State v. Rhoten

257 P.2d 141, 174 Kan. 394, 1953 Kan. LEXIS 336
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 9, 1953
Docket38,782
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 257 P.2d 141 (State v. Rhoten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Rhoten, 257 P.2d 141, 174 Kan. 394, 1953 Kan. LEXIS 336 (kan 1953).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Parker, J.:

Defendant, Carl H. Rhoten, was arrested and eventually charged in an information with the commission of three separate and distinct crimes, prohibited under the provisions of G. S. 1949, 21-915. Subsequently, he was tried by a jury which found him guilty of setting up and keeping gambling devices and of keeping and maintaining a common gambling house as charged in Counts 1 and 3 of the information and acquitted him of inducing, enticing, and permitting persons to gamble as charged in Count 2 of that pleading. Thereafter, his motion for new trial having been overruled, he was sentenced on the verdict of the jury in accord with the statute. The appeal is from that judgment and sentence and from the order overruling his motion for new trial.

The instant record discloses some conflicting evidence. However, the principal questions involved on appellate review deal with its sufficiency and are to the effect it fails to establish commission of the two crimes of which the defendant was found guilty under the verdict of the jury. In that situation we are not concerned with conflicts in the testimony and need only relate evidence tending to uphold the verdict. In doing this, based upon a careful examination of the record, we shall give our version of the supporting and pertinent facts disclosed by the evidence in highly summarized form without, for the moment, identifying any of the witnesses and will hereafter refer to the parties as the state and the defendant.

On Sunday morning August 5, 1951, at about 2 a. m. the respective sheriffs of Labette and Montgomery counties with their deputies, accompanied by two special investigators from the office of the attorney general, raided a house located in Labette county, known as the Goodtime Club, located about six miles east of Coffey-ville on United States Highway No. 166. The house was a two-story frame building with several rooms downstairs and a large *396 room about thirty-five by twenty feet, together with a bathroom, upstairs. The officers surrounded the house preparatory to entrance. As they did so they found a hose stretched across the driveway with a warning system which sounded in the house whenever pressure was applied thereto. The system was similar in character to that used in gasoline filling stations to warn attendants of the approach of customers. After surrounding the house the officers heard music and voices through an open upstairs window. One of them stated he could tell there was a dice game in progress from the sounds that were coming from the window and that he heard the statements “Place your bets,” “New man shooting” and other conversations which he described as “Lingo” used in connection with the operation of a gambling game. After they had knocked on the door and demanded admittance the voices in the upstairs room ceased immediately and the officers heard the sound of small objects being dropped or thrown down inside the wall or air shaft on the north side of the building. After an elapse of about ten minutes, when their continued knocking brought no response, they forced the front door and entered the building. Thereupon they discovered that the outer door was connected with a buzzer system which sounded in the upstairs room when that door was opened. Inside the vestibule they were confronted with another door, which was also opened by force, and discovered that it was also connected with a buzzer system. In going upstairs the officers who had entered the house found eleven persons, including the defendant, in the upstairs room. Thereafter they searched the premises. This search revealed a system of mirrors whereby a person in the upstairs room could watch the front door and observe the approach of anyone entering the vestibule. It also disclosed an electrically-controlled apparatus, whereby the door opening from the vestibule to the upstairs room could be opened by pressing a button upstairs, and a secret compartment in the wall of the bathroom. During the search of the room the officers found an instrument, identified as a dice stick, designed for moving dice on the table during a dice game. They also found that on the backs of throw rugs on the floor of the room there were designs identified as dice covers which were so adapted they could be placed on a large table, located in the center of the room, for the purpose of playing the game of dice. There was a lamp located over and close to the top of this table. It was obvious this light was used as a means of lighting the surface of the table and not for reading purposes. In addition two *397 packs of playing cards were found in the room. A search of the defendant disclosed a large sum of money on his person. Other sums of money were found hidden in the room. Divers sums of money were found on the persons of those present in the room.

There was testimony on the part of several witnesses indicating that the defendant, and perhaps one other person, were the managers of the Club and in charge of the premises, also that defendant was present when the first guests arrived and admitted some of the guests, also that he had invited persons to the house on other occasions. In fact one of the Witnesses, an officer, testified he asked the defendant who was in charge of the place and that the latter told him that he was one of two persons in charge. Another witness, a member of the raiding party, stated that in a conversation in which he was present the defendant told some of the officers that he was running the place for a Mr. White and that he was the person in charge. This same witness, who was one of the investigators from the attorney general’s office, stated that later in the evening he found a secret compartment in the wall and was about to break into it when the defendant protested about his breaking the latch and then showed him the trip which enabled him to open the secret compartment. Another of the state’s witnesses testified that he had engaged in a dice game on the premises that evening and had lost $60. Another officer testified that while interrogating one of the persons found in the house at the time of the raid such person, in the presence of the defendant, stated in substance that those present were out there enjoying themselves, that they paid so much a year dues to come out to the house for that purpose and have a place where they could have a little entertainment and that occasionally they would have a little game when the stakes got a little high.

Before submitting the cause to the jury the trial court instructed that body on the applicable law. No objection was made by defendant to such instructions and, as he now frankly concedes, they became the law of the case. Nevertheless, contentions advanced on appellate review require they be given special attention.

Instruction 12 deals with what the state was required to prove in order for the jury to convict under Count 1 of the information. It reads:

“Before you will be warranted in finding the defendant guilty of the crime of setting up and keeping a gambling device, as charged in the first count of the information, you must find and be convinced by the evidence herein, beyond a reasonable doubt, that in the County of Labette, and State of Kansas, *398

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 P.2d 141, 174 Kan. 394, 1953 Kan. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rhoten-kan-1953.