State v. Johnston
This text of 643 P.2d 666 (State v. Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Defendant was convicted, on stipulated facts, of promoting gambling in the second degree, ORS 167.122, a Class A misdemeanor, for promoting bingo games conducted by Oregon Chapter No. 1 of Disabled American Veterans (DAV). Defendant was fined $350, of which $200 was suspended. He is a member of the DAV chapter and is its “club manager.” ORS 167.122 provides:
“(1) A person commits the crime of promoting gambling in the second degree if he knowingly promotes or profits from unlawful gambling.”
There is no allegation by the state that defendant profited from the organization’s bingo games; the contention is that defendant knowingly promoted unlawful gambling. Defendant concedes that his actions amounted to “promoting” the games, as that word is used in ORS 167.122. The only issue is whether the bingo games operated by the DAV constituted “unlawful gambling” within the meaning of ORS 167.122. The trial court, in denying defendant’s motion for judgment of acquittal, stated:
“Clearly, I don’t think anyone can argue with the motivation here and the kind of work that the DAV is engaged in. That’s clearly, they’re engaged in good causes and always have. But they are clearly in violation of the statute. ***”
We agree and affirm.
Defendant’s principal argument is that the bingo games conducted by DAV are not unlawful gambling, because they are specifically excluded from the statutory definition of gambling. ORS 167.117(4)(d) provides that gambling does not include:
“Bingo or lotto operated by a charitable, fraternal or religious organization when no person other than the organization or a player profits in any manner from the operation of the lottery and when the organization has complied with the provisions of ORS 465.100(2).”
The state stipulated that the DAV is a charitable, fraternal or religious organization within the meaning of the statutory exclusion and that it had complied with subsection (2) of ORS 465.100, requiring it to notify the Commissioner [852]*852of Corporations of its intention to operate bingo games. The state’s position is that because members of the chapter were paid a daily wage to assist in operating the games, a “person other than the organization or a player” profited from the operation, removing the chapter’s bingo games from the statutory exclusion and making them unlawful gambling, as defined in ORS 167.117(14), i.e., “not specifically authorized by law.”
The more limited issue is thus whether the fact that individual “auxiliary members” of the chapter,1 who were not players, received money as a result of the DAV bingo games means that a person other than the organization or a player “profited” from the operation. Defendant argues that the wages paid to the members who assisted with the games were expenses to the organization, or part of the costs of operating the games, and were not “profits” to anyone. The state argues that the proper interpretation to be placed on the language of ORS 167.117(4)(d) is that
“a charitable bingo operation becomes unlawful whenever anyone other than a player or the organization itself receives value as a proximate result of the conduct of the game.”
Maintaining that the language of ORS 167.117(4)(d) relating to profit is ambiguous, both parties turn to the legislative history of the statute and rely heavily on the same language from the minutes of the debate in the House Judiciary Committee. This language indicates that the principal evil the legislature sought to prevent by enacting the statutes, including ORS 167.117(4)(d), was the “taking over” of the operation of bingo games on behalf of charitable, fraternal or religious organizations by other organizations specializing in operating such activities for profit and who would charge a fee or collect a percentage for their work. This is obviously not the fact situation in the instant case.
However well-motivated DAV’s actions, though, it is clear, the evil result — that money ostensibly contributed to the coffers of a charity is instead diverted to private [853]*853parties — is the same.2 As the state points out, there are persons deriving a substantial income from their participation in the bingo games.3 That these persons are auxiliary members of the organization does not change the fact that they gain as individuals. The salary received by these individuals, paid out of the proceeds of a bingo game represented to benefit charity, certainly is a “profit” within the meaning of ORS 167.117(4)(d).4
Because individual members of the DAV chapter profited from the operation of the bingo games, the games were “gambling” not included in the statutory exclusion provided by ORS 167.117(4)(d). Since they were not authorized by law, the games were “unlawful gambling” within the meaning of ORS 167.122. Defendant did not dispute that he “promoted” these games. The trial court properly denied his motion for a judgment of acquittal.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
643 P.2d 666, 56 Or. App. 849, 1982 Ore. App. LEXIS 2687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-johnston-orctapp-1982.