Gevaras v. Cleveland city

24 Ohio Law. Abs. 89
CourtCity of Cleveland Municipal Court
DecidedApril 6, 1937
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 89 (Gevaras v. Cleveland city) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of Cleveland Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gevaras v. Cleveland city, 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 89 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

OPINION

By CELEBREZZE, J.

This is an action in replevin filed by the plaintiff to recover from the defendants one Multiple machine, one Derby Day machine and one Preakness machine. Said machines were confiscated by members of the police department pursuant to a raid on [90]*90Gene’s Pun House. Plaintiff owns and operates said business.

It appears from the evidence that on December 8, 1936, John J. Sullivan, a member of the Cleveland Police Deartment, entered plaintiff’s place of business and played a pin machine known as Derby Day, which will be shortly described in detail. On his play Sullivan won four metal tokens which were automatically released by the machine. It is undisputed that with three of these tokens Sullivan purchased a package of cigarettes from Jack Donnell, an employee of the plaintiff. The evidence shows further that Sullivan left, only to return later with a patrol wagon. He arrested Jack Donnell and seized amongst other-property the three machines in question. Jack Donnell was convicted of exhibiting a gambling device. Plaintiff admits that said machines were available to the use of the general public, including children.

The “Multiple” machine and the “Preakness” machine were exhibited .in open court and. the testimony- of the witness Donnell described the operation of each of said machines.

. The Multiple machine is so constructed that it slopes downward to the plunger end of the machine and the playing field consists of a sloping surface, with certain holes located in various portions thereof and each designated by a certain number. In addition thereto there are located thirty-three (33) different kinds of coil springs in the playing field, with a continuous coil spring along the edges of said field. These springs are constructed on pins and spaced in such a way as to deflect or propel the ball while the ball is rolling to the bottom of the playing field.

Play is commencéd by inserting a coin in a slot, and the machine then emits a ball which the player starts to the top of the playing field by means of a spring plunger. Once the ball enters the playing field, its course is directed and controlled by means of the springs heretofore described and the law of gravity, and if the ball falls into one of the holes, the machine emits a number of tokens or metal discs, depending on the number of the hole in which it falls. These disks, the evidence shows, then entitle the player to re-play the same machine or any other machine of like character.

With respect to the Preakness machine, and it is admitted that the “Derby Day” machine is of like consruction, the testimony shows that the Preakness, in addition to a playing field which is constructed similarly to that of the Multiple machine heretofore described, has a back board which contains the pictures of seven (7) horses, each bearing the numerals one to seven, and an additional set of numbers on the back board designating the odds which the machine will pay if the ball is placed in a hole, the number of which corresponds to the illuminated or lighted number of the horse on the back board.

Play is commenced by inserting a coin in the slot, at which time, by mechanical means, one or any number or all the numbers in the horses on the back board are illuminated together with the numbers indicating the odds or the number of tokens which the machine will pay if the ball is dropped into a hole bearing a number corresponding to the number of the illuminated horse on the back board. The numbers on the horses and the numbers designating the odds are illuminated by means of a mechanism immediately after the coin is inserted, over which mechanism the player has no control whatsoever.

The playing field on the Preakness machine contains 28 coil springs and one continuous spring along the edges of the board, as well as numerous pegs or pins located’ over the entire field. The ball is propelled by means of a spring plunger to the top of the playing field, and from this point its course is directed and controlled by the springs, pins and the law of gravity as it rolls to the lowest portion of the field. If the ball falls in a hole, disks are emitted as above set forth. The tokens or metal disks which are paid can be used to play the same machine or any other machine of like nature.

The plaintiff asks for the return of this property, and defendants contend that they are gambling devices and, therefore plaintiff can have no property right therein and is not entitled to possession thereof.

The question for this court to determine is whether or not the machines heretofore described in detail and the subject of controversy herein are gambling devices. If these machines are gambling devices, the plaintiff, by reason thereof, must be denied the right to recovery therein; if, on the other hand, they are not gambling devices, then the plaintiff’s right of recovery should be sustained and the property returned to him.

In approaching the determination of this question, the court refers to 12980 of the Municipal Code of Cleveland, which reads as follows;

[91]*91“The city manager or any police officer of the city shall seize or direct to be seized, any instrument, device or thing used for the purpose of gambling, or on, by or with which money or other articles may be lost or won, and all such instruments, devices or things shall be demolished or destroyed under the direction of the city manager, upon it being adjudged by the court that such instruments, devices or things were used, kept or intended for the purpose of gambling. (It. O. §1780).”

and also reference is made to the state law, especially §13066, GC, which provides:

“Exhibiting gambling device for gain. Whoever keeps or exhibits for gain or to win or gain money or other property, a gambling table, or faro or keno bank, or a gambling device or machine, or keeps or exhibits a billiard table, for the purpose of gambling or allows it to be so used, shall be fined not less thap fifty dollars and not more than five hundred dollars and imprisoned not less than ten days nor more than ninety days, and shall give security in the sum of five hundred dollars for his good behavior for one year.”

Counsel have not cited nor has the court after diligent search found any previous decisions pertaining specifically to the machines herein described, but there have been a number of decisions rendered by the courts in which gambling devices have been described and defined.

What then constitutes a gambling device? A device is an 'instrument or machine. Gambling is gaming or playing for money or other property of value. State v Lark, 3 O.N.P. 155.

And therefore a gambling device is an instrument or machine which permits one to play so that he may win or lose money or other property of value. Or “the tangible thing on which the game at which money is won or lost is played as distinguished from the game itself.” 12 R.C.L. 726.

The Supreme Court of Ohio, in State v Krauss, 114 Oh St 342, in its opinion, defines a gambling device by quoting from 12 R.C.L. 730, and says:

"It is generally held that a slot vending machine, which in return for a coin deposited therein, dispenses merchandise of the value of such coin, accompanied at occasional and uncertain intervals by a varying amount of money, trade checks, or coupons, is a gambling device.”

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Related

Snyder v. City of Alliance
179 N.E. 426 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1931)
Brassel v. Benham
32 N.E.2d 482 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1934)
State v. Lark
3 Ohio N.P. 155 (Cleveland Police Court, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Ohio Law. Abs. 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gevaras-v-cleveland-city-ohmunictclevela-1937.