84 Ala. 451 | Ala. | 1887
The defendant is indicted for playing at a game with cards at a tavern, inn, public house or out bouse, where people resort — the indictment following tbe require
The evidence, in our judgment, was sufficient to sustain a conviction for playing at a tavern or inn, and authorized the giving of the general affirmative charge, which was given by the court in favor of the State.
An inn is a house of entertainment for travellers — being synonymous in meaning with hotel or tavern. It was formerly defined to mean “ a house where a traveller is furnished with everything which he has occasion for while upon his way.” — Thompson v. Lacy, 3 B. & Ald. 283; People v. Jones, 54 Barb. (N. Y.) 311. But this definition has necessarily been modified by the progress of time, and the mutations in the customs of society and modes of travel in modern times. An inn, however, was always, and may now, when unlicensed, be distinguished from a boarding house, the guest of which is under an express contract, at a certain rate, and for a specified time — the right of selecting the guest or boarder, and fixing full terms, being the chief charaeteristic of the boarding-house as distinguished from an inn, except as to inns or hotels specially licensed under the statute where general contracts with guests are expressly authorized. — Code, 1886, §§ 1324, et seq.; Willard v. Reinhardt, 2 E D. Smith (N. Y.) 148; McDaniels v. Robinson, 62 Amer, Dec. 586, note. There is nothing inconsistent or unusual, however, in a house of public entertainment having a double character, being simultaneously a boarding-house and an inn. In respect to those who occupy rooms and are entertained under special contract, it may be a boardinghouse ; and in respect to transient persons, who, without a stipulated contract, remain from day to day, it is an inn, tavern or hotel . — Cromwell v. Stephens, 2 Daly (N. Y.) 15; 24; Chamberlain v. Masterson, 26 Ala. 371.
The house occupied by Mrs. Schoolcraft was clearly both an inn and boarding-house within the above definitions, partaking of a dual character in this particular.
The playing was done in a room in the third story of this house, which had been rented from the proprietress by one Bibb by the year, and was occupied by him as a bed room, in which he, having no family, prepared his meals, ate and slept. There was no connection between said room and inn or boarding-house, except that it was part of the building occupied by Mrs. Schoolcraft, and the entrance to the room was through that to the boarding-house. Was the room a
' It has been uniformly held in this State where a house is public, as a store, and a bed room in the same building is under the control of the proprietor of the building, the room, though used for private purposes, is prima facie within the prohibition of the statute as to playing at a public house, “unless it affirmatively appears that it is not used as an appendage to the store, nor in the prosecution of its business, nor in connection with the store for the mere convenience or accommodation of the owner, his employees or his customers but is occupied for some justifiable private purpose entirely disconnected • from the business of the store, or the convenience of its customers.” — Brown v. State, 27 Ala. 47; Huffman v. State, 29 Ala. 40; Arnold v. State, Id. 46.
Yet when the playing is at a public house, inn, tavern, or any other of the places specially enumerated in the statute, no matter what secrecy may be observed in the playing, those who participate in the game will be held to be violators of the law, and subject to the penalty.— Windham v. State, 26 Ala. 69; Bythwood v. State, 20 Ala. 47.
So when a case is embraced in the words of a statute, and clearly falls within the mischief intended to be remedied by it, such case will be construed to come within the prohibition of the statute, however penal its terms may be. — Huffman v. State, 29 Ala. 40.
The room in question was in the same building occupied as an inn, and was rented by the occupant from the proprietress of the inn. It must, therefore, be construed to be appurtenant to it, so as to be a part of it within the prohibition of of the statute. — Russell v. State, 72 Ala. 222. There can be no difference between the case of a room in a hotel or inn engaged by the year, the month, the week or the day, so far as the question before us is concerned. In the Elizabethan inns, travellers paid separately for their appartments and for each meal. In modern times there are hotels kept on what is known as the European plan, where rooms may be engaged for a specified price and time, without meals or other accommodations. In fact the modern guest often rents his room from the inn or hotel proprietor, -and takes his meals at a restaurant; or obtain his meals there, and his lodging elsewhere — there being at this day any amount of diversity as to the contracts and relations of the various patrons to the building and business of the proprietor. As observed
Any other construction of the statute would easily enable persons to evade its provisions by the most flimsy devices.
The first charge requested by the defendant ignored the inquiry as to the room being appurtenant to the inn, and was properly refused. It erroneously assumed that no conviction could be had under the indictment unless the evidence showed the playing was done in a “public place.”
The house could be a hotel or inn, without being licensed under the statute — a fact which is excluded erroneously from the consideration of the jury by the second charge requested on the part of the defendant Lanier v. Youngblood, 73 Ala. 587; Code, 1886, §§ 1324, et seq. There was no error in refusing this instruction.
Affirmed.