State v. Larosa

41 S.E.2d 121, 129 W. Va. 634, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 86
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1946
Docket9811
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 41 S.E.2d 121 (State v. Larosa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Larosa, 41 S.E.2d 121, 129 W. Va. 634, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 86 (W. Va. 1946).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

James LaRosa complains of the judgment of the Circuit Court of Harrison County, sustaining the judgment of the criminal court of said county, entered upon a verdict of a jury, sentencing him to fine and imprisonment for operating a place of prostitution, lewdness and assignation, at a specified location in the city of Clarks-burg. The final judgment of the circuit court was entered on the 31st day of October, 1945, to which we granted a writ of error and supersedeas.

*636 Four points of error, alleged to have been committed by the trial court, are stressed on this hearing: (1) That the warrant under which defendant was convicted was insufficient; ,(2) that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict of guilty returned by the jury; (3) that it was error, as a part of the State’s case in chief to permit the introduction of evidence tending to show that sales of intoxicating liquor were made at the Home Hotel; and (4) it was error to permit the State to elicit from defendant, on cross-examination, the fact that he had, in the month of September, 1945, before a justice of the Peace, in answer to a warrant on a charge of selling intoxicating liquor at the same location where, it was alleged, he operated the place of prostitution, lewdness and assignation aforesaid, confessed to said charge and paid a fine therefor.

The warrant in this case is in all essential particulars the same as that involved in State v. Crummitt, 129 W. Va. 366, 40 S. E. 2d 852, decided at thjis term. In that case we held: “A warrant dated September 18, 1944, on which an accused is tried, as distinguished from a warrant of arrest, which charges that the accused did knowingly and unlawfully keep, maintain and operate a place of prostitution ‘on the-day of-, 1944’, substantially follows the language of the statute describing that crime, and is sufficient upon a motion to quash.” Point 1, syl. That ruling clearly applies to the case at bar; and inasmuch as the question here involved was elaborately discussed by the Court in the Crummitt case, further comment is not deemed necessary.

The evidence shows that defendant is the owner of land and a building known as the “Home Hotel”, located at 415 and 417 Clark Street, in Clarksburg; that for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1944, he held a license to operate a hotel at that place; that the night clerk at the hotel, Bennie Silvert, was employed by defendant and had been so employed since January, 1944; that in the month of March, 1943, Bennie Silvert, was indicted for operating the Home Hotel as a place of prostitution, and plead *637 guilty to said charge on March 18, 1943; and that the defendant, not more than two weeks thereafter, learned of this indictment and confession. Defendant admits this knowledge, but says that at the time he employed Silvert in January, 1944, he gave him instructions to be careful not to violate any laws.

In this situation, there appeared on the scenes, a stranger, one Koester, an undercover man employed by the law-enforcing bodies of Harrison County, to investigate certain conditions then believed to exist in that county. This man visited the Home Hotel on several occasions beginning August 27, and continuing to August 31, 1944. On the latter date at about two o’clock a. m., he visited the hotel, on the street and ground floor, and ordered a highball, and, while drinking the same, a girl came in and sat down with him. He did not know her, but ordered her a drink, which she accepted, then ordered another and they then procured a room; that a girl arranged for the room with Bennie Silvert, identified at the trial; that Silvert gave to the girl the key to a bedroom; that she addressed the clerk by his first name; that when the clerk delivered the key to her, without his aid or direction, she took Koester to the room assigned to them; that in the room she solicited witness to commit acts of prostitution with her; and that he gave the girl three dollars, and paid two dollars and four cents for the room; that he was in the room with the girl thirty minutes or more, and while there purchased for her two more drinks. Following this occurrence a search warrant was sworn out by Koester, and a raid was made on the Home Hotel on September 9, 1944, at which time three people were found in the hotel in room No. 43, a man and two women. The man’s name was Thomas Massadon, and the women’s names were Ruth Elinor Stiner and Jane Anderson, of the respective ages of fifteen and seventeen years. When these people were arrested they gave their names as Mr. and Mrs. Powell and Joan Powell. Five witnesses testified as to their knowledge of the general reputation of the Home Hotel in the Clarksburg community, as being a place of prostitution, lewdness and *638 assignation, and all of them said that such reputation was bad. On this testimony the State rested its case, and a motion, then made to direct a verdict for defendant, was overruled. .

The defendant then testified and gave an explanation of the license for operating the hotel being in his name; stated that he did not spend much time at the Home Hotel; that he might drop in once a week, or something like that, but that he did maintain the building; that he had no knowledge of any acts of prostitution, lewdness or assignation of any kind being practiced in the hotel. He admitted employing Bennie ' Silvert as • night clerk, and that he had been in his employ since January, 1944, and, as heretofore stated, admitted his knowledge of Sil-vert’s having been indicted for operating the Home Hotel as a place of prostitution in March, 1943, and his confession on that charge.

We are of the opinion that the evidence fully sustains the charge contained in the warrant that a place of prostitution, lewdness and assignation was being operated at the Home Hotel, and that defendant was fully cognizant thereof. Defendant testified that he lived within a block and a half of the hotel, and, while he attempted to minimize his actual connection with the operation of the hotel, it is clear that he must have known what was going on. Aside from the fact that a licensee must, under ordinary conditions, be held to be responsible for what transpires in the exercise of that license, it is inconceivable that a person who is the owner of a hotel, who has a license to operate the same as such, and who lives in the immediate vicinity, and who, according to his own admission, visits the hotel every week at least, does not know what is going on. The evidence that the place was actually operated as a house of prostitution is clear. Women do not go to a hotel alone at two o’clock in the morning, and- while there accost a stranger, take him to a bedroom, with the actual knowledge and connivance of the night clerk, who did nothing more than deliver the key thereto, and allow the woman to find the room *639 without any aid from him, their association with each other being such that the woman was able to call the clerk by his first name, without there arising the irresistible conclusion amounting to clear proof, that the hotel was being operated as a place of prostitution, lewdness and assignation.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.E.2d 121, 129 W. Va. 634, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-larosa-wva-1946.