State v. Vaughan

98 S.W. 685, 81 Ark. 117, 1906 Ark. LEXIS 435
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 10, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 98 S.W. 685 (State v. Vaughan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Vaughan, 98 S.W. 685, 81 Ark. 117, 1906 Ark. LEXIS 435 (Ark. 1906).

Opinion

PIiEE, G. J.

The Attorney General of Arkansas, the Prosecuting Attorney of the Sixth Judicial Circuit, and the Mayor and Citsy Attorney of Rittle Rock brought a bill in chancery against Vaughan, Furth, Faucette and others, in the name of the State of Arkansas and the City of Rittle Rock, seeking to enjoin Furth from operating a pool room at a place in the city of Argenta near the Free Bridge which connects Argenta and Rittle Rock, and that the other defendants be enjoined from permitting or assisting, in the several ways alleged, said Furth in conducting said pool room. The defendants answered, denying man);- allegations of the bill, and to this answer the State and city demurred, and the case was determined on the demurrer, the court sustaining it, and the State and city rested upon it and appealed. The review here is limited to the admissions and allegations in the answer arid the undenied allegations of the complaint, as all other allegations were eliminated by trying the case on the sufficiency of the1 answer. The material parts of the answer, aside from its denial of the allegations of the complaint, are as follows:

“It is true that the defendant, Bob Furth, operated what is known as a turf exchange or pool room, where money is received, won and lost on horse races, and where tickets for pools on horse races run, or to be run, at various and divers racecourses in the State of Arkansas and throughout the United States, are bought, sold and cashed.” “That in point of fact there are not more than fifteen or thirty people who visit said turf exchange daily, and that neither women nor children are permitted in said pool room or turf exchange. And they state that said pool room or turf exchange is conducted as a quiet, orderly business, and that no persons visit the same except those who desire to do so, and that disorderly or dissolute characters are not allowed or permitted to visit there, and are not in the habit of doing so. It is true that he has caused the said turf exchange to be advertised by a short notice in one of the Little Rock papers, and that he has at times operated a carriage from said city of Little Rock to said pool room. That the business only attracts such as desire to purchase tickets or pools on horse races, and that disorderly or lewd women or the lawbreaking class are not in the habit of attending said pool room or turf exchange. And that no one is disturbed by the gathering of the people in or about said premises. They further state that the city of Little Rock has no corporate property whatever that is in any way affected by the alleged public nuisance as described in said complaint. They further state that the State of Arkansas has no property interest in the matters complained of, and that, if the said defendants are violating any law, the criminal courts of the State have ample power and authority to prosecute the defendants for such offenses, and that the charter of the city of Argenta authorizes said city to punish or abate a nuisance carried on as alleged in fhe complaint.”

The first question under inquiry is whether betting on horse-racing is gambling within the meaning of the statutes against gaming.

The general statute, the only one of them under which it could fall, defines the act therein made criminal to be “betting any money or any valuable thing on any game of hazard or skill.” Kirby’s Digest, § 1740. It contemplates that the game be “played,” for the next section provides that it shall not be necessary for the indictment to allege with whom the game was played. Sec. 1741. In construing these statutes in 1861 Chief Justice English for this court said: “But we do not think the Legislature intended to embrace horse-racing by the words ‘any game of hazard or skill’ ‘played,’ etc., -however vicious such sports may be.” State v. Rorie, 23 Ark. 726. In 1893 this court had before it betting on a game of baseball, and it was held to be criminal because on a game of skill, and the distinction that horse-racing wás not a game but a sport was approved. Mace v. State, 58 Ark. 79. Some States sustain this distinction, and hold horse-racing to be a sport and not a game, within the gaming statutes, but the weight of authority is to the contrary. 20 Cyc. 884; 14 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 682. It will not do to overule State v. Rorie merely because against the weight of authority; there is good reason to sustain the distinction therein made, and it has been acquiesced in by the State for 45 years, when at any time it could have been changed by legislation. Therefore it must be taken in this case that betting on horse-racing is not a crime of itself.

The quoted parts of the answer admit the maintenance by Furth of a turf exchange or pool room, wherein money is received, wón and lost on horse races, where tickets for pools on horse races run or to be run in Arkansas and elsewhere are bought, sold and cashed; that fifteen to thirty persons daily visit the pool room for the purpose of betting on the races or buying, selling or cashing pools on the races; that said business is advertised, and at times a vehicle to bring patrons to it has been furnished.

What is the status of such a house, notwithstanding.it is conducted in á quiet and orderly manner without unusual noise or disorderly conduct? At common law there were no statutes against gaming, yet the maintenance of a gaming house was a criminal nuisance, indictable and punishable as such. Mr. Justice Scott for this court said: “Independent of any statute, the keeping of a common gaming house is indictable at common law -on account of its tendency to bring together disorderly persons, promote immorality and lead to breaches of the peace. Such an establishment is thus a common nuisance.” Vandeworker v. State, 13 Ark. 700. Chief Justice Watkins for this court said:

“At common law, gaming houses were indictable. as a public •nuisance (Vandeworker v. State, 13 Ark. 700), but unless restrained by express statute ordinary wagers or betting were tolerated as being for amusement or recreation.” Norton v. State, 15 Ark. 71.

In Thatcher v. State, 48 Ark. 60, the court went into the subject of gaming, bawdy and disorderly houses being common-law nuisances, and held that they were such, not from the noise or disorder, but on account of the evil tendency of the business there conducted. Mr. Wharton says: “It is at common law not indictable for persons to engage in gaming in private, or to conduct a single game of chance in public. But when gaming is there publicly known to be carried on, however secluded the place may be, and when unwary and inexperienced persons are there enticed and fleeced, then the parties concerned are indictable for nuisance, irrespective of any particular statutes.” 2 Wharton, Crim. Law, § 1465.

Mr. Bishop' says a common gaming house is a nuisance because those attracted to it, especially youths, are there lured to vice, and youths may be as- effectually lured by a noiseless process as by any other. 1 Bishop, Crim. Law § § 1135, 1136. ■Therefore it follows that the fact that betting on horse-racing is not within the gaming statutes does not prevent a house maintained for such betting being a criminal nuisance. As seen, the evil character of the business, and - not the violation of express statutes, is what stamps it as a nuisance.

Turning more directly to the case in hand, do pool rooms fall within the definition of common-law nuisances, whether the games or sports bet upon are contrary to statute or not ?

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.W. 685, 81 Ark. 117, 1906 Ark. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vaughan-ark-1906.