Advance Whip & Novelty Co. v. Benevolent Protective Order of Elks

170 A. 95, 106 Vt. 72, 1934 Vt. LEXIS 145
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 4, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 170 A. 95 (Advance Whip & Novelty Co. v. Benevolent Protective Order of Elks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Advance Whip & Novelty Co. v. Benevolent Protective Order of Elks, 170 A. 95, 106 Vt. 72, 1934 Vt. LEXIS 145 (Vt. 1934).

Opinion

*75 Geaham, J.

On July 17 to 19, 1930, one H. M. Knight, the owner of a circus, gave an exhibition of the circus at Montpelier in the name of the defendant. The exhibition was advertised as the Elks ’ circus. The' contract between Knight and the defendant was not received in evidence, but witnesses testified that the arrangement was made with a so-called committee of the defendant, and that it provided for a division of the net profits between Knight and the defendant. Joseph G. Abair was the Exalted Ruler of the defendant lodge, and also a member of the committee.

Just before coming to Montpelier, this circus was exhibited by Knight at St. Johnsbury under the auspices of the lodge of Elks there. The plaintiff, a Massachusetts corporation, of West-field, Mass., shipped to St. Johnsbury on consignment certain merchandise and games for use and disposal at that exposition. When the circus closed, the St. Johnsbury lodge was to return to the plaintiff at Westfield all unused merchandise and games for credit. The games were not for sale, but were to be used in connection with the sale of the merchandise.

On July 16, Abair Avired the plaintiff to release the novelties at St. Johnsbury and charge same to Montpelier Elks. The plaintiff made no direct reply to this telegram. The next morning its manager telephoned the chairman of the committee at St. Johnsbury and authorized him to assent to Abair’s request. The - committee chairman immediately communicated with Abair by telephone. He then engaged a truckman to deliver the goods to Montpelier, and they were brought by truck to the grounds then being occupied for the circus. Abair paid the trucking charges.

The goods so delivered consisted of wheels and lay downs, bingo cards, and a fortune board; also an assortment of articles consisting of blankets, electric heaters, clocks, thermos bottles, coffee percolators, etc., to be used as prizes in connection with the wheels, punch board, and other games. If any of the delivered articles were of a different classification, or for a different purpose, it is not indicated in the briefs, nor, so far as *76 we can discover, is any such separation made in the record. The conclusion is clear from the record that the plaintiff’s goods were sent to Montpelier for the same intended use and on the same terms as prevailed at St. Johnsbury. The articles intended as prizes proved, on examination, unsatisfactory to Abair, and few, if any, of them were used or disposed of. The games, however, were operated with other prizes secured locally. At the close of the circus, Abair turned over to Knight the plaintiff’s goods, and games with directions to return them to the plaintiff, but only a part of the games and merchandise was returned.

This action of contract is brought to recover the inventory value of the unreturned merchandise and games. The trial was by jury, with a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. The ease is for review on defendant’s exceptions.

At the close of the evidence the defendant moved that a verdict in its favor be directed because (1) there is no evidence that the defendant was in any way bound by the acts of Abair in ordering or dealing with the goods in question, and because (2) the contract between the plaintiff and defendant, if there was such a contract, is so tainted with gaming or gambling as to be void. The same questions are raised by a motion to set the verdict aside.

Our view of the case requires a discussion only of the second ground of the motion, and, for the purposes of our discussion, we will assume, but do not decide, that Abair had authority to represent the defendant in the transaction.

That the games furnished by the plaintiff were devices for the disposal of merchandise by chance is not questioned. The wheels are numbered to correspond with numbers on the lay downs. The player chooses a number on the lay down and, after paying the required price for the privilege, places a token thereon. Then the wheel is turned and if it stops on a number corresponding -with the number chosen on the lay down the player gets one of the prizes, otherwise he loses his money. The fortune board is about three feet square with numbers scattered over it in close alignment, and it is assembled with prizes. The player, after paying, draws a ticket on which is printed the player’s fortune and also a number; if the number on the ticket corresponds with one of the numbered prizes, he wins it, otherwise the player gets only the printed fortune for the price paid. *77 Tbe bingo cards were designed for tbe sale of articles by tbe chance drawing of numbers. A man, whose identity and connections were not disclosed, otherwise than that be was called ‘! Zippy, ’ ’ assisted at tbe operation of tbe wheels. If tbe wheels became too generous with tbe prizes, bis duty was to adjust or plug them so they would not stop on numbers selected by tbe players. It is common knowledge, of which we take, judicial notice, that these so-called games are nothing but gambling devices furnished for gaming purposes at fairs, carnivals, and circuses, and it cannot be questioned, and is not in this ease, that the keeping and using of such devices under the circumstances and for the purposes shown here in evidence was a violation of the criminal statutes of this State. G-. L. 7079, 7090, and 7091.

On this phase of the case, the court submitted to the jury only the question whether the plaintiff knew that the goods were to be used for gambling. The defendant contends that this was error because the evidence, taken most favorably for the plaintiff, compels the conclusion that the plaintiff had such knowledge.

Some of the states follow the English rule that, where the agreement is innocent in itself, but the intention of one of the parties is unlawful, as where goods are bought or money borrowed to be used for an unlawful purpose, the mere fact that the other party knows of such purpose renders the agreement illegal and void. 13 C. J. 517, § 476; Parker-Gordon Importing Co. v. Benakis, 213 Iowa, 136, 238 N. W. 611. But the plaintiff contends that the rule in this State, as established by our cases, is that, in addition to mere knowledge of the buyer’s illegal intention, the seller must do some act in aid of, or in furtherance of, the unlawful design. This rule was held to apply to legal sales in a foreign state of goods conveyed to this State by common carrier in the ordinary and usual course of business in Case v. Riker, 10 Vt. 482, 33 A. D. 211; Gaylord v. Soragen, 32 Vt. 110, 76 A. D. 154; and Tuttle & Reed v. Holland, 43 Vt. 542.

But in Territt v. Bartlett, 21 Vt. 184, 190, this Court, on the authority of Lightfoot v. Tenant, 1 B. & P. 551, recognized and approved the rule that one who sells goods, in the place of the forum, knowing they are intended to be put to an illegal use there, cannot recover the price. The decision of the case, however, was put upon the ground that the plaintiff having *78

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170 A. 95, 106 Vt. 72, 1934 Vt. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/advance-whip-novelty-co-v-benevolent-protective-order-of-elks-vt-1934.