Lane v. City of Springfield

120 Ill. App. 5, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 591
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 20, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 120 Ill. App. 5 (Lane v. City of Springfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. City of Springfield, 120 Ill. App. 5, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 591 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action in debt by appellee against appellant to recover penalties for a violation of two ordinances of the City of Springfield, as follows:

“651. Gambling House or Eooms. Whoever shall, within the City of Springfield, set up, keep, maintain or support any gambling house or room, or place used for the practice of gambling or playing for money or property, or shall knowingly permit any building or premises owned or controlled by him to be used for am such purpose; or whoever shall keep or use, or permit to be used, in any building or place occupied, controlled or owned, by such person, any keno or faro table, wheel of fortune, roulette, shuffle board, cards, or other instrument or device commonly used for the purpose of gaming, shall, upon conviction, be fined not less than twenty-five dollars nor more than two hundred dollars for each offense.”
“652. Inmates of Gaming House. Whoever shall be an inmate of any gaming house or-room, within said city, or shall be in any way connected therewith, or shall frequent or visit the- same or be found therein; or whoever shall, within the city, play for any money or other valuable thing at any game with cards, dice, billiards, or any other instrument or device whatsoever; or whoever shall bet on any such game when played by others, shall, on conviction, be fined not less than ten dollars nor more than one hundred dollars for each offense.”

The declaration contains twenty counts, the first ten counts alleging violations of ordinance 651 upon ten certain days in September, 1903, and the last ten counts alleging violations of ordinance 652 upon the same days.

Upon trial by a jury, there was a verdict against appellant upon the first ten counts and upon the last eight counts and the penalty, or debt, was fixed at $100 upon each count, making a total of $1,800. Upon this verdict the court rendered judgment, after overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.

It is urged that the offense under ordinance 651 is of a higher degree than the offense under ordinance 652, and therefore, that a person found guilty of violating ordinance 651 cannot, at the same time, be found guilty of violating ordinance 652; that a violation of the latter ordinance is necessarily merged in the violation of the former, and but one penalty can be imposed. Ordinance 651 was enacted to prohibit the establishment, the keeping or maintaining, of a gambling house or room, and was directed particularly at the proprietor of such a house or room, while ordinance 652 was enacted to prohibit persons from frequenting or being inmates of a place so established, kept or maintained. It is clear that the offenses sought to be prohibited and penalized are separate and distinct. A person may be guilty of violating the provisions of ordinance 651 by setting up, keeping or maintaining a gambling house or room, as proprietor, and yet not be present in such house or room, as an inmate or frequenter, so as to be amenable to the penalty imposed by ordinance 652, and the same person may be amenable to the penalty imposed by ordinance 651 as being a proprietor and to the penalty imposed by ordinance .652, as being an inmate or frequenter.

It is also insisted by appellant that the evidence did not authorize the jury to cumulate the penalty imposed by ordinance 651, because if appellant violated said ordinance, such violation was continuous from September 3, 1903, to September 21, 1903. The evidence tended to prove that appellant kept and maintained a gambling house at 415-|-E. Washington street in the city of "Springfield, and at no other place, and that there was no interruption in the conduct of such establishment asa gambling house, during the time indicated. It was, so far as the evidence shows, one act of setting up, keeping and maintaining, and the jury were not justified in imposing upon appellant more than one penalty. Cawein v. Commonwealth (Ky.), 61 S. W. Rep. 275; Dixon v. Washington, 4 Cranch, 114; Freeman v. State, 119 Ind. 501. If there was an interruption in the conduct of such establishment as a gambling house, a cessation in its operation and a re-opening, it was incumbent upon appellee to show it. In this case no presumption can be indulged to supply a want of the necessary proof. Furthermore the language"of the ordinance: “ Whoever shall, * * * set up, keep, maintain or support” implies continuity.

It is urged that the testimony of the witness Hank-ins, as to what appellant did and said at the place in question upon a former occasion, merely tended to show that he was then keeping a gambling house, and was incompetent as tending to show that appellant was keeping a gambling house at the time charged in the declaration. Ho objection having been made by appellant to the testimony of the witness, the trial court was not called upon to pass upon its competency, and the question is not before us for decision.

A common gambling house is a nuisance by the common law and the keeping of a common gaming house is made a misdemeanor by statute. It is the duty of the municipality to enforce its ordinances enacted to prohibit gaming and the keeping of gaming houses. The insidious character of the evil, and the utter lawlessness and abandon that characterizes those engaged in it as a profession, demands a resort to drastic measures for the suppression of gaming and the punishment of those who allure their victims to disgrace and ruin. For the attainment of these ends, ordinance 652 is not an unreasonable exercise of the police power. The verdict of the jury finding that appellant was an inmate of the gaming house in question—a frequenter of the place— upon the several occasions testified to by the witnesses Harts, Fitzgerald and Lawler, is supported by the evidence and should stand.

Appellant offered in evidence a resolution, adopted by the city council of the city of Springfield, as follows:

“ Ordered, oy the City Council of the City of Springfield:
“ That the City Attorney is hereby instructed to discontinue action in cases brought in the name of the City in the Circuit Court for violation of ordinances for the following reasons:
“First, he was not instructed by this council, nor any officer of the city so to do, for the reason that the Grand Jury was in session at the time the praecipes in those cases were filed, and true bills were found. If for any reason he shall refuse, the Mayor is hereby instructed to order the Corporation Counsel to dismiss said cases for the City.
“ Passed by the City Council of the City of Springfield, Illinois, November 2, 1903. (Seal) C. F. Morrow, City Clerk.”

It is represented by counsel for appellant, that the city attorney having refused to obey this extraordinary mandate of the city council, the corporation counsel, in pursuance of an order from the mayor, moved the court to dismiss the suit, and that such motion was denied by the court. Error is assigned upon the alleged ruling of the court in denying such alleged motion. The bill of exceptions fails to show any such motion or the ruling of the court thereon and we are therefore precluded from passing upon such alleged error. St. L. & O. F. Ry. Co. v. Union Bank, 209 Ill. 457.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 Ill. App. 5, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-city-of-springfield-illappct-1905.