Boom Town Saloon, Inc. v. City of Chicago

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 14, 2008
Docket1-07-0239 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Boom Town Saloon, Inc. v. City of Chicago (Boom Town Saloon, Inc. v. City of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boom Town Saloon, Inc. v. City of Chicago, (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION JULY 14, 2008

No. 1-07-0239

BOOM TOWN SALOON, INC., Licensee, and ) Appeal from the EUGENE PERRY, President, ) Circuit Court of ) Cook County. Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) v. ) ) THE CITY OF CHICAGO, a Municipal ) corporation, RICHARD M. DALEY, ) as both Local Liquor License ) No. 06 CH 5562 Commissioner and Mayor, SCOTT BRUNER, ) Director of the Mayor's License ) Commission, ROBERT NOLAN, Hearing ) Officer for the Mayor's License ) Commission, the MAYOR'S LICENSE ) COMMISSION, THE LICENSE APPEAL ) COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF CHICAGO, ) ANTHONY CALABRESE, IRVING KOPPEL, ) The Honorable DON ADAMS and PHILIP J. CLINE, Chicago ) Mary Ann Mason, Police Superintendent, ) Judge Presiding. ) Defendants-Appellees. )

JUSTICE ROBERT E. GORDON delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs Boom Town Saloon, Inc., and Eugene Perry, Boom Town's president, appeal

the order of the circuit court of Cook County affirming the decision of the Local Liquor Control

Commissioner (LLCC). The LLCC revoked Boom Town's liquor license for allegedly

committing acts of gambling. On appeal, plaintiffs claim that the LLCC’s findings of gambling

were against the manifest weight of the evidence. We agree, and therefore reverse. No. 1-07-0239

BACKGROUND

Defendant City of Chicago sought to revoke plaintiff Boom Town's liquor license based

on charges that Boom Town engaged in gambling; that it operated, kept, or used a gambling

device; and that it kept a place of gambling. The charges involved three sections of the Criminal

Code of 1961 (720 ILCS 5/28-1(a)(3), 28-3, 37-1 (West 2004)), and two sections of the Chicago

Municipal Code (Chicago Municipal Code §§8-12-010, 8-12-030 (1990)).

At the administrative hearing before the LLCC, Officer Mark Sobczyk of the vice control

section testified that at 7 p.m. on March 4, 2004, he entered Boom Town in plain clothes by

himself, sat down at the bar, and ordered and paid for a drink. The bartender identified herself as

"Denise."

Sobczyk noticed another patron of the bar approach a "Fruit Bonus Number 9" video

poker machine. Sobczyk explained that to play the game, the player inserts money into the

machine, which registers a corresponding number of "credits." The player hits a button to place a

"bet" with the credits, and hits another button, which prompts icons on the screen to roll.

Depending on how the icons stop, the player either loses the credits, or earns additional credits.

Officer Sobczyk watched the patron insert money into the machine and manipulate its

buttons. At the time, the machine was 25 to 28 feet away from the officer’s seat. Sobczyk left

his seat and walked to within 10 feet of the machine, where he noticed that credits had appeared

in its left corner. Sobczyk returned to his seat.

Officer Sobczyk testified that the patron played for 38 minutes and then approached the

bar. Officer Sobczyk again left his seat and walked to within 10 feet of the machine, where he

2 No. 1-07-0239

observed an amount of credits on the screen. Sobczyk could not see the exact number of credits,

but he testified it was a

four-digit number. Sobczyk's testimony continued:

"MS. NAVE [Assistant Corporation Counsel]: What did

you do next?

OFFICER SOBCZYK: In the meantime while I was doing

this, the player, as I said, who had been approaching the bar, by this

time had made it to the bar at which point he called out to the

bartender.

MR. TOUHY [Defense Counsel]: I object and move to

strike it out as hearsay.

MS. NAVE: It's not hearsay. It's not a statement--he's just

testifying what he observed.

COMMISSIONER NOLAN: Are you offering it for the

truth of the matter asserted?

MS. NAVE: No, I am not.

COMMISSIONER NOLAN: Then it's not hearsay. I'll

overrule it.

***

MS. NAVE: What happened after you observed the player

call out to the bartender?

3 No. 1-07-0239

OFFICER SOBCZYK: I then concentrated my

observations on the bartender and the player.

MS. NAVE: What did you observe?

OFFICER SOBCZYK: I observed the player using his

thumb over his shoulder and pointing toward the machine.

MR. TOUHY: I'm going to object and move to strike this

out as hearsay and no proper foundation laid.

COMMISSIONER NOLAN: Overruled.

MR. TOUHY: And there's no foundation establishing that

this is the kind of testimony that would be [relied] upon [by] a

reasonably prudent person.

COMMISSIONER NOLAN: I don't believe it's hearsay, so

there's no reason for that requirement. I'm merely taking it as his

describing what the conduct was that he observed.

MS. NAVE: Officer, what did you observe after you saw

the player point his thumb towards the machine?

OFFICER SOBCZYK: The bartender nodded in the

affirmative.

MR TOUHY: I object; move to strike it out, hearsay,

nonverbal.

COMMISSIONER NOLAN: But by an agent of the

4 No. 1-07-0239

corporation, so it's overruled as an exception."

Officer Sobczyk testified that after the bartender nodded, the bartender turned around and

entered a storage area behind the bar. She exited within 15 seconds with money, which she

handed to the patron. Sobczyk could not see the denomination of the bills or how many bills

were given. The patron ordered a drink and paid for it with the money. The patron finished his

drink and left. Sobczyk left a short time later, and obtained a search warrant for the premises.

Officer Sobczyk testified that, on the following day, March 5, 2004, he returned to Boom

Town to execute the warrant. The bartender working at that time telephoned the bartender

named Denise, who came to Boom Town. When she arrived, Sobczyk issued her an ordinance

complaint ticket.

Officer Sobczyk testified that he seized $170 from the video poker machine and the

machine itself. He did not recover any money, paraphernalia, documents, or other evidence of

gambling from the back storage area.

Plaintiffs presented testimony from bartender Denise Pietz. Pietz testified that she tended

the bar on March 4, 2004. She kept her "bank" in a register drawer and did not keep any money

in the back area. She also testified that she was not involved in any gambling activities.

Pietz testified that the Fruit Bonus Number 9 video poker machine at issue in this case

had been malfunctioning during the week of March 4. The machine would "jam up," meaning it

would not accept a player's money, and "freeze." If a customer complained about a malfunction,

Denise would "take the customer's word for it" and refund the player up to $5. Larger refunds

were at the discretion of the owner, Eugene Perry. Pietz would refund customers with money

5 No. 1-07-0239

from the register drawer.

Pietz testified that she refunded $5 to a customer named John on March 4, 2004.

Concerning the refund, Pietz testified that she went from behind the bar to look at the machine,

determined the machine was frozen, unplugged the machine to reset it, and gave John $5.

Bryan Bandyk, an employee of Shamrock Amusement Company, testified and identified

two work service tickets. The first ticket was created on March 1, 2004,1 in response to a call

from Boom Town indicating the dollar bill intake was sticking on a poker machine. Bandyk

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