Purcell v. Commonwealth
Purcell v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
The prosecution in this case was had under the 4th section of chapter 198 of the Code, by which a fine of thirty dollars is imposed on any free person who, at an ordinary, race-field or other public place, shall play at any game except bowls, chess, backgammon, draughts, or a licensed game. And the specific charge was for playing at an unlawful game, with cards, at the ordinary of Mrs. Mead in Martins-
The establishment of an ordinary may be composed of several houses, or it may be kept in a single house, or in a part of a house; the other portions being held in a different right, and appropriated to an independent business or use.
If we suppose a sale or lease, for the purposes of an ordinary, of a portion only of an establishment, the whole of which, previous thereto, was held-and occupied as a private dwelling, the remaining portion thereof being still retained and occupied by the vendor or lessor as before, for his own exclusive use, it could hardly be maintained in such a case that the vendor or lessor, his family or guests, for a mere playing at cards, in a house or room belonging to the part so retained, could be convicted of gaming at an ordinary.
Without a statute so declaring, would the rule be changed by merely reversing the order, in the holding of the establishment, and supposing that the house or room, though at one time constituting a part of an ordinary, is, at the time of the playing, in the exclusive occupancy of a party, who, under a sale or lease, has in good faith converted such house or room into a private dwelling? I should think not.
In the absence of such a statute, no good reason is perceived why, when the business of the ordinary is conducted in several houses, one or more of them, or, when the ordinary is kept in one house only, one or more of its apartments might not by a sale or lease and an exclusive dedication to other purposes, be to all legal intents severed and disconnected from the ordinary. And (in such a state of the law) the true en
If at the time of the playing such house or room be in the occupancy of a party who, having no concern or interest in the business of the ordinary, has honestly bought or leased it and appropriated it to his own private and exclusive use, a conviction for such playing would seem to me to be unwarranted either by the letter or spirit of a law which prohibits such playing only when it takes place at “ an ordinary, race-field or other public place.”
In comparing the 198th chapter of the Code of 1849 with the 147th chapter of the Code of 1819, it will be seen that the two statutes vary from each other materially in their mode of treating the subject under consideration. The act of 1819, after prohibiting the playing at any game except bowls, &c. in an ordinary, &c. in the 5th section, proceeds, afterwards in the 16th section, to declare that every house, out-house, booth, arbor, garden and place within the curtilage of the principal house, tavern, messuage or tenement, or in any wise appurtenant thereto, or at any time held therewith, shall be considered as a part of the tavern, unless the same shall have been bona fide leased to some other person, by deed indented and recorded, &c. But in the act of 1849 there is no declaration as to what shall be deemed and taken to be parts of the ordinary. It is true, that in the 6th and 7th sections of the last mentioned act, a fine is imposed on a keeper of an ordinary or house of entertainment, for permitting unlawful gaming at his house or at any out-house, booth or arbor, or other place appurtenant thereto or held therewith;
As a means of suppressing the vice of unlawful gaming, and of removing it as far as possible from places of public resort, it was altogether competent and proper for the legislature to enjoin it upon every keeper of an ordinary, as a duty, to give information of all commissions of the offence occurring not only at all places connected with his ordinary and within his control, but also at all places which may have been at any time held with the ordinary, though at the time of the commission of the offence, they may be in the exclusive use and occupancy of persons who under bona fide leases have severed them from all connection with the business of the ordinary; but there arises no necessary implication that in doing this the legislature meant to indicate that a mere playing with cards at any of the places last mentioned, should be deemed and taken as a playing at an ordinary, and so be treated as unlawful gaming.
If it had been the purpose of the legislature to make any distinction between a mere playing with cards at a private house, never held with or in any manner connected with an ordinary, and a like playing at a private house, which, though at some time so held or connected, is at the time of the playing in the occupancy of a tenant in good faith renting and holding it for his own lawful and exclusive use, it is but reasonable to suppose they would have declared such
Applying the views thus taken of the law to the facts certified, I am led to the conclusion that the judgment of the Circuit court cannot be sustained. For though the room in which the playing took place (and which was within the same enclosure with the main building, about thirty yards distant from the latter), had at one time been held with and used as an appendage to the tavern, such was not the case at the time of the playing. It was in the exclusive holding and occupancy of the witness Redd, who had rented it for the year as a law office. The fact that he was a boarder at the tavern, makes no difference j by the terms of the renting he was to have the right to hold and occupy the office until the end of the year, whether he continued to board at the tavern or not. His use of the room was not in any wise incidental to, or dependent upon his being a guest or boarder at the tavern, but was enjoyed by force of his rights as tenant. Nor is the case affected by the use of the room above his for the accommodation of the guests of the tavern. It does not appear that the access to that room was through the room in question, and the inference that such was the case is repelled by the consideration that the latter was used by Redd as a law office, and that he had, as is stated in the certificate, the exclusive control over it.
The severance of the room in question, therefore, from the tavern, in tenure, occupancy, use and control,
I think the judgment should be reversed, the verdict set aside, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Purcell v. The Commonwealth
- Status
- Published