Stangier v. Goad

97 P.2d 191, 163 Or. 314, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 143
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 97 P.2d 191 (Stangier v. Goad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stangier v. Goad, 97 P.2d 191, 163 Or. 314, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 143 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

LUSK, J.

Plaintiff brought this suit to. obtain a decree enjoining the defendants, the sheriff and district attorney of Umatilla county and the chief of police of the city of Pendleton, from seizing and destroying certain personal property. The defendants filed a demurrer to the complaint, which was sustained by the Circuit Court, and, the plaintiff having refused to plead further, a decree of dismissal was entered from which the plaintiff has “appealed, assigning as error the ruling on the demurrer.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff “is the owner of certain vending machines and games of skill described as follows, to-wit, — A Flasher, Railroad Game, Mint Vending machines, Ten Grand, and Golden Wheel, some of which are in use and some of which are in storage, — and which said machines are used solely for the stimulation of sales of merchandise and are games of skill only and not games of chance, and from the use of said machines the plaintiff derives a profit so that the said machines are to plaintiff a valu *316 able property, and tbe same are not in anywise a gambling device.”

The complaint further alleges that, “acting under the provision of Section 3 of Chapter 492, General Laws of Oregon for the year 1937”, “the defendants, and each of them, are threatening to, and will, unless restrained by this Court, seize and destroy the machines of the plaintiff above described without the issuance of any process of any court and without this plaintiff having any day in court in which to defend himself and his property, and that such threatened action will result in the destruction of plaintiff’s property without due or any process of law, and such threatened action is in violation of the constitutional rights of this plaintiff.”

It is alleged that the said Chapter 492 is unconstitutional, but that the defendants assert authority to seize and destroy plaintiff’s machines under the provisions of Chapter 210, General Laws of Oregon 1937. Both of these statutes make unlawful the possession, operation, etc., of various gambling games and devices, and provide for their seizure and destruction by the authorities.

The complaint contains the usual allegations as to irreparable injury and the want of an adequate legal remedy.

The sole question is whether the complaint states a good cause of suit for an injunction.

Since the plaintiff is seeking the aid of a court of equity to obtain the extraordinary remedy of injunction, his complaint, to be sufficient, must exhibit “candor and frankness.” 32 C. J., “Injunction”, 325, §537. “That eminent good faith, which is a prevailing principle in courts of equity, requires that the statement *317 thus permitted should be fairly made, without attempt at suppression or evasion. When this is not done, it leaves room for very great uncertainty in the mind of the court, when seeking to ascertain the true import of the allegations made in the bill”. Garrett v. Lynch, 44 Ala. 683. “A fair and candid disclosure of all the facts must be made”. McDowell v. Biddison, 120 Md. 118, 128, 87 Atl. 752. The plaintiff “should not only show his hand but open it wide”. Headley v. Chester, 22 Pa. Dist. 900. “There should be no misrepresentation or ■concealment or keeping in the background important facts of which the court ought to be advised, and which the court thinks are material in order to form its judgment.” Moffat v. Calvert County, 97 Md. 266, 270, 54 Atl. 960. To the like effect, see Stoddart v. Vanlaningham, 14 Kan. 18, 36; Gates v. Sweitzer, 347 Ill. 353, 179 N. E. 837, 79 A. L. R. 1151.

Does the present complaint measure up to these requirements?

There is no description of the so-called games or vending machines, or of the method of their operation. The fact that they are referred to as “ games ’ ’ indicates that they are different from the ordinary legitimate vending machine which returns to its patron an article of merchandise — presumably his money’s worth — in exchange for the deposit of a coin. A machine of that kind is not a game, and is never referred to as such; but we do know judicially that there are forbidden devices which go euphemistically under the name of vending machines, but which are in fact gambling devices, such, for instance, as certain types of slot machines.

If we may regard the allegation that the plaintiff’s machines are “games of skill only and not games of *318 chance” as anything more than a conclusion of law on the part of the pleader, it still remains true that, being games, there is at least a probability that they may be used as games of chance. The only reference to their use is the following: “and which said machines are used solely for the stimulation of the sales of merchandise.” This is an ambiguous statement, which does not inform us how the machines are used, but of the purpose for which they are used; and there is not in the complaint an unequivocal allegation that the machines are not, and will not be used, as gambling devices. The quoted language, moreover, has suggestive implications. It is reminiscent of the argument used at the last general election by the proponents of the proposed constitutional amendment “Legalizing Certain Lotteries and Other Forms of Gambling” (see Official Voters' Pamphlet for the General Election of November 8,1938, p. 45), wherein certain gambling devices, among others “vending machines”, are referred to as “trade stimulators”.

If the plaintiff’s machines are games of skill, the court is interested in knowing, and is entitled to be informed by the complaint, how they are played. What does the player do that constitutes an exercise of his skill, and what occurs after he exercises it? Does he receive a reward for being skillful, or does he play simply for the pleasure of playing, as in the case of the game of billiards, for example ? If he receives a reward, what relation does it bear to the cost of playing, and what factor determines the amount? If, on the other hand, the vending machines are truly such, what do they vend, and does the patron receive merchandise which has some substantial relation in value to the price he pays?

*319 As to these matters we are left in the dark, and after a minute inspection of the complaint, we have only the vaguest notion concerning the real character and use of these “vending machines”, which are “games of skill and are used solely for the stimulation of the sales of merchandise.”

The statute under which the plaintiff alleges that the defendants intend to proceed provides in its first section that “regardless of whether their operation requires an element of skill on the part of a player, all games of chance, such as slot machines, dart games, pin hall games, and/or similar devices or games, when operated or played for a profit, either in cash merchandise or other article of value, hereby are declared unlawful, and their licensing, possession, display, operation -or play are hereby prohibited”, and by its third section makes it the especial duty of certain officers “to confiscate such without delay, destroy all such games when possessed, displayed, operated or played in violation of the terms of this act.” (Ch.

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Bluebook (online)
97 P.2d 191, 163 Or. 314, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stangier-v-goad-or-1939.