Dorman, Et Vir. v. Publix-Saenger-Sparks Theatres, Inc.

184 So. 886, 135 Fla. 284
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 7, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 184 So. 886 (Dorman, Et Vir. v. Publix-Saenger-Sparks Theatres, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorman, Et Vir. v. Publix-Saenger-Sparks Theatres, Inc., 184 So. 886, 135 Fla. 284 (Fla. 1938).

Opinion

Buford, J.

In this case plaintiff in error sued defendant in error filing a declaration in three counts. The first count of the declaration alleged:

“That the defendant, at the time of the institution of this suit and at the times hereinafter referred to, conducted and operated in the City of Gainesville, Florida, among others, two certain motion picture theatres commonly known respectively as the Florida Theatre and the Lyric Theatre; that at the times hereinafter referred to and for upwards of ten months next prior to the institution of this suit, the defendant, in connection with said motion picture theatres, conducted a scheme or plan of advertisement therefor commonly known as Bank Night that by said scheme or plan the defendant proposed and advertised to the public in said City of Gainesville that on Tuesday night of each week the defendant would- pay a certain sum of money on the succeeding Tuesday night to that- person who attended said *286 Florida Theatre or Lyric Theatre, or who was sufficiently near either of said theatres on the outside thereof to claim the said sum, hy making the presence of such person known to the officers or agents of either said Florida Theatre or Lyric Theatre from within either of said theatres, from the lobby of either of said theatres, or from a point on the outside of either of said theatres, within a reasonable time on the night of the drawing after the name of the person entitled thereto was announced by or on behalf of the defendant from the stage or either of said theatres, the lobby of either of said theatres, or in front of each of said theatres, and that the name of the person to whom the said sum of money would be paid would be determined by having some blindfolded person chosen by or on behalf of the defendant draw from a cylinder on the stage of the Florida Theatre one of the numbers designated on the pieces of paper contained in said cylinder, and that the pieces of paper contained in said cylinder would disclose the respective numbers assigned by or on behalf of the defendant at the time of registering to such persons as had registered their names in hooks provided by the defendant for that purpose, and for the permission to make which registration the defendant made no charge whatsoever; that the sum which the defendant proposed and advertised as aforesaid the defendant would pay under the scheme or plan aforesaid on Tuesday, September 28, 1937, was the sum of $500.00; that on Tuesday, September 28, 1937, the plaintiff, pursuant to and in reliance upon the defendant’s aforesaid plan or Scheme, was present outside said Lyric Theatre and nearby thereto at the time the defendant caused to be determined under the plan or scheme aforesaid the name of the person entitled to receive said sum of $500.00, and at that timé the plaintiff was one of those who had prior thereto, in conformity with the defendant’s said plan or scheme, registered in one of the *287 defendant’s registration books provided for the purpose aforesaid. That on Tuesday night, September 28, 1937, pursuant to and in conformity with defendant’s said plan or scheme aforesaid, the defendant caused to be drawn on the stage of the Florida Theatre from the cylinder aforesaid, one of the pieces of paper containing the numbers of the registrants aforesaid, and that the number so drawn' was the number which the defendant had assigned to the plaintiff at the time of the plaintiff’s registration, and that the defendant then and there caused to be announced from the stage of said Florida Theatre that the plaintiff was entitled to the said sum of $500.00; that the plaintiff, at the time and place last referred to, within a reasonable time from plaintiff’s name being announced by or on behalf of the defendant from the stage of the said Florida Theatre as the name of the person entitled to said sum of $500.00, did from the nearby proximity of said Lyric Theatre and from the lobby thereof make the presence of the plaintiff known and claim said sum of $500.00, to the employees of the defendant at the box office of said Lyric Theatre and the lobby of said Lyric Theatre, and did keep and perform each and every act and thing required of the plaintiff by the terms of the defendant’s aforesaid plan or scheme, to entitle the plaintiff to receive from the defendant the said sum of $500.00, nevertheless, the defendant, in violation of its said proposal and undertaking, did then and there refuse, and at all times thereafter- has continued to refuse, to pay to the plaintiff said sum of $500.00, or any portion thereof.”

There are no material ■ differences between the 1st count and the 2nd and 3rd counts. The same cause of action is alleged in slightly different language, but the basic facts are alleged alike in all counts.

Demurrer was filed stating a number of grounds and the *288 demurrer was sustained without indication by the court upon, what ground or grounds it was sustained.

The plaintiff refusing to plead further, judgment was had, on demurrer sustained to the declaration and writ of error was sued out.

The first three questions submitted by defendant in error-in its brief are as follows:

“Did the published proposal of advertisement to give away a sum of money under the plan of bank night alleged in the declaration constitute or result in an offer to enter into a binding legal contract which could become effective by one, merely attending the drawing and not purchasing a ticket of admission ?

"Did not the proposal and advertisement to give away a sum of money under the plan of bank night alleged in the declaration constitute a mere published notice of voluntary intention to make a gift as distinguished from an offer to contract ?

“Does presence at or near a place in anticipation of receiving a gift or gratuity constitute a consideration or convert a mere published intention to make a gift at such place into a contract or create legal responsibility for refusal to make a gift?”

Aside from the questions above stated, the demurrer presented the question of whether or not the allegations of the declaration on the face thereof showed that the transaction described in the declaration and constituting the cause of action' constituted a lottery. It, therefore, becomes necessary for us in determining the merits of the demurrer to determine whether or not the plaintiff is barred from recovery because the transaction constituting the basis of the cause of action was a lottery.

The first question to be determined is whether the offer of the Theatre Company is one to,make a gift upon condition *289 or one for a binding contract upon acceptance and performance of the terms of the offer.

In Williston on Contracts, Vol. 1, Sec. 112, p. 232 (1920 Ed.) it is said:

“If a benevolent man says to a tramp,—‘if you go around the corner to the clothing shop there, you may purchase an overcoat on my credit,’ no reasonable person would understand that the short walk was requested as the consideration for the promise, but that in the event of the tramp going to the shop the promisor would make him a gift. Yet the walk to the shop is in its nature capable to being consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
184 So. 886, 135 Fla. 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorman-et-vir-v-publix-saenger-sparks-theatres-inc-fla-1938.