State v. Haines

30 Me. 65
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 30 Me. 65 (State v. Haines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Haines, 30 Me. 65 (Me. 1849).

Opinion

Shepley, C. J.

— The defendant was indicted with another person for keeping a bowling alley for gain and common use.

The first question presented by the bill of exceptions is, whether the offence is sufficiently set forth in the indictment. A motion was made apparently with a design to have the indictment quashed. This was overruled, and the indictment was declared to be sufficient. The presiding Judge was under no obligation to decide such a question before the accused had been found guilty. ■ Then it could be properly presented by a motion in arrest. As such a motion can yet be made, the question may as well be considered-and decided.

The indictment contains two counts. Divested of theirx formal and expletive language the averments in the first count are, that the accused kept a bowling alley for gain, and procured or induced persons to frequent the same to play at bowls in the day and night time, to the great annoyance, damage and common nuisance of the citizens.

An averment, that the acts alleged are to the common nuisance without averments, which, being proved, will show, that the accused had been guilty of causing a nuisance, will not be sufficient. The allegation, that the alley was kept to the great annoyance and damage” of the citizens, without stating any particular acts that would occasion such annoyance or damage, is so general, that the accused could not be prepared to rebut the charge by proof.

The question therefore on this count is presented, whether the keeping of a bonding alley for gain and common use, as an inducement for persons to play on it in the day and night time, is a common nuisance.

A nuisance has been defined to be “ any thing, that worketh hurt, inconvenience, or damage.” 3 Bl. Com. 216. Erections made and occupied for certain purposes are by the law regarded as nuisances, without proof of any particular injury. The injury is considered to be inherent. Other erections wholly innoxious in their nature and usual occupation, may become .nuisances by being used in such a place or in such a manner, [75]*75as to render the enjoyment of life and property in their neighborhood uncomfortable. Among those, which are held to be nuisances per se are stages for rope-dancing, for mountebanks, gaming houses and bawdy-houses. The law requires no particular allegations or proofs, that they are injurious to the community. The simple allegation, that such places or houses are kept ad commune nocumentum, is sufficient. Among those not regarded as common nuisances, without proof of their improper location or use, may be reckoned the trades of the soap-boiler, tallow-chandler, brewer and tanner. If a bowling alley kept for gain and common use is to be regarded as a common nuisance per se, the first count in the indictment is sufficient, otherwise it is not.

Hawkins states, that stages for rope-dancers, and gaming houses, are common nuisances not only because they are great temptations to idleness, but because they are apt to draw together great numbers of disorderly persons, which cannot but be very inconvenient to the neighborhood.” Hawk. P. C. B. 1, c. 75, $ 6, 7.

Bowling alleys appear to have been early regarded as analogous in character to stages for rope-dancing, probably because they produced similar results. Jacob Hall’s case. 1 Mod. 76. Hale, C. J. is reported to have said in that case, that in the eighth year of Charles the first Noy came into Court and prayed a writ to prohibit a bowling alley erected near St. Dunstan’s church, and had it.” It appears, that a writ was issued in the case referred to by Lord Hale to abate the bowling alley as a nuisance. 1 Yent. 169.

The “ hurt” or injury to the community, which has occasioned bowling alleys kept for gain and common use to be regarded as common nuisances, arises from their tendency to withdraw the young and inconsiderate from any useful employment of their time, and to subject them to various temptations. From their affording to the idle and dissolute encouragement to continue in their destructive courses. Clerks, apprentices and others are induced, not only to appropriate to them hours, which should be employed to increase their [76]*76knowledge and reform their hearts, but too often to violate higher moral duties to obtain means to pay for the indulgence. Other bad habits are in such places often introduced or confirmed. The moral sense, the correct principles, the temperate, regular and industrious habits, which are the basis of a prosperous and happy community, are frequently impaired or destroyed. Bowling alleys without doubt may be resorted to by many persons without such injurious results. The inquiry is not what may be done at such places without injury to persons of fixed habits and principles, but what has been in the experience of man, their general tendency and result. The law notices the usual effect, the ordinary result of a pursuit or course of conduct, and by that decides upon its character. It need not be the necessary and inevitable result of a bowling alley kept for gain and common use, that it is thus injurious to the community, to make it a common nuisance. Mr. Justice Littledale, in the case of Rex v. Moore, 3 B. & Ad. 184, correctly said, “if it be the probable consequence of his act, he is answerable as if it were his actual object. If the experience of mankind must lead any one to expect the result, he will be answerable for it.” But the question was so fully examined and discussed by Mr. Justice Cowen, in the case of Tanner v. The Trustees of Albion, 5 Hill, 121, that it may be more useful to quote and adopt certain portions of that opinion, than to enter upon a more enlarged discussion of the question.

He says, “ so far as I have been able to discover, erections of every kind adapted to sports or amusements having no useful end, and notoriously fitted up and continued with the view to make a profit to the owner, are considered in the books as nuisances.

“ The tendency of the alley being well known, it was adjudged to be a nuisance of itself; and a writ accordingly issued to remove it without a trial.

“ The nuisance consists in the common and gainful establishment for the purpose of sports having the aptitude and ■tendency of which Hawkins speaks.

[77]*77In general the law is not scrupulous about actual results. It sees, that a building has been erected for at least an idle purpose, the probable consequence of which will be pernicious. It does not stop therefore and call witnesses to prove, that it is so in fact.

“ The only argument I have heard urged in excuse for bowling alleys is, that the exercise of the players is conducive to health. In this respect such alleys have been compared with bath houses. The answer is, that there are various other kinds of exercise entirely equivalent, and if not, the means of playing with bowls are easily accessible without those public establishments carried on for hire, which the law has denounced as of evil tendency.”

■ If these views are correct, the first count in the indictment is sufficient.

But if that count should be regarded as defective, the second would seem to be sufficient to show, that the alley was a nuisance, because it was used in such a manner as to render the enjoyment of life and property, uncomfortable to those residing in its neighborhood.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Me. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-haines-me-1849.