City of Roswell v. Jones

67 P.2d 286, 41 N.M. 258
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1937
DocketNo. 4205.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 67 P.2d 286 (City of Roswell v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Roswell v. Jones, 67 P.2d 286, 41 N.M. 258 (N.M. 1937).

Opinions

ZINN, Justice.

Appellees were charged with violating Ordinance 397, Section 3, of the Municipal Ordinances of Roswell, in permitting a lottery device to be conducted in the place of business operated by the appellees. The place of business is the Yucca Theatre, owned by R. C. Griffiths Theatres, Inc., and the alleged lottery device is what is commonly known as “Bank Night.”

In the police magistrate’s court the appellees were found guilty and fined $25 each. They appealed to the district court where the cause was tried de novo. The district court ruled that:

“ * * * the device complained of does not constitute a lottery device in that the participants in ‘Bank Night’ pay nothing to either register or participate in the drawing, it being equally free to those who do not even purchase a ticket as to those who do purchase a ticket, there being no consideration for the chance to win, and as a conclusion the court finds no violation of the ordinance.”

The court discharged the appellees, dismissed the complaint, and the City of Roswell prosecutes this appeal from such judgment. The Attorney General enters his appearance amicus curise in support of the City of Roswell.

“Bank Night” as operated by appellees is similar to the plan considered by many courts in cases herein cited. It is the usual plan of free registration, the drawing of a number corresponding to a number in the registration book, and the presence of participants required inside or outside of the theatre at the time of the drawing, and the awarding of a cash prize to the person whose number is called, if such person is present either in the theatre or immediately outside. The plan is described in detail in many of the cases to which we refer. Any variations in details between the cited cases and the facts before us are immaterial.

We do not have a legislative definition of lottery in New Mexico. In 1889, the Territorial Legislature of New Mexico enacted a statute in relation to lotteries. Laws 1889, c. 47 (Comp.St.1929, § 35-3803, et seq.)

Section 1 of said act (Comp.St.1929, § 35-3803) provides, as follows: “Whoever shall set up, draw, manage, or otherwise promote any lottery for money or any other thing of value, or dispose of, or promote the disposing of, any money or thing of value by way of lottery, or aid in committing any of said offenses, shall be fined five hundred to ten thousand dollars.”

The Attorney General in his brief defines a lottery as: “ * * * a game of hazard in which small sums of money are ventured for the chance of obtaining a larger value in money or other articles.”

We agree with the Attorney General when he says this definition is sensible and true.

The devices and schemes which some courts have condemned and other courts have refused to condemn as lotteries, are as varied as the ingenuity of man can devise. Generally the different devices and plans can be placed into two categories. On the one hand the lottery where tickets are sold for a cash consideration, the prize may either be a large sum of cash or an article of value, and the winner is determined by lot. The purchaser is not limited in the number of tickets or chances he may purchase, and the operators of the-lottery withhold from the receipts of the sale of tickets an amount to defray the expenses of the lottery and also a profit. This plan is universally outlawed under statutes similar to ours.

On the other hand, we have devices and schemes akin to a lottery which are used to promote the sale of goods or services or to increase patronage in profit enterprises. “Bank Night” comes within the latter class.

The , courts are divided in their views when construing the latter class or devices which might be termed “akin to a lottery.” Even these fall into two groups. In one .group it will be found that the prize tickets were only furnished to customers—those who purchased something. The payment made by the customer was for both the article purchased and the prize ticket—part of the consideration was for the ticket. The vast majority of the cases hold these schemes to be lotteries. State v. Powell, 170 Minn. 239, 212 N.W. 169, and Matta v. Katsoulas, 192 Wis. 212, 212 N.W. 261, 50 A.L.R. 291, are typical of this group. The decisions, however, are not entirely uniform in holding even such a scheme to be a lottery. R. J. Williams Furniture Co. v. McComb Chamber of Commerce, 147 Miss. 649, 112 So. 579, 57 A.L.R. 421, holds it not to be.

In the group similar to “Bank Night” will be found the cases where the distribution of prize tickets is purported to be both to noncustomers as well as to customers. In considering such schemes the courts are hopelessly divided.

In the early case of Yellow-Stone Kit v. State (1890) 88 Ala. 196, 7 So. 338, 7 L.R.A. 599, 16 Am.St.Rep. 38, the court said:

“There is no law which prohibits the gratuitous distribution of one’s property by lot or chance. If the distribution is a pure gift or bounty, and not in name or pretense merely, which is designed to evade the law, —if it be entirely unsupported by any valuable consideration moving from the taker, —there is nothing in this mode of conferring it which is violative of the policy of our statutes condemning lotteries, or gaming. We may go further, and say that there would seem to be nothing contrary to public policy, or per se morally wrong, in the determination of rights by lots. * * * The gratuitous distribution of money or property by lot has never prevailed to such extent as to require police regulation at the hands of the state, nor, so long as human nature remains as it now is and has been for so many thousand years, is it likely ever to be otherwise. The history of lotteries for the past three centuries in England, and for nearly a hundred years, in America, shows that they have been schemes for the distribution of money or property by lot in which chances were sold for money, either directly, or through some cunning device. The evil flowing from them has been the cultivation of the gambling spirit,—the hazarding the money with the hope by chance of obtaining a larger sum,—often stimulating an inordinate love of gain, arousing the most violent passions of one’s baser nature, sometimes tempting the gambler to risk all he possesses on the turn of a single card or cast óf a single die, and ‘tending, as centuries of human experience now fully attest, to mendicancy and idleness on the one hand, and moral profligacy and debauchery on the other.’ ”

In the case of State v. Danz, 140 Wash. 546, 250 P. 37, 48 A.L.R. 1109, the Supreme Court of Washington, by a five to four decision, held a scheme resembling that presented in this case to be a lottery.

In the case of People v. Cardas, 137 Cal.App.(Supp.) 788, 28 P.(2d) 99, 100; 101, the court in considering a plan similar to “Bank Night” said: “Our conclusion is that the holders of the prize tickets did not pay a valuable consideration for the chance of winning the prize—did not hazard anything of value upon the chance—and consequently the scheme was not a lottery, and therefore the defendant was not guilty of having violated sections 320 and 321 of the Penal Code.”

In Glover et al. v. Malloska, 238 Mich. 216, 213 N.W. 107, loc.cit.

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67 P.2d 286, 41 N.M. 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-roswell-v-jones-nm-1937.