People Ex Rel. Green v. Grewal

352 P.3d 275, 61 Cal. 4th 544, 189 Cal. Rptr. 3d 686, 2015 Cal. LEXIS 4519
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 2015
DocketS217896, S217979
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 352 P.3d 275 (People Ex Rel. Green v. Grewal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Green v. Grewal, 352 P.3d 275, 61 Cal. 4th 544, 189 Cal. Rptr. 3d 686, 2015 Cal. LEXIS 4519 (Cal. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

CHIN, J.

Slot machines, sometimes called “one-armed bandits” (although younger users might wonder why), have long been outlawed in California. Under review are devices that resemble traditional casino-style slot machines in some ways and offer users the chance to win sweepstakes prizes. Because they employ modem technology, the devices differ from traditional slot machines in some ways. We must decide whether the devices come within the statutory definition of a “slot machine or device” in Penal Code section 330b. 1 We conclude they do and affirm the judgments of the Court of Appeal, which reached the same conclusion.

I. Facts and Procedural History

These facts are taken largely from the Court of Appeal opinions authored by Justice Kane.

In these cases, which we have consolidated for argument and this opinion, the People of the State of California, by and through the District Attorney of Kern County, filed civil actions against defendants Kirnpal Grewal, John C. Stidman, Phillip Ernest Walker, Kamal Kenny Nasser, and Ghassan Elmalih, *550 operators of Internet cafés in Kern County. Three distinct, albeit similar, devices operated at several Internet café businesses are at issue here. We will first describe the businesses and devices as they existed at the time of the hearings in the superior court, then the procedural background.

A. The A to Z Café; the OZ Internet Café and Hub

Defendant Kirnpal Grewal owned the A to Z Café, and defendant Phillip Ernest Walker owned the OZ Internet Café and Hub (the OZ), both in Bakersfield. The record shows, and the parties agree, that Grewal’s business operated a sweepstakes system essentially identical to that of the OZ. Accordingly, we will discuss the OZ’s system.

Among other products, the OZ sold computer and Internet time (hereafter, Internet time) on computer terminals on its premises. The OZ promoted the sale of Internet time and other products with a sweepstakes giveaway implemented through a software system that a company known as Figure Eight Software provided. Participants in the sweepstakes had the chance to win cash prizes varying from small amounts to a top prize of $10,000 as set forth in the sweepstakes’s odds tables.

OZ customers could purchase Internet time for $10 per hour. When a customer purchased Internet time, an employee assigned the customer a personal identification number (PIN). The employee created an account by which the customer could access the computers and Internet as well as play sweepstakes computer games. Customers were not charged for Internet time while they were playing the computer sweepstakes games. At the time of purchase, the customer received 100 “sweepstakes points” for each dollar spent. Walker stated that “[cjustomers purchase produces] consisting mostly of computer and Internet time at competitive prices and receive free sweepstake points in addition to the product purchased.” Additionally, a customer might receive 100 free sweepstakes points every day that the customer came into the OZ, and first-time customers received 500 additional sweepstakes points. These sweepstakes points could be “used to draw the next available sequential entry from a sweepstake contest pool.” This could be done and the result revealed in one of three ways: (1) asking an OZ employee to reveal a result, (2) pushing an instant reveal button at the computer station, or (3) playing computer sweepstakes games at the computer terminals that appeared similar to common games of chance.

The sweepstakes rules provided that no purchase was necessary to enter the sweepstakes. According to Walker, noncustomers could obtain free sweepstakes entries by asking an employee at the OZ or by mailing in a request.

According to Walker, to access the computers, customers had to sign a “Computer Time Purchase Agreement” form. On the form, the customers had *551 to acknowledge that they understood the following matters before using the OZ computers: (1) that they were purchasing computer time and (2) the sweepstakes computer games were “not gambling,” but were a “promotional game” in which all winners were predetermined. On the form, the customers affirmed that they understood “[t]he games have no [e]ffect on the outcome of the prizes won,” but were merely an “entertaining way to reveal [their] prizes and [they] could have them instantly revealed and would have the same result.”

Walker’s declaration explained what happened when a customer used the sweepstakes computer game: “If a customer utilizes the pseudo-interactive entertaining reveal interface the customer can encounter some games that have appearances similar to common games of chance.” However, before any “spinning wheels or cards” appeared on the screen, “the sweepstakes entry has already been drawn sequentially from a pool of entries and is predetermined. There is no random component to the apparent action of the images in the interface even though it simulates interactivity. Instead, the images will display a result that matches the amount of any prize revealed in the entries. [Citation.] [¶] As told to the customer in the rules and in disclaimers, the pseudo-interactive interface does not ‘automatically’ or ‘randomly’ utilize any play to obtain a result.”

Walker also described in greater detail the operation of the software system the OZ used to run the sweepstakes. His declaration stated that under that software system, the issue of whether customers had won a cash prize was determined when their entries were drawn from a sweepstakes pool. Each such entry had a previously assigned cash prize of zero or greater. Entries were drawn sequentially from one of 32 sweepstakes pools (also called “multiple finite deals of entries”) that the software company created. The software company prearranged the entries in each pool in a set order or sequence, and the OZ had no control over that order or sequence or the corresponding results. Access to a particular sweepstakes pool was determined by how many points customers chose to use (or bet) at any one time. Each pool had its own prizes and its own separate sequence of entry results. When customers selected a sweepstakes pool, the software system assigned them the next available entry result in that pool, in sequence. At that point, the result was established and could not be affected by the computer game play, which merely revealed the established result. Walker stated that a specific sequential entry would yield the same result regardless of the method the customers used to draw and reveal it.

B. I Zone Internet Café

Defendant John C. Stidman owned the I Zone Internet Café (I Zone) in Bakersfield. Among other products, I Zone sold Internet time to the public for *552 $20 per hour, which customers could use on computer terminals located on the I Zone premises. To promote the sale of Internet time and its other products, I Zone offered a sweepstakes to customers when they made a purchase. Noncustomers might also enter the sweepstakes; that is, no purchase was necessary to enter.

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Bluebook (online)
352 P.3d 275, 61 Cal. 4th 544, 189 Cal. Rptr. 3d 686, 2015 Cal. LEXIS 4519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-green-v-grewal-cal-2015.