191 Ind. 232 | Ind. | 1921
The appellant was tried by jury in the criminal court of Marion county, Indiana, upon an affidavit based upon §2466 Burns 1914, §2079 R. S. 1881, which reads as follows: “Whoever keeps a building, room, arbor, garden, booth, shed, .tenement or canal boat, wharf boat or other water craft, to be used or
To the affidavit filed against him the appellant entered a plea of not guilty, and upon the trial of the issue thus made, the jury rendered a verdict of guilty, as charged in the affidavit- and that he be fined $10 and imprisoned on the State Farm for a period of thirty days. Judgment was rendered on this verdict and from such judgment appellant appeals and assigns as error that the trial court erred in overruling his motion for a new trial.
The only questions presented in appellant’s brief are the sufficiency of the evidence and alleged error in ad
The charging part of the affidavit upon which the appellant was tried is as follows, to wit: “That Beverly Howard, late of said city, county and state on or about July 30,1919, at and in the city, county and state aforesaid, did then and there unlawfully keep a certain building to wit: 1118 E. 16th St., there situate, to be used and occupied for gaming and then and there unlawfully and knowingly permitted William Hall and others unknown to play at certain games for money and other articles of value.”
In Davis v. State (1885), 100 Ind. 154, the court in passing on a motion to quash an indictment in substantially the same form as the indictment in this case, and based upon a similar statute, said: “The purpose of the statute is to suppress gambling houses. If a person keeps a house to be used for gaming, he violates the statute, and may be convicted. If a person knowingly permits his house to be used or occupied for gaming, he, that far, makes it a gambling house, violates the statute, and may be convicted. In this sense, the of-fences are separate, and may be separately prosecuted. And yet, in another sense, the offenses constitute the one offence of violating the statute against gambling houses. And in this sense, as was said in the case of Sowle v. State, 11 Ind. 492, the offence of permitting the gambling is merged in the offence of keeping a gambling house.”
The appellant quoting from Hamilton v. State (1895), 142 Ind. 276, 41 N. E. 588, says: “Where the evidence leaves standing some reasonable hypothesis of innocence there can be no conviction, and when the record discloses that fact to the appellate tribunal, a judgment of conviction cannot be affirmed.” Hamilton v. State, supra, has been overruled by Lee v. State (1901), 156 Ind. 541, 60 N. E. 299.
In Deal v. State (1895), 140 Ind. 354, 39 N. E. 930, it is held that the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court on an appeal is limited to errors of law only, and it has no' jurisdiction to pass upon errors of fact; the correction of errors of fact into which a jury may fall belongs exclusively to the trial court. The Supreme Court cannot retry questions of fact.
Edwin C. Ball, whose name is attached to the affidavit upon which this prosecution is based, testified substantially as follows: “I am a member of the .police force of the city of Indianapolis. On the 27th day of July, 1919, in the morning I went to the corner of 16th and Alvord Sts. to the dry beer parlor known as 1118 E. 16th St. in the city of Indianapolis. Sergeant Russell, patrolmen Evert, Claud White and Walters went with me. We stopped at the back door and found it locked and later found it was barred. We stayed there for three or four minutes, listening and heard the clinking of money and heard the dice being shaken and rolled. Heard a man say ‘shoot a dollar’ and another man say ‘a dollar it comes’ and another man say ‘a dollar it don’t come.’ I had Claud White lead off at a run from the north end of the building, which is the
Charles Russell testified as follows: “I am a member of the Indianapolis police force. On the morning of the 27th or 28th of July I went to Sixteenth and Alvord' Streets with Lieutenant Ball. Met Lieut. Ball at Seventeenth and Columbia Ave. and we went down the alley and came in through the back way. We stopped for a
Claud White testified as follows: “I am a policeman. I went on that night about 2 o’clock in the morning on the 27th of July, Lieut. Ball and myself and three or four patrolmen met patrolman Russell and two or three other patrolman at 17th and Columbia and we walked down through the alley and through some back yards and came up to this place at Sixteenth and Alvord Streets. We stopped and listened. We heard them in there say T will take that bet’ another one say T bet you don’t’ — talk like that. We listened and heard money rattling and the roll of the dice dingling in their hands. I suppose it was dice. I didn’t see them but I heard them. Then we arranged between ourselves to go in. I took the lead and Lieut. Ball was right behind me. I made a rush through the dry beer saloon through the
The state introduced and read in evidence state’s exhibits Nos. 1 to 18, inclusive, and each of them. The said exhibits being transcripts of the records of the city court of the city of Indianapolis of pleas of guilty and convictions thereon in cases of the state against certain persons who were arrested at the dry beer saloon known as 1118 E. Sixteenth St. in the city of Indianapolis July 27,1919, when a raid was made upon said place by some of the police officers of the city of Indianapolis, together with the marginal entries on each of the said judgments of replevin bail by Beverly Howard. An examination of the record- shows that the appellant made the following objection to the introduction of said exhibits, viz.: “The defendant objects to each of the record entries offered for the reason they are records of a proceeding to which this defendant is not a party and he is not bound by any adjudication of any of them, and it is not competent evidence.”