107 P. 510 | Mont. | 1910
delivered the opinion of the court.
Leander Duncan and others were convicted of operating and conducting a gambling game. From the judgment of conviction, and from an order denying him a new trial, the defendant Duncan appealed.
1. The first contention made is that the trial court erred in permitting the information to be amended after the defendant had entered his plea. Sections 9108 and 9174, Revised Codes, provide:
“Sec. 9108. An information may be amended in matter of substance or form at any time before the defendant pleads, without leave of court. The information may be amended at any time thereafter and on the trial as to all matters of form, at the discretion of the court, where the same can be done without prejudice to the rights of the defendant. No amendment must
“See. 9174. Upon the trial of an indictment or information, when a variance between the allegation therein and the proof, in respect of time, or in name or description of any place, person or thing, shall appear, the court may, in its judgment, if the defendant cannot be thereby prejudiced in his defense on the merits, direct the indictment or information to be amended, according to the proof, on such terms as to the postponement of the trial, to be had before the same or another jury, as the court may deem reasonable. ”
As originally drawn, the information charged the defendant with operating and conducting a certain game of chance played with cards, “commonly known as and called by the name of ‘stud horse poker,’ ” said game being then and there played, carried on, run, and conducted with cards for money, checks, credits, and other representatives of value. The amendment was made by striking out the words quoted above. If these words were material, in the sense that their presence in the information was necessary to constitute the statement of a public offense, or if the information, as amended, charged an offense different from the one it charged before the amendment was made, then, confessedly, the amendment was as to a matter of substance and could not be made after plea. (Section 9108, above; 22 Cyc. 439.) The attorney general concedes that it is the rule that if these words, so stricken, had remained in the information. the state would have been confined in its proof to the specific game designated. (State v. Radmilovich, ante, p. 93, 105 Pac. 91.) But counsel for appellant err in assuming that this is a rule of pleading, whereas it is a rule of evidence.
Section 8416, Revised Codes, under which the defendant was convicted, makes it a crime to carry on or conduct a game of chance played with cards for money, checks, credits, or other representatives of value. The information, as originally drawn, charged the defendant with that crime, and the information in its amended form does likewise. The original information desig
2. Exception is taken in this court to certain remarks made by the judge of the trial court in the presence of the jury. But the record fails to disclose that any objection was made, ruling requested, or exception saved in the court below, and there is therefore not anything before us to review.
3. The principal assignment of error, and the only other one which requires special notice, relates to the insufficiency of the •evidence to sustain a conviction. From the brief of the attorney general we quote his résumé of the evidence, as follows: “The testimony of the witnesses on behalf of the state, Charles S. Henderson, J. B. Henderson, and W. D. Tracy, all peace officers of Silver Bow county, connected with the sheriff’s office, is to the effect, generally, that when they broke into the rooms where the defendants were arrested, they found about seven or eight men, who had apparently been playing cards. There was a card-table, cards and chips scattered about the room. Some of the inmates were trying to escape, and all were much perturbed, and apparently attempting to conceal what had been going on. The testimony of the witness Tracy, in part, is as follows: ‘‘About 2 o’clock that day we went down to Yeale’s place, and in
The judgment and order are reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.