People v. American Art Union

13 Barb. 577
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 Barb. 577 (People v. American Art Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. American Art Union, 13 Barb. 577 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1852).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

By the constitution of the Art Union, adopted By themselves, the society was to purchase such works of art as the state of the treasury would warrant; which, at the annual meeting in December, were to Become, By lot, the property of the individual members, each member Being entitled to one chance, or share, in such distribution, for each $5 by him subscribed and paid. (Art. 8, 10.) By section 4 of the by-laws, the mode of distribution is prescribed. Each work of art was to Be numbered, and its number be placed in a box; the name of every member of the association was to be placed in a similar [578]*578box: one number was then to be drawn from the first box, and a name was to be drawn from the box of names, and the person whose name was thus drawn was to be the owner of the work represented by the number just drawn; and this process was to be repeated until all the works should have been distributed. (Sec. 1 of art. 6, p. 122,) Before any of the subscriptions for the last year were received, the Art Union published its plan—showing that for the payment of $5 any person would become a subscriber, and entitled to an engraving, to certain numbers of the Bulletin of their proceedings, and to the chance of one of a, number of paintings, which in December of every year were to be distributed by lot among the members, each member having one share for every $5 paid by him.” After this publication, the Art Union received a great many subscriptions, and bought a large number of pictures, which they were about to distribute according to their agreement thus made with the members, when they were stopped by the charge made that their proceedings were illegal. Article four of 1st Revised Statutes, page 665, is entitled “ Of raffling and lotteries but its provisions are not confined to the offenses, technically called raffling and lotteries, among the experts in games of chance. Section 22 not only forbids any one setting up, or proposing, any money, goods, chattels, or things in action, to be raffled for, but also forbids their setting them up, or proposing them to be distributed by lot or chance, to any person who shall have paid any valuable consideration for the chance. of obtaining such money, &c. Under this section it is clearly unlawful for any one to set up, or propose—that is, to hold forth to others that he has, or will have, any articles, although they bo works of art, which are to be distributed by lot or chance to any person who (before the distribution) shall have paid any money for the chance of obtaining such article. The Art Union certainly did, by its constitution, and articles, and plan, propose, or hold forth, to every person who would become a member, that if he would pay $5, some works of art should be distributed by lot or chance, and that .he should have the chance of obtaining one of them. They also held out other inducements to him; such as that he should certainly have an engraving, and numbers [579]*579of the Bulletin, and that he would be a patron of the fine arts ; but still they kept distinctly before his eyes, that he was to have the chance of the more valuable article—a fine painting. No one subscribed without the agreement to give him that chance; although, therefore, other motives entered into the consideration of the member, yet the chance was held out to every one as an inducement to him to pay “ the valuable consideration,” which the proposers of the scheme were to receive from him. Those other motives only tended, to entice a larger number to accept the scheme and to blind themselves, as well as the directors of the institution, to its evil effects. The directors wished to' promote the fine arts. They thought it could best be done by procuring a ready market for the works of artists at prices such as liberal men would' give from a fund devoted to that purpose. They also concluded that this fund could not be raised in sufficient amount annually by voluntary donations, even from the friends of the art. They therefore appealed to a passion which experience had proved was most powerful even with those who knew nothing of the fine arts. They proposed, as part of the inducement to the payment for a share, that each share should entitle its holder to one chance of obtaining one of a number of valuable paintings which should be distributed by lot. The money paid for each share was then, by agreement, to be paid, and was paid, for the chance of obtaining one of these articles, which were to be distributed by lot, and the Art Union did propose these articles to be distributed by lot or chance. This is the offense described in section 22 of article 4, (1 R. S. 665.) That other considerations were mingled with this unlawful consideration, does not make any part of the contract good; but if this unlawful object of distribution by chance was one of the considerations for the contract, it vitiated the whole contract, and was within that section, otherwise the act might always be evaded by combining any lawful object with one avowedly prohibited by the act. These pictures were about to be so distributed by lot, and even by public advertisement announced and offered by the said association to be so distributed by lot among over 13,000 subscribers, when they were declared by the district attorney as [580]*580forfeited.” If there were any doubt whether the offense in section 22 was complete until the articles were about to be distributed, this fact, thus admitted, removes that difficulty. Section 10 of article one of the constitution, is, that “No lottery shall hereafter be authorized, or any sale of lottery tickets allowed within this state.” The essential evil of lotteries, and which caused their prohibition in the constitution of 1821, and again in that of 1846, is. that persons are induced to spend their money in them from the hope of obtaining, by chance, a far more valuable return than they pay. Those are the elements of the offense prohibited by section 22 of the part of the revised statutes, which we have just been considering. It is essential to that offense that the purchase should have been made, or valuable consideration given, for this chance. This is to be inferred, also, from the section of the constitution just quoted. By prohibiting the sale of lottery tickets, it shows that the thing to be prohibited is that in which a sale is to take place, and a ticket given to show that the buyer is entitled to a chance. The purchase, then, is made for the sake of the ticket in the lottery. This shows the meaning of “lottery” as the qualifying adjective to “tickets,” and so, also, the meaning of the same word when previously used as a substantive. If persons already owning family pictures, or rare works of art, or lands of nearly equal value, or property which does not admit of division into equal parts, and which is too sacred to be sold, choose to distribute by an appeal to lot what has thus come to them before they had any scheme of so distributing it, they are not within any of the evils which the law means to prohibit. Nor is the choice of jurors or arbitrators, or the allotment of senators or judges, within those evils. In neither case ' is the chance held out or felt as a motive for the giving of any thing. In neither case does the chance tempt one to the expenditure of his money; but chance is resorted to as the only mode of assigning to some an unequal share when the law or the necessity of the case has already made it indispensable that the shares should be unequal. The lottery is no less an evil because a large proportion of the profits is to be applied for a good purpose. All lotteries which the legislature ever sanctioned; were

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Bluebook (online)
13 Barb. 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-american-art-union-nysupct-1852.