Court Opinion

ID: 3691577
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:33:47.389146+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:33:10.795546
License: Public Domain

Max Jacobs and Louis Jacobs were indicted on, and plead guilty to, the charge of keeping a room for "the recording of wagers and selling pools," in violation of Section 13062, General Code. *Page 154 
They each paid their fines and costs. The Court of Common Pleas of Lorain county was the forum.
Prior to the defendants' arrest, their place of business was entered by the sheriff, and certain property was seized, some of which was indisputably used for gambling purposes, and some of which was money. Part of the money was found on the person of an employee of the defendants, one Stanley Sharkey, and the rest in a cloth bag in the counter. All of the seized property was held as evidence by the sheriff. No warrant had been issued for the search and seizure.
Subsequent to the conclusion of the criminal action, and after the fines and costs were paid, one of the defendants, Max Jacobs, requested the court to order the sheriff to return to him, as owner, the property taken at the time of the raid.
The prosecuting attorney appeared at the hearing at the request of the court, and stated: "I am not entering an appearance for anybody and am specifically objecting to any appearance being entered for anyone." He objected to the court making any order on the application, for the reason, as stated by him, that "Whatever was taken by the sheriff in this case is property in his custody. It wasn't taken on a search warrant, and therefore is not in the custody of the court. Any owner desiring to have that property returned must pursue his remedy at law to get it back."
It was the claim of the prosecuting attorney that process had neither been served upon the sheriff nor upon himself, and that the court had no authority to make an order in the matter.
The court thereupon conducted a trial, based upon the application of the defendant Max Jacobs. Witnesses were examined and cross-examined by the prosecuting attorney. At the conclusion of the evidence, the court ordered the destruction of certain items of property, and further ordered that the money, which *Page 155 
the court found to belong to the defendant Max Jacobs, should be returned to him, after deducting therefrom the increased costs of the proceedings. From the decision ordering the return of the money, the state of Ohio has appealed to this court on questions of law.
On November 6, 1939, this court determined the question as to whether or not the order which is the subject of this appeal was a final order within the meaning of the statutes, and could therefore be reviewed on questions of law. We there held that "the order directing the sheriff in reference to the disposition of the seized property is not an interlocutory order, but one made `upon a summary application in an action after judgment,' and therefore a final order as defined in Section 12223-2, General Code."
The jurisdiction of this court to hear the appeal having been thus determined, we are confronted with the question of the legal right of the Court of Common Pleas to award to the defendant the money in controversy.
If property is seized by an officer under a valid search warrant, the legal custody of the property is determined by statute. Section 13430-6, General Code, provides:
"When the warrant is executed by the seizure of property or things described therein, such property or things shall be kept by the judge, clerk or magistrate to be used as evidence."
If property is seized by an officer without a search warrant for use as evidence, the rule is the same, for the reason that the sheriff is an executive officer of the court, and is made so by virtue of Section 2833, General Code. Therefore, regardless of the manner in which he comes into the custody of any article which has an evidential bearing upon a proceeding in court, and of which any person has been or is being unlawfully deprived, that person may petition the court for *Page 156 
a restitution of his property. This for the elementary reason that the court has inherent and disciplinary power over its officers and can thus enforce its orders against them.
Therefore, in deciding one of the points in the instant case, this court concludes that, if the defendant Max Jacobs is unlawfully deprived of his property which was seized by the sheriff while said sheriff was legally raiding his place of business, and which property was seized as evidence of the violation of the law, then he can petition the court for a return of his property, for the reason that such property is subject to the orders of the court, and the sheriff, as an officer of the court, is subject to the orders of the court as to the disposition of the property.
Is defendant Max Jacobs unlawfully deprived of his property?
It may be safely asserted that after the evidence has served its purpose as evidence, or could have been so used, the owner is entitled to its return, unless the very possession of such articles constitutes an offense.
The possession of the money under the circumstances here disclosed does not constitute an offense, and it is not subject to confiscation as apparatus suitable to be used for gambling purposes, within the purview of the gambling statutes of Ohio.
It is further claimed that, by virtue of the provisions of Section 13430-9, General Code, the money cannot be restored to the owner. That section reads as follows:
"Upon conviction of a person for keeping a room or place to be used or kept for gambling, or knowingly permitting gambling to be conducted therein, or permitting a game to be played for gain, or a gaming device for gain, money or other property or for betting, or gambling, or permitting such device to be so used, or for being without a fixed residence and in the habit *Page 157 
of gambling, if money or other property won in gaming, be found in his possession, such money or other property shall be subject to seizure and payment of a judgment which may be rendered against him, growing out of such violation of law."
It is asserted that, by virtue of Sections 5966 and 5969, General Code, a civil action may be instituted by anyone who has lost money at gambling, or by anyone else if the loser has not sued, and therefore this money must be preserved to satisfy any judgments which might be rendered by virtue of those code provisions.
This claim cannot be maintained if the proper application of the well-known rule of statutory construction, ejusdem generis,
is followed. Section 13430-9, General Code, supra, specifically provides that "Upon conviction of a person," etc., money found in his possession which was won at gambling "shall be subject to seizure and payment of a judgment which may be rendered against him, growing out of such violation of law."
This statute clearly means that such money shall be subject to whatever judgment for fines and costs that may be imposed upon the convicted person, growing out of the violation of the gambling statutes, and the word "such" as used in the last sentence, plainly refers to the word "conviction" in the first sentence; and if this court were to attempt to construe the statute in the way suggested by the prosecuting attorney, we would be indulging in judicial legislation.
Judgment affirmed.
WASHBURN, P.J., and STEVENS, J., concur. *Page 158