Skeeles v. United States

95 F. Supp. 242, 118 Ct. Cl. 362
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedFebruary 6, 1951
Docket48838, 48839
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 95 F. Supp. 242 (Skeeles v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skeeles v. United States, 95 F. Supp. 242, 118 Ct. Cl. 362 (cc 1951).

Opinion

JONES, Chief Judge.

These cases involve gambling losses. In reporting income may such losses be carried forward from a previous year as a deduction for the current year on the ground that gambling was the taxpayer’s business, and that the deduction should be allowed as a business loss?

Gambling is apparently as old as the human race. The practice runs back through recorded history until it is lost amid the mysteries of tradition. It affects people in all latitudes, , longitudes and stages of civilization. The ancient and *243 oriental and medieval European as well as the modern American have in time come under its influence. Greece and Rome came under its spell, and an ancient Hindu hymn bewails the woes of the ruined gambler.

It has been practiced in every stage of society, whether primitive or complex. It has followed largely five distinct patterns:

Wagers on the outcome of races between humans, animals, or machines; physical contests such as fighting between human beings, animals, or birds; games of skill such as checkers, chess, football, basketball, and numerous popular games; contests of pure intellectual skill; and wagers based on pure chance, such as lotteries or the tossing of a coin.

The Australian and South African Bushmen had competitions for prizes, as have all other known peoples. Sometimes the stakes were large. Tacitus, whose penetrating brevity makes his history fascinating reading, tells of wealthy Romans who bet so heavily on chariot races that they lost their entire fortunes and as a consequence their respectability. He says that in some instances in his time men gambled away their liberty.

In practically all countries a distinction has been made both in the public mind and in legislative enactment between the occasional wagerer and the professional who undertakes, without work, to wring a living from the wages of others. The professional or common gambler has never occupied a high position in society. In the old cow country there were a few men who by the skillful use of the branding iron reached the dizzy heights of a cattle king, but these men never stood high with the great run of cattlemen who depended for their success on their knowledge of the cattle business, their ranching experience and their skill in buying and selling.

The churches generally have opposed gambling as immoral. The Talmud classes gambling winnings with thievery.

There is a long record of legislation against gambling in many, in fact in most countries, sometimes on moral but more often on economic grounds.

Anti-gambling legislation runs into many practical difficulties. Small wagers seem inconsequential while the profits of big-time, highly organized gambling are so great that sometimes public officials are bribed, and the element of chance taking deteriorates into weapon-controlled racketeering, which is crime in its lowest form. In the United States this difficulty is further complicated by the fact that the 48 states have passed varying laws.

Another complicating factor has been the desire to¡ encourage games of skill. Games of pure chance like faro, roulette, and dice have been made illegal almost universally, while games of skill have sometimes been encouraged or permitted. In interpreting legislation that undertook to make this distinction the decisions have been conflicting and the record is full of reversals and contradictions. The general pattern seems to be that when skill predominates the gaming is lawful and when chance is the major element it is illegal.

There is an element of chance in all the affairs of life even in the soundest and most conservative of ¡business undertakings. This element of chance is sometimes referred to as luck. It is sometimes, difficult to find where business judgment leaves off and chance or luck begins. For example, ¡when Charles Lindbergh flew to Paris in a small plane he had to have considerable luck, but as in all such undertakings luck needs a partner, and in that instance the partner was the unusual skill, experience and daring of the flyer. If he had depended on blind chance alone he probably would have fallen into the ocean.

Wagering has had a strange hold on the human race. The barefoot boy plays marbles for keeps, throws knives with a cry of “whole blade or no trade,” and in the prairie states will wager whatever is in his pocket on which dog will catch the mule-eared rabbit. Grown men and women continue the practice in a multitude of forms. But through it all the professional gambler has been more or less condemned. Perhaps the distinction is in recognition of the injunction when man was taken out of Eden that he should “eat his bread in the sweat of his face.”

*244 The betting instinct is so strong in so many people that in the field of legislation so many problems of enforcement have arisen as to cause a movement to legalize gambling and have it state controlled. Betting on horse racing‘has been so popular in English-speaking countries that legislation in many instances was ineffective. Eventually it became legalized in many places under what is known as the parimutuel system. But usually the legalized wagering has been limited.to the area of the. track.

The network of wires and radio carrying information of race results, lotteries in many forms, pools on the result of athletic contests, slot machines and numerous other devices evidence the widespread interest in wagering and indicate some of the difficulties of enforcing laws.

Licensing, supervising, inspection, and many methods have been tried not because of approval, but in an effort to minimize its evils and in so far as possible to reduce the trickery and deception that are sometimes used to trap the unwary.

In this long-time effort to legislate in reference to gambling, which has prevailed in practically all countries, about the only consistent defenders of the practice have been the gamblers themselves. At the same time, practical men have recognized the desirability of some form of control.

In most states gambling debts are not collectible in the courts. In some few states a gambling debt is collectible, even though the gambling itself is illegal.

This background is given as an aid to the interpretation of the statute. For the occasional wagerer no carry-over deduction is allowed. To sustain the contention of plaintiff it is necessary to extend to the professional gambler tax-deduction privileges that are not accorded to one who bets occasionally. To reach such a conclusion in the face of the public viewpoint and legislative purposes generally would require a clearly worded statute that precludes any other reasonable conclusion.

Plaintiff’s deceased husband was a professional gambler. He bet on horse races, football and baseball games, prize fights, and card and dice games. His gambling and wagering transactions, conducted for his own account and with others, constituted his and his wife’s only source of income in 1940, 1941, and 1942. All his transactions, which were in violation of city and state laws, were entered into for profit.

Plaintiff and her husband regularly filed separate returns of community income.

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