Miggins v. State

184 A. 911, 170 Md. 454, 1936 Md. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 20, 1936
Docket[No. 30, April Term, 1936.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 184 A. 911 (Miggins v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miggins v. State, 184 A. 911, 170 Md. 454, 1936 Md. LEXIS 118 (Md. 1936).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The grand jury for the February term, 1936, for Washington County, indicted Harry D. Miggins, the appellant, for establishing, using, keeping, and occupying a certain “house, building, grounds and place, and a portion of a certain house, building, grounds and place, within the state of Maryland, situate on the second floor of the Arcade building on West Washington Street in Hagerstown, Washington County, Maryland, for the purpose of making, selling and buying books and pools therein and thereon upon the result of any race, contest and contingency.” To that indictment Miggins demurred. The demurrer was overruled, he then confessed a plea of guilty, sentence was imposed,, and judgment entered. The appeal is from that judgment.

The effect of the appellant’s plea of guilty was to waive proof of any facts alleged in the indictment, but not to waive objection to it on the ground that the facts alleged did not constitute an indictable offense, nor to waive objection to the jurisdiction of the court to try him under it. 16 C.J. 402 et. seq. Those questions may therefore be considered on this appeal.

The offense charged in the indictment is defined in Code, art. 27, sec. 247, which reads in part as fellows: “It shall not be lawful for any person or persons, or association of persons, or for any corporation within the State of Maryland, to bet, wager or gamble in any manner, or by any means, or to make or sell a book or pool on the result of any trotting, pacing or running race of horses or other beasts, or race, contest or contingency of any kind, or to establish, keep, rent, use or occupy or knowingly suffer to be used, kept or rented or occupied, *457 any house, building, vessel, grounds or place, or portion of any house, building, vessel, grounds, or place, on land or water, within the State of Maryland, for the purpose of betting, wagering or gambling in any manner, or by any means, or making, selling or buying books or pools therein or thereon upon the result of any race or contest or contingency.” It is apparent from that language that the statute defines not one but several offenses, one of which is to “bet, wage or gamble * * * or sell a book or pool on the result of any trotting, pacing or running race of horses or other beasts, or race, contest or contingency of any kind.” Another is to “establish, keep, rent, use or occupy * * * any house, building, vessel, grounds or place * * * for the purpose of * * * making, selling or buying books or pools therein or thereon upon the result of any race or contest or contingency.”

The offense charged in the indictment is not that of making, buying, or selling books or pools on races, but that of keeping, using, and occupying a certain “house, building, grounds and place, and a portion of a certain house, building, grounds and place” for that purpose.

Code, art.. 27, sec. 247, is a codification of chapter 232 of the Acts of 1894, amended by chapter 285 of the Acts of 1898. In Stearns v. State, 81 Md. 341, 32 A. 282, it was held that the information in that case, which was based on that statute, was bad because in each count thereof it stated both offenses in the disjunctive or alternative. While the court was dealing there with the Act of 1894, the amendment made by the Act of 1898 did not materially change that part of it which is under consideration here. In that case it was held that each offense could properly have been charged in a separate count, or both might have been stated in the same count if connected by the conjunctive “and” instead of by the disjunctive “or.” In the indictment in this case, what the court held in Stearns v. State to be a, separate offense has been stated separately, and the count under consideration therefore was free of the vice which invalidated the in *458 dictment in the Steams case. Pritchett v. State, 140 Md. 810, 313, 117 A. 763.

It is suggested, however, that it does not charge the crime in the language of the statute and that it fails to apprise the defendant of the essential elements of the supposed crime which it does charge. The force of those criticisms is not readily apparent. The indictment does in fact charge the offense in the very language of the statute, as will appear from any comparison of the two, the statute and the indictment.

The objection that it fails to apprise the defendant of the elements of the crime seems to rest upon its failure to state that defendant operated a place for the purpose of making, selling, and buying books upon the result of some particular race, contest, or contingency. But the very essence and purpose of the statute was to make it unlawful to operate a place for making, selling, or buying books upon “any” race, contest, or contingency. The evil at which it was aimed was that of keeping a place where such operations might be carried on. Keeping an inn at which persons may board is one thing, boarding in an inn is another. In this case the indictment charges that on the 24th day of August, 1935, the defendant unlawfully did establish, keep, use, and occupy a place specifically named and identified, for the purpose of making, selling, buying books and pools upon the result of “any” race, contest, and contingency.

Since, the indictment followed the language of the statute and alleged facts sufficient to fully apprise the defendant of the particular offense with which he was charged, it was sufficient. Joyce on Indictments, sec. 454; Kearney v. State, 48 Md. 16; Parkinson v. State, 14 Md. 184.

It is further suggested that for reasons not very clearly disclosed the act is unconstitutional and it is also stated that the act “had been previously declared unconstitutional in Close v. Southern Maryland Assn., 134 Md. 629, 644, 108 A. 209. That statement is erroneous, the court in that case did strike down- certain li *459 censing provisions of the statute, but it expressly-approved the particular section of the act upon which the indictment in this case is based (134 Md. 629, at page 644, 108 A. 209), and in O’Connell v. State, 159 Md. 376, 150 A. 735, it was held that the invalidity of those parts of the statute stricken down in Close v. Southern Maryland Assn., supra, did not affect that part of chapter 285 of the Acts of 1898, section 124e, later codified as Code, art. 27, sec. 251, which exempted Washington County from the operation of the act. That exemption was repealed by chapter 390 of the Acts of 1935, the validity of which was sustained in Miggins v. Mallott, 169 Md. 435, 182 A. 333. The effect of that legislation was to bring Washington County within the operation of the general law announced in Code, art. 27, sec. 247. Miggins v. Mallott, supra.

It is also suggested in this court, for the first time in this case, that chapter 390 of the Acts of 1935 is invalid because, it is said, the House Journal shows that the yeas and nays were not recorded on the final passage of the bill, as required by the Maryland Constitution, art. 3, sec. 28.

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Bluebook (online)
184 A. 911, 170 Md. 454, 1936 Md. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miggins-v-state-md-1936.