Rainey v. State
Rainey v. State
Opinion of the Court
The appellant was. prosecuted in the County Court, under the act of April 12, 1871 (Rev. Penal Code, art. 320), by information which charges that he did “ unlawfully and wilfully -go into a ball-room with a pistol on his person, the said Rainey not then and there being an officer of the peace.” By the article of the Penal Code it is provided: “If any person shall'go into any church or religious assembly, any school-room, or other place where persons are assembled for amusement or for educational or scientific purposes, or into' any circus, show, or. public exhibition of any kind, or into a ball-room, social party, or social gathering, * * * and shall have or carry about his person a pistol, etc., he shall be punished,” etc.
The evident intent and purpose of the law is to protect the several assemblies mentioned in the article, whether religious, political, social, or scientific, from intrusion by any person (except those designated in art. 321, Penal Code) going into them and carrying or having about his person any of the arms mentioned in the article, and not the protection of a bare church-edifice, school-room, or ballroom, without reference to the persons there assembled. Hence the charge- in the present case, that the defendant went into a ball-room with a pistol on his person, without any averment indicating that there were persons there assembled to be protected, does not allege an offence against the law. Owens v. The State, 3 Texas Ct. App. 404.
The judgment is reversed because of a defective information, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.