a game of cards. It is, also, very clear, that one indicted for a violation of section 1967, supra, .should
(c) The contention,, that the verdict of the .jury was «contrary to the law and the evidence, as presented by appellant, is in reality an argument, that the facts proven-•did not show that the machine, as used, was one ordinarily used in gambling, and in fact neither money nor property was bet, won or lost by the use of the machine.. The machine was called by the appellant a “chewing-gum slot machine.” Within the machine there was ordinarily kept •a quantity of chewing gum, in packages, which had printed upon them the statement that they were each ■five cent packages. Near the top of the machine was a ■slot, and when a nickel was introduced into the slot, and a small lever turned, it would descend and by reason of some mechanism of the machine, there would be cast out, near the bottom of the machine, one of these packages
The judgment is therefore affirmed.