Opinion
June Term, 1838.
Indictment — Gambling — Spirituous Liquors.
1. The playing at cards for money or property in a counting-room attached to and under the same roof with a store-room in which spirituous liquors are retailed falls within the prohibition of the Act of 1831, ch. 26 (1 Rev. Stat., ch. 34, sec. 69), forbidding the playing "at any game of cards in any house where spirituous liquors are retailed, or any outhouse or store attached thereto, or any part of the premises occupied with such house."
2. In an indictment under the above mentioned act it is sufficient to show that the spirituous liquors were in fact retailed in the house in which the playing took place; and it is no defense for the defendants that the retailer has not pursued the directions of the act of Assembly in obtaining a license to retail.
THE defendants were tried at Wilkes, on the spring circuit of 1838, before his Honor, Judge Bailey, upon an indictment for gaming in a house wherein spirituous liquors were retailed, contrary to the act of 1831, ch. 26 (see 1 Rev. Stat., ch. 34, sec. 69), when the jury returned a special verdict in the words following, to wit: "That the defendants, Joel Vannoy, Armsted Terry, and Thomas F. Lowery did play at cards, for a horse, in a room belonging to the said Joel Vannoy, which said room and a storeroom in said house, the said Vannoy had theretofore rented from Benj. W. Cass, in which said storeroom the said Vannoy, at the time of the playing the cards aforesaid, retailed spirituous (326) liquors without a license authorizing him so to do. And they further find that the county court of Wilkes, before the playing aforesaid, had made an order and within twelve months, that a license should issue to the said Vannoy to retail in said storehouse; and further, that it did not appear from the record aforesaid, that the said order granting a license was made by seven justices then in court; and they find further, that the room in which the cards were played was a counting room."
Upon this verdict, a motion was made to arrest the judgment, which was sustained by the court, and the solicitor for the State appealed.
The defendants are indicted for offending against the following act of Assembly: "Every person who shall play at any game of cards in any public house or tavern, or house where spirituous liquors are retailed, or any outhouse or store attached thereto, or any part of the premises occupied with such house, and bet money or property, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor." 1 Rev. Stat., ch. 34, sec. 69. The jury, in a special verdict, find that Vannoy, one of the defendants, was owner of a storeroom and counting-room in one house. He retailed spirits in the storeroom, and the defendants gamed at cards, and for property, in the counting room. The store and counting room, in our opinion, constituted parts of but one establishment. The counting room was a part of the premises occupied with the store by the retailer, and the playing of cards in that room brought the defendants within the act of the Assembly.
The second question arising out of the verdict is, whether the owner was a retailer of spirituous liquors within the meaning of the said act of Assembly. We are of opinion that the circumstance of Vannoy's not having complied with all the requisites of the law in obtaining his license to retail, is no excuse for the defendants. The jury have found the fact that he did retail spirits in his storeroom. That fact satisfies the gaming act above quoted, and the charge in the indictment that spirits were retailed in the house. The judgment rendered in (327) the Superior Court must be reversed. This opinion will be certified, that judgment may be rendered for the State.
PER CURIAM. Judgment reversed.
Cited: State v. Hawkins, 91 N.C. 628.