City of Owensboro v. Smith

383 S.W.2d 902, 1964 Ky. LEXIS 60
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 17, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 383 S.W.2d 902 (City of Owensboro v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Owensboro v. Smith, 383 S.W.2d 902, 1964 Ky. LEXIS 60 (Ky. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinions

STEWART, Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Daviess Circuit Court, holding that City of Owensboro Ordinance No. 24-61 which prohibits the licensing by the city of any pinball, shooting, target or amusement device for which a federal gaming stamp has been secured, is ultra vires because it is outside or in excess of the authority conferred by KRS 137.410, and invalid because it is in conflict with Kentucky statutes relating to the licensing of coin-operated amusement machines.

The judgment enjoined appellants, who are the Mayor, Board of Commissioners, City Manager, City Treasurer, and Chief of Police of the City of Owensboro, from enforcing the ordinance and directed appellants to issue the city license applied for on the pinball machine herein involved.

Two of appellees are J. G. Smith and Marvin Melheiser, a partnership doing business under the name of the Owensboro Amusement Company. They own pinball machine No. B-3659 and, pursuant to KRS 137.340, paid the state fee required and were issued a license in accordance with KRS 137.360 for the machine. They anticipated placing the device in a restaurant in Ow-ensboro owned by Robert Wellman, also an appellee. Wellman, under protest, bought a federal gaming stamp for the machine, and Smith and Melheiser applied for a city license for it under the provisions of City of Owensboro Ordinance 11-27, the general [903]*903licensing ordinance, and tendered the' fee of $10 named therein. The city clerk declined to grant the license, as the application stated a federal gaming stamp for it had been secured. This refusal was based on City of Owensboro Ordinance 24 — 61 mentioned above. Following this refusal, the three appellees brought this action, asking for the relief which was granted in the judgment.

The trial judge found the pinball machine is activated by the insertion of a 5‡ coin, and “in its construction, operation and use meets the qualifications of * * * KRS 436.230(5), which exempts devices similar in all respects to the one owned and operated by the Owensboro Amusement Company from the penalties provided in a previous subsection of the same statute making it unlawful to set up and keep, manage or operate, certain machines or contrivances for the purpose of gambling. No money, or any thing else of value, may be won or lost in the operation and playing of this device, and the operation and playing of such device shall not be considered gambling under the provisions of KRS 436.230(5).”

The trial court concluded as a matter of law that the Commonwealth had preempted the field of licensing coin-operated amusement machines in this state by enacting KRS 137.340 through KRS 137.410; and that City of Owensboro Ordinance No. 24-61 was ultra vires and therefore invalid, as its enactment was beyond the power conferred upon the city by KRS 137.410.

It is argued that where a state licenses pinball games under statutory provisions intended to be state-wide in effect, as in the case of KRS 137.340 through KRS 137.410, such games are exclusively governed by state law and the City of Owensboro had no authority to enact the prohibitive ordinance. It was restricted, it is contended, to the power granted by KRS 137.410, which provides only for the charge of a limited license tax, and the attempt to set up additional requirements for the obtaining of a city license on pinball games is void.

To support their position appellees cite Magwire v. Village of Springfield, 111 Vt. 414, 17 A.2d 260, where it was held that the legislature, by the enactment of a statute intended to be general in scope for the licensing of pinball games, must have intended to repeal a former statute empowering a municipality to license or refuse to license pinball machines within the limits of the municipality. They also rely upon Smith Amusement Co., et al. v. Mayor, etc., of the City of Chattanooga, 205 Term. 712, 330 S.W.2d 320, wherein it was ruled that an ordinance of the City of Chattanooga prohibiting the possession or display of pinball machines was ultra .vires, in view of a state statute specifically excluding pinball machines from the definition of gambling or from classification as gambling devices.

Appellants maintain that the ordinance, the purpose of which is to prevent gaming by the use of pinball machines, does not go counter to the provisions of KRS- 436:-230(5), the intent of which is also to restrain gaming with such devices. Appellants point out that, by purchasing the federal gaming stamp, appellees have in effect admitted the machine will be used for gambling purposes and that to issue them a city license would actually contravene the intent of the statute.

In Terry v. City of Portland et al., 204 Or. 478, 269 P.2d 544, it was held by the Supreme Court of Oregon that a statute imposing a privilege tax of $50 per annum on every coin-in-the-slot device, enacted in the exercise of the state’s power to tax, did not prevent the City of Portland from adopting an ordinance prohibiting the ownership, operation and use of any coin-in-the-slot device, which was aimed not only at devices of a gambling nature but also at machines that did not provide pay-off or free play, notwithstanding that the ordinance, if enforced, would diminish the state’s revenue.

[904]*904In Grigsby v. Mitchum, 191 Kan. 293, 380 P.2d 363, the Supreme Court of Kansas determined that a city ordinance prohibiting issuance of a pinball license to one who had paid a current $250 federal occupational tax for the privilege of operating a coin-operated amusement or gaming device, and requiring revocation of such license if á federal gaming stamp was issued, was not unreasonable or arbitrary and was within the legislative power of the city.

It .should be pointed out that Oregon and Kansas, as well as Kentucky, have enacted legislation 'making gambling illegal within :th'eir boundaries. Also, Oregon and Kansas, like Kentucky, have statutes which have b'den. interpreted to mean that a pinball machine which does not pay off in money or tangible property, but only gives free games, is'-’nót a- gambling device.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
383 S.W.2d 902, 1964 Ky. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-owensboro-v-smith-kyctapp-1964.