3 Denio 88 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1846
The question is, whether the indictment should not have stated the object or purpose for which the lottery was made or carried on. The 27th section of the statute against raffling and lotteries, (1 R. S. 665,) provides, that “ no person, unauthorized by special laws for that purpose, shall,
The district attorney in his able argument reads the word “ lottery” in the 27th section, without any qualification in relation to “ the .purpose” to be accomplished by it; and restricts that qualification to a “ game or device of chance.” But in grammatical construction, the lottery, as well as the game or device, must be for the purpose of disposing of some kind of property. And such must have been the intention of the legislature. The object was, to prevent gambling, or gaming for some valuable thing; and not to punish a lottery made or drawn for mere amusement: or the determination by lot of some matter involving no right of property. The class to which a senator belongs, which fixes the duration of his office, is sometimes determined by lot; and so of a justice of the peace. And there is
It is said that the reference in the 29th section may be to the 26th, which declares every unauthorized lottery a common and public nuisance, without saying any thing concerning the purpose for which the lottery was made. But the different branches of this law must be construed together; and when we see by one section that the legislature only intended to suppress and punish gambling lotteries, general words in another section must be read and understood with a like qualification.
■ As none of the counts allege that the lottery was opened &c. “ for the purpose of exposing, setting to sale or disposing” of money, or any other valuable thing, the indictment cannot be supported.
Judgment affirmed.