71 S.W. 768 | Tex. App. | 1903
Ohlsen sued to recover for the value of a certain metal box with many attachments, etc., which he alleged he was employed to make for M.H. Wilson, and he sought also to recover of C.O. Hodges on the ground that Wilson had placed with said Hodges certain tools to hold as collateral security, and which the said Hodges had wrongfully returned to said Wilson.
The evidence showed that the box manufactured by Ohlsen was a trick faro box especially designed for gambling purposes, the mechanism of which enabled the user to manipulate the cards in favor of the exhibitor of the game and against those who bet at said game, all of which was known to Ohlsen.
The vital point in the case is raised by the charge of the court wherein the jury were instructed, in effect, that if Ohlsen constructed for defendant Wilson the box, knowing the same was intended to be used exclusively as a gambling device he could not recover. The proposition is advanced that in order to prevent plaintiff's recovering he must not only have known the illegal use for which the box was intended, but also that his pay was to be derived from the illegal gains derived from the illegal use thereof. That such would prevent his recovery is settled by our Supreme Court. Reed v. Brewer,
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed. *180