105 Ind. 271 | Ind. | 1886
The grand jury of Knox county presented to the court, by formal indictment, that Frederick Graeter did, on a day therein named, unlawfully permit a certain frame building situate on lot numbered forty-one, in the city of Vincennes, which he had theretofore let to one Mollie Avery to be kept as a house of ill fame and resorted to for the purpose of prostitution, then and there well knowing that it was so kept, etc.
After conviction there was a motion to arrest the judgment, on the ground that the facts stated in the indictment did not
The indictment is predicated on the last clause of the foregoing statute. The offence is described substantially in the terms employed in defining it. As a general rule this is sufficient. State v. Miller, 98 Ind. 70; Betts v. State, 93 Ind. 375. Whether the house was, at the date of the alleged offence, let to and occupied by Mollie Avery, is not stated in the indictment with as much certainty as a strict regard for technical precision might require, on a motion to quash. It .is charged, however, that the house had been theretofore let to her, and that subsequent to the letting the defendant had knowingly permitted it to be kept as a house of ill fame. On a motion in arrest, if the indictment is found to contain all the essential elements of a public offence, even though to some extent defectively stated, it will be held sufficient. Greenley v. State, 60 Ind. 141; Lowe v. State, 46 Ind. 305; Shepherd v. State, 64 Ind. 43.
The sixth, seventh and eighth instructions given by the •court are complained of. In the sixth, the jury were told that it was not necessary for the State to prove particular acts of prostitution, as having occurred in the house, in order to establish the allegation that it was a house of ill fame. That while such proof was competent, it was also competent, for the purpose of sustaining such allegation, to prove the general reputation of the house, and also of its inmates and
The jury were told in the seventh instruction, that a landlord could not be convicted of the offence charged, without proof that he had knowledge that the house let was kept as a bawdy-house, but that it was not necessary to prove that he had Witnessed acts of prostitution in the house, or that he had been personally notified of such acts; that knowledge might be proved by circumstantial evidence, by proof of such facts and circumstances as would justify the jury in coming to the conclusion that he had such knowledge.
The appellant insists that' the proof must have shown that he had actual knowledge that the house was being kept as a house of ill fame, and that, with such knowledge, he willingly permitted the house to be so kept. If by actual knowledge it is meant that he must have had personal knowl
The court told the jury that “the statute upon which this prosecution is based was enacted for the first time in this State in 1881. Prior statutes had proven insufficient to restrain what all good citizens regarded as an alarming evil. This statute aims to lessen the evil by interposing a formidable obstacle to the securing of houses and shelter by prostitutes.” We are unable to discover anything in this which could have prejudiced the appellant.
The contention of the appellee, that the instructions are not in the record, is not well made. They are properly presented by a bill of exceptions filed under section 1849, R. S. 1881. This latter section appears, through an error, to be cited in Erlinger v. East, 100 Ind. 434. The section there intended was 629, R. S. 1881.
It is contended with much earnestness that the evidence does not sustain the verdict of the jury. The argument at this point is directed to two propositions: First. That there is no evidence that the defendant knew that the house
When the State proved the fact to exist, and that it was a matter of general repute in the community in which the defendant lived, a prima facie ease was made. It was then incumbent on the defendant to show that he had no knowledge, or that the circumstances were such that he may have .remained ignorant, of the facts.
With regard to the variance suggested, it may be said, the 'testimony shows that Mollie Avery lived in the house and
Judgment affirmed, with costs.