Commonwealth v. Edner

77 Pa. D. & C. 433, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 441
CourtFranklin County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedMarch 27, 1951
Docketnos. 41 to 49
StatusPublished

This text of 77 Pa. D. & C. 433 (Commonwealth v. Edner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Franklin County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Edner, 77 Pa. D. & C. 433, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 441 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Wingerd, P. J.,

Defendant was indicted under The Penal Code of June 24,1939, P. L. 872, Sec. 605,18 PS §4605, which provides among other things: “Whoever sets up or establishes, or causes to he set up or established, any game or device of address, or hazard, at which money or other valuable thing may or shall be played for, or staked or betted upon; ... is guilty of a misdemeanor, . . .”

There were nine separate indictments, each one setting forth that, on March 4,1950, in Washington Township, Franklin County, Pa., he had set up, etc., a certain slot machine, describing the machine and giving the serial number thereof. When the cases were called for trial, defendant contended that, as the indictments set forth that all of the machines were gambling devices and as they were all set up on the same day at the same place, the indictments alleged only one offense and that, therefore, the district attorney was bound to elect on which indictment he would try defendant. The court refused to direct the district attorney to so elect. Defendant pleaded not guilty to each one of the indict[434]*434ments upon the understanding that such act would not prejudice him in making the contention that all of the indictments constituted one offense. The court allowed this, reserving to defendant the right to raise his contention after the jury had reached its verdicts. All of the cases were tried together before one jury. The jury found defendant guilty on each one of the nine indictments. Defendant made a motion in arrest of judgment and for a new trial, giving as one of the reasons therefor, the following:

“The court erred in not ruling that there was but one offense instead of nine separate offenses and that the district attorney should have proceeded on one indictment instead of nine indictments or should have proceeded with the nine indictments consolidated into one offense”.

There is no doubt that defendant, pursuant to the objections made by him before the jury was sworn and before pleading to the indictments and the court’s ruling on such objections, had the right to raise this question in his motion for arrest of judgment and for a new trial. This reason for a new trial is the only reason urged by defendant in support of his motions and the only matter argued before the court in support thereof.

The evidence in the case showed that the machines in question had been set up in a building owned by the Eagles’ Aerie Home near the western limits of Waynes-boro, in Washington Township, Franklin County, Pa., that on March 4, 1950, there had been a raid and that the machines described in the several indictments were there on that day. Just when each machine had been set up was not shown but it was shown that all of them were set up and established during a period between sometime in August 1948 and March 4, 1950. By the finding of the jury defendant set up or caused to be set up each one of these machines, each of which was a [435]*435gambling device, although each was not exactly the same in character. There were machines which were played with coins of different value.

Let us consider what section 605 of The Penal Code means. Defendant contends that the word “any” as used in the expression “any game or device of address” has the force of “every” and “all”; that “any”, when used in a statute, has been held to mean “some” or “indefinite number or quantity” and that the proper construction in the instant case is that “any” must be read “as definitive of an indefinite number” and if so, there has been but one offense committed by defendant under the finding of the jury.

We cannot agree with the contention of defendant. Section 605 of The Penal Code of June 24,1939, supra, to us, clearly makes each setting up or establishing or causing to set up or establish “any game or device of address, or hazard, at which money or other valuable thing may or shall be played for, or staked or betted upon;” a distinct and separate offense. The word “any” as used in connection with the singular of “game or device” has the ordinary meaning ascribed to the word, i.e. “any one of many”. It means any one device of any character used for gambling or a game or device of address or hazard no matter of what kind or character. To give it any other meaning is not in accordance with its common and ordinary use in connection with a singular noun, i.e. “One indifferently out of a number; one (or as pi., some) indiscriminately of whatever kind or quantity”: Webster’s New International Dictionary. If used with a plural noun it may be synonymous with “some” just as “some” when used with a singular noun may be synonymous with “any”. In support of the meaning of “some” or “indefinite number or quantity”, defendant cites Whitherhead v. Allen et al., 42 N. Y. [3 Keyes’] 562, which was a case providing for suits against “any and all stockholders”. [436]*436This is no authority for defendant’s position, for “any” is used in connection with the plural and it could readily be interpreted “any one or more”. Defendant also cites New York County Medical Association v. City of New York, 65 N. Y. S. 531, in which the court considered a statute directing that fees collected from prosecutions for practicing medicine without proper registration shall be paid to any medical society which makes the complaint. Defendant contended that the statute only referred to three societies which had been named in prior acts. The court held that “association” and “society” were convertible terms and if the legislature meant to confine the statute to three it could have done so instead of using the word “any” which means “an indefinite number or quantity” and held the association entitled to the fine. This opinion, on the facts, gives the word “any” the meaning, “any one of an indefinite number”. To this court there is no question that section 605 of The Penal Code makes the setting up of a single gambling device of any nature a crime and that it does not include the setting up of many devices as one offense. The offense set forth in that section is not the establishing of a gambling place or the conducting of a place where gambling takes place, as such, but is the setting up of a single device.

Defendant further argues:

“The general rule laid down in Corpus Juris Secun-dum (42 C. J. S. 1124, §168) is that where the same act is charged with having been committed by defendant at the same place and at the same time even though there be several agencies or instrumentalities used to commit the act there is only one offense. One of the leading cases supporting this rule is State v. Jackson [242 Mo. 410], 146 S. W. 1167 (1912), where the indictment charged that defendant ‘did unlawfully and feloniously set up and keep divers gaming tables and gambling devices, to-wit: one crap table, commonly [437]*437so-called, and one poker table, commonly so called, upon which dice and cards were used, which said gaming tables and gambling devices were adapted, devised and designed for the purpose of playing games of chance for money, property and poker chips’. Defendant moved to quash the indictment for the reason, inter alia, that it charged two separate and distinct offenses.

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Bluebook (online)
77 Pa. D. & C. 433, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-edner-paqtrsessfrankl-1951.