* Headnotes 1. Gaming, 27 C.J., Section 189; Indictments and Informations, 31 C.J., Section 260; 2. Gaming, 27 C.J., Section 240; 3. Gaming, 27 C.J., Sections 159 (Anno), 167; 4. Gaming, 27 C.J., Section 241. This is a prosecution, by indictment, in Cape Girardeau county, Missouri, charging the defendants with setting up and keeping a gaming house, in violation of section 3541, Revised Statutes 1919. Defendants were convicted and their punishment fixed at a fine of $400 each. After being unsuccessful in their motion for new trial and in arrest of judgment, defendants have appealed.
The indictment is as follows; omitting formal parts:
"That Henry Froemsdorf and Mattie Froemsdorf on the ____ day of December, A.D., 1922, and from that date until the 5th day of May, A.D. 1923, did wilfully and unlawfully set up and keep a gaming house, and did then and there permit divers persons, Leo Boussum, Roy Cain, Romance Fulton, Jack Fisher, William Hannebrink and divers other persons whose names are *Page 485 unknown to these jurors, to come together and play for money, at certain games in said house of the defendants Henry Froemsdorf and Mattie Froemsdorf, there situate, against the peace and dignity of the State."
The State adduced evidence tending to show that the defendants jointly owned, occupied and controlled a certain building in the city of Cape Girardeau. It was shown that between the dates mentioned in the indictment this place was under almost constant surveilance of the police officers of that city.
Policeman Robert Wilson testified for the State that, on complaint of neighbors and citizens generally, he went to this place on numerous occasions, always about midnight, to inform himself as to the character of the house kept by defendants; that on one night he concealed himself in a garage across the street, and between the hours of 11 o'clock P.M., and 1 o'clock A.M., he saw twenty-one men go into the place and come out of same; that he looked through the window in that portion of the house usually used as a kitchen, and saw a game of chance, commonly known as a crap game, being conducted on a table, and he recognized several of the players. He testified, further, that early Christmas, 1922, he saw two young men, whom he knew and recognized as Roy Cain and Leo Boussum, coming out of the place, and that he took Cain in charge because he was so much under the influence of liquor that he fell in the street. He said in his vigil of the place he observed a large number of men, both white and colored, going in and out of same, and it was his testimony, too, that the people who were frequenting the place were not boarders but were men who lived about town.
Policeman H.F. Wickham also testified for the State that he was often called to watch this place on Saturday and Sunday nights, describing the situation closely corroborating Policeman Wilson as to what was going on in the place. *Page 486
Roy Cain, one of the persons seen by the police officer leaving the house on Christmas morning, 1922, was called as a witness for the State, and though he gave information reluctantly, he admitted that he had been to the place of defendants at the time mentioned by the officer; that the place was known as "the Froemsdorf place," and that he was accompanied by Leo Boussum on that occasion; that he went into the house through the front door and joined a number of men who were gambling with dice in the kitchen. He testified that it was a general crap game in which he lost six or seven dollars. When asked who was engaged in the game, he answered: "Everybody was betting." He also admitted that he had been there before, and said that the place had the reputation generally of being a gambling house at the time he was there. He also corroborated the police officers by admitting that he was arrested for being drunk and having liquor in his possession at the time named by the policeman.
Leo Boussum also testified for the State. He admitted that he was with Cain on his Christmas visit to this place. He said there were seven or eight persons in the game besides himself, and that all were active in betting money in one general dice game, and that he lost money in the game. This witness was then nineteen years of age, and said he left the house because there was a general row growing out of the dice game; that when he and Cain left, after having been there nearly an hour, the other six players remained, continuing the game.
Mrs. Hulda Maystedt testified for the State that she knew defendants' place; that at about 3 o'clock in the morning, on the last Sunday in January, 1923, she went there to induce her husband to come home; that when she arrived at the place, at that hour, both of the defendants were up and in the front room of the house. She said she was admitted by defendant Mattie Froemsdorf; that she located her husband with several of his *Page 487 acquaintances whom she knew, and also saw others whom she did not know, all being around the table indulging in a dice game, and that she saw the men actually engaged in the shaking of the dice. She protested against her husband frequenting the place, and asked defendant Henry Froemsdorf to refuse to allow her husband to again come there, and that Froemsdorf promised her he would keep him away. She said she knew the reputation of the Froemsdorf place, and that it bore the reputation of being a gambling house. She further testified that on other occasions she had been to this place, and each time had seen a number of men going in and out of the house.
The State then introduced a deed of record to the property, showing title in these defendants.
The defendant Henry Froemsdorf testified that he lived at this place, but flatly denied that any gambling was conducted there with his knowledge or consent; that he worked in a sawmill most of the time, and that he and his wife kept boarders at the place for whom they served meals, and that they also served meals for different people who visited them frequently. He said that the boarders would bring friends with them, and that the boarders and their friends would go to the kitchen, but if there was any gambling there he knew nothing about it. He denied knowing Cain and Boussum, and denied that he had ever admitted them into his house, or into any crap game. He admitted that Mrs. Meystedt came there on the morning mentioned by her, and that she did go to the kitchen, explaining that particular circumstance in the following questions and answers:
"Q. And didn't you see her walk over to that door, which couldn't have been over four or five feet right due east, and look in where that crap game was going on? A. I seen her open the door, yes.
"Q. Couldn't you see in that room the same as she could? A. No, sir; I never got up off my seat." *Page 488
This defendant insisted that the persons in the kitchen had been playing cards, and that they often had card games in his house, but that they did not play for money.
Defendant Mattie Froemsdorf denied any knowledge of gambling at the house, and said that she served lunches at the place as late as midnight; that the boarders and their friends often asked for a table upon which to play cards. She denied knowing Cain and Bossum, but admitted that Mrs. Meystedt visited the place at the time heretofore mentioned, and that it was she who opened the door for her to enter on that occasion, though she said she had been lying down before that and arose to allow Mrs. Meystedt to enter. She said she did not know there was anybody in the kitchen at that time, and that she had heard no noise whatsoever that indicated that persons had congregated there.
One other witness, John Morton, was produced by defendants, who said he was acquainted with the defendants; that he went to their home as much as two or three times a week and that he never saw any evidence of gambling there.
The first assignment of error challenges the sufficiency of the indictment. The indictment very appropriately charges the offense in the language of the statute and is invulnerable. Indeed, counsel who orally argued the case here for defendants concedes the sufficiency of the indictment.
Appellants' next insistence is that the court erred in permitting evidence to go to the jury as to the reputation of defendants' house. It has been definitely ruled in this State that the prosecution in a case of this character may show the reputation of the house, and, indeed, to that end the State may show the reputation of the frequenters of the place. [State v. Mosby, 53 Mo. App. 571. See also: State v. Barnard, 64 Mo. 260; State v. Price, 115 Mo. 656, 92 S.W. 174; Neudeck v. *Page 489 Grand Lodge, 61 Mo. App. 97; State v. Flick, 198 S.W. 1134; State v. Kearns, 264 S.W. 775.]
The further point is made that it was not shown that the defendants profited from the vice, nor that they actually participated in the game itself. This is not necessary. [State v. Mosby, supra.]
Finally, it is said that the State's proof is not sufficient to support the conviction. Without again going over the evidence, we find the record containing an abundance of evidence, both direct and circumstantial, which supports the verdict and judgment. It seems that the police officers proceeded cautiously in this case to lay the foundation in securing sufficient substantial evidence before instituting the prosecution. They made observations on many nights to determine whether this house was being used for gaming purposes; they observed the game actually in progress, and saw that at unusually late hours men were going into and coming out of this place. That the frequenters were not restricted entirely to white people was also shown. A wife, prompted by solicitude for her husband, finds him at this place at 3 o'clock in the morning where gambling was then being carried on. Cain and Boussum, when forced by the circumstances of being arrested on another charge, reluctantly admitted that they had actually gambled in the house, together with a large number of other men. Thrown into the balance, was the reputation of the place that it was a gambling house. It was then clearly for the jury to determine the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses. It may be in place to recite that while defendants positively denied their guilt, their explanation as to the boarders using this room innocently for card playing became seriously involved and very nebulous in their cross examination. If they were supported at all it was by only one witness, a former neighbor, who simply said that during his visits at the place he saw no gambling.
The instant case should not be confused with the decisions under section 3537, Revised Statutes of Missouri *Page 490 1919, which is a felony statute and contains other and different elements constituting the crime, and such are the cases of State v. Miller, 234 Mo. 588, 137 S.W. 887, and State v. Solon,247 Mo. 672, 153 S.W. 1023, relied upon by appellants.
The case was fairly tried on proper instructions, and the jury found both defendants guilty. We find no prejudicial error in the record and the judgment of conviction should be affirmed. It is so ordered. Becker and Nipper, JJ., concur.