Russell v. Equitable Loan & Security Co.

58 S.E. 881, 129 Ga. 154, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 324
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 5, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 58 S.E. 881 (Russell v. Equitable Loan & Security Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. Equitable Loan & Security Co., 58 S.E. 881, 129 Ga. 154, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 324 (Ga. 1907).

Opinions

Atkinson, J.

This is a suit for the recovery of the amount • promised to be paid according to express stipulations by the Equitable Loan & Security Company, made in its certificates known as “ Class A.” There were no allegations in the plaintiff’s petition showing the character of the company’s business, its charter powers, the purpose of its organization, its assets or liabilities, or manner of transacting business. The petition consisted of a full recital of the contents of the certificates sued upon, and allegations to the effect that the plaintiff had paid the certificates to maturity in accordance with their stipulations, and that the company had refused payment in accordance with its promises. With nothing else appearing in the petition, the trial court sustained that ground of the defendant’s demurrer in which the position was taken that the petition showed upon its face that the certificates declared upon were in the nature of a lottery, and for that reason were contrary to public policy, and collection could not be enforced. Exception was taken to that ruling, and we have nothing else for consideration. Similar certificates were involved in the case of Equitable [160]*160Loan & Security Company v. Waring, 117 Ga. 599, but for sufficient reasons this court, in express terms, eliminated class A certificates from the ruling therein made. See page 649. Certificates of classes A and B are set forth in the majority opinion in that case. A careful examination will show that the substantial difference between the two classes consists of a difference in arriving at redemption values to obtain in the event the company elects-to redeem before maturity. In class A the value is fixed at certain specifically named sums, if redeemed at certain times. See condition 3 in class A, page 644. In class B the values of redemption ■at specified times are not specifically named, but the method of ascertainment is given; that is to say, the redemption value at any given time before maturity is “the full amount of the first payment and all installments paid hereon, with interest on said amount at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum, and its proportionate-share of all dividends or accumulations from fines, lapses, and interest earned in excess of 8 per cent, per annum.” See condition 2 in class B, page 650. Dealing with this provision in class B-certificates, the majority, admitting for the sake of the argument that the element of chance entered into the certificates, for reasons fully set forth by Mr. Justice Cobb in the opinion, held that there was no element of prize, and consequently the certificates of that class were not unlawful. Chief Justice Simmons and Mr. Justice Lamar, dissenting, held that in class B as well as in class A certificates, under the evidence submitted, the element of prize and chance appeared, which rendered both classes obnoxious to the laws of this State. The court was unanimous in the conclusion that in order to render the certificates of either class lottery contracts and for that reason obnoxious to the laws of this State,, there must be somewhere in the enterprise a union of three elements, to wit, (a) consideration, (b) chance, (c) prize. The evidence is not before us, which in that case played an important part in inducing the conclusions expressed both in the majority and dissenting opinions. What we shall say will deal with the case on demurrer and refer strictly to the pleadings construed in the light of our statutes. The Penal Code of this State, §406, provides that “If any person, either by himself or his agent, shall sell or offer for sale, or procure for, or furnish to, any person any ticket, number, combination, or chance, or anything representing [161]*161a chance in any lottery, gift enterprise, or other similar scheme or device, whether such lottery, gift enterprise, or scheme shall be operated in this State or not, he shall be guilty of-a misdemeanor.” Section 407 provides that “No person, by himself, or another, •shall keep, maintain, employ, or carry on any lottery in this State, or other scheme or device for the hazarding of any money or valuable thing.” These statutes are. directed against lotteries, gift enterprises, or other similar schemes. In a lottery there must be union of the three elements, consideration, chance, and prize. Equitable Loan & Security Company v. Waring, 117 Ga. 599. A “gift enterprise” is a sporting artifice by which, for example, a merchant or tradesman sells his wares for their market value, but, by way of inducement, gives to each purchaser a ticket which entitles him to a chance to win certain prizes, to be determined after the manner of a lottery. See Meyer v. State, 112 Ga. 23. As the gift enterprise contemplates lottery, and lottery involves chance, it follows that the element of chance is an essential of a'gift enterprise. The expression “similar scheme,” as used in these statutes, necessarily refers to schemes like lotteries or gift enterprises, and consequently the element of chance is essential to their existence. These code sections are to be construed together, and the use of the word “hazard,” as employed in section 407, emphasizes the construction which we have given. If the contracts are not forbidden under the express terms or policy of those statutes, the court should not on account of them refuse, in a proper case, to require their enforcement. As “chance” is an essential element in either a “lottery,” “gift enterprise,” or “other similar scheme,” it is proper to inquire, what is chance as contemplated in these statutes? The chance here referred to is that chance which is employed in connection with lottery schemes, where the attempt is to attain certain ends, not by skill or any known or fixed rules, but by the happening of a subsequent event, incapable of ascertainment or accomplishment by means of human foresight or ingenuity. If the result in a given transaction could be accomplished or foretold by the exercise of skill or foresight, its ascertainment would not be attributed to chance, but to the exercise of skill and foresight, and consequently to design. Chance and design are exactly opposite, and the presence of either will exclude the other. Where design enters into a transaction, it immediately [162]*162partakes of the nature of contract and will be governed by other principles. In the gaming sense there is no chance whatever where either party has means of knowing the result at the inception of the wager. There may be fraud, but not chance. Such is the element of chance as contemplated in the statutes which we have quoted. The International Dictionary gives the general definition of chance as “the unknown or undefined cause of events that to us are uncertain or not subject to calculation; luck; fortune.” The Cyclopedia of Law & Procedure, vol. 6, p. 890, defines chance thus: “Possibility; hazard; risk; or the result or issue of uncertain and unknown conditions or forces neither understandingly brought about by one’s act nor pre-estimated by one’s understanding.” Illustrative of the definitions given, the case of Meyer ,v. State, supra, is in point. There a slot machine was employed. Whether a prize would be won or not depended upon an unknown display of cards which the. machine would make. In several of the eases cited in the opinion other devices were employed, but each was of such character as to eliminate the idea of arriving at the result by human design. So in the case of Horner v. U. S., 147 U. S. 449.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.E. 881, 129 Ga. 154, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-equitable-loan-security-co-ga-1907.