State v. Miller

137 S.W. 887, 234 Mo. 588, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 178
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 23, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 137 S.W. 887 (State v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Miller, 137 S.W. 887, 234 Mo. 588, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 178 (Mo. 1911).

Opinion

KENNISH, P. J.

— At the April term, 1910; of the circuit court of Jasper county, appellant was convicted of the offense of setting up and keeping a gaming table and gambling device, commonly called a crap table, sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of two years, and appealed to this court. The prosecution was based on section 4750; Revised Statutes 1909.. The facts are fully stated in the opinion.

I. Appellant first assigns as error the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict and the refusal of the court to give an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. This contention calls for a review of the testimony upon.which the jury found the defendant guilty.

[592]*592That gambling was carried on openly and in flagrant violation of the law, at the time and place charged in the indictment and mentioned in the evidence, was clearly shown and, aside from the criminal agency of the defendant, every essential element of the offense charged was proven by undisputed evidence. The question that now demands our serious consideration is this: Wasi the testimony sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the defendant set up and kept the gaming table, upon which the gambling was conducted as testified to by the witnesses'?

It is provided by section 4761, Revised Statutes 1909, that: “Every person appearing or acting as master or mistress, or having the care, use or management, for the time, of any prohibited gaming table, bank or device, shall be deemed a keeper thereof; and every person who shall appear or act as master or mistress,' or having the care, use or management of any house or building in which any gaming- table, bank or device is set up or kept, or of any gaming house, brothel or bawdy house, shall be deemed the keeper thereof.”

Did the testimony for the State bring the defendant within the charge in the indictment of setting ' up and keeping a gaming table, as defined in the statute upon which the prosecution was based, construed in connection with the foregoing section?

Four witnesses only testified on behalf of the State, namely, David Joseph, Frank Holburt, Guy Humes and W. 0. Porter. Porter was a deputy sheriff and his testimony was limited to proof of the inability of the officers to obtain service on another witness for the State whose name was indorsed on the indictment. So the determination of the question in hand depends on the testimony of the three witnesses first named. Witness Humes was mayor of the city of Joplin and his testimony did not relate directly to the time referred to in the indictment and by the other witnesses. He testified that about the first of June, [593]*5931909, in company with members of the police force, he went to the place in which gambling had been carried on in March or April preceding, as testified to by Joseph and Holburt, for the purpose of making a raid; that they went into the saloon over which the gambling room was located, and demanded to go up stairs; that the defendant, who was in the saloon at the time, got the keys at the bar and took the mayor up stairs and into the gambling room; that they found the room furnished and fitted up with gambling tables and devices, but with no person therein. There was ice water in the water tank, and the spittoons had the appearance of having been lately used. The mayor said to the defendant, “You have been gambling up here,” whereupon the latter laughed but made no reply.

This testimony was objected to by the defendant and its admission is now assigned as error. We think it was properly admitted upon the principle that the conduct and admissions of the accused, after the commission of the crime and tending to prove the charge, are always competent. It was at least a circumstance that was proper for the consideration of the jury. But when that is said it must be admitted that the testimony of this witness has very little probative force as tending to prove that the defendant, two months- before, set up and kept a gaming table as charged in the indictment.

The testimony of the witness Holburt very satisfactorily proved every element of the offense except that it in no manner connected the defendant with the setting up or keeping of the crap table on which the game was being played. He saw the defendant in the room, but did not see him taking part in the management of the table or acting differently from others who were in the room. Therefore, so far as it was necessary to connect the defendant with the setting up and keeping of the gaming table that was shown to [594]*594have been operated, the case stands practically on the testimony of the witness Joseph.

Leaving ont of consideration the fact of the hostility of this witness to the State and the discredit unavoidably cast upon his character as a witness, we shall examine next his testimony upon the point under consideration. Testifying as to what occurred in the gambling room at the time of the offense charged, he was asked by the prosecuting attorney, “Was the defendant there or was he not there?” The witness answered, “I don’t remember.” Several times the same question, in varying language, was propounded to the witness and each time' the answer was that he did not remember. After the witness had answered, “I say I can’t remember it,” the prosecuting attorney stated: “We are entitled to that answer one way or the other and I insist on the witness answering it. This ‘I don’t remember’ has been carried too far in this case.” The witness was then shown the written notes of his testimony before the grand jury in June or July after the alleged offense and asked to examine the same and refresh his memory therefrom. After making the examination he was asked if he saw the defendant in the gambling room at the time mentioned. Pie answered “According to that statement I did,” and being asked the same question again said, ‘ ‘ According to that statement I did.” The prosecuting attorney then said, “I insist the witness answer the question,” and the witness answered, “Yes, sir.” Joseph further testified that when he saw the defendant the latter was in the room walking around,'and that part of the time he was around where the others were shooting craps; that a man named Billy was runing the crap table, and that no one else was assisting him, but that defendant brought money to Billy once when the latter needed it in the game.

The cross-examination and refreshing of the memory of the State’s witness, as thus conducted by the [595]*595prosecuting attorney, was vigorously objected to by tbe defendant and exceptions were saved to the adverse rulings of tbe court. On cross-examination by tbe defendant tbe witness Joseph answered that the man named Billy exercised control over and had the management of the crap table, and that he could not have remembered that the defendant took the money to the table if he had not seen the notes of his testimony before the grand jury. "It was not shown that the defendant exercised any authority in the room, or gave any directions, or was in any manner connected with the saloon below, or even that he was generally found in the saloon or gambling room, nor were there any circumstances in evidence tending to show his connection with the gambling room or tables therein, except as above detailed.

From this review it appears that there was direct, positive and uncontradicted evidence of the corpus delicti

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 S.W. 887, 234 Mo. 588, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miller-mo-1911.