ETOWAH BAPTIST ASS'N. v. Entrekin

45 So. 3d 1266, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 43, 2010 WL 908481
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 15, 2010
Docket1080168
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 45 So. 3d 1266 (ETOWAH BAPTIST ASS'N. v. Entrekin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ETOWAH BAPTIST ASS'N. v. Entrekin, 45 So. 3d 1266, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 43, 2010 WL 908481 (Ala. 2010).

Opinion

PARKER, Justice.

This is an appeal by the Etowah Baptist Association (“EBA”) from an order of the Etowah Circuit Court denying the EBA’s motion to intervene in a declaratory-judgment action concerning the licensing of organizations to conduct bingo games in Etowah County. Because we conclude *1268 that the circuit court had no jurisdiction over the declaratory-judgment action, we dismiss the appeal.

Background

On September 9, 2008, the sheriff of Etowah County, Todd Entrekin (“the sheriff’), filed a declaratory-judgment action naming as defendants Coosa Entertainment Group, LLC (“Coosa”), and CBS Supply, LLC (“CBS”), two organizations that had applied for permits to conduct bingo games in Etowah County authorized by Amendment No. 506 to the Alabama Constitution of 1901 (now Local Amendments, Etowah County, § 2, Ala. Const. 1901 (Off. Recomp.)) (hereinafter “Amendment No. 506”). 1

In his complaint, the sheriff asked the Etowah Circuit Court to decide the applicable law under which the sheriffs investigation of applicants for bingo permits must be conducted. He noted that the Alabama Constitution had been amended in 1989 by Amendment No. 506 to legalize bingo in Etowah County and that Amendment No. 506 authorizes the Etowah County Commission to promulgate rules for the issuance of permits and licenses for the operation of bingo games. The sheriff further noted that Amendment No. 506 authorized the legislature to adopt laws supplemental to Amendment No. 506 and that both the Etowah County Commission and the legislature had acted on the authority provided them in Amendment No. 506.

The legislature, contemporaneously with its enactment of Act No. 89-329, Ala. Acts 1989, which proposed Amendment No. 506, enacted Act No. 89-463, Ala. Acts 1989, which was later amended by Act No. 94-135, Ala. Acts 1994, as enabling legislation for Amendment No. 506. Amendment No. 506 included no definition of the word “bingo.” Both Act No. 89-463 and Act No. 94-135 define “bingo” as “that game commonly known as bingo where numbers or symbols on a card or paper sheet are matched with numbers or symbols selected at random.”

The Etowah County Commission, on July 7, 2008, issued a resolution promulgating rules and regulations for the operation of “charitable machine bingo” in Eto-wah County. Section 1 of the resolution defines “bingo” or “bingo games” as follows:

“(a) ‘Bingo’ or ‘Bingo Games’ shall mean any game of chance known as bingo, including any game defined as such by state or federal law (whether or not electronic, computer or other technological aids are used in connection therewith), which incorporates the following elements:
“(i) the game must be played on a grid of five (5) horizontal rows intersected by five (5) contiguous squares contained within the grid;
“(ii) each square in a grid must be designated by a number or other sym *1269 bol contained in a collection of numbers or symbols used for playing the game;
“(iii) numbers or symbols are selected by a procedure or mechanism entirely or predominately governed by chance and, as such number or symbols are selected during the playing of a particular game, the same numbers or symbols, if they are present on one or more of the squares on any grid in play, are covered or otherwise marked on such grid;
“(iv) the winner or winners of a particular game are the players of those grids for which a previously designated pattern or arrangement is first covered or marked;
“(v) one or more players must compete against one or another for prizes;
“(vi) money may be collected from the players of bingo for the opportunity to participate in the game, and such monetary amounts may vary to reflect the value of the prize for winning a particular game, whether for participation in the whole game or a particular phase thereof, and other factors reflecting the interplay of the amount collected from each player, the size of the prize and the probability of winning; and
“(vii) the prizes for winning the game can be money or anything of value with limits as to amount. To the extent that the foregoing elements are present in the game of bingo, it can be played with different kinds of equipment varying from one end of the spectrum, where traditional cards displaying the playing grids are used with tokens to cover the designated squares on the cards, to the technologically advanced end of the spectrum, where electronic devices perform the operations of the game using computers or micro-processors and interact with the human players by means of an electronic console. If the game of bingo is played on electronic devices which determine and signal the winner, such devices shall be electronically linked to ensure that multiple players are competing against each other. The prizes or evidence thereof for winning bingo games may be disbursed by the electronic devices or consoles used in playing such games at the time each game is won or on different schedules that reflect a record of wins and losses involving multiple games.
“(b) ‘Machine Bingo Game’ shall mean any electronic or mechanical equipment, machine or device, or computer or other technologic hardware or device,
“(i) which is installed, or is to be installed at a Machine Bingo Location and
“(ii) which is used, or can be used, to play Bingo as herein defined. Machine Bingo Games includes any machine, device or hardware that assists a player or the playing of Bingo Games, broadens the participation levels in a common game and includes all of the ancillary Bingo supplies. Examples of Machine Bingo Equipment and Supplies include, but are not limited to, dispensers, readers, electronic player stations, player terminals, central computer servers containing random number generators and other processing capabilities for remote player terminals, electronic consoles capable of providing game results in different display modes, telephones and telephone circuits, televisions, cables and other telecommunication circuits, and satellites and related transmitting and receiving equipment. Machine Bingo Games shall not be *1270 deemed to be for any purpose a ‘gambling device’ or ‘slot machine’ within the meaning of the Code of Alabama 1975, Sections 13A-12[-]20(5) and (10) or any other provision of law, whether now in effect or hereafter enacted. Traditional bingo played utilizing paper cards and any devices to assist in the paying of traditional bingo utilizing paper cards shall be exempt under this definition.”

The sheriffs responsibility under the rules established by the Etowah County Commission was to conduct an investigation to determine the appropriateness of the issuance of licenses to applicants for bingo permits.

The sheriffs complaint presented the following issue:

“13. ...

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 So. 3d 1266, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 43, 2010 WL 908481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/etowah-baptist-assn-v-entrekin-ala-2010.