112 Ga. 20 | Ga. | 1900
Meyer was arraigned on an accusation under the. Penal Code, §407, which declares that “ No person, by himself, or another, shall keep, maintain, employ, or carry on any lottery in this State, or other scheme or device for the hazarding of any money or valuable thing.” The accused was tried by the judge of the city court of Richmond county, presiding without a jury, upon an agreed statement of facts; and was convicted. That portion of the agreed statement of facts upon which the judgment of conviction was based was, in substance, as follows: The accused was a wholesale and retail dealer in cigars and chewing-gum. On the day alleged in the accusation he was operating a “nickel slot trade machine.”1
The accused made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and he excepted.
We do not think the judge erred in refusing to consider that portion of the statement of facts above detailed. The judgment was right on the facts passed upon by him; and even if the facts which he refused to consider had been treated as properly before him, the judgment should have been the same. A lottery is defined to be: “Á scheme for the distribution of prizes' by lot or •chance.” Web. Int. Diet. “ A hazard in which sums are ventured for the chance of obtaining a greater value.” W orcester’s Diet. E or ■other definitions, see Anderson’s and Bouvier’s Law Dictionaries. If, then, the scheme or device for the hazarding of money which is prohibited by the Penal Code must be of the same nature as a lottery, before any one could be held to have violated the law who had not actually run a lottery, it must be shown that he engaged
But it is said that none of the cases above referred to are controlling in the present case, for the reason that in all of them there
Judgment affirmed.