City of Mexico v. Harris

92 S.W. 505, 115 Mo. App. 707, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 22
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 92 S.W. 505 (City of Mexico v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Mexico v. Harris, 92 S.W. 505, 115 Mo. App. 707, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 22 (Mo. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

— On a trial before the police judge of the city of Mexico, Missouri, the defendant was convicted of a violation of the following ordinance of said city:

“Sec. 109. Setting up gambling devices.- — -Any person who shall, in this city, set up or keep any gaming table, gambling device, the setting up and keeping of which is not by the law of this State declared to be a felony, at which any game of chance shall be played for money, property or anything representing money or property or-shall suffer, or permit any such table or device, at which any game of chance is played, to be set up or used for the purpose of gaming in any house, building, shed, booth, shelter, lot or other premises to him belonging or by him occupied, or of which he hath at the time the possession or control, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof be fined not less than fifty nor more then one hundred dollars.”

Defendant appealed to the circuit court of Audrain county, where on a trial de novo he was again found guilty and adjudged to pay a fine, from which judgment he appealed to this court. In the circuit court, the following motion to quash the information — so-called— was filed and overruled by the court:

“Now comes the defendant and moves the court to [710]*710quash the affidavit and statement of the city attorney herein and for cause says there is a variance between the affidavit and the attorney’s statement, that neither the affidavit or statement states facts sufficient to constitute a charge against the defendant; that the said affidavit is uncertain, ambiguous and indefinite and fails to apprise the defendant of the charge made against him.”

The action of the court in overruling -said motion is assigned as error.

The affidavit upon which the information purports to have been founded need not be set out as it is of no importance in the determination of the error assigned. The information'is as follows (omitting caption and signature) :

“The undersigned, city attorney of the city of Mexico, Audrain county, Missouri, upon the complaint of J. D. Sims, informs the court that one John Harris on the --day of January, February and March, 1903, within the-corporate limits.of said city of Mexico-, did then and there willfully and unlawfully did set up and keep a gambling device the setting up and keeping of which is not by the laws of this State declared to he a felony at which was played a game of chance commonly called poker with a pack of playing cards in which chance was a material element at which a .game of chance was played for money, property and effects and did bet and wager on the sides in a house, room or place which is known as the Mayfield building within the corporate limits of the city of Mexico, contrary to and in violation of the provisions of section 109, of chapter 22, of the revised ordinances of the city of Mexico, 1893, entitled 'Misdemeanors,’ wherefore the plaintiff asks the court to render judgment against said defendant for the penalties prescribed by the ordinance for said offense, together with the costs of this prosecution and for all other proper relief.”

1. The city of Mexico is a city of the third class. Section 5795, article I, chapter 91, Revised Statutes [711]*7111899,' concerning cities of the third, provides: “When any person shall he arrested and brought before the police judge, it shall be the duty of the judge to hear and determine forthwith the complaint alleged against the defendant,” etc. Section 5805, of the same article and chapter, authorizes an appeal from the judgment of the police judge by the defendant or the city. A prosecution for violation of a city ordinance is hot — -as assumed by appellant — a criminal action, but a civil one, and for this reason the sufficiency of the complaint is to be determined by the same rules as are applicable in other civil cases. [City of Gallatin v. Tarwater, 143 Mo. 40, 44 S. W. 750; City of St. Louis v. Weitzel, 130 Mo. 600 31 S. W. 1045; Town of Canton v. Ligon, 71 Mo. App. 407; City of Cassville v. Jimerson, 75 Mo. App. 426; City of California v. Harlan, 75 Mo. App. 506.] The statute, supra, authorizes a police judge to proceed when complaint of a violation of an ordinance is made. Such complaint, regardless of form, is sufficient, if it notifies the defendant of the particular ordinance he is charged with violating and is sufficiently definite to bar another prosecution for the same offense. The statute does not require that the complaint shall be supported by the affidavit or oath of any one; for this reason it is ■wholly immaterial whether the complaint, as filed, conforms to the affidavit upon which it purports to be based or not. The defendant Avas tried on the complaint filed by the city attorney and not upon the affidavit. The complaint notified him of the particular ordinance he was charged with violating and is sufficiently definite to bar another prosecution for the same offense. For these reasons the motion to quash was properly overruled.

2. Sims, the prosecuting witness, testified that on March 7, 1903, in company with the city marshal, he entered the Mayfield building in the city of Mexico, ascended to the second floor and, by looking over the top of a partition, saw Harris, the defendant, Boyd and [712]*712Miller sitting around a table (produced in court) with, poker chips (also produced in court) before them and cards in their hands. The city, over the objection of defendant, offered in evidence a complaint made by Sims charging Harris, Boyd and Miller with a violation of section 111, chapter 22, ordinance of the city of Mexico, by playing a game of chance with cards, for money, in the Mayfield building, March 7, 1903, filed before the police judge of the city of Mexico, and the docket entry of said judge, showing that the three defendants pleaded guilty to the charge. Sims testified that the offense of gambling to which defendant pleaded guilty, and the setting up of the gaming table, for which he was then on trial, were committed at one and the same time. It seems to us that on this evidence of Sims, the complaint and plea of guilty to gaming were competent evidence, for the purpose of showing the table produced in evidence was used as a gambling device. Sims also testified that defendant, a few months before his arrest, told him he had a poker game and was running it in the building named in the complaint. The city marshal testified that he and Sims went to the room together and found defendant and Boyd and Miller sitting around the table with poker chips before them and cards in their hands, and that he seized the table, chips and cards and produced them in court; that two days after this he found from sixty to seventy-five poker chips in the same room.

Robert Kemp, a witness for respondent, testified that at one time he occupied the room with defendant and Boyd;, that Boyd and defendant turned it into a poker room and he left them; that afterwards they continued to occupy the room as a poker room and played cards in it for money.

There was countervailing evidence offered by the defendant and evidence that the room was rented by Boyd alone.

[713]*713The court refused the following instructions asked by defendant:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 S.W. 505, 115 Mo. App. 707, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-mexico-v-harris-moctapp-1906.