delivered the opinion of the court:
By an information filed in the county court of Bureau County, Lester Cattaneo was charged with keeping a dice table, dice and chips for the purpose of playing at a game for money or other valuable things, in violation of section 3 of an act to prohibit the use of clock, tape, slot or оther machines or devices for gambling purposes. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1953, chap. 38, par. 343.) Defendant moved to suppress as evidence the articles in question, whiсh had been seized without a warrant. The motion was denied ; and after a trial before the court without a jury defendant was found guilty and was sentenced to pay a fine of $500. On petition of the State’s Attorney the court also entered an order for destruction of the articles. The judgment and order were affirmed by the Appellate Court (People v. Cattaneo,
Thе evidence discloses that defendant operated a tar^ern located in Bureau County. On August 25, 1953, at 11:3o P.M. the sheriff of the county and two of his deputies loоked through a window of the tavern and saw what is commonly called a crap table, together with a number of chips, dice and a croupier stick. The tavern was open for business at the time, but the only persons present were the defendant, his wife and a man named Klein, who was wearing a green apron and holding a stick. There was no evidence of any gambling taking place. The three officers thereupon entered the tavern and took possessiоn of the table and the other articles mentioned. A metal box with a slot in the top was fastened underneath the table so that money could be placed from the table directly into it. The box contained $151. In addition to ordering a destruction of the property the court ordered this money confiscated and paid over to the State’s Attorney.
Defendant contends that the seized articles do not constitute gambling devices per se, as defined in section 2 of the act, and that the county court therefore erred in refusing to suppress them as evidence, in ordering their destruction, and in finding that their possession сonstituted a violation of section 3. It is further urged that the order for destruction was improper because the articles were taken without a searсh warrant.
Section 3 of the act prescribes a penalty for every person “in possession of any premises upon which any gambling device may bе located and every person in the use, operation, lease or other possession of the same.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1953, chap. 38, par. 343.) Section 2 оf the act, which contains the definition of “gambling device,” provides, in so far as material, as follows: “Every clock, tape machine, slot machine or other machine or device for the reception of money on chance or upon the action of-which money is staked, hazarded, bet, won or lost is hereby declared a gambling device and shall be subject to seizure, confiscation and destruction by any municipal or other local authоrity within whose jurisdiction the same may be found.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1953, chap. 38, par. 342.) It is clear that if the dice table and other paraphernalia taken constitute suсh a gambling device as is described in the statute, their seizure, forfeiture and destruction do not violate any constitutional provision. (People v. One Deviсe,
In Frost v. People,
In the case at bar, a detailed description of the table is contained in the testimony of the sheriff and one of his deputies, and photographs have been incorporated into the record by stipulation of the рarties. Defendant does not dispute the People’s evidence that the table is a “crap table,” and in fact he so designates it in his brief here. In Webstеr’s New International Dictionary, Second Edition, “craps” is defined as “a gambling game played with two dice;” and “crap table” is defined as “A high table, for playing craps, with a raised margin against which the dice must be thrown.” A “crap table,” as commonly known and as depicted by the photograph of the subject tаble introduced into evidence by stipulation of the parties here, is covered with cloth upon which sections have been marked off by lines, the sections being numbered or containing numbers showing the “odds,” or being marked by such terms as “field,” “pass,” “no pass,” and “come.” In playing the game the players place their money or chips upon the section they choose and win or lose according to the relation between their chosen section and the numbers on the top of the rolled dice. Bets must be made, the dice must be rolled, and the players must win or lose to constitute “shooting craps.” Consequently, a device admitted to be a “crap table” is admitted to be a device upon which bets are made and the players win or lose by the chance roll of the dice.
We think the evidence fully justified the conclusion of the county and Appellate courts that the paraphernalia in question had nо Avalué or use for any purpose other than that of gambling and that they constitute gambling devices per se. The table bore the markings used in “shooting craps.” Underneath a slot in the top Avas a box to receive money pushed through the slot, and this box when found by the officers contained $151. The construction and appearance of the table clearly shoAvs it to be a “device” to “receive money on chance,” within the terms and intent of the statute. We can perceive no practical use to which the design and construction of this table are adapted, other than that of gambling, and none has been suggested by defendant.
Defendant has failed to sIioav any error in the proceedings beloAv, and the judgment of the Appellate Court is therefore affirmed.
, Judgment affirmed.
