248 Mo. 522 | Mo. | 1913
As the sufficiency of the indictment is challenged, we set it forth in full, omitting the caption and signature: .
“II. A. Rosskopf, Assistant Circuit Attorney in and for the city of St. Louis, aforesaid, within and for the body of the city of St. Louis, on behalf of the State of Missouri, upon his official oath, information makes as follows:
“That Edward A. Hilton and Sylvester Scharpiat on the 19th day of May in the year of our Lord, one thousand nine hundred and ten, at the city of St. Louis aforesaid, unlawfully and feloniously did make and establish a ‘policy’ as a business and avocation in the State of Missouri, against the peace and dignity of the State.
“And H. A. Rosskopf, Assistant Circuit Attorney, in and for the city of St. Louis, as aforesaid, within and for the body of the city of St. Louis, on*527 behalf of the State of Missouri, upon his official oath aforesaid, further information makes as follows:
“That Edward A. Hilton and Sylvester Scharpiat, in the city of St. Louis, on the nineteenth day of May, 1910, unlawfully and feloniously did aid and assist in making and establishing a ‘policy’ as a business and avocation, in the State of Missouri, contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided, and against' the peace and dignity of the State.”
Defendants were arraigned and pleaded not guilty. A severance was granted to Scharpiat and the State elected to try the defendant Hilton first. There was a trial of defendant before a jury. At the close of all the testimony the State elected to proceed upon the second count of the information and the court withdrew from the consideration of the jury all matters relating to the first count. Thereupon defendant asked the court to give a peremptory instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which was refused. Instructions were given (1) defining the offense and prescribing the punishment; (2) the weight to be given circumstantial evidence as affecting guilt; (3) the probative force of defendant’s statements; (4) that defendant was a competent witness in his own behalf; (5) that the information was not to be considered as evidence; (6) the presumption of innocence; (7) defining a reasonable doubt; (8) that the jury were the sole judges of the credibility and weight to be given the testimony; and (9) that the verdict must be based on the evidence and not upon arguments of counsel.
After the arguments of counsel, the jury returned a verdict of guilty as charged in the second count of the information and assessed defendant’s punishment at three years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary.
Ineffectual motions for a new trial and in arrest were filed, and overruled, and an appeal was perfected to this court.
. Upon defendant’s executing a bail bond approved by the trial court, a stay of execution was granted pending the appeal.
These facts are disclosed by the testimony:
On the 19th day of May, 1910, the date alleged in the information, three police officers named Wells, Stephenson and White, who had been detailed to look after gambling and were designated on the force as the 4 4 Gambling Squad, ’ ’ went to a room in the rear of a shoemaker’s shop at 922 Sidney street in that city, in the discharge of their special duty. Wells and White went to a window of the rear room, and saw defendant and Scharpiat sitting at a table marking in policy books. Stephenson went through the shoemaker’s shop and entering the rear room seized defendant with one hand and Scharpiat with the other, and pulled them away from the table, holding them until the other two officers ran around and entered the room, and defendant and Scharpiat were placed under arrest. Paraphernalia consisting of wall sheets, policy books with pencil markings on them, tickets and drawings were found on the table and in other parts of the room, and a small amount of money was lying on the table. All of these things- were taken possession of by the officers.
Officer Wells says when he entered the room he recognized defendant, whom he had known for three years, and said to him: 44This is pretty good, here you are again; I thought you had enough of this business;” to which defendant replied that 4 4 he was out of work and had to do something.” Wells then inquired how long defendant had been at that business, and the latter replied.: 44I havfe only been doing it two or three months.”
Officer Stephenson’s statement as to this conversation is slightly different, but to the same effect.
A- somewhat more general account of the conversation is given by White, the other officer.
All of the officers state that when asked his residence, at the police station, defendant stated it was 922 Sidney street, that he was renting the room where he had been arrested.
Upon officers Wells and Stephenson being qualified as experts by showing their familiarity with “policy,” the paraphernalia which had beón seized in the room was produced in court and the officers each explained how such sheets, policy books, tickets and drawings were used in that character of game or lottery. Each testified that the books taken out of defendant’s and Scharpiat’s hands at the time of their arrest were policy books and that defendant at the time was making figures in such a book.
The burden of the testimony for the defense was to show that the room in which the defendant was found, was used for other purposes than as a policy shop; that it was headquarters for a number of persons in the neighborhood to engage in social games of cards and to meet and drink beer. It was also attempted to discredit the testimony of the officers in regard to their ability to see what defendant and Scharpiat were doing in the room as the officers stood at the window — witnesses for the defense testifying it was not possible to see through the lace curtain which bung over the window.
Defendant and Scharpiat directly contradicted the testimony of the'officers as to officer Wells’ conversation with defendant or as to any admission having
Other testimony complained of by defendant will be discussed in its order in tbe opinion.
A familiar rule of criminal pleading is that where a statute specifically defines an offense, an indictment or information thereunder is sufficient which properly follows tbe language of tbe statute. [Whar. Cr. Pl. & Pr. (9 Ed.), sec. 220.]
Further discussion, therefore, as to the sufficiency of the information and the validity of the statute on which it is based, will serve no- useful purpose, as it would be but the threshing of old straw from which» no grain of valid objection can be winnowed.
We, therefore, rule this point against the defendant.
A motion to strike out should not be leveled at the entire testimony of a witness unless it is wholly inadmissible. After timely objections have proved ineffectual, it is not improper at the close of a witness’s testimony to move to strike out the objectionable por: tions of same, so 'designating them that the court may be enabled to determine the extent and purpose of the motion and to rule intelligently thereon. This was not done here. The motion was too broad, and we rule this contention against the defendant. [State v. Skibiski, 245 Mo. 459; Pressley v. State, 111 Ala. 34; Snideman v. Snideman, 118 Ind. 162; People v. Stanley, 101 Mich. 93.]
This contention seems formidable on its face, but its force is due to its phrasing and not to defects in the instruction. Similar instructions in all essential
Defendant’s specific objection is the use of the words “or scheme of lottery” after the word “policy” in one part of the instruction, and in the use of the words “or scheme of drawing in the nature of a lottery” after the word “policy” in another part of the instruction. The testimony clearly disclosed that “policy” was a scheme of lottery, as well as a scheme of drawing in the nature of a lottery, and the well-established meaning of the word in criminal law gives it no other signification. [State v. Harmon, 60 Mo. App. 48; State v. Wilkerson, 170 Mo. 184.] The words objected to were, therefore, nothing more than definitions and their use tended to enlighten rather than mislead the jury.
The first remark was in effect an appeal for conviction on account of the prevalence of the crime charged.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment is affirmed and the sentence which the law pronounces is ordered to be executed.