Scherer v. MGM Resorts International

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedApril 4, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-00258
StatusUnknown

This text of Scherer v. MGM Resorts International (Scherer v. MGM Resorts International) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scherer v. MGM Resorts International, (S.D. Miss. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI SOUTHERN DIVISION

LEANE SCHERER, individually and PLAINTIFF on behalf of all others similarly situated

v. Civil No. 1:22cv258-HSO-BWR

MGM RESORTS INTERNATIONAL DEFENDANT

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT MGM RESORTS INTERNATIONAL’S MOTION [16] TO DISMISS

BEFORE THE COURT is Defendant MGM Resorts International’s Motion [16] to Dismiss. The Motion [16] is fully briefed. After due consideration of the parties’ filings and relevant legal authority, the Court finds that Defendant MGM Resorts International’s Motion [16] to Dismiss should be granted, and that this civil action should be dismissed without prejudice for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. I. BACKGROUND A. Procedural history On September 21, 2022, Plaintiff Leane Scherer, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated (“Plaintiff” or “Scherer”), filed a Complaint [1] in this Court, advancing state-law claims for breach of contract, conversion, unjust enrichment, and quantum meruit against Defendant MGM Resorts International (“Defendant” or “MGM”). Compl. [1]. Plaintiff invokes this Court’s diversity jurisdiction pursuant to the Class Action Fairness Act (“CAFA”), 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d), and has since amended her Complaint [1]. See Am. Compl. [14]. Defendant operates several casinos across the United States, including the

Beau Rivage Resort and Casino (“Beau Rivage”) in Biloxi, Mississippi. Id. at 1-2. The allegations in the Amended Complaint [14] arise from the cash-out system utilized at Defendant’s casinos for players who gamble on slot machines. See generally id. To gamble on a slot machine, a player must pay for credits, typically by inserting cash into the machine. Id. at 3-4. Those credits are then “chanced” by the player by pressing a button or pulling a lever to see if the machine will generate a winning combination. Id. at 4. A winning player receives additional credits,

otherwise the chanced credits are lost. Id. Assuming that a player seeks to stop playing before she loses all of her credits, she can “cash out” on the slot machine by selecting the appropriate button. Id. Upon cashing out, the slot machine prints a voucher that converts the remaining credits into dollars and cents and that displays the corresponding amount. Id. A player can then take this voucher to a kiosk to receive her actual payment. Id. at 5.

Plaintiff’s central complaint is that Defendant’s kiosks will only dispense cash. Id. at 5-6. Accordingly, when a player inserts the voucher printed from a slot machine into the kiosk, the kiosk rounds down to the nearest dollar and pays that amount in cash. Id. at 6. A player is then given the option to either donate the leftover change to the MGM Resorts Foundation, a 501(c)(3) foundation controlled by Defendant, or to “attempt[] to redeem the change.” Id. If a player wishes to redeem her change, the kiosk prints another voucher, known as a “TRU Ticket,”1 which a player can take to the casino’s main cashier’s window, commonly called the “cage,” to redeem for the corresponding amount of cents. Id. Prior to the

implementation of the TRU Ticket system, the kiosks dispensed coins in addition to cash. Id. at 5. However, Defendant changed this practice during the COVID-19 pandemic, citing a coin shortage, and now the sole method for obtaining coins upon cashing out of a slot machine is to follow this multistep process of receiving a voucher from the machine followed by a TRU Ticket from the kiosk and then redeeming the TRU Ticket at the cage. Id. at 4-6. Plaintiff alleges that this TRU Ticket system is “a vehicle for converting players’ funds into Casino funds” because

Defendant does not provide adequate notice to players on how to redeem their coins, and that some of the donated funds were improperly used to provide financial support to furloughed MGM employees during the COVID-19 pandemic. Id. at 6-8. On June 14, 2022, Plaintiff visited the Beau Rivage and decided to play a penny slot machine in the casino. Id. at 8. She inserted $40.00 into the machine and later cashed out with $18.19 remaining. Id. Based on the cash-out policy at

Defendant’s casinos, Plaintiff received a voucher for $18.19 and placed it into a kiosk. Id. The kiosk paid her $18.00 and printed a TRU Ticket for the remaining $0.19. Id. Plaintiff asserts that she was “[u]naware that the TRU Ticket could be

1 Plaintiff refers to these vouchers as “TRU Tickets,” Am. Compl. [14] at 6, while Defendant calls them “Tru Tickets,” see Mem. [17] at 1; Ex. [21] at 2. For purposes of the present Order, the Court will use Plaintiff’s manner of capitalization. redeemed at the cage,” and left the Beau Rivage without obtaining her $0.19. Id. at 8-9. Plaintiff now has filed suit against Defendant on behalf of herself and

“hundreds of thousands of Casino patrons who have been deprived, little by little, of millions of dollars since Defendant’s adoption of its no-change policy.” Id. at 9. She alleges that Defendant’s cash-out system breaches a contract between the casino and its players by “prohibiting the [players] from cashing out their gaming credits as originally agreed.” Id. In addition, she asserts that Defendant’s actions constitute conversion by “conceal[ing] the manner for recovering change and ma[king] it logistically impossible and logically improbable that thousands of players would

wait in line at the cage to retrieve their change.” Id. at 10. In the alternative, Plaintiff raises claims for unjust enrichment and quantum meruit. Id. at 10-11. In total, Plaintiff claims that the TRU Ticket system has led to over $5,000,000.00 in cents being unlawfully obtained or retained by Defendant. Id. at 2, 9-11. B. The present Motion [16] Defendant has filed the present Motion [16] to Dismiss pursuant to Federal

Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) and (6), raising two challenges to this Court’s subject-matter jurisdiction and alternatively contending that Plaintiff has failed to state a claim for relief. Mot. [16] at 1. Regarding the jurisdictional challenges, Defendant first argues that the amount-in-controversy does not exceed $5,000,000.00 as is required to establish jurisdiction under CAFA, Mem. [17] at 13; 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2), and it has submitted two Exhibits [16-2], [21] in support of this position. In addition, MGM contends that Plaintiff’s claims seek payment of a gaming debt which is void and unenforceable in Mississippi courts and can only be addressed by the Mississippi Gaming Commission. Mem. [17] at 10 (citing Miss.

Code Ann. § 75-76-157). As a result, this Court cannot hear Plaintiff’s claims because Mississippi courts would also lack jurisdiction over them. Id. at 10-12. As for its merits challenge, Defendant maintains that: (1) the alleged facts do not demonstrate the existence of a contract that was breached; (2) Plaintiff did not make a claim of title over the change and therefore cannot claim conversion; (3) her quantum meruit claim is meritless because she does not allege that she provided goods or services that went unpaid; and (4) Defendant was not unjustly enriched

because Plaintiff does not allege an implied-in-law promise. Id. at 15-22. Finally, MGM requests that the Court strike Plaintiff’s proposed class definition as unascertainable because it requires determining whether each class member did not redeem the coin value of their TRU Tickets based upon a lack of knowledge, a desire to donate the change, or some other reason. Id. at 4-5, 23-24. Plaintiff’s Response [28] counters that Mississippi law cannot deprive this

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Scherer v. MGM Resorts International, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scherer-v-mgm-resorts-international-mssd-2023.