163 Mo. App. 30 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
Appellants were tried and convicted in the circuit court of Dade county, Missouri, on an information charging that “defendants Pete Brown, Dick Wilkins, Wm. Perry and Carl Stephenson, on the 14th day of August, 1911, at the said county of Dade did then and there unlawfully bet a sum of money to-wit twenty-five cents at and upon a game of chance commonly called ‘craps’ then and there played with dice and a blanket, devices for playing games of chance for money and property contrary to the form of the statute, ’ ’ etc. Hpon trial, defendants were found guilty and a fine of thirty dollars was assessed, against each. The case is here on their appeal.
Appellants contend that the trial court should have sustained their motion to quash the information upon the ground, therein alleged, that no offense prohibited by the laws of the state of Missouri was charged therein.
The information charged “that said defendants Pete Brown, Dick Wilkins, Wm. Perry and Carl Stephenson, on the 14th day of August, 1911, at the said county of Dade did then and there unlawfully bet a sum of money to-wit twenty-five cents at and upon a game of chance commonly called ‘craps’ then and there played with dice and a blanket, devices for playing games of chance for money and property contrary to the form of the statute,” etc.
The statute, section 4751, Revised • Statutes 190-9, provides: “Every person who shall bet any money or property upon any gaming table, bank or device prohibited by the preceding section, or at or upon any other gambling device, or who shall bet upon any game played at or by means of any such gaming table or
It will be seen that this statute rqakes it a criminal offense to bet any money or property upon any gaming table, bank or device prohibited by the preceding section (4750); it does not stop there, however, but by its terms 'its scope is so broadened as to include not only betting on the gambling devices enumerated in section 4750, but also prohibits anyone “to bet at or upon any other gambling device.” [State v. Torphy, 66 Mo. App. 434.] Under the peculiar language of section 4751 the rule of construction which requires that where general words follow the enumeration of particular classes of things the general words will be construed as applicable to things óf the same general class as therein enumerated, has no application. The appellants invoke this rule of statutory construction and cite as authority the case of State v. Bryant, 90 Mo. 534, 2 S. W. 836. This rule of construction in the case of State ex rel. v. Harter, 188 Mo. l. c. 529, 87 S. W. 941, received a radical modification. The court there announced that “it is one of the cardinal principles of construction of statutes that all the parts of the statute must, if possible, be given a meaning and effect, ’ ’ and it was held that when this principle of construction applies, the doctrine of ejusdem generis has no applicability; that such doctrine “is only a rule of construction to aid us in arriving at the real legislative intention. It is not a cast-iron rule; it does not override all other rules of construction, and it is .never applied to defeat the real purpose of the statute, as that purpose may be gathered from the whole instrument. It is- a corollary to the first proposition above stated, that the statute must be construed to give effect to all its words. The rule itself must not be so construed as to defeat that purpose. Whilst it is aimed to preserve the meaning of
"We think the information was properly sustained by the trial court.
Appellants assign as error the action of the court in refusing at the close of the state’s evidence in chief to give a peremptory instruction to the jury to find
Finding no prejudicial error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.