Nuckolls v. Commonwealth
Nuckolls v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a writ of error to a judgment of the hustings court of the city of Richmond, rendered in March, 1879, in favor of the commonwealth against the plaintiff in error William P. Nuckolls, convicting him of a misdemeanor.
The said indictment was founded on the Code, page 1212, eh. 194, §1, which is in these words: “A person who shall keep or exhibit a gaming table, commonly called A B C or E O table, or faro bank, or keno table, or table of the like kind, under any denomination, whether the game or table be played with cards, dice or othewise, or who shall be a partner or concerned in interest in the keeping or exhibiting such tables or bank, shall be confined in jail not less than two nor more than twelve months, and be fined not less than one hundred, nor more than one thousand dollars. Any such table or faro bank, and all the money, stakes or exhibits to allure persons to bet at •such table, may be seized by order of a court, or under the warrant of a justice ; and the money so seized, after deducting therefrom one-half for the person making the seizure, shall be forfeited,” &c., “and the table and faro bank shall be burnt.”
The plaintiff in error was convicted on the said indictment on the 17th day of December, 1878, but the judgment was afterwards reversed, and a new trial was awarded by this court; on which new trial he was again convicted by the said hustings court, which overruled his motion for a new trial, and rendered judgment against him accord
I. It is stated in the first bill of exceptions that during the trial of the case, after the attorney for the commonwealth had made his opening statement, and the attorney for the accused had done the same, the prisoner, by his counsel, moved the court to require the prosecuting attorney to furnish him a statement or bill of particulars showing when, how and where the offence of which he is accused was committed, the same not being sufficiently specified in the indictment; which motion the court overruled on the ground that the indictment had been passed upon by this court, and that this was a motion unheard of in a criminal case, as far as the court is advised; to which ruling of the court the prisoner excepts.
Without assigning any other reason than that assigned by the hustings court, which is deemed sufficient for its action in this respect, this court is of opinion that there is no error in such action.
II. It is stated in the second bill of exceptions that on the trial of the cause the commonwealth introduced as the first witness one J. P. Jetér; whereupon the prisoner, by his counsel, moved the court to permit him to take down, the evidence in the cause in writing; but there having been at the time of such motion no exception taken to any portion of the testimony, and the court having stated to the counsel that as soon as any exception was taken which would require the statement of the evidence to be set forth in writing, it would, according to its custom, stop the trial, and in the presence of the witnesses have the bill or bills
This ruling of the court was plainly right.
III. It is stated in the third bill of exceptions that on the trial of the cause the commonwealth introduced a witness—M. J. Griffin—and asked him to explain to the jury, if he could, how the game of “ keno ” was played; thereupon the attorney for the prisoner asked the witness if he was an expert at the game of keno; to which the witness answered no, but that he had played it twice, and seen it played two or three times. The attorney for the commonwealth then asked the witness if he knew how the game was played; to which the witness answered that he did; and then the said attorney asked the witness to explain to the jury what he knew of the game; and thereupon the prisoner objected to the witness stating to the jury what he knew of the game, on the ground that the witness was not an expert; but the court overruled the objection, and allowed the witness to state what he knew of the game; to which ruling of the court the prisoner excepted.
The evidence objected to was certainly admissible. The weight of it was of course a subject for the consideration of the jury. The evidence of an expert, if there can be an expert in such a matter, and the witness was not in fact such an expert, still his evidence, to the extent of his knowledge on the subject which he explained, was admissible, and it was uncontradicted by the evidence of any expert introduced as a witness by the prisoner. There was, therefore, no error in the action of the court in overruling the said objection.
IY. In the fourth bill of exceptions precisely the same question is presented in regard to the game of faro as in the third bill of exceptions is presented in regard to the game of keno, aud the facts in regard to the two games in this case are the same, or similar. For the reason already
V. In the fifth and last bill of exceptions is presented the only difficulty arising in the case, which, however, is certainly a very serious difficulty, and the question we now have to solve is, whether such difficulty be not in fact insurmountable.
It is stated in that bill of exceptions that on the trial of the canse, after the jury had returned their verdict into court—“we, the jury, find the prisoner guilty”—the prisoner, by his counsel, moved the court to set the said verdict aside, because the same was contrary to law and the evidence, and grant him a new trial; which motion the court overruled; and the prisoner excepted. On his motion, the court certified the facts proven on the trial; which, so far-as it seems to be material to state them here, are in substance as follows:
“The commonwealth first introduced one J. P. Jeter, who proved that as sergeant of police, by direction of chief of police of the city of Richmond, on Saturday night, 10th day of November, 1878, at about 10 o’clock at night, he, in company with two other policemen, went to house No. 20, located on Fourteenth street in said city, the lower part being occupied by one John Pitt as a tailor’s shop; that he went up stairs and knocked at the door; he heard some one say, ‘here come our oysters’; that he was dressed in citizens’ clothes at the time. The door was opened by the prisoner, who asked him to come in. He went in, saying to the other policemen, ‘Come on, boys’; that on entering the room he saw two round tables, a sideboard, a stove and some chairs, and nine or ten men; that the room was nicely carpeted, and divided from the front part of the house by a partition extending from the floor to near the ceiling, with an open door in it; around one of the tables five men were seated playing cards, he thought the game of poker
“The commonwealth then introduced one M. J. Griffin as a witness, who proved that he had seen the games of ‘ keno’ and ‘ faro ’ played on other occasions and gave an account of those games, but as neither of those games was played by the prisoner or others on the occasion to which this prosecution applies, and as the game which was played on that occasion was not a game or table of the like kind with faro bank or keno table, or any of the games or tables specified in the section on which this prosecution is founded, it is unnecessary to insert here the facts proved by this witness, which seem to be irrelevant to this case.
“ The commonwealth also proved by a witness, one B. ~W. Hancock, that he was playing in the game at the time of the arrest on the night named; that when he went into the room he found four men playing, and he said to Nuckolls, I should like to get into that game, when Nuckolls said to him the game is made up, I believe, I don’t know
“The commonwealth also proved by a witness, one
“ For the defence it was proved by one witness, John Pitt, that he rented out premises in question—rented it to Thomas G. Black; that Black paid both the rent and gas bill, and that he never knew Nuckolls in the transaction, or that he had anything to do with it; that he rented the rooms to Black for a sleeping apartment and never knew that any gaming was carried on in there.”
The game proved to have been played in this case was certainly not one of the games specified in the statute, Code,, p. 1212, ch. 194, § 1. It was not a keeping or exhibition of “ a gaming table, commonly called A B C or E O table, or faro bank, or keno table.” And if the case comes within the terms, intent or meaning of the statute, it can only be because the game proved to have been played in this case was the keeping or exhibition of a table of the, like kind with those specified in the said statute.
Was it a case of the like kind as aforesaid ? In what does the likeness consist? The record does not show. Can the accused be said to have been a keeper or exhibitor of a gaming table in the meaning of the statute? He may have owned or had an interest in the tables on which the game was played. He took no part in playing the game, was not always present while it was played, and had no
In regard to what is a table of the like kind* with those specified in the statute, according to its true intent and meaning, there are two decisions of this court which seem to settle the matter beyond all controversy. They are, The Commonwealth v. Wyait, 6 Rand. 694, decided in 1828; and Huff’s case, 14 Gratt. 648, decided in 1858.
In Wyatt’s case, supra, it was unanimously held by the late general court, in an opinion delivered by Daniel, J., that “the distinctive feature in the character of the games called ABC and E O and faro bank, is that the chances of the game are unequal, all other things being equal, and those unequal chances are in favor of the exhibitor of the games or tables. If other games resemble those standard games in that distinctive feature, they come within the terms of the 17th section of the gaming act, (corresponding with the 1st section of the present gaming act), being ‘gaming tables of the same or like kind/ and are liable to the penalties denounced against those standard games, whatever may be the denomination of those other games, •and whether played with cards, dice, or in any other manner.”
In Huff’s case, supra, it was unanimously held by this ■court, in an opinion delivered by Allen, P., that “an indictment for gaming under the 1st section of chapter 198 ■of the Code, (corresponding with the 1st section of the gaming act in the present Code), must charge the playing
These "two cases clearly show that the game proved to have been played in this case was not a game of the like kind with any of those specified in the statute, as it was clearly not one of the games so specified. The accused was not an exhibitor of a gaming table such as seems plainly to be contemplated by the statute—a gaming table against which the betters at the game risk their money. He had no interest in the game, except as a means of compensation for the house, the tables and the gas, which were used in carrying on the game. It does not appear that such compensation derived in' thát way exceeded what might reasonably have been charged directly for the same consideration. At all events, it is not perceived how that mode of receiving such compensation can convert what would otherwise be a lawful act into one which would be highly penal. If it be deemed reasonable and proper that the owner of a house, receiving compensation in that way for the use of his house and his tables for gaming purposes, should be punished as an exhibitor of a gaming table under section 1 of chapter 194 of the Code, page 1212, it ought to be plainly so declared by statute, instead of being left as a matter of such forced and violent inference.
In the argument of this case before this court the Arkansas Code and reports were referred to, which seem to have an important bearing upon the .case. In the said Code of 1858, page 369, chap. 51, art. Ill, §1, it is declared, in language very similar to that of our Code, that every person who shall set up, keep or exhibit any gaming table, &c., commonly called A B C, E O, &e., or any faro bank or other gaming table, &c., of the like .or similar kind, &c., shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and
In Stith v. State, 13 Ark. R. 680, it was held by the supreme court of that state that the owner or occupant of a house, Ac., cannot be indicted under the fourth section of the gaming act for permitting poker or any of the small games of cards mentioned in the 8th section of the act to be played in his house, Ac., but only for suffering some of the games, tables, cards, &c., embraced in the previous sections to be played, Ac., therein. The Chief Justice, in delivering the opinion of the court in that ease, uses this strong and appropriate language: “ An attentive perusal of the statute makes the conclusion almost irresistible that the first seven sections are intended to relate exclusively to the banking games, whether called by the names specified or by auy new name or device. They are usually exhibited by persons whose occupation it is to prey upon the community, and who are therefore peculiarly obnoxious to the laws, which design also to punish with equal severity those who allow them to be exhibited in their houses.” Id. 682.
See also Barkman v. The State, Id. pp. 703 and 705, and The State v. Hawkins, 15 Id. 259.
The court is therefore of opinion that the said hustings court erred in overruling the motion of the prisoner to set aside the verdict because the same was contrary to law and the evidence and grant him a new trial, as mentioned in his said fifth bill of exceptions. And for that cause the said judgment is reversed, the said verdict set aside, and the cause remanded to the said hustings court for a new trial to be had therein, in conformity with the foregoing opinion.
The court is of opinion, for reasons stated in writing and filed with the record, that there is no error in any of the rulings of the said hustings court excepted to by the first, second, third and fourth bills of exceptions, made parts of the record of this cause.
But the court is further of opinion, for reasons stated as aforesaid, that there is error in the ruling of the said court excepted to by the fifth of the said bills of exceptions, made part of the said record, and that the said court erred in overruling the motion of the plaintiff in error to set aside the verdict of the jury because the same was contrary to law and the evidence and grant him a new trial; this court, being of opinion that according to the facts certified in the said fifth bill of exceptions to have been proved on the trial of the said cause in the hustings court, the accused, the said plaintiff in error, was not guilty of the of-fence with which he was charged, and of which he was convicted on the said trial.
Therefore, it is considered, ordered and adjudged that the said judgment of the said hustings court be reversed and annulled, the said verdict be set aside, and the cause remanded to the said hustings court for a new trial to be had therein, in conformity with the foregoing opinion.
Which is ordered to be certified to the said hustings court of the city of Richmond.
Judgment reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.