Commonwealth v. Theatre Advertising Co.

190 N.E. 518, 286 Mass. 405, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1035
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 25, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 190 N.E. 518 (Commonwealth v. Theatre Advertising Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Theatre Advertising Co., 190 N.E. 518, 286 Mass. 405, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1035 (Mass. 1934).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

These are two complaints charging the defendants with keeping and maintaining a gaming nuisance in the city of Boston, i.e., premises “resorted to for illegal gaming.” The complaints were tried to a jury and resulted in verdicts of guilty as to both defendants. Upon motions the complaints were consolidated for the purpose of filing and presenting the exceptions of the defendants to the Supreme Judicial Court.

[407]*407There was evidence that the defendants conducted in Keith’s old theatre on Washington Street, in Boston, a game, known as “Beano,” in the following manner. Along one side of the lobby of the theatre there was a long counter outside of which chairs were placed. On the inner side of the counter was a row of shelves upon which various articles of merchandise were displayed. In front of these shelves slightly below the level of the counter and five feet from the chairs, was a series of square targets, one opposite each chair. Each target was about fourteen inches square, divided into one hundred squares of approximately one square inch. These squares were numbered one through ninety-nine, one square being blank. As many players as desired could sit on the chairs and upon the payment of ten cents each would receive one score card and one ticket or for fifteen cents two score cards and two tickets. The player also received four pointed, feathered darts and a number of beans. On the side of the targets were the separate letters of the word “Beano,” repeated twice. The numbers one to nineteen on each target appeared in two rows of nine and ten numbers respectively opposite each letter B. The numbers twenty to thirty-nine in two rows of ten numbers each appeared opposite the letter E, the numbers forty to fifty-nine so appeared opposite the letter A, the numbers sixty to seventy-nine opposite the letter N, and the numbers eighty to ninety-nine opposite the letter O. On each score card appeared five horizontal rows and five vertical rows of numbers. These cards stated the rules of the game. The center space on the score card was blank and the vertical columns of figures were “topped” by the letters B, E, A, N, O. The numbers on the score card were arranged in relation to the letters of the word “Beano” corresponding to their arrangement on the targets. The score cards of the various players had varied arrangements of numbers. The announcer, at the beginning of the game, said that by buying (or playing) two cards for fifteen cents, a player has twenty-four ways of making “Beano,” and instructed the players to throw their darts at the target opposite their chairs and to cover with beans on their score [408]*408cards any numbers thereon corresponding with numbers pierced by their darts on their targets; after the darts were thrown the announcer asked if any player had made “five in a row,” or “Beano,” i.e., four beans in a row, which, with the blank space in the middle of the card (which each player was instructed to cover with a bean before starting), would make five beans in a row. If any player so announced “Beano” he was declared the winner and was given a coupon entitling the winner to one of the various articles of merchandise upon the shelves of the value of $1.50, or a certificate of purchase or paid order, upon one of various department stores in the vicinity, to the value of $1.50 which could be redeemed by the purchase of merchandise at such store.

There was further testimony to the effect that if nobody declared “Beano” by individually so scoring “four hits in a row,” the announcer began to call from the targets of the other players the numbers pierced by such other players on their individual targets, and instructed all players on whose score cards such numbers appeared to cover the same with beans and, upon any player getting “five in a row” in this way, to declare “Beano.” Such player was declared the winner, and received the coupon in the same way as above stated. It is possible to make “Beano” upon the hits of the other players.

A witness called by the defendants, who was the assistant manager of the defendant corporation and who was the announcer, testified that from six to fifteen winners per day won “Beano” by themselves piercing four numbers on their own targets which appeared in a row on their score cards; that about twenty-five per cent of the winners so pierced three such numbers; that fifty to sixty per cent so pierced two such numbers; and that seventy-five to ninety per cent so pierced one number, and that seldom, if ever, did a person win “Beano” without so piercing one number.

At the close of the testimony the defendants duly filed written motions for directed verdicts of “not guilty.” These motions were denied subject to the exceptions of the defendants. The defendants, in writing, thereupon [409]*409requested the judge to instruct the jury as follows: “1. The fact that chance enters into the determination of the winner is not sufficient to establish a game of chance. 2. The burden is upon the Commonwealth to prove that the element of chance was the dominating factor in determining the winner in the game of ‘Beano.’ 3. If the element of skill is the dominant factor in determin[in]g the winner in the game of ‘Beano,’ then ‘Beano’ is a game of skill and the jury should return a verdict of not guilty.” The judge refused so to instruct the jury and the defendants duly excepted.

The judge charged the jury in part as follows: “Now, what is illegal gaming? Our Supreme Court as far back as 1860 has decided in the case of Commonwealth v. Gourdier, . . . [14 Gray, 391] what illegal gaming is, and in that case the court said: ‘To play at any game of chance or skill, on the issue of which money, or property having any value, depends, is illegal. gaming.’ ... It may or may not help you to determine whether or not the game is a game of skill or chance. That is not the determining factor. The question for you men to decide is whether or not any money or property having any value depends upon the outcome of this game whether it be of skill or of chance. That is the question that you must determine. . . . But the issue, after all, on the evidence is, as I said before, be it a game of chance or be it a game of skill, you have got to determine this question, Is the final result that that man gets after playing that game, money or property having any value? Does it depend upon his skill, or does it depend upon his chance? If you find that the money that he obtains or the prize that he obtains is induced in any way by the playing of that game, either by chance or by skill, then you can come to the conclusion that that constitutes illegal gaming under óur law.” The defendants excepted to the foregoing parts of the charge and then made the following request: “I am requesting you now to instruct the jury that gaming as an illegal act differs from the playing of games, and is synonymous with gambling. That gambling as an illegal act means that [410]*410staking of money or property of value upon an outcome determined by chance, and that the essentials of gaming as an illegal act are, a stake and a hazard or chance.” This request was refused and the defendants excepted. All the exceptions relate to the same fundamental issues, to wit, what constitutes gaming under our law and does the playing of “Beano” fall within the definition?

The motions for directed verdicts for the defendants were denied rightly.

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Bluebook (online)
190 N.E. 518, 286 Mass. 405, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-theatre-advertising-co-mass-1934.