The defendant was indicted for being a vagrant.- The prosecution was based upon subdivisions 9 and 10 of section 7843 of the Code of 1907: (9) That defendant is a prostitute; (10) that defendant is a keeper of a house of prostitution. From a judgment of conviction she appeals, and counsel for appellant assigns errors and insists that the lower court erred in its rulings upon the admission of evidence, and also in its refusal to give the general affirmative charge requested in writing by the defendant.
While several rulings of the court are complained Of as being- error, there are but two questions involved in this case; First, was the defendant a prostitute? or, second, was she a keeper of a house of prostitution within the time covered by the indictment?
The law defines a prostitute to be a female given to indi§,crimate lewdness; a strumpet. “As a verb, its definition is to offer freely to a lewd use. or to indiscriminate lewdness. As an adjective it means openly devoted to lewdness; sold to wickedness or infamous practices.” A woman may be a prostitute and carry on the business of such if she so holds herself out to the world. She may on the street or in other public or private places so conduct herself as to make it clear that she is a prostitute, and that such is her occupation. Or any female who frequents or lives in bouses of ill fame, or associates with women of bad character for chastity, either in public or private, or at a house which men - of bad character frequent or visit, or who commits fornication for hire, shall be deemed to be a prostitute, or a female who offers her body to an indiscriminate intercourse with men. Finally, a prostitute means a whore or strumpet in the common acceptation of those words. But a single or occasional act of illicit sexual intercourse does not make a woman a prostitute; -and a female may live in a state of illicit cabnal intercourse with a man for years without becoming a prostitute.
Other questions presented relating to the ruling of the court upon the testimony need, not here be treated. Suffice it to say that there is no evidence in the record, except the illegal evidence above mentioned, proving or even tending to prove that the defendant was the keeper of a house of prostitution, and, as above stated, the court erred in allowing this evidence to go to the jury.
It follows that the judgment of conviction must be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
