delivered the opinion of the court.
The basis of this prosecution is a warrant issued by a police justice of the city of Norfolk, which is in the following words:
“Whereas, Sergeant Gwynn and Officer Debman has this day made complaint and information, on oath, before me, a justice of the said city, that on the 18th day of April, 1912, in said city, Herbert Tisdale did unlawfully maintain and conduct a public nuisance, to-wit: a gambling house, at No. 38 Randolph street, in violation of the law, where divers persons meet for unlawful gambling and have in his possession one faro bank outfit, and unlawfully did keep and exhibit a gaming table, commonly called a faro bank, against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of Virginia. These are, therefore,” etc.
Upon trial before the police justice and also upon appeal to the corporation court, the accused was convicted.
No claim was made, either in the justice’s court or in the corporation court, that the facts averred in the warrant did not constitute a criminal offense, but on the contrary the contention in the corporation court and here is that it charged two offenses, viz.: one for the violation of the common law in maintaining a public nuisance, and the other for violating section 3615 of the Code.
Placing that construction upon the warrant, the accused, upon the calling of the cause in the corporation court, moved that court to require the Commonwealth to elect for which of the said offenses it would prosecute. Error is assigned to the action of the court in overruling that motion.
The warrant does not seem to have been prepared with very great care, and shows less precision of expression in the description of the offense charged against the accused than is desirable in the prosecution of criminal offenses. *868It undoubtedly does contain some phrases or terms descriptive, in part at least, of the statutory offense, as claimed by the accused, as well as of the common law offense of maintaining a public nuisance. This latter offense, it is apparent, we think, from the language of the warrant taken as a whole, was intended to be charged against the accused. It avers that the accused (stating time and place) did unlawfully maintain and conduct a public nuisance, to-wit. Then follows the terms or phrases which it is claimed charge another offense.
We have no statute defining a public nuisance or declaring its constituents, or prescribing the form of an indictment therefor. The offense, therefore, remains as defined at common law, and the indictment for its commission may be framed substantially as at common law, omitting many averments rendered unnecessary by statute. Code, secs. 3998, 3999 and 4000.
But it is not sufficient, it seems, in an indictment to merely aver that the accused is maintaining a public nuisance. There must be some facts alleged which show that it is an offense of that character. If the public nuisance for which the accused is prosecuted consists in keeping a gaming house, the indictment or warrant ought to contain averments of what was done in the house which gives it the offensive character and from which the public injury is deduced. 2 Bish. Cr. Pr., secs. 275-6; Wood on Nuisances, sec. 45; 3 Greenleaf on Ev., sec. 185; Hickey v. State, 53 Ala. 514.
It being necessary, or at least proper, that the warrant should contain allegations of facts and circumstances which showed that the house maintained was a public nuisance, the averments and parts of the warrant following the videlicet should be construed in the light of the averment which preceded it. The force and significance of such terms or phrases, although they may describe a different *869offense, will depend in each particular instance in which they are used upon the manner in which they are introduced into the pleading and upon their connection with other allegations. Com’th v. Hart, 10 Gray (Mass.) 465, 467.
In the case cited it is said: “The precise and legal use of a videlicet in every species of pleading is to enable the pleader to isolate, to distinguish and to fix with certainty that which was before general, and which without such explanation might with equal propriety have applied to different objects. 1 Chit. Cr. Law, 226.”
In Gilligan’s Case, 99 Va. 816, 828, 37 S. E. 962, 964, it is said, quoting the definition given by Webster in his International Dictionary, that the words “to wit” “are used to call attention to a more particular specification of what has preceded.”
The terms and phrases which it is claimed describe the statutory offense being pertinent and proper, even if they were not necessary in describing the common law offense, and being averred under a videlicet, they ought to be construed, we think, as having immediate and direct reference to the preceding averment of the maintenance of a public nuisance, and not as charging another offense.
In the case of Com’th v. Hart, supra, it was held that an indictment which averred that the defendants on a day named and on divers other days and times between that and another day, did knowingly maintain and keep a certain common nuisance, to-wit, a certain building, to-wit, a house of ill fame and resorted to for the purpose of prostitution and “lewdness,” and for their own lucre and gain, certain persons, as well men as women, of evil name and fame and of dishonest conversation, to frequent, and come together, did unlawfully and wilfully cause, permit and procure, as well in the night as in the day, did suffer and permit to be and remain, having illicit intercourse, was not *870bad for duplicity as stating, in addition to the offense of a common nuisance under the statute, the common law offense of keeping a disorderly house. In discussing the effect of the language following the videlicet the court said: “The common nuisance complained of is thus shown to be the keeping of a house of ill fame, contrary to the provisions of the statute; and by this explanation the general expression first used, though susceptible of a different meaning in itself, is restricted and confined to a precise and definite fact, and the accused are thereby secured against all danger of misapprehending the exact offense for which they are called upon to answer. If there are other expressions in the indictment which are not essential to a distinct statement of the offense intended to be charged against the defendants, they may be regarded as useless and rejected as surplusage, for none of them are in, conflict with the general purpose of the prosecution or inconsistent with an accurate description of the particular offense which is complained of.”
Upon a careful examination of the averments of the warrant and of the manner in which they are made, we are of opinion that the accused was not being prosecuted for two offenses, but only for the common law offense of maintaining a public nuisance, and that the said motion of the accused was properly overruled.
The action of the court in overruling the motion of the accused in arrest of judgment is also assigned as error. As that motion was based upon the hypothesis that the warrant was a prosecution for two separate and distinct offenses, when, as we have held, it only charged one offense, the trial court did not err in overruling that motion.
The remaining assignment of error is to the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict as contrary to the evidence.
There was evidence that the house charged with being *871maintained as a public nuisance was located on a street in the city of Norfolk; that at the time the police of the city made their raid upon it the accused was found in it and was the lessee thereof; that it contained four rooms and a small office, in which were found fifty-five men (all of whom were arrested), poker chips, a table known as a “crap table,” a board commonly known as a “faro layout,” which was so mutilated that it was impossible to use it as it then was, but there was afterwards found in one of the station cells where one of the men arrested was incarcerated a part of the covering of said faro board, which fitted into the mutilated part of the “faro layout”; and that within six months preceding the said raid men had been seen on several occasions playing cards in the house. In the absence of evidence explaining these facts and circumstances (and there are none), the jury were justified in reaching the conclusion they did; certainly it cannot be said that their verdict is without evidence to support it.
The judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.