State Ex Rel. Replogle v. Joyland Club

220 P.2d 988, 124 Mont. 122, 1950 Mont. LEXIS 20
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1950
Docket8962
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 220 P.2d 988 (State Ex Rel. Replogle v. Joyland Club) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Replogle v. Joyland Club, 220 P.2d 988, 124 Mont. 122, 1950 Mont. LEXIS 20 (Mo. 1950).

Opinions

THE HONORABLE C. E. COMER, District Judge,

sitting in place of MR. JUSTICE BOTTOMLY, disqualified:

This is an appeal from a decree of the district court of Fergus comity, the Hon. C.F. Holt, district judge presiding, ordering the confiscation of five coin-operated slot machines loaded with money and abating, as a nuisance, the premises on which the machines were being operated.

The premises consist of a parcel of land with a one-story frame building thereon owned by the defendants W. S. Shepherd and Ann LaMere, and situate near the outskirts of the city of Lewistown, in Fergus county, Montana.

In the beginning Shepherd and Mrs. LaMere owned and operated a public bar and restaurant on the premises so owned by them.

In April 1947, they organized and caused to be incorporated the defendant Joyland Club, a so-called “nonprofit organization” of which Shepherd is president and Mrs. LaMere secretary-treasurer. The third incorporator is Andrew Medvee, who was made vice-president, he being the son-in-law of the defendant Ann LaMere.

[125]*125Following its incorporation Joyland Club, by written agreement, leased a portion of the building from Shepherd and Mrs. LaMere, the lessors reserving therefrom the space occupied and used by them for the bar which the two lessors continued to own and operate in their individual capacity. In the same room with the bar and immediately adjacent thereto the club installed, kept and maintained two Mill-O-Matic coin-operated slot machines. One was a nickel machine, — the other a quarter machine. Both were purchased from the Lewistown Elks Club. On May 27, 1947, licenses for each of the two machines were issued by the state board of equalization under the provisions of Chapter 142, Session Laws of 1945, B. C. M. 1947, secs. 84-3601 to 84-3610.

In the same room housing the bar and slot machines, the club served meals, maintained card tables and provided an orchestra and floor space for dancing.

Shepherd 'was the manager in charge of the operation of the club and Mrs. LaMere actively participated therein. The lease agreement provided that the club should pay to Shepherd and to Mrs. LaMere a salary of $200 per month, each, and that it should also pay to them a rental of $300 per month for the space which the club occupied.

Shepherd testified that the profits to be earned by the club were to be donated to The Montana Children’s Home, a charity located in Helena, Montana. He also testified that the club’s operations covering a period of more than three months were in the “red” paying out more money than it took in; that the club had never made any profits and hence had made no donation of any sort to the designated charity nor to any other charity.

On September 11, 1947, the club obtained and installed in the establishment three additional slot machines, being a quarter, a dime, and a nickel machine. These additional slot machines were obtained from the Helena Novelty Company, represented to be a partnership, with headquarters in and operating out of Helena, Montana. These three additional slot machines were delivered to defendants in Fergus county by a Mr. Mitchell, since deceased, [126]*126who, as an agent or employee of the Helena Novelty Company, brought them to Lewistown by truck and there set them up in defendants’ place of business with the understanding that the club was to pay to the Helena Novelty Company, out of the earnings, an unstated amount to be accounted for or paid each month. No licenses were issued or obtained for the three additional slot machines nor did the club ever pay for the machines nor were such machines the property of the club when seized.

On September 13,1947, the defendants placed, maintained and kept under their management and control in their place of business the two licensed slot machines, the three unlicensed slot machines, as well as certain games played with cards known as blackjack and twenty-one, all of which were played by numerous and divers persons during the evening of September 13, 1947.

At about eleven o ’clock on the night of September 13, 1947, a deputy sheriff of the county, armed with a warrant 'of arrest for defendants and a search warrant for the premises, and accompanied by the chief of police and assistant chief of police of Lewistown, and the county attorney of Fergus county, raided the establishment, — arrested the defendants, "W. S. Shepherd and Ann LaMere, and seized and took into their custody, the five slot machines then loaded with money.

Thereafter on appropriate proceedings instituted in the district court and trial had before the district judge, sitting without a jury, decree was rendered and entered against defendants.

The decree: (1) Enjoins defendants from operating on the premises slot machines or any other gambling device of any kind or nature for a period of one year; (2) orders the sheriff to immediately take into his possession the five slot machines, together with their contents and to sell the machines as provided by law and to deliver the proceeds together with the money in the machines to the county treasurer to be paid into the proper fund as provided by law; (3) orders that the premises be vacated by all persons; (4) directs that the sheriff forthwith lock and seal the building and property and keep same under lock and sealed for [127]*127one year; and (5) adjudges that plaintiffs have judgment against defendants for plaintiff’s costs.

From such decree the defendants Joyland Club, W. S. Shepherd and Ann LaMere have appealed.

The district court made and filed written findings of fact and conclusions of law. Therein it found that in operating and maintaining the slot machines defendants were conducting a public nuisance. The decree entered is in form and substance the same as that entered in the case of State ex rel. Bottomly v. Johnson, 116 Mont. 483, 154 Pac. (2d) 262.

Defendants assert that it was error for the trial court to so find and determine, contending that defendants were accorded the legal right to use, operate, keep and maintain slot machines by virtue of the provisions of Chapter 142, Session Laws of 1945, and particularly section 3 thereof and they pose the question: Does the using, operating, keeping and maintaining for use, of slot machines, constitute a nuisance that is subject to abatement under the laws of Montana ?

Chapter 24, of Title 94, R. C. M. 1947, sections 94-2401 to 94-2428, is entitled “Gambling.”

Section 94-2409 provides: “Any article, machine or apparatus maintained or kept in violation of any of the provisions of this act is a public nuisance, but the punishment for the maintaining or keeping of the same shall be "as provided in this act.”

This court long since held that operating and maintaining coin-operated slot machines constitutes gambling under the laws of this state.

Almost half a century ago this court, speaking through Mr. Chief Justice Brantly, in State v. Woodman, 1902, 26 Mont. 348, 67 Pac. 1118, sustained a conviction for the offense of “unlawfully running and conducting, and permitting to be run and conducted, a certain nickel in the slot machine for cigars in his [defendant’s] cigar store in the city of Helena,” as a violation of the Laws of 1901, page 166, entitled, “An Act to Prohibit Gambling Within the State of Montana, ’ ’ etc.

[128]*128In State v. Hovland, 1946, 118 Mont. 454, 169 Pac.

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State Ex Rel. Replogle v. Joyland Club
220 P.2d 988 (Montana Supreme Court, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 P.2d 988, 124 Mont. 122, 1950 Mont. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-replogle-v-joyland-club-mont-1950.