Thrasher v. State

53 So. 256, 168 Ala. 130, 1910 Ala. LEXIS 559
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 6, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 53 So. 256 (Thrasher v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thrasher v. State, 53 So. 256, 168 Ala. 130, 1910 Ala. LEXIS 559 (Ala. 1910).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

The offense charged is gaming; the scene is defendant’s bedroom, in his father’s residence; the time is a Saturday night; the game is “craps”; the stake is money; the limit a quarter. Present and participating, the defendant, the two Pattersons (the state’s witnesses), and eleven others. The gaming was proved beyond doubt and without dispute; in fact, was confessed on the witness stand by the defendant, except as to the “public place.” As to this necessary constitutent of the offense, the defense claimed that the state entirely failed to prove it; indeed, it is contended [133]*133that all the proof showed that the game was played at a private place.

What was said by this court in Russ’s Case, 132 Ala. 20, 31 South. 550, as to a pasture being made a public place, is in part applicable to this case. It was there said: “For the meeting of persons in an abstractly private place of the character of place involved here for the purpose of gaming, to convert such a place into a public.place for the occasion, the meeting must be attended in such numbers and by such circumstances of publicity as imply a right and privilege, and opportunity, on the part of the people generally in the vicinity to attend. For other and prior meetings at an otherwise private place such as this to have the effect of converting it into a public place in respect of a game of cards subsequently played there, such other and pri- or meetings must have been of such character and so repeated and continued up to near the time of the subsequent playing counted on as to stamp the place with such attributes of publicity as involves the idea that people of the vicinage may and are likely to go there at will — the idea of a meeting place for the neighborhood.”

Likewise what was said by this court, speaking through the same learned Chief Justice (McClellan), in Cartiledge’s Case, 132 Ala. 17, 31 South. 553, is even more applicable, in that the place of the gaming in that case was the same as in this case — a private bedroom. This court said: “The evidence for the state tended to show that the defendant played at a game of cards in the bedroom of one Wilson on Commerce street in the city of Montgomery, and that an indefinite number of persons, and different persons at different times, had used this room every week or two throughout the preceding year for the purpose of gaming, and they [134]*134came and went there for that purpose whenever they saw fit, and without special invitation of Mfilson, the owner. On this evidence it was open to the jury to find that the defendant played a game of cards at a public place, and the court properly refused to give the affimative charge for defendant.” And.in the same opinion, after condemning the charge requested by the defendant, the court adds the following “moreover” clause: “The charge is absolutely faulty, in that it declares that the playing every night in the year in a bedroom by a party, or some members of a party, composed of the same members, could not make the bedroom a public place under the statute; whereas this party may have been so numerous a.s to constitute the place practically a common resort of the community for the purpose of gaming, and hence a public place within the terms of the statute.”

It has also been held by this court (Coleman’s Case, 20 Ala. 52), speaking in reference to same statute and same subject, that a bedroom is prima facie a private place; that it may he made public within the meaning of the act, but the presence of eight or ten persons there by invitation, the doors not being locked, does not convert the bedroom into a public place, when such persons are there by invitation and the public have no right to be there; that, in order to determine the question as to whether or not the bedroom is a public place, we must look to the character of the place, the manner of ingress to it, as well as the number of persons who assemble there. The court concludes by saying that a private house or bedroom, at which a dozen or more persons assemble by invitation, does not lose its character of privacy and thereby become a public place.

In Nichols’ Case, 111 Ala. 60, 20 South. 564, quoting from Smith’s Case, 52 Ala. 384, it was said: “ ‘Any [135]*135house to which all may go night or day, and indulge in gaming in its various forms, is a public place within the meaning of the statute.’ A dwelling house or private room is within the statutory prohibition, if it is open to those who would resort thither to gratify their passion for gaming, and frequently, the greater the air of secrecy which is given the place, the more effectual is the deception. Prima facie, a dwelling is a private place; but where the evidence tends to show that it is used for other than private purposes, and as a resort by those who would indulge in gaming, the question of its being also a ‘public place,’ within the meaning of the statute, is properly left to the jury.-Coleman v. State, 20 Ala. 52; Jacobson v. State, 55 Ala. 154; Johnson v. State, 75 Ala. 7; Tolbert v. State, 87, Ala. 27 (6 South. 284).”

In line with what is said in the cases above referred to, it was competent for the state to prove the character and location of the dwelling and of the room in which the playing took place, with regard to the access which the public may have had to the dwelling and to the room; and for this purpose we do not think that the trial court erred in allowing the state to prove how far the room in question was located from the store of Ernest Hubbard, nor do we think the fact that such store had become notorious as a place for the violation of other laws would render such evidence inadmissible. The court limited such evidence to the question of simply locating the room in question. It was likewise competent for the state to prove the fact of other parties going to the house and to the room, the frequency of such occurrences, the number of persons on such occasions, and the time of day or night in which the visits were made; such visits being limited, as-they were by the trial court, to the time shortly preceding [136]*136tlie time of the alleged offense. Nor was it necessary i'or the state’s counsel to first prove that the parties frequenting the room or house on these occasions were going there for the purpose of gaming. It would be difficult to prove this except by the witnesses themselves and this might tend to incriminate them. The jury might infer the purpose of their visits to the room from all the facts and attendant circumstances, though there was no direct proof as to the purpose of their visits.

It is true, as contended by defendant’s counsel, that the mere fact that on Saturdays and Sundays many people visited the room of the defendant and the house of his father did not of itself convert the room or the house from a private to a public place. But this evidence was admissible, in connection Avith other evidence that numerous parties, shortly before the time of this offense, had visited the house Avithout invitation, and AA-ithout any special relation or connection being shown betAveen the visitors and the inmates or inhabitants of the house; and especially so in connection Avith the defendant’s own evidence that a number of persons Avere engaged in gaming in his room, on the occasion in question, when he returned home, and that they were without invitation from him, and, so far as the record shows, from any other person professing to have the right to invite them.

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Bluebook (online)
53 So. 256, 168 Ala. 130, 1910 Ala. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thrasher-v-state-ala-1910.