60 Neb. 157 | Neb. | 1900
We are asked by the state to pass judgment upon cer
“That on the 16th day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight - hundred and ninety-nine, and on divers days between the said 16th day of January, 1899, and the 26th ;day of January, 1899, Thomas Dennison, late of the county of Douglas aforesaid, in the county of Douglas and State of Nebraska aforesaid, then and there being in said county, did then and there unlawfully and wilfully for gain, open and establish a certain lottery and scheme of chance known as policy, in which money was to be and was drawn, paid and distributed by the hazard and turn of a wheel of chance known as a policy wheel.”
The defendant filed a motion to quash this information for duplicity, which was overruled, and after a plea of not guilty, a jury was empaneled and trial proceeded. Defendant then objected to the introduction of any evidence on the ground that the information did not state a crime under section 225 of the Criminal Code, this being the section, as stated by the county attorney, in open court., under which the prosecution in the case was had. Thereupon, the court, of its own motion, instructed the jury to return a verdict of not guilty. The state then asked leave to file an amended information, which request was denied. It then asked the court to discharge the jury, Avithout prejudice to a future prosecution, Avhich application was also overruled. The jury then rendered a verdict of not guilty, in accordance with the instruction, and the defendant was discharged from custody. The state brings the case here on error, alleging that the lower court erred:
First, In sustaining the defendant’s objection to the introduction of evidence on the ground that the information charged no offense;
Second, In instructing the jury on its own motion to return a verdict of not guilty;
Fourth, In refusing to proceed with an examination for the purpose of determining whether probable cause existed for holding defendant to the next term of court.
1. It will be obseiwed that the state at the trial elected to consider the information as being drawn under section 225 of the Criminal Code. If it charged a crime under said section, it would be under the following language:
“If any person *• * * shall open, or establish, as owner,-or otherwise, any lottery, or scheme of chance, in this state.” It will be noticed that the information is silent as to the capacity in which defendant acted in opening and establishing the forbidden business, while the statute denounces the act when committed by any person as “owner, or otherwise.” It is therefore necessary to determine whether or not it is essential' to allege and prove the capacity in which a person may act who is charged with this crime, under this section. If it is, the information was defective, and the lower court properly sustained defendant’s objection to the introduction of any evidence thereunder.
The question is fraught with difficulties, for the reason that section 22-1 of the Criminal Code is also applicable to lotteries, the essential differences in the two, so far as is necessary to notice here, being that section 221 is confined to lotteries within this state, while section 225 extends to those either within or outside the state; and further, that while in section 221 the act is denounced against “any person,” in section 225 the act of opening or establishing a lottery within the state is prohibitory against any person “as owner, or otherwise,” and it further forbids any person “as owner or agent” from conducting a lottery established either within or outside the state. There seems to be.no doubt that, in an information drawn under section 221, it is not necessary to allege the capacity in which a person may act in conducting a lottery or scheme of chance, the mere act on the part of
2. On the second point urged, that the court erred in instructing the jury to return a verdict of not guilty, counsel for the state is right; for, if the information did not state a crime (and we have so held) there was nothing on which the jury could pass, and the proper practice would have been to have discharged the jury from further consideration of the case.
3. As the record stands, the court ruled correctly in denying the application of the state’ for leave to file an amended information. The complaint filed before the committing magistrate, which is a part of the record in
4. As the record does not disclose that the state asked the district court to hold a preliminary examination in the case, that question can not be considered.
Exception sustained.