State v. Wheatley
State v. Wheatley
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
- The defendant was indicted, for that he did unlawfully let to certain persons named a certain dwelling of his, “ then and there well knowing that the said persons intended to use the said dwelling house as a place of resort for the purpose of prostitution and lewdness, and the said dwelling house was so used and occupied for the purposes aforesaid.”
The indictment was, upon motion of the defendant, quashed, and the Attorney-General appealed.
The indictment is for letting a house, knowing •that the lessee intended to u§e it for the purposes mentioned, the house being actually used for those purposes. In England, it seems to be settled that the landlord is not punishable when the keeping of the house for illicit purposes is the exclusive act of the lessee. In America, the weight of authority seems to treat the act of letting as an attempt -to commit the offense, and the subsequent keeping as making the landlord liable jointly with the lessee for the nuisance: 1 Bis. Grim. Law, sec. 1090, et seq. The indictment in this case is probably fatally defective as not charging either offense, but merely a letting with knowledge of the lessee’s purpose. If, however, the indictment be treated as charging an attempt, the question is
There is no error, in the judgment of the Court below, and it must be affirmed.
Reference
- Status
- Published