State ex rel. Hunter v. Omaha Motion Picture Exhibitors Ass'n

274 N.W. 397, 133 Neb. 89, 1937 Neb. LEXIS 21
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1937
DocketNo. 30189
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 274 N.W. 397 (State ex rel. Hunter v. Omaha Motion Picture Exhibitors Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Hunter v. Omaha Motion Picture Exhibitors Ass'n, 274 N.W. 397, 133 Neb. 89, 1937 Neb. LEXIS 21 (Neb. 1937).

Opinion

Paine, J.

This is an original action in the supreme court, in which the state of Nebraska, on the relation of the attorney general, as plaintiff, prays that this court will issue a restraining order forthwith, which shall serve as a temporary injunction until a hearing shall be had, at a time to be fixed by this court, for the purpose of restraining and enjoining the defendants, their officers, agents, servants, and employees, from carrying on, promoting, permitting, or allowing within their places of business an illegal lottery, gift enterprise, or scheme of chance, commonly called “bank night,” and that upon the final hearing the injunction be made perpetual.

The petition first describes the various corporations and associations and officers and agents conducting various moving picture theaters in the city of Omaha, and alleges that for months past all of the moving picture theaters now operated in the city of Omaha have been conducting a lottery, gift enterprise, or scheme of chance in connection with said theaters, and intend to continue so doing; that [90]*90such lottery has been designated as “bank night,” and its operation is described in the petition briefly as follows: That a series of registration cards, numbered serially, provide a blank space for the name, address, and telephone number of the registrant; that any person desiring to register fills in the blanks and hands it to an employee of any participating theater; that said cards so filled are filed serially in one card index file, being a record of the individuals who have registered for participation in the weekly drawing; that such blank registration cards are available in the outer lobbies of all participating theaters, and any one can secure a card and fill it in without buying a ticket of admission; that the same serial numbers are printed on small cards, about one inch square, for each of the registration cards, which small cards are placed in a large drum, or receptacle; that Wednesday night of each week is “bank night” at all of the Omaha moving picture theaters.

That a matinee performance is given in all said theaters on Wednesdays, on which afternoon any person who buys a ticket of admission for the matinee prior to 6:00 p. m. may upon request receive a special matinee attendance record, and thereby become eligible to participate in the drawing for that particular night only, whether present at the theater at the time of the drawing or not, and such cards are only provided to those who purchase such admission tickets. Each of said matinee cards has printed upon it: “You are now entitled to participate in tonight’s drawing. Should your name be drawn, you will be notified. This card good for tonight’s prize only.”

On Wednesday evenings, between 8:00 and 9:15 o’clock, during the course of the evening’s performance, a large drum or receptacle, containing all of the small one-inch cards, is placed upon the stage of the Orpheum Theater, in full view of the audience, and some disinterested person spins this drum, thereby mixing the cards. The drum is then opened, and one card is drawn therefrom by a blindfolded, disinterested person, usually a child. Reference is [91]*91immediately made from this small one-inch card to the registration index, and the name of the registrant whose number has been called is identified, and this winner’s name and address are telephoned to every moving picture theater in Omaha, and then announced from each stage. The winner is notified that unless he has signed a matinee card that day he has three minutes in which to make himself known to an agent of some Omaha theater and claim the prize. At some of these theaters this announcement is made simultaneously from the stage and also in the outer lobby and on the street in front of the theater. In other theaters the announcement is made only from the stage inside the theater. If the winner identifies himself within three minutes, or if he has signed a special matinee card that day, the defendants deliver to him the prize money, which consists of a minimum amount of $1,000 cash. If within the three-minute time limit a winner does not appear, and such winner has not signed and filed a special matinee card, no prize is awarded on that Wednesday night, but $500 is added to the $1,000 and the combined sum of $1,500 becomes the prize the following week, and in like manner the prize money is pyramided every week until a winner receives it under these rules, and then the defendants again put up a $1,000 prize for the next ensuing Wednesday night. If the winner whose name is announced is outside of said theater and presents himself within the three-minute limit, he is permitted to enter the theater and claim and receive the prize money without buying an admission ticket.

Thatv on each Wednesday all Omaha theaters display large signs, posters, banners, lighted displays, carrying the words “Bank Night,” thereby holding out as a chief inducement for patronage such lottery drawings to be conducted that night; that large signs and small signs are displayed near box office windows, urging prospective patrons to “Register now and be eligible for tonight’s drawing.” That several of these theaters charge a greater admission price on Wednesday than other days; that the [92]*92operation of said “bank night” lottery tremendously increases the patronage of the theaters; that on Wednesdays many matinee tickets are sold to those persons who desire to register, but who do not see, or try to see, the picture that is being- shown inside.

It is charged that that part of the scheme which in remote and infrequent cases seems to present the possibility of participating in the drawing and winning the prize without being required to buy an admission ticket is, in truth and in fact, a mere subterfuge, skilfully devised and used by the defendants in an attempt to give their enterprise the outward appearance of a lawful enterprise, whereas in the practical operation of the scheme a vast majority do pay in money for their opportunity to participate, and those who do pay in effect pay for whatever chance, if any, those who do not pay have to win.

That many thousands of dollars have been paid out in prize money, and large sums have thereby been gambled, hazarded and lost by thousands of persons who have been induced by the defendants to participate in said lottery, including minors and others who cannot afford to risk their earnings, and that this tends to demoralize the winners and impoverish the losers, and will, if permitted to continue, result in irreparable losses to legitimate business and to the habits and morals of the people which cannot be compensated in money.

That by the operation of said scheme the defendants are wilfully violating the Constitution and statutes of Nebraska, and are maintaining a public nuisance, which directly affects thousands of citizens of Nebraska,' because the same “bank night” scheme is being operated in hundreds of theaters all over the state of Nebraska, and is statewide in its scope, so that individual prosecutions would involve plaintiff in a multiplicity of suits, which would not prevent the lawlessness herein described. That all of such suits would be for the purpose of quieting and establishing the same common rights of plaintiff to proceed by criminal prosecution against operators of the [93]*93“bank night” scheme, and all of said suits would have a common set of facts and a single question of law for determination.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 N.W. 397, 133 Neb. 89, 1937 Neb. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hunter-v-omaha-motion-picture-exhibitors-assn-neb-1937.