State v. Rand

25 N.W.2d 800, 238 Iowa 250, 170 A.L.R. 289, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 302
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 14, 1947
DocketNo. 46860.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 25 N.W.2d 800 (State v. Rand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Rand, 25 N.W.2d 800, 238 Iowa 250, 170 A.L.R. 289, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 302 (iowa 1947).

Opinion

Bliss, J.-

-On July 9, 1945, the grand jury of Polk County, Iowa, indicted the appellant and Knote for “keeping a gambling house as defined in Sections 13198 and 13199 of the 1939 Code of Iowa,” and charged that they “kept a building, house, and place, resorted to for the purpose of gambling and permitted and suffered persons in said building, house, and place, under their care and control, to play at cards, dice, and slot machines for money.” The indictment was, in substance, in the words of said section 13198 (section 726.1, Code of 1946). Section 13199, Code, 1939 (section 726.2, Code, 1946), is as follows:

“ ‘Keeper’ defined. In a prosecution under section 13198, any person who has the charge of or attends to any such house, shop, or place is the keeper thereof.”

To the indictment each defendant pleaded not guilty. The trial, begun on November 19, 1945, ended on December 5, 1945, with the verdicts above noted.

The gambling house mentioned in the indictment was known as the “Mainliner Night Club.” It was located at 6001 Southwest Twenty-first Street, Lot 1, Geil Place, in Bloomfield Township, Polk County, Iowa, outside the corporate limits of the city of Des Moines.

The record clearly sustains a finding that the place above described was operated as a gambling house within the meaning of said Code section 13198. While the appellant’s plea of not guilty is a denial of every essential element of the crime charged, he offered no evidence, and made no contention by argument, that the place was not resorted to for the purpose of public gambling. While other errors on the part of the trial court are assigned and vigorously argued, the appellant’s chief ground for reversal is the claimed failure of the State to establish that the place was operated as a resort for gambling under his care, control, charge, or. attendance. It is his contention that, while he may have been about the place and worked there and performed some services in its operation, his wife, Gladys Rand, *253 was in fact the owner of the property and the operator of the “Mainliner Night Club.”

Since the facts largely control our decision, a summary thereof, pertaining to matters in controversy, seems fitting. The building which housed the business was a large hollow-tile structure just east across the highway from the Des Moines Airport. Meals were served to the public in a large dining hall, approximately seventy by one hundred feet. An orchestra and dancing space and floor shows were provided for the patrons. There were four liquor bars in the place. Just north of the dining room was a taproom about thirty feet square. Just east of the taproom and connected with it by a wide hall was a room fifty feet square.

The public records in the office of the Polk county recorder show that Frank Cardamon conveyed this property to Gladys Rand, grantee, by deed dated December IS,J1943, and that Gladys Rand, by deed dated January 2, 1945, conveyed a one-half interest therein to Peter A. Rand, husband of the grantor. The land conveyed was Lot 1, in Geil Place, excepting one thousand fifteen feet thereof, in an official plat of Bloomfield Township. Certified copies of the deeds were introduced.

Proceedings of the Polk county board of supervisors, being a part of the public records in the county auditor’s office, show that on the application and bond of Gladys Rand, a Class B beer permit was issued on December 30, 1944, to “Gladys and Peter Rand” at the “Mainliner,” covering a period to December 10, 1945. An exact duplicate of the permit issued to them was received in evidence. The permit was the only beer permit to them or either of them in existence in June 1945. A beer permit was on the north wall of the taproom in the “Mainliner” when officers searched the place on June 22, 1945.

The Bloomfield township assessor was a witness for the State. He made his assessment of the Mainliner Night Club property, both real and personal, on April 6, 1945. He talked with the appellant about the details of the assessment. He made his inquiries about the items of property of appellant and the latter answered. He identified the slot machines and the dice tables, which were exhibits received in evidence at the appellant’s *254 trial, as being part of the personal property at the “Mainliner” when he made the assessment. The dice tables were included in his assessment. They were in the northeast room, hereinabove referred to. The slot machines — “he imagined there were a dozen or more” — were in “a sort of barroom.” That was the taproom mentioned above. The appellant told the assessor that he did not own the slot machines. But he did not state to whom they did belong. There is no other testimony respecting their ownership. The dice tables were assessed to the appellant with his assent. The legal description of the lot, which was assessed at $1,500, was Lot 1, Geil Place, in Bloomfield Township. The personal property was assessed at $3,500. A $10,000 assessment was placed on the “Mainliner” building. The assessment roll was signed by appellant in the presence and view of the assessor. A carbon copy of the assessment roll was given to the appellant by the assessor. The original of the roll was received in evidence. There is no denial of any of this testimony of the assessor. The witness identified Exhibits 20 and 21 — “black jack” tables— and Exhibits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 — slot machines — as resembling tables and articles that he saw at the “Mainliner” when he made the assessment. According to the testimony, “black jack” is a gambling game'with ordinary playing cards.

On June 14, 1945, in the evening, Basil A. Grossnickle, a constable of Allen township, Polk county, and Robert Barton, a constable of Clay township, in said county, went to the “Main-liner” to make observations as to sales of whisky and gambling. The appellant was there at that time, about 9 o’clock p. m. He was standing behind a bar or counter with a cash register, on it, talking to a man on the other side. They bought two drinks— a jigger of whisky and a bottle of beer — at the bar, in the taproom. It was not the bar at which appellant was standing. They remained five or ten minutes. While they were there the slot machines were not in operation.

Leonard Sims and Marvin C. Vanderlinden, members of the state highway patrol, testified that on September 14, 1943, about 8 o’clock p. m., a few miles south and west of Ames, Iowa, while in the performance of their duties, they stopped a small farm truck. The clerk’s transcript shows — although this was *255 not disclosed at the trial — that their attention was directed to the truck because its taillight was not operating. One Chiesa was driving the truck and the appellant was seated with him. In the conversation the appellant identified himself, by his motor vehicle driver’s license, as Peter Alfonso Rand, and told the witnesses that he was on his way to the "Mainliner,” of which he was the owner. The patrolmen then took the truck, appellant, and Chiesa to Ames to the home' of John Nyberg. The latter was a witness for the State. On September 14, 1943, he was a special investigator of the Iowa Bureau of Criminal Investigation.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.W.2d 800, 238 Iowa 250, 170 A.L.R. 289, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rand-iowa-1947.