Court Opinion

ID: 8017327
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:06:17.574854+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:36:26.186437
License: Public Domain

KENNISH, J.
On March 29, 1909, the grand jury for the city of St. Louis returned an indictment charging defendant with having feloniously set up and kept a gambling device, to-wit, a poker table. After being arraigned and entering a plea of not guilty, the defendant was put upon his trial, which resulted in his conviction, and' the' assessment of punishment at six six months’ imprisonment in the city jail. Unavailing motions for new trial and in arrest were thereupon filed, after which judgment was pronounced in accordance with the verdict, and an appeal was duly taken.
On the part of the state the testimony tended to prove that the Modern Horseshoe Club had headquarters in a three-storv building located at No. 2309' Chestnut street, in the city of St. Louis. In different rooms of this building various persons assembled and played poker for money. The games were played on tables which were kept for that purpose, and, instead of using money in the games, each person desiring to play purchased chips from the person in charge of the place, paying him money therefor. After the game was ended the chips were returned to the person from whom purchased, and the amount represented by them was paid by the “keeper” to the person by whom they were presented. While the game was in progress and on each occasion when the players held certain cards, the person in charge of the house, referred to as the “keeper,” would take from the players his “rake off,” which consisted of two chips representing five cents. *36Regardless of the result of the game, this “rake off” was exacted by the “keeper;” it represented his charge for the use of the table and as the keeper of the game.
From December, 1908, until February, 1909, the appellant was in personal charge of the tables used as above mentioned, and acted in the capacity of " keeper, ’ ’ selling and redeeming the chips, arranging for the games, taking the “rake off” and playing at the game himself whenever it was necessary to have a sufficient number of players for a game.
The game of poker was fully explained by an expert witness, and it was shown to be a game of chance played upon a table with cards, but we do not deem it necessary to set out in detail the evidence upon that branch of the case.
Appellant offered no evidence in his own behalf, but at the close of the evidence for the state asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence and directing a verdict of acquittal.
I. It is conceded in appellant’s brief that under the recent decisions of this court the indictment in this case is sufficient, and we are therefore relieved from a review of the action of the trial court in overruling the motion to quash and the motion in arrest of judgment.
II. Appellant complains that the court erred in giving of its own motion the following instructions:
"The court instructs the jury that before you can convict the defendant in this case of the charge mentioned in the indictment, you must not only find that the defendant set up or kept the table mentioned in the evidence, and that the same was a gambling device, but that he induced, enticed or permitted other persons to play upon it whilst he was himself in charge of setting up or keeping said table; and unless you *37find that the defendant set up or kept said table, or bad charge of the same, and also induced, enticed or permitted other persons to play uptín the same, you will acquit the defendant of the charge.
“You are further instructed that it is not necessary for the State to prove that the defendant owned the ‘poker table’ mentioned in the indictment and the evidence. If you find and believe from the evidence that the defendant, Sylvester Ohauvin, had charge and control of said table, that is sufficient; provided, you find the facts to be as required and specified in the foregoing instructions designated ‘first’ and ‘second.’ ”
As set out in appellant’s brief the first of the foregoing instructions contains the word “and” instead of the word “or” in the clause “but that he induced, enticed or permitted,” and our attention is particularly directed to that fact. An examination of the record shows that the word “or” is used in the instruction as above quoted, and in that respect it is in accord with the language of the statute and the decisions of this court; but had it been otherwise, and as stated by defendant, it is obvious that the error would have been in defendant’s favor, by placing upon the State the burden of proving more than the law required.
Although the instruction is as favorable as appellant was entitled to, yet he complains that it authorized a conviction even though the defendant was not'the owner of the table, provided that he had charge and control thereof. And it is contended that the instruction should have gone further and “told the jury that if they believed from the evidence that appellant was merely an employee, and as such not responsible for the poker game alleged to have been played nor the paraphernalia of the game and was not himself personally and directly interested in any gain or profit derived therefrom, then they should acquit him.” In other words, appellant’s contention is that if the jury *38believed that the intangible organization known as the Modern Horseshoe Club, owned the gambling outfit and received the profits from the game, and that the defendant was merely an employee, then the defendant should have been acquitted.
The organization, as such,, cannot be guilty of a felony, and it would not do to say that because the club owned the table and received the profits, the defendant, who in fact set up, kept and had actual control of the table, who represented the organization and acted for it, was guilty of no offense. Such doctrine would lead to such serious consequences in attempting to . enforce this statute that its unreasonableness is shown in the bare statement. The law does not recognize the doctrine of agency as a defense to a criminal charge. It deals with the person who commits the overt act, and while others may be guilty as accessories, the party committing the prohibited act is not permitted to interpose the defense that he acted only as an agent or employee. [1 Bishop’s New Crim. Law, sec. 355.]
We have carefully examined the instructions, including instruction number 2, and find that they correctly declared the law as applicable to the facts in evidence, and were fully authorized by the decisions of this court construing the same statute. [State v. Hall, 228 Mo. 456; State v. Lee, 228 Mo. 480; State v. Locket, 188 Mo. 415; State v. Rosenblatt, 185 Mo. 114; State v. Mathis, 206 Mo. 604.]
III. It is earnestly urged by distinguished counsel for appellant that the evidence failed to bring the defendant within the terms of the statute upon which the indictment is bottomed. In support of this contention it is ingeniously argued that the object of the statute (See. 4750, R. S. 1909) was to restrain and punish those who ply the arts of the gambler for their own gain and profit by setting up and keeping such devices as may tempt the unwary to part with their money, *39but that it was never intended to punish as for' a felony the members of a social organization who on their own premises and among themselves, for pastime or sport, indulge in the game for small stakes, with no eye to gain or profit to the organization.
It was shown by uncontradicted evidence that the defendant was in charge of the table, chips and paraphernalia by means of which gambling was carried on; that he controlled and directed the games and collected the rake off; that no person could participate in the. game unless he purchased chips in the amount of two dollars or over; that the betting at times ran as high as $14 and higher, and that the playing continued all night and frequently until daylight the next morning. One witness, who frequently participated in the gambling, when asked to describe the part taken by the defendant in the game, said: “He done like any gamekeeper would do. When he got sufficient to play he sold the chips and when it came to the jack pot, he took off two or three chips, and the chips were worth two cents and a half apiece.”
There was no substantial evidence tending, to prove that persons frequented the Modem Horseshoe. Club because of its social features. It appears that there was some kind of a roll supposed to be signed by the members, but the witnesses who admitted having taken.part in the gambling there, were uncertain as to whether or not they were in fact members of the club. They had not paid any dues or membership fees, and one of them who had visited the place regularly for a ■ number of years, when asked by counsel for defendant if he didn’t go to the club for the purpose of enjoying himself, naively answered, “We went there to enjoy ourselves and try to win.”
Under these facts there can be no doubt that the defendant with others was conducting a. common-gambling resort, and to call it a social organization where games were indulged in for pleasure and pastime *40is but a tbin disguise to conceal the mercenary purpose of those who were preying upon the weaknesses of their fellows. .But let it be assumed, as contended by appellant, that the defendant was not the proprietor of the place; that he was there as an employee; that he had no pecuniary interest in the table at which he presided as game-keeper, or even that the games were played as much for amusement as for the chance of winning; neither of these facts nor all of them combined would constitute a defense to the felony charged.
The statute under which the defendant was convicted is leveled against persons who shall set up or keep' any kind, of a gambling table or device. There is no exception exempting from its provisions those who shall commit the prohibited act without having any pecuniary interest in the game; nor does it make the least difference where the gambling- table may be set up or kept, whether in a building used for the purposes of a social organization or in the privacy of the home of the accused. All that is required to constitute the offense is that the defendant at the time and place mentioned set up, kept or maintained any kind of a gambling table or gambling device adapted, devised or designed for the purpose of playing any game of chance for money or property, and that he induced, enticed or permitted some person or persons to bet or play at or upon the same.
The evidence clearly established the guilt of the defendant, and finding no error in the record the judgment is accordingly affirmed.
Gantt, P. and Burgess, J., concur.