1 Idaho 714 | Idaho | 1878
delivered tbe opinion;
At tbe July term, 1875, of the district court in and for tbe county of Oneida, tbe defendant, Michael Goldman, was indicted under tbe common law for keeping and maintaining a common gaming-house. Tbe indictment charges tbat on tbe first day of December, 1874, and at divers other days and times between tbat day and the finding of tbe indictment, tbe defendant, for lucre and gain, unlawfully and willfully did cause and procuró divers idle and evil-disposed persons to frequent and come to play together at certain unlawful games of cards, called freeze-out, draw poker, sancho pedro, and divers other unlawful games of chance, etc. Tbe defendant demurred to tbe indictment, on tbe ground tbat tbe facts therein contained do not constitute a public offense, which demurrer was overruled by tbe district court, after which a trial was bad, resulting in a verdict and judgment of conviction, and fine, from which judgment tbe appeal is taken to this court. The case comes to this court upon tbe judgment-roll alone, and tbe only ques
At common law the keeping of a common gaming-house is a public nuisance, and as such indictable; but it is claimed by the defendant that the common law, relating to that subject, was superseded by the act of the legislative assembly entitled, “An act relating to all games of chance,” approved January 13, 1871, which was in force at the date of the alleged commission of the offense.
The act referred to, in its first section, provides, that a license shall be granted to any person or persons on the payment of fifty dollars per quarter for each of the following games kept, viz.: Paro, monte, E. O. or roulette, shuffleboard, or any other, banking games at cards, dice, or other device; provided, that no person shall have a license for three-card or French monte, or the game called the thimble game, and those games are made unlawful. The body of the act is silent as to other games than those above named. Section 2 of the act provides for the prosecution and punishment of persons who shall keep any of said games without having first obtained a license therefor. The interpretation and effect given to this statute will be decisive of the case.' It is a statute concerning the keeping of games. It is the keeping of games that is punishable as a nuisance at common law. So far as the statute relates to or regulates the keeping of the games therein named, there can be no question but that the common law is superseded; the only question is whether, by implication, the common law is abrogated as to the keeping of the games named in this indictment— whether it was the intention of the legislature to revise the whole subject-matter of keeping gaming-houses.
In construing statutes the cardinal rule is to ascertain the intention of the legislature that framed it. “A thing which is within the intention of the makers of the statute is as much within the statute as if it were within the letter; and a thing which is within the letter of the statute is not within the statute unless it be within the intention of the makers.” Again it is said: “ A statute is to be construed so as to give sense and meaning to every part, and the maxim was never
This statute having, as we hold, superseded the common law, there was no law in force, at the date mentioned in the indictment which constituted the acts, charged to have been committed by the defendants, a public offense, and it is clear, that there can be no legal conviction for an offense unless the act be contrary to law at the time it is committed.
The judgment of the district court is reversed.