164 Mo. App. 406 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
This is a suit in equity for injunctive relief. The finding and judgment were for defendants and plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.
Plaintiff is the proprietor of a cigar and tobacco store at 407 Walnut street, St. Louis, and defendants are the board of police commissioners and the chief of police of that city. The police officers of the city had recently before made numerous arrests in plain
The evidence for plaintiff tends to prove that he conducts a small cigar and tobacco store at the place mentioned, in which-he maintains a stock of goods valued at about $600. For him it is shown, too, that the police officers of the city, within the period of two •or three months before the institution ’of this suit, made about twenty arrests in plaintiff’s establishment. One of the persons arrested was plaintiff’s clerk, Mc-Allister, and he was taken into custody several different times. Others arrested were customers of plaintiff, and it appears that the charge laid against them .pertained to betting on horse races through the agency of plaintiff and his clerk, McAllister. None of the persons arrested were convicted hut all were finally •dismissed of the charges laid against them.
For defendants the evidence is abundant to the •effect that plaintiff was a former bookmaker on the race tracks and followed the calling of laying wagers for others on horse racing. His clerk, McAllister, had formerly followed the same calling, and many of those who were arrested about his place were men who, it is said, had followed the races. It is shown that plaintiff kept and sold at his store one solitary publication and that was the Daily Racing Form, which is a paper devoted exclusively to matters connected with horse racing. Plaintiff testified that he sold this paper because it was the only one which his customers desired to purchase. It is shown that plaintiff maintained an office across the river at East St. Louis, Illinois, where he conducted the business of placing
The statutes denounce as guilty of a felony those who occupy any room, tenement, booth or building and engage in the business of receiving, recording or registering bets, or wagers' on horse races, etc. They denounce as guilty of a felony, too, the act of any person who occupies any room, shed, tenement, tent,booth, building or inclosnre, or any part thereof, in this state with any telephone or telegraph instrument, or any apparatus or device of any kind whatsoever, for the purpose of communicating information to any place in this or any other state for the purpose of there recording or registering bets or wagers or selling pools upon the result of any trial or contest of skill, speed or power of endurance of man or beast which is to be made or to take place within or without this state, etc. [Secs. 4748, 4749, R. S. 1909.] The record before us teems with evidence tending to prove that plaintiff maintained his cigar and tobacco store at 407 Walnut street, in part at least, as an agency through which he might negotiate wagers on horse races for his customers. It is shown that people communicated bets and wagers to him in his office in East St. Louis through the telephone from the cigar store, and that others communicated bets to the clerk in charge of the store here through the telephone. According to plaintiff’s evidence, the net profits from the small stock of cigars and tobacco, consisting of about $600 in value were $100 per month and the record suggests that his income was augmented from commissions received on the placing of wagers in violation of the statutes above referred to.
The court very properly declined to interfere with the exercises of the discretion lodged in the police, for under the law it was both their right and duty to. act upon grounds of reasonable suspicion which the evidence undoubtedly reveals. The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.