247 Mo. 672 | Mo. | 1913
Prosecution under section 4750, Revised Statutes 1909, which comes up upon an appeal by defendant from the circuit court of Monroe county. The information is in two counts, the first of which
“And Ezra T. Fuller, prosecuting attorney of and within and for -the county and State aforesaid, upon his oficial oath aforesaid further informs the court that at and in the county of Monroe and State of Missouri, on or about the 9th day of December (A. D. 1911, and on divers other days prior thereto), George P. Solon did then and there unlawfully and feloniously set up and keep a certain gaming table and gambling devices, to-wit: A round table covered with cloth, upon which dice and cards were used, which gaming table and gambling devices were adapted, devised and .designed for the purpose of playing games of chance for money and property, and did then and there unlawfully and feloniously induce, entice and permit Edgar W. Guilford, Edward Crawford and other persons whose names are to this prosecuting attorney unknown, to be and play at and upon and by means of said gambling table and gambling devices, contrary to the form of the statute in such cases made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the State.”
Upon a trial had at the March term, 1912, of the said Monroe Circuit Court defendant was found guilty by a jury on the second .count and his punishment as
The facts as. developed by the testimony seem fairly to be about as follows:
The defendant, a young man, of about the age of twenty years, is a son of a Mrs. Solon, who at the times complained of, was the keeper of a certain hotel in Monroe City, known as the Monroe Hotel. The build-
It will be noted that the information charges the offense to have been committed on about the 9th of December, 1911. It is in evidence that on the 9th day of December, 1911, one Dr. Guilford having occasion to see a Mr. Crawford, also a witness in the case, went to the Monroe‘Hotel, and ascertained that Crawford was in a certain room of the hotel. Guilford describes his meanderings in seeking Crawford as follows: “We went up a flight of steps to the hotel office; up another flight of stairs to the third floor; back through a hallway — the back portion of which was dark — through a dark room into another room, and in the northeast corner of the third story in the rear of the building. ’ ’ There the witness saw the defendant with two other young men engaged in playing with dice for money. Two dice appear to have been used. Dice were being “shot” upon a table described by the witness as a ‘£ round dining-room table covered with cloth and about five feet in diameter.” The witness Guilford, after observing the game for a time, was asked by defendant to join therein, and ultimately did so. Being asked
Another witness Crawford, who seems to have been present at all the times complained of by the State in both counts of the information, testifying for the State touching the charges contained in each count, says: “Dr. Guilford came up and sat on the bed; sat there probably two or three minutes, something like that; I think I had the dice in my hand at the time; I lost out, as we call it, and doctor took the dice and shot four or five rolls, and what we call craps; he threw craps each time I think. The defendant won in those games; I don’t have any recollection of the defendant making any charges or taking anything for the ‘shots’ from those who participated in the game. I have no recollection of him making any charges on shots. I have been in that room other than on December 9, 1911; we played back in that room on that table with the defendant; he was, what we term, banking the game; taking a ‘take-off.’ ”
After offering the testimony of other witnesses, which testimony had reference largely to the location of the hotel, the rooms thereof and other matters not pertinent to this inquiry, the State announced that it rested. Thereupon the defendant filed a demurrer to the evidence in the form of an instruction to be given by the court to the jury that under the law and the evidence their finding on the second count of the information should be for the defendant. Before any action was taken by the court on this demurrer the State announced that it desired to withdraw its an
Upon being recalled the witness Crawford again testified in substance as follows: “Q. Ask you whether you were ever invited to this room in question? A. I would not consider it a particular invitation, just in a way; defendant said he had ‘a little game up there once in a while, if I ever done the like come around,’ something to that effect. By ‘up there’ he had reference to up in the hotel. I believe I have played poker twice in that room in that hotel. Defendant was there each time; he was playing poker; he made change and took the take-off; this was sometime in December, 1911. I don’t remember the first time I went to this room; it has been so long I could not,recall who was there.”
The above is the substance of the testimony for the State so far as the facts are pertinent to this prosecution, and so far as they refer to the acts done by the defendant.
Defendant did not testify in his own behalf and called but one witness, his mother, whose testimony,, in the view we take of this case, is not pertinent, except the fact of .defendant’s age, which it seems to be conceded, was twenty years.
At the close of all the testimony defendant requested an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the second count of the information. This request was refused, and the defendant properly saved his exceptions.
As stated heretofore, the jury acquitted the defendant on the first count and found him guilty on the second count of the information.
I. Among other things, it is complained that the court erred in permitting the State, after having announced that it rested, to re-open the case and re-call
II. The contention is made that the instructions given by the court were bad, but we are not furnished with any specifications showing wherein the same are defective, and a careful reading of them does not dis-
III. Complaint is made by counsel for defendant in effect that there was not sufficient testimony to go to the jury on the second count of the information.
TMs point presents a serious question for consideration. The prosecution is under what is now section 4750, Revised Statutes 1909, a section which, first passed in 1825, has undergone many vicissitudes both by amendment and by construction. In considering this point of complaint it must be kept in mind that defendant stands convicted here of setting up and
We have looked in vain in the record for some testimony that the game of poker alleged to have been played npon the table in question, was played with cards. The proof simply shows that “a round dining table, covered with cloth, five feet in diameter and similar in all respects to many other tables used in this hotel,” constituted the plane surface upon which the game of poker was played. No chips or other paraphernalia, no cards even (though the information alleges the use of cards as an adjunct to the table) were offered in evidence physically, or orally shown by the evidence, to have been used in playing the game of ' poker. Beyond the fact that an ordinary table was used and that on one occasion defendant took a “rake-off” and “made change and acted as ‘banker,’ ” no facts are shown to bring defendant within the denunciation of the statute. The information charges the use of cards on the table mentioned therein. Having so charged, some proof ought to have been adduced, either orally or by offering the cards themselves in evidence, that cards were used on the table in playing the game of poker from which the defendant took the “rake-off” in the game of which he was banker. But there is not one word of proof as to the use of common playing cards or any other cards on this ta
It follows then, that the demurrer to the evidence on the second count ought to have been sustained, since to be clear upon the point, we hold that it is not sufficient in a prosecution under this section to show that a. game of poker was played upon an ordinary dining table, and that the defendant (though a clerk in the hotel in which the room was situate wherein the game was played) acted as banker in said game and actually took a “rake-off” therefrom. There should have been a showing as to the use of other paraphernalia; certainly to the extent charged in the information in order to bring defendant within the purview of the section under consideration.
We are not inclined, the history and patent original intent of this section being kept in mind, to any further invade the “twilight zone” separating the facts in the case at bar from an ordinary case of gambling. All of the cases wherein convictions for setting up and keeping poker tables have been sustained, were cases in which the proof showed that playing cards' and poker, chips were used, and usually that some specially prepared table (e. g., one having a canvas top, or having a slot leading into a box, called in the slang of the witnesses, a “kitty”) was a part of the paraphernalia, and that the acts involved continuity over some period of time beyond one single isolated act. [State v. Cannon, 232 Mo. 205; State v. Hall, 228 Mo. 456; State v. Mathis, 206 Mo. 604.]
We are not holding that a prosecution under this section as it now reads cannot be maintained for setting up and keeping the appliances and paraphernalia with which games of chance with cards can be
Clearly this section has been by construction strained almost to the breaking point. Passed originally in 1825, it denounced the use of gambling wheels and gaming tables and devices mechanically constructed — devices more intricate and perhaps even more unfair than a mere table or plane surface equipped with a pack of playing cards or a pair of dice. It has been twice amended by adding other appliances to those prohibited. In 1865 the word “keno” was added to it, and again in 1901 the words “slot machine, stand or device of whatever pattern, hind or make, however worked, operated or manipulated,”
It follows then that this demurrer to the evidence on the second count of the information should have been sustained.
IY. Instruction numbered 3 given by the court of its own motion is complained of. This instruction is as follows:
“The court further instructs the jury that before you can find the defendant guilty under either count in the information, you must find and believe from the evidence in the case beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant set up and kept a gaming table of the kind and character as defined and explained in instructions one and two herein, but you are further instructed that under the law every person appearing or acting as master or mistress or having the care, use or management, for the time, of a gaming table or gambling device is deemed a keeper thereof.”
Learned counsel for defendant contend that this instruction is erroneous in that it does hot use the word “prohibited,” for the reason, as they urge, that section 4761, Bevised Statutes 1909 (which section
It follows from what has been said that this case must be reversed for the reason that under the law there was not sufficient testimony to go to the jury on the second count. It may be said in passing that unless the testimony can be made stronger in another trial than in the case at bar no necessity is seen for coiitinuing the prosecution. Aside from the error noted, for which we reverse the case, and the failure of the court to instruct that a conviction could not be had on both counts, the case was well and ably tried. Objection is made to the rulings of the court on the introduction of testimony. The case is singularly free from facts warranting this criticism.