— The pleas in abatement seem to have been framed with a direct reference to the act of assembly, passed the fourteenth .day of January, eighteen hundred and twenty-six, entitled ‘an act for the better selecting, drawing and summoning jurors’ — (Aik. Dig. 298.)
It is unnecessary to consider whether these pleas are formally pleaded, because at the time when this indictment was found, and when the grand jury must have been selected, a different mode than the one pointed out by the act of eighteen hundred and twenty-six had been provided by law, and tills act, so far as it governed the selection of grand jurors, had been repealed—(Act of 8 Jan. 1836, Aik. Dig. 2 ed. 624.)
By the last enactment, it is made the duty of the clerk of the Circuit court, and of the sheriff, under the superintendence of the judge of the County court, to select from the whole number of persons qualified to serve on juries, twenty-four persons, best qualified, in their opinion, to serve on the grand jury,” &c. The pleas in abatement, were therefore properly overruled.
*438The instruction to the jury, as well as those refused, involve the construction of the first sections of the acts of eighteen hundred and twelve, and eighteen hundred and twenty-six, and the fourth section of the act of eighteen hundred and twenty-eight, in relation to the offences of exhibiting gaming tablés, &c.
The section of the act of eighteen hundred and twelve, is in these Words: “Jf any person or persons shall be guilty of keeping or exhibiting any gaming; table, commonly called ABC, or E O, or roulette, or rowley pow-ley, or rouge and noir, or any faro bank, or any other gaming table of the same or like kind, or of any other description, under any other denomination whatsoever, or shall be in any manner, either directly or indirectly, Interested or concerned in any of the aforesaid gaming tables, bank or games, either by furnishing money or other articles, for the purpose of carrying on the same, being interested in the loss or gain of the said table or bank, or employed in any manner in conducting, carrying on or exhibiting said table or bank. Every person so offending, and being convicted thereof in the Superior court of law and equity of the proper county, shall pay a fine of not less than five hundred dollars, and not more than two thousand dollars, and shall stand in the pillory three days in succession, one hour each day”—(Aik. Dig. 210.)
So much of the section of the act of eighteen hundred and twenty-six, as requires examination, is in these words: “And if any person or persons shall, after the passage of thia.aet, by him or her, or themselves, or their agent, keep, or cause io be kept, any suchlable, bank, or *439other invention, by whatever name known or distinguished, for the purpose of gaming, or shall permit, or knowingly suffer the same to be kept, for the purpose , aforesaid, on his, her, or their premises, he, she or they so offending, shall, on conviction thereof, upon indictment, be fined in a sum not less than five hundred dollars, nor more than two thousand dollars, and imprisoned- not less than two, nor more than twelve months” —(Aik. Dig. 212.)
The fourth section of the act of eighteen hundred and twenty-eight, is as follows: “If any person or persons?• shall hereafter be guilty of keeping or exhibiting any gaming table called A B C, or E O, or roulette, or rowley powley, or rouge and noir, or shall keep or exhibit any faro bank, or shall keep or exhibit any other gaming table or bank of the like kind, or of any other description, under any other name or denomination, or without any name therefor, or shall in any manner be interested or concerned in keeping, exhibiting or carrying on any such table, bank or game, each and every such person so offending, and being thereof convicted, shall be fined one thousand dollars, and on failure to pay the same, shall be imprisoned (without bail) for three months”—(Aik. Dig. 212.)
It may be somewhat questionable, whether the act of eighteen hundred and twenty-six, is as general and extensive as that of eighteen hundred and twelve; but the act of eighteen hundred and twenty-eight covers the whole ground of both the previous statutes, so far as the keeping, exhibiting, carrying on, or being in any manner interested in any gaming tabie or bank whatever; *440and includes every offence connected with the subject matter, unless the furnishing' of money or other things to carry oil the same, without being in any manner connected by interest in the table, &c. is an offence intended to be punished by the act of eighteen hundred and twelve. As the act of eighteen hundred and twenty-eight provides a different, and in some respects, a milder punishment, for those offences, than the previous statutes, it must be held to repeal them, so far as the same of-fences are provided to be punished by it.
It cannot be doubted, that a faro bank is within the words of the act of eighteen hundred and twenty eight, and whether it be a gaming table or bank, is immaterial; both arc equally within the inhibition of the statute, and the only matter to be ascertained by the jury, is the exhibition for the purpose of gaming.
The Circuit court properly refused to charge the jury, that a faro bank was not a gaining table; and it was correct in deciding, that the words ‘gaming table,’ in this indictment, as well as ! played with cards,’ might he regarded as surplusage.
The sixth section of the act of eighteen hundred and twenty-eight, provides that it shall be sufficient for the indictment to charge, that the person indicted, did keep and exhibit the .gamin'' table or bank above specified, for gaming, without proving that any money was won, or lost, or bet, on such gaming table or hank, &c. The indictment, in the present instance, contains substantially these averments, although they are coupled with the immaterial allegation, that the gaming table was played with cards, and if the evidence was sufficient to warrant *441the charge of the court, the judgmeut must be sustained.
The proof was, that the defendant exhibited a faro bank. It is not stated that the exhibition was for the purpose of gaming — but must not such purpose be inferred, from the ordinary meaning to be attached to these terms? We think it must, it would be absurd, to suppose that a faro bank can be exhibited for any other purpose. A different purpose would change the character of the exhibition, and it would cease to be a foro bank or gaming table.
There is-no error in the decision of either of the questions referred to this court, and the judgment of the Circuit court is affirmed.