State v. Barbee

175 So. 50, 187 La. 529, 1937 La. LEXIS 1189
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 24, 1937
DocketNo. 34250.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 175 So. 50 (State v. Barbee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Barbee, 175 So. 50, 187 La. 529, 1937 La. LEXIS 1189 (La. 1937).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

Defendant is charged by information with unlawfully establishing, setting up, and engaging in the operation of a lottery in the parish of Ouachita on or about the 2d of June, 1936.

As the offense charged is a misdemeanor, defendant was tried by the court, found guilty as charged, and sentenced to pay a fine of $500 and costs, and, in default of payment, to serve six months in jail subj ect to road duty.

Defendant has appealed from the conviction and sentence pronounced against him.

The information filed in this case charges that defendant “on or about the 2nd day of the month of June, Anno Domini, 1936, in the Parish and State aforesaid, did then and there wilfully and unlawfully establish, set up and engage in the operation of a Lottery contrary to the form of the Statute of the State of Louisiana,” etc.

Defendant demanded a bill of particulars setting forth the following: “Whether or not said lottery was operated in person or by agents.

“The kind of machinery used in the operation of said lottery.

“Whether or not more than one person was engaged in said lottery.

“In the event it is shown that a marble table is used, whether same is such a table as licensed under Act No. 5 of the First Extra Session of 1935.” Tr. p. 5.

In answer to the motion for bill of particulars, the district attorney says: “1. That the defendant, R. L. Barbee, on some date prior to the date charged in the Bill of Information, placed a marble table known, designated and named as a ‘Screamo’ in a place of business in the City of Monroe, Parish of Ouachita, known as the Stagg Pool Hall, with one John Williamson as Proprietor; that same ‘Screamo’ marble table was a scheme for the distribution of property or money by chance or lot among persons who paid, or agreed to pay, a valuable consideration for the privilege of participating in such scheme; that the said R. L. Barbee received the money or consideration paid by all individuals participating in said lottery and also paid the winner, or winners, from his own funds, and for the privilege of placing said ma *533 chine in the Stagg Pool Hall, paid to one John Williamson, the Proprietor thereof, twenty-five (25%) of the net profits realized in the operation.of said lottery; that the winners of said lottery were paid in cash, or merchandise, according to the amount each won, from 10{S to $2.00, as above designated, by John Williamson, as agent for the said R. L. Barbee, and in turn the said R. L. Barbee reimbursed, or refunded, to the said John Williamson all sums so paid.

“2. That the said R. L. Barbee did establish, set up and engage in the operation of said lottery as charged in the Bill of Information by placing a nine ball marble table in said Stagg Pool Hall, said marble table being named and designated a ‘Screamo’; that to participate in said lottery, the participant would deposit the sum of 5‡ in a slot attached to said marble table, and thereafter, by means of a plunger, attempt to place nine balls which were played one after another in certain holes in said table, which holes were under a panel of glass, each ball upon falling in a hole under said glass would in turn light an electric bulb behind a number situated in a board or panel at the rear of said table. Under the panel of glass there were a great number of holes with little wire brackets and wire pins in the vicinity of each hole to deflect and alter the course of each ball as same was played by the participant, and in the event the participant was successful in causing the nine balls in question to fall in certain designated holes, thereby lighting the lights behind the numbers in the panel or board at the rear of the table in certain diagrams, series or combinations, he would then be paid a prize from 10f! to $2.00, depending upon the diagram or series of lights which he had been successful in lighting, as above set forth. In the event the player was unsuccessful in causing the lights behind the numbers on the panel or board at the rear of the table to light in certain series, combinations or diagrams, there being many series, combinations and diagrams for which no prize was paid, the amount deposited in the slot attached to said machine, being 5‡, was lost by the player or participant.

“3. That during the time the machine, or marble table in question, was located in the Stagg Pool Hall, it was played and operated many times by any person desiring to do so, as above set forth, the consideration for said play being received by Defendant, R. L. Barbee, and he, in turn, paying to the player, through his said agent, John Williamson, any prize or money won.

“4. That said table was a scheme for the distribution of property or money by chance or lot among persons who paid a consideration for the privilege of playing said machine, as above set forth, and therefore same was a lottery.” Tr. pp. 8, 9, and 10.

1. After bill of particulars was filed, a motion to quash the information was made, on the ground that same does not charge any crime or oifense under the laws of the state of Louisiana. This motion was objected to by the State as coming too late. The motion was argued and overruled. Tr. pp. 7 and 11. As the counsel for defendant requested that he be arraigned without prejudice, and the defendant was so arraigned, the objection by the State that the motion to quash should have been made before arraignment is ■ not well taken, under *535 article 284 of Dart’s Code of Criminal Procedure. Tr. p. 4.

2. It is to be noticed that defendant, in his motion for a bill of particulars, made no objection as to the vagueness of the date of the otiense charged, “on or about June 2, 1936,” and no request was made by defendant that the State specify the particular date as to the alleged commission of the offense, and be restricted in its proof to that date.

But, on the trial of the case, defendant objected, for the first time, to the introduction of any testimony, under the bill of information filed, for the reason that in the answer to the bill of particulars the date is made vague and indefinite. Tr. p. 14.

This objection was overruled by the trial judge, as well as defendant’s motion to' quash. Defendant reserved bill of exceptions No. 1 to these rulings, and it is the only formal bill taken during the trial in the court below. Tr. p. 54.

In the per curiam to this bill, it is stated by the trial judge that: “Defendant, in his motion for a Bill of Particulars, made no objection as to the date charged in the Bill of Information, nor did he ask if the State relied on the specific date charged therein, but on the contrary requested certain other information. The Court, in its discretion, ordered the State to furnish defendant with certain information and the State complied with the order fully in its answer to the motion for a Bill of Particulars.

“In the opinion of the Court, the Bill of Information having charged a crime under the laws of this State and the State having furnished the defendant with certain information requested by him, the objection to' any testimony thereunder is without merit.

“The information itself charges the crime' in the language of the statute, Act No.

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Bluebook (online)
175 So. 50, 187 La. 529, 1937 La. LEXIS 1189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barbee-la-1937.