Commonwealth v. Klucher

193 A. 28, 326 Pa. 587, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 529
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 7, 1937
DocketAppeal, 7
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 193 A. 28 (Commonwealth v. Klucher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Klucher, 193 A. 28, 326 Pa. 587, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 529 (Pa. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

The sole question before us in this appeal is whether or not so-called “pin ball games” are within the purview of the Mercantile Tax Act of May 25, 1907, P. L. 244.

*588 By a stipulation filed the case was tried without a jury and the facts agreed upon. Defendant conducts a drug and confectionery store in the City of Harrisburg, where he sells candies, tobacco, ice cream, etc. He permitted a glass encased playing board standing on four legs, about five feet long and two and one-half feet wide to be installed in his store. This device is described in the opinion of the court below as follows: “In the board are about 20 holes variously placed, and around or in proximity to each hole upright pins or nails are fastened. Each hole represents a particular score that may be obtained when the balls enter the hole. The game is played by projecting small balls on to the board by means of a plunger, and the object is to have the balls enter the holes which will secure the highest score. The score made by the player is the total of the scores of the holes which the balls enter. Games such as this are of various patterns; some are operated by electric batteries, some have certain lighting systems, some do not require cylindrical shaped pieces of metal resembling pins or nails but instead use wooden pegs fastened to the surface of the board, or indentations on the surface of the board. These games are games of skill, and the majority of them are placed in drug stores, grocery stores and cigar stores, and are incidental to the chief business in each particular store. The ball is approximately one half inch in diameter, resembling a marble in structure. The cylindrical pieces of metal nailed to the surface of the board in an upright position are approximately one half inch in height and of the thickness similar to that of a small nail. In order to operate the board in question the player must insert a coin, in the instant case a nickel, to secure 10 balls.” Defendant receives fifty per cent of the receipts.

On or about May 28, 1935, the Mercantile Appraiser for Dauphin County levied an assessment in the sum of $21.50 against defendant, on account of this device, by virtue of the Act of May 25, 1907, supra. Section 1 of *589 this Act provides: “No person . . . shall keep, for purpose of profit, any shooting-gallery, shuffle-boardroom, billiard- or pool-room, bowling-alley, nine or tenpin alley, or any alley or place on or in which any game is played with the use of balls and pins, or other objects, in this Commonwealth, without first taking out a license from the treasurer of the proper county. Every such person . . . shall pay, each year, the sum of twenty dollars for the first shooting-gallery, shuffle-board, billiard or pool-table, or bowling-alley, nine or tenpin or other alley, or other game played with the use of balls or pins, or other objects. ...” Section 2 provides, inter alia, that “ ‘nine and tenpin alley’ includes any place on or in which any game is played with the use of balls and pins, or other objects.”

On June 3, 1935, defendant appealed from the appraisement and assessment to the County Treasurer of Dauphin County, and on the next day the County Treasurer and the Mercantile Appraiser filed an opinion in which they said: “We find that the assessment was proper and dismiss the appeal.” On June 14, 1935, the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County allowed an appeal to that court. On April 6, 1936, that court sustained the appeal and set aside the assessment. The Commonwealth appealed.

The court below in its opinion asked: “Do the words ‘other objects’ include any kind of a game in which any kind of a ball or any kind of a pin is used?” The court then said a little later in it's opinion: “The principle of ejusdem generis must be applied to taxing statutes as well as to any other kind of laws. That principle means that the general and specific words capable of analogous meaning take color from each other, so that the general words may be restricted to a sense analogous to those less general. ... In our opinion the principle of ejusdem generis should be applied to the language now under consideration, and, when so applied, it necessarily follows that the device is not taxable. The statute im *590 poses a tax upon games which can be readily classified, shooting-gallery, shuffle board, billiard or pool tables, and then includes another class, ‘or bowling-alley, nine or ten-pin or other alley.’ That is a classification on any alley on which a game is played by the use of ninepins or tenpins, or bowling. Then follows the language, ‘or other game played with the use of balls or pins, or other objects.’ It would be a far cry from a bowling alley or a nine or tenpin alley to this device standing on four legs, about five feet long and two and one-half feet broad. There is no ejusdem generis about this; the two things are totally different.”

It will be observed that the act refers not only to “bowling-alley, nine or tenpin alley or other alley” but also to “any place [italics supplied] on or in which any game is played with the use of balls and pins or other objects.” The pin-ball game in question is played on a device which is certainly located in a “place” and both “balls” and “pins” are used in the device. Without the balls and pins the game could not be played. In the quoted excerpt from the court’s opinion reference is made both to the “balls” and “pins” used in the device and in the playing of the game.

Even if pins and balls were not used in the device, we think the words “other objects” as used in the act should not be given a narrow interpretation in deference to the “ejusdem generis” rule. This rule is but one of construction and does not warrant a court in confining the operation of a statute within narrower limits than intended by the legislature. As was said of it by the United States Supreme Court in U. S. v. Mescall, 215 U. S. 26: “It is not a cast-iron rule, it does not override all other rules of construction, and it is never applied to defeat the real purpose of the statute, as that purpose may be gathered from the whole instrument.” In the case of Grissell v. Housatonic R. Co., 9 Atl. 137, it was held by the Supreme Court of Errors of Connecticut that the words .“other property” in a statute making railroad *591 companies liable in damages for fires communicated by their locomotives where the owner of the “building or other property” injured is not guilty of contributory negligence, included “fences, growing trees and herbage.” That court refused to apply the rule “ejusdem generis,” saying its application would tend to defeat in part the object of the statute.

Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, section 410, says: “The general object of the Act, also, sometimes requires that the final generic word shall not be restricted in meaning by its predecessors.

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Bluebook (online)
193 A. 28, 326 Pa. 587, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-klucher-pa-1937.