248 Mo. 509 | Mo. | 1913
Defendant was convicted of violating section 4749, Revised Statutes 1909, by becoming the custodian of money bet and wagered upon a horse race, and appeals from a judgment of the circuit court of St. Louis city fixing his punishment at a fine of $500.
The information upon which defendant was convicted also contained a count charging him with registering a bet, but, as he was not convicted on that count, it will be disregarded on this appeal.
The evidence for the State tends to prove that William J. Breen, a police officer of the city of St. Louis detailed to the gambling squad, went into a cigar store on Pine street, in said city, on October 12, 1911, and found defendant standing behind the counter. Said policeman asked if he could make a bet on a horse race. Defendant replied in the affirmative and handed witness a “form sheet” showina a race sehed
Immediately after the bet was made other officers arrested defendant and took- from him the “racing form sheet” and the two dollars. The money was marked and identified as. the currency which witness Breen had delivered to defendant as a bet that the horse Cherryola would win. Witness Breen further testified that the bet was with defendant, and that there was no discussion or understanding about whether there were any odds offered in favor of or against the horse Cherryola.
The policeman who made the arrest said to defendant: “I got you at last, I placed a bet with you. I have the goods on you.” To which remark defendant replied: “We all take chances; we all get by.. We won’t think of this two years from now.”
The “form sheet” or “racing form” found in defendant’s possession, and upon which witness Breen had made a mark opposite the name of the horse Cherryola, was introduced in evidence by the State to prove that a horse race was scheduled and advertised to take place in the State of Kentucky upon which the bet was placed.
Defendant was not sworn as a witness, but one Thomas Fitch, a clerk in the cigar store where defendant was arrested, gave evidence on behalf of defendant. His testimony, in substance, is to the effect that one Frank Cummings, a brother of defendant, was the proprietor of the cigar store; that bets made there were made with Frank Cummings; that defendant and witness Fitch were merely clerks of the said Frank Cummings, working on a salary, and not di
For reversal defendant asserts: (1) That the evidence does not prove that he was the custodian of two dollars bet by witness Breen; (2) that as the information charges that witness Breen made a bet against a party to the circuit attorney unknown, and the evidence shows that said bet was made by Breen against defendant, there is a fatal variance between •the charge and proof; (3) that there was no competent evidence that any race between Cherryola and other horses took place on October 12, 1911, in the State of Kentucky, and that the court erred in permitting the “form sheet” or “racing form” found in defendant’s possession to be read to the jury.
There is also no reason why the word “custo
Just why the above quoted paragraph was inserted in this information is not apparent. That provision of section 4749, Revised Statutes 1909, prohibiting persons from becoming the custodian of money bet or to be bet on the result of a horse race is analogous to section 4554, Revised Statutes 1909, which prohibits the receiving of money or property which has been stolen or embezzled.
In furtherance of its desire to suppress book-making and pool-selling upon the result of races, the General Assembly by the express language of section 4749, supra, has visited the penalty of a felony upon all persons who knowingly aid such book-making or pool-selling by knowingly receiving into their custody money which has been bet upon a contest of speed or endurance of horses or men and which money is received or held for distribution upon the result of such races. Consequently, it is just as much a violation of the law to knowingly receive money as a bet or wager upon a horse race as it is to knowingly receive stolen or embezzled goods. The penalties are a little different, but both acts are denounced by statute and are correspondingly illegal. It follows that the rules of procedure which apply to the indictment and evidence in a prosecution for receiving stolen goods can properly be applied to a charge of knowingly becoming the custodian of money bet upon a horse race.
In the case of State v. Sakowski, 191 Mo. 635, it was held that in prosecutions for receiving stolen goods it was wholly unnecessary to charge or allege the name of the person from whom the goods were stolen, and that when an indictment averred the name of the person from whom the goods were stolen, such allegation was only surplusage and need not be proved. [See, also, State v. Brown, 209 Mo. 413.] Under the
It was wholly unnecessary to recite in the information the name of the party against whom Breen made the bet; that the name of the party was unknown to' the prosecutor, or that the horse race was to be run in the State of Kentucky. When the defendant received the two dollars as a wager upon a horse race his crime of becoming the custodian of money bet upon a horse race was complete, regardless of whether any race actually took place. [20 Cyc. 888.] The allegations necessary to a valid information in this ease must be determined by section 22 of article 2 of our State Constitution and the statute creating the crime; and after a careful consideration of those laws, we are convinced that it was only necessary to state the name of the party from whom the money was received, and that it was knowingly received as a bet or wager upon a contest of speed between horses, coupled, of course, with the usual averment that the act was feloniously, wilfully and unlawfully done.
We are aware of the rule that when an indictment or information describes the acts which constitute an offense with unnecessary detail it sometimes becomes necessary to prove the crime with the same particularity with which it is charged. [See State v. Samuels, 144 Mo. 68.] The spirits of the Sakowski and Samuels cases do not seem to be in complete accord. We have no quarrel with the Samuels case, but do not think the doctrine of that case can be extended or expanded so as to require proof of all the allegations of the information in this case.
However, if it be conceded that by inserting in the information in the case at bar the allegation that the bet of which defendant became the custodian was made by witness Breen against a party unknown to
This point would be worthy of serious consideration if defendant had stood upon his demurrer offered at the close of the State’s evidence in chief. However, he declined to stand upon that demurrer and introduced witness Fitch who testified in effect that defendant was a mere clerk in the cigar store of his brother Frank Cummings, and that bets received there were for said Frank Cummings; consequently, it was made reasonably clear by said witness that the bet was really made with said Frank Cummings, and it appearing that Breen did not report the name of Frank Cummings to the circuit attorney as being concerned in the betting, it is made reasonably clear that the prosecutor did not know against whom the bet by Breen was made at the time the information was filed. In other words, the defendant introduced substantial evidence to support the allegation of an unknown bettor, and thereby destroyed his plea of a variance as to the names of the bettors.
When a defendant doe's not stand upon his demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence, but afterwards introduces evidence on his own -behalf,' and again demurs at the close of all the evidence, his first demurrer will be deemed waived and his last demurrer will be considered with reference to all the evidence in the case. [Klockenbrink v. Railroad, 172 Mo. 678;
The accuracy of items published in newspapers and trade journals usually not vouched for by any party connected with the litigation in which they are offered, while the form sheets showing races scheduled or advertised to take place at Louisville were used by defendant to induce Breen to make the bet and deposit his money with defendant. Verbal statements by a defendant made at the very time he is engaged in the commission of a crime, if against his interest, are always admissible as part of the res gestae. [Wharton, Criminal Evidence (10 Ed.), sec. 262.] There is no sound reason why printed or written representations so made and explanatory of-defendant’s criminal acts should not likewise be admitted against him.
In the ease of People v. McCue, 83 N. Y. Supp. 1088, l. c. 1090, the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court* of New York in construing a statute similar to section 4749, Revised Statutes 1909 announced the fol
To the same effect is the ruling of the St. Louis Court of Appeals in State v. Townsend, 50 Mo. App. 690, l. c. 698. We do not feel called upon to condemn or approve the views expressed in those cases, as it was not necessary in this case to prove that a race actually took place in the State of Kentucky. The information does not charge that a horse race did occur in the State of Kentucky on the 12th day of October, 1911; it only charges in effect that a race was to take place in Kentucky on that date, a fact disclosed by the very form sheet used by defendant when he pointed out to witness Breen how to make the bet.
We are unable to see how any substantial right of defendant was invaded by compelling him to meet the very documentary evidence which he used in committing the crime of which he was convicted. To hold that the racing form sheet was not competent to establish the fact that a horse race was scheduled or advertised to take place in Kentucky upon which the witness Breen made his bet, would be almost as illogical-as to hold that a deadly weapon used in committing an assault is not competent evidence against the party who used such weapon in committing the assault. •
Courts take judicial notice of the location of all cities which are commercial centers and of the states where they are located. Louisville is the principal commercial center bearing that name in the United States, a fact so well known that when used without other designation any man in St. Louis with average intelligence knows that one of the chief cities in Kentucky is thereby named. “A State court will take judicial notice of . . . the location of .cities outside, the State, at least if they are well-known commercial centers.” [16 Cyc. 858.] To the same effect is the case of Parks v. Jacob Dold Packing Co., 6 N. Y. Misc. 570, l. c. 574.
In the early cases of Ober v. Pratte, 1 Mo. 58, and Riggin v. Collier, 6 Mo. 568, l. c. 572, the doctrine is announced that the courts of this State cannot take judicial cognizance of places outside of its limits. However, it is evident that the courts of all the States are evolving towards a more logical construction of the law of judicial notice. In the subsequent case of Price v. Page, 24 Mo. 65, l. c. 67, this court took judicial notice of the fact that the State of Missouri was located east of the Rocky Mountains, and that it was the duty of the courts to judicially know the geographical position of places of well-known public notoriety. .
A court which would solemnly decree that it cannot judicially know facts which are well known to all its constituents would thereby furnish substantial reason for its own recall.
Defendant’s resourceful attorney also contends
Finding no reversible error in the record the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.