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Statutes of Northern Ireland |
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GAMING ACT 1845 GAMING ACT 1845 - LONG TITLE An Act to amend the Law concerning Games and Wagers.{1} [8th August 1845] Preamble S.1 rep. by SLR 1875 GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 2 What shall be sufficient evidence that a house is a common gaming house. 2. In default of other evidence proving any house or place to be a common gaming house, it shall be sufficient, in support of the allegation in any indictment or information that any house or place is a common gaming house, to prove that such house or place is kept or used for playing therein at any unlawful game, and that a bank is kept there by one or more of the players exclusively of the others, or that the chances of any game played therein are not alike favourable to all the players, including among the players the banker or other person by whom the game is managed, or against whom the other players stake, play, or bet; and every such house or place shall be deemed a common gaming house such as is contrary to law and forbidden to be kept... by all... Acts containing any provision against unlawful games or gaming houses. GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 3 Justices may by warrant authorize constables to enter houses suspected of being common gaming houses, &c. 3. In every case... in which the justices of the peace in every shire, and mayors, sheriffs, bailiffs and other head officers within every city, town, and borough, within this realm, now have by law authority to enter into any house, room, or place where unlawful games shall be suspected to be holden, it shall be lawful for any justice of the peace, upon complaint made before him on oath that there is reason to suspect any house, room, or place to be kept or used as a common gaming house, to give authority, by special warrant under his hand, when in his discretion he shall think fit, to any constable, to enter, with such assistance as may be found necessary, into such house, room, or place, in like manner as might have been done by such justices, mayors, sheriffs, bailiffs, or other head officers, and, if necessary, to use force for making such entry, whether by breaking open doors or otherwise, and to arrest, search, and bring before a justice of peace all such persons found therein as might have been arrested therein by such justice of peace had he been personally present; and all such persons shall be dealt with according to law, as if they had been arrested in such house, room, or place by the justice before whom they shall be so brought; and any such warrant may be in the form given in the first schedule annexed to this Act. GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 4 Penalties on gaming house keepers, &c. convicted before justices. 4. The owner or keeper of any common gaming house, and every person having the care or management thereof, and also every banker, croupier, and other person who shall act in any manner in conducting the business of any common gaming house, shall, on conviction thereof by his own confession, or by the oath of one or more credible witnesses, before any two justices of the peace,... be liable to forfeit and pay such penalty, not more than one hundred pounds, as shall be adjudged by the justices before whom he shall be convicted, or, in the discretion of the justices before whom he shall be convicted, may be committed to [prison]... for any time not more than six calendar months;...: Provided always, that nothing herein contained shall prevent any proceeding by indictment against the owner or keeper or other person having the care or management of a common gaming house; but no person who shall have been summarily convicted of any such offence shall be liable to be proceeded against by indictment for the same offence. GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 5 Proof of playing for money, &c. not necessary. 5. It shall not be necessary, in support of any information for gaming in, or suffering any games or gaming in, or for keeping or using, or being concerned in the management or conduct of, a common gaming house, to prove that any person found playing at any game was playing for any money, wager, or stake. GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 8 What shall be deemed evidence of gaming. 8. Where any cards, dice, balls, counters, tables, or other instruments of gaming used in playing any unlawful game shall be found in any house, room, or place suspected to be used as a common gaming house, and entered under a warrant or order issued under the provisions of this Act, or about the person of any of those who shall be found therein, it shall be evidence, until the contrary be made to appear, that such house, room, or place is used as a common gaming house, and that the persons found in the room or place where such tables or instruments of gaming shall have been found were playing therein, although no play was actually going on in the presence of the constable entering the same under a warrant or order issued under the provisions of this Act, or in the presence of those persons by whom he shall be accompanied as aforesaid; and it shall be lawful for the police magistrate... before whom any person shall be taken by virtue of the warrant or order to direct all such tables and instruments of gaming to be forthwith destroyed. GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 9 Persons concerned in gaming and giving evidence, to be exempt from prosecutions, &c. 9. Every person who shall have been concerned in any unlawful gaming, and who shall be examined as a witness by or before any police magistrate or justice of the peace, or on the trial of any indictment or information against the owner or keeper or other person having the care or management of any common gaming house, touching such unlawful gaming, and who upon such examination shall make true and faithful discovery to the best of his or her knowledge of all things as to which he or she shall be so examined, and shall thereupon receive from the magistrate or justice of the peace or judge of the court by or before whom he or she shall be so examined a certificate in writing to that effect, shall be freed from all criminal prosecutions, and from all forfeitures, punishments, and disabilities, to which he or she may have become liable for anything done before that time in respect of such unlawful gaming. GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 11 Places kept for public billiard tables to be licensed. 11. Every house, room, or place kept for public billiard playing, or where a public billiard table or bagatelle board, or instrument used in any game of the like kind, is kept, at which persons are admitted, to play,... shall be licensed under this Act; and every person keeping any such public billiard table or bagatelle board, or instrument used in any game of the like kind, for public use, without being duly licensed so to do, and not holding a victualler's licence for the house or premises where such billiard table, bagatelle board, or other instrument as aforesaid is kept or used, and also every person licensed under this Act who shall not during the continuance of such billiard licence put and keep up the words "licensed for billiards," legibly printed in some conspicuous place near the door and on the outside of the house specified in the licence, shall be liable to be proceeded against as the keeper of a common gaming house, and, besides any penalty or punishment to which he may be liable if convicted of keeping a common gaming house, shall, on conviction of keeping such unlicensed billiard table, bagatelle board, or other instrument as aforesaid, by his own confession, or by the oath of one or more credible witnesses, before any police magistrate..., be liable to pay such penalty, not more than ten pounds for every day on which such billiard table, bagatelle board, or instrument as aforesaid shall be used, as shall be adjudged by the magistrate ... before whom he shall be convicted, or, in the discretion of the magistrate..., may be committed to [prison]... for any time not more than one calendar month;... but no person who shall have been summarily convicted of any such offence shall be liable to be further proceeded against by indictment for the same offence. GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 12 Penalties for offences against tenor of licences, as for offences against tenor of licences granted under 1828 c.61. 12. Every person licensed under this Act, who shall be convicted before a police magistrate... of any offence against the tenor of the licence to him granted, shall be liable to the same penalties and punishments, in the case of a first, second or third offence respectively, to which persons licensed under the Alehouse Act, 1828, are respectively liable on conviction of a first, second, or third offence against the tenor of the licence granted to them under the last-recited Act, or as near thereunto as the nature of the case will allow; and all the provisions of the last-recited Act with respect to convictions and penalties for offences against the last-recited Act, and the proceedings for enforcing the same, and to the expences of prosecution and penalties on witnesses for not attending, and the recovery and application of penalties, and the proceedings on appeals against convictions, and the award of costs on appeals, and in actions against justices, constables, or other persons for anything done in execution of the last-recited Act, shall be deemed to apply, so far as they are applicable, to convictions for offences against the tenor of the licences granted under this Act, and to the proceedings consequent thereupon or connected therewith, as if they were herein re-enacted. GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 13 When billiard playing shall not be allowed. 13. Every person keeping any public billiard table or bagatelle board, or instrument used in any game of the like kind, whether he be the owner of a victualler's licence or licensed under this Act, who shall allow any person to play at such table, board, or instrument after one and before eight of the clock in the morning of any day, or at any time on Sundays, Christmas Day, or Good Friday, or any day appointed to be kept as a public fast or thanksgiving, and every person holding a victualler's licence who shall allow any person to play at such table, board, or instrument kept on the premises specified in such victualler's licence at any time when such premises are not by law allowed to be open for the sale of wine, spirits, or beer, or other fermented or distilled liquors, shall be liable to the penalties herein provided in the case of persons keeping such public billiard table, bagatelle board, or instrument as aforesaid for public use without licence; and during those times when play at such table, board, or instrument is not allowed by this Act every house licensed under this Act, and every billiard room in every house specified in any victualler's licence, shall be closed, and the keeping of the same open, or allowing any person to play therein or thereat, at any of the times or on any of the days during which such play is not allowed by this Act, shall be deemed in each case an offence against the tenor of the licence of the person so offending. GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 14 Constables empowered to visit licensed houses. 14. It shall be lawful for all constables and officers of police to enter into any house, room, or place where any public table or board is kept for playing at billiards, bagatelle, or any game of the like kind, when and so often as such constables and officers shall think proper; and every person licensed... under this Act, who shall refuse to admit or who shall not admit any such constable or officer of police into such house, room, or place, shall, on conviction thereof before a police magistrate..., be deemed guilty of an offence against the tenor of his licence, whether the same be a billiard table or a victualler's licence,.... Ss.15, 16 rep. by SLR 1875 GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 17 Winning money, &c. by cheating at play, or by sharing stakes, or by betting or wagering on the event of any game, to be punished. 17. Every person who shall, by any fraud or unlawful device or ill practice in playing at or with cards, dice, tables, or other game, or in bearing a part in the stakes, wagers, or adventures, or in betting on the sides or hands of them that do play, or in wagering on the event of any game, sport, pastime, or exercise, win from any other person to himself, or any other or others, any sum of money or valuable thing, shall [(a)on conviction on indictment, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years; or (b)on summary conviction, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months or to a fine not exceeding two hundred pounds, or to both.] GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 18 Contracts by way of gaming to be void, and wagers or sums deposited with stakeholders not to be recoverable at law. 18. All contracts or agreements, whether by parole or in writing, by way of gaming or wagering, shall be null and void; and no suit shall be brought or maintained in any court of law or equity for recovering any sum of money or valuable thing alleged to be won upon any wager, or which shall have been deposited in the hands of any person to abide the event on which any wager shall have been made: Provided always, that this enactment shall not be deemed to apply to any subscription or contribution, or agreement to subscribe or contribute, for or towards any plate, prize, or sum of money to be awarded to the winner or winners of any lawful game, sport, pastime, or exercise. S.19 rep. by SLR 1892. S.20 rep. by SLR (NI) 1954 GAMING ACT 1845 - SECT 21 Distress not unlawful for want of form, &c. 21. When any distress shall be made for any money to be levied by virtue of the warrant of any justice under this Act, the distress shall not be deemed unlawful, nor shall any party making the same be deemed a trespasser, on account of any defect or want of form in the information, summons, warrant of apprehension, conviction, warrant of distress, or other proceeding relating thereto, nor shall such party be deemed a trespasser from the beginning on account of any irregularity which shall be afterwards committed by him, but all persons aggrieved by such defect or irregularity may recover full satisfaction for the special damage by an action on the case in any of Her Majesty's courts of record. Ss.22, 23 rep. by SLR 1894. S.25 rep. by SL(R) 1976. S.26 rep. by SLR 1875 To the constable Whereas it appears to me, J.P., one of the justices of our lady the Queen assigned to keep the peace in the said county, by the information on oath of A.B. of , in the county of , yeoman, that the house [room or place] known as [here insert a description of the house, room or place, by which it may be readily known and found,] is kept and used as a common gaming house within the meaning of the Gaming Act, 1845. This is, therefore, in the name of our lady the Queen, to require you, with such assistants as you may find necessary, to enter into the said house [room or place], and, if necessary, to use force for making such entry, whether by breaking open doors or otherwise, and there diligently to search for all instruments of unlawful gaming which may be therein, and to arrest, search, and bring before me, or some other of the justices of our lady the Queen assigned to keep the peace within the county of , as well the keepers of the same as also the persons there haunting, resorting and playing, to be dealt with according to law; and for so doing this shall be your warrant. Given under my hand and seal at <,in the county of <,thisday of of Second Schedule rep. by SLR 1893 (No.2)