158 Ky. 444 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1914
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Section 1972 of the Kentucky Statutes is as follows:
“If any person, being the owner or controller of the tables called “pigeon-hole tables,” or any table similar thereto, or any billiard table, shall knowingly suffer or permit, for compensation or reward, any minor under the age of twenty-one years, without the written permission of the parent or guardian of said minor, or other person having the care, custody or control of said minor, to play any game thereon, either by betting or not bet*445 ting, or shall knowingly suffer or permit any person to bet upon any game played, every such person so offending shall be fined for each offense one hundred dollars, and shall forfeit the right and privilege of again keeping such tables.”
The indictment in this case was under that section, and charges that,
“The said Nance, in the said county of Hopkins, on .................. day of September, 1913, and before the finding of this indictment, the said Willis Nance being then and there the owner and having control of pool-tables-, being tables similar to tables called pigeon-hole tables, did unlawfully, willingly, and knowingly suffer and permit for compensation and reward Hubbard Cansler, a person under twenty-one years of age, to play games of pool on said tables without permission from the father, mother, or guardian or other person having custody or control of said minor authorizing him so to do.”
At the close of the evidence for the Commonwealth the lower court directed the jury to find the defendant not guilty, being of opinion that under the evidence the pool-table in question was not “similar” to a pigeon-hole table, and therefore not embraced within the terms of the statute; and the Commonwealth has appealed.
It is admitted that the defendant was at the time named in the indictment the licensed owner and controller of an ordinary pool table. The undisputed evidence is that Cansler was a minor, and played pool on the pool table and paid defendant therefor, and that he had no written permission from any one authorizing him to play.
The evidence showed that the pool table so owned and controlled" by defendant had four legs, and' was covered by a cloth, and had rubber cushions on each side and at each end, and that there were six pockets in the table, one at each corner and one in the center of each side; that the game of pool played by the prosecuting witness was played with sixteen balls, fifteen of which were numbered from one to fifteen, and the other was known as the cue ball, without any number; that in playing the game a cue or stick was used, and the game was played by striking the cue ball with such cue or stick and attempting by striking another ball with the cue ball to put it in one of the pockets. The evidence also showed that “pigeon-hole tables” are tables not so
In.each game it is the purpose to put the balls either into the pockets or the holes; each table is constructed along the same general lines; while the dimensions of the tables are different, they are each covered with a cloth, they are each surrounded by rubber cushions to give life to the balls when they strike them. It requires in each game the same skill and practice to put the balls in the pockets on the one table as to put them into the holes on the other table, and in a general way it may be said not only that the tables are constructed along the same general lines, but that the games played upon the tables require, in a general way, the same sort of skill, the same'kind of practice, and a knowledge of the same character.
Manifestly it was the purpose of this enactment to discourage minors from frequenting such places, and to protect them from the evil habits which may be so easily contracted in such surroundings. With this purpose of the statute in view, and considering the general similarity between the two games of pool and pigeonhole, it cannot be said with any degree of reason that it was the'purpose of the statute to protect them from the playing of pigeon-hole pool and not to protect them from the playing of ordinary fifteen ball pool. Statutes must be given a reasonable interpretation, and must always be construed so as to effectuate the purpose of their enactment when it can be done without doing violence to the language itself.
Cye., Vol. 36, page 457, defines “similar” as follows:
“Exactly corresponding, resembling in all respects; precisely like; nearly corresponding; resembling in*447 many respects; somewhat like; having a general likeness; homogeneous; uniform.”
The lower court gave to the word the strict interpretation indicated by the first part of the definition quoted and was of opinion that under the evidence a pool table was not “similar” to a pigeon-hole; but we think, looking to the plain purpose of the statute, that the more liberal definition later indicated in the quotation should be adopted; and that it was clearly in the mind of the Legislature to embrace within the Act any table resembling in its general characteristics a pigeon-hole table upon which was played a game somewhat similar to or alike in a general way to the game played upon a pigeon-hole table.
It seems to us that any other interpretation of the statute would partially defeat its purpose and would authorize minors to frequent places of this character for the purpose of playing a game resembling in all its' essential features the game played upon a “pigeon-hole table. ’ ’
If the evidence is substantially the same upon another trial, the court will instruct the jury that a pool table is- a table “similar” to a pigeon-hole table.
The judgment is reversed with directions to grant a new trial and for further proceedings consistent herewith.