Section 3600 of the Code is in the following words: “A conviction cannot be had on the testimony of an accomplice, unless he is corroborated by such other evidence as tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense; and the corroboration is not sufficient, if it merely show the commission of the offense, or the circumstances thereof.” The question of this case is, whether one who played with the defendant, and adversely to him, at a game with cards, is an accomplice within the meaning of the statute above quoted.
An accomplice is defined to be, “ an associate in a crime; a partiler or partaker in guilt.”—See Webster’s Dictionary; Bouvier’s Law Dictionary. In Foster’s Crown Law, (341,) the word accomplices is said to take in all participes criminis. If, then, a person playing at a game with cards, adversely to the accused, and with him, participates in the commission of the offense condemned by the statute, he is an accomplice.
The offense is playing at a game with cards.—Code, § 3243. When two or more persons play cards together, although each may be contending with all the rest, it is the combination of all the successive acts of all the different persons, which constitutes the game at cards. Each player, by every act of his done in pursuance to the law of the game, contributes an appointed part to the combination of acts, which together make a game with cards. It is clear, therefore, that in playing at a game with cards, each player is a participant in the production of the result which the law condemns.
*353If the statutory offense were winning at a game with cards, then adversaries in the game could not be accomplices. The loser of the game could not be said to participate in the accomplishment of the unlawful object, (winning at a game.)
Our argument does not involve the position, that adversaries in fact are accomplices in law. Antagonists in playing cards are not adversaries, as to the thing which constitutes the offense. They agree together as to the playing at a game with cards, and each voluntarily contributes to that end; and they are adversaries as to which one shall perform his part in the game with the highest skill. There is a perfect agreement among the players that each shall perform his part, and the strife between them is which shall do it most skillfully.
If a community of purpose be necessary to constitute one an accomplice, our position is still maintainable. It would be absurd to contend, that any other common object than to commit the offense was necessary to make one an accomplice with the accused. Those who play together at a-game with cards have a common object to play at the game, and that is the offense. They have diverse objects to play with the greatest skill, and that does not constitute the offense. Bach- sits down to the card-table with a common purpose to do that which the law condemns; but each has an ultimate object to accomplish, by playing at a game with cards in violation of the law. They concur in the purpose to violate the law. They do not concur in the object to be accomplished by the violation. The offense is complete before it is known who will be the winner. If two men were to agree together to commit a murder, and the motive of one was to gratify revengeful feelings, and of the other to obtain money, they would be accomplices, notwithstanding the diverse objects with which the crime was committed. So, in this case, those who agree in the violation of law, by playing at a game with cards, are accomplices, notwithstanding they do so for the purpose of beating each other in the game.
Playing at cards is not the means by which the end con*354demned by the statute is accomplished; but that is the very thing which constitutes the offense, and it is impossible for persons to play cards together without a common purpose, so far as their conduct goes to make out the offense.
The term accomplice is as applicable to participants in the commission of misdemeanors as felonies.—2 Russ, on Cr. 967, 968; Reg. v. Farler, 8 C. & P. 106.
It has been the universal practice in this State, to join all persons engaged together ■ at a game with cards as defendants. Prom this long and well sanctioned practice we deduce an argument, that they are participes criminis. Wharton’s Am. Crim. Law, § 429; Archbold’s Crim. Pl. 96, note 1.
Por the reasons above stated, we regard the witness in this case as an accomplice. .
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded.
Bice, C. J., dissenting.