State v. Ricciardi

108 A.2d 111, 32 N.J. Super. 204
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedSeptember 13, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 108 A.2d 111 (State v. Ricciardi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ricciardi, 108 A.2d 111, 32 N.J. Super. 204 (N.J. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

32 N.J. Super. 204 (1954)
108 A.2d 111

STATE OF NEW JERSEY, PLAINTIFF,
v.
PETER RICCIARDI, ANTHONY LIGGIO, JR., ALBERT JOHN GOLDSCHMIDT AND JOSEPH NOVICKI, DEFENDANTS.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division.

Decided September 13, 1954.

*205 Mr. Harold Kolovsky, Deputy Attorney-General and Acting County Prosecutor, attorney for the State (Mr. Martin D. Moroney, Deputy Attorney-General and Acting Assistant County Prosecutor, of counsel).

Mr. John E. Selser, attorney for defendants.

DREWEN, J.C.C. (temporarily assigned).

These defendants are separately indicted for the unlawful keeping of slot machines or machines in the nature thereof, "which may be used for the playing of (sic) money," in violation of N.J.S. 2A:112-2 (formerly N.J.S.A. 2:135-2). The indictments against Liggio, Goldschmidt and Novicki were, with the consent of the accused, consolidated for trial together as one, and the said defendants having signed the appropriate waivers their cases were tried by me, sitting without a jury. Immediately upon the trial's conclusion the defendant Ricciardi likewise waived his right to jury trial and through his counsel stipulated with the State that all testimony, for the State and for the defense, previously adduced in the trial of the other three defendants should for all purposes be dealt with as the testimony in the trial of the indictment against the said Ricciardi.

Upon the conclusion of all the proceedings aforementioned, counsel for the four defendants moved for judgments of acquittal on the ground of a fatal variance between the indictments and the proofs, and also on the ground of the contended failure of the State to prove the respective offenses charged.

*206 The statute above-cited under which the indictments are framed reads as follows:

"Any person who has or keeps in his place of business, or other premises, any slot machine or device in the nature of a slot machine, which may be used for the playing of (sic) money or other valuable thing, is guilty of a misdemeanor."

The single point to be decided is whether or not the machines here in question come within the language "or device in the nature of a slot machine." The defendants contend they do not. The machines are what are commonly known as pinball machines. They are described in complete detail in the opinion of the court in Hunter v. Mayor and Council of Teaneck Township, 128 N.J.L. 164 (Sup. Ct. 1942), p. 166 et seq. Specifically, the instant machines are not equipped for the players' making or recording of a high score. The result of a so-called "win" is ostensibly nothing other than the privilege of playing additional "free games," the number of "free games" won being recorded by the mechanism. The player initiates the operation by inserting a coin in a slot provided for the purpose. The coin makes available to the player, within the enclosure of the mechanism, the balls that are to be played by him. Each ball is in turn propelled by a released spring upward on an inclined plain, then rolling downward, making its chance contacts with marked and identified places and so determining the result of the venture. It is obvious that a machine of the type in question can be used in gaming for money simply by dealing with the free games won as entitling the player not to the games but to a designated equivalent in money. That is precisely what these defendants did. Not only is this not denied, it is expressly admitted, save in the case of the defendant Ricciardi, whose position in the proofs will be dealt with later.

As already stated, the question submitted by defendants' motion is not whether these machines were used for gaming, that being conceded, but whether, and notwithstanding such use, they can be regarded as "in the nature of slot machines." In their admission of a gaming use defendants make the *207 contention that the indictments should have been drawn not under N.J.S. 2A:112-2 but N.J.S. 2A:112-1, the pertinent portion of the latter section reading as follows:

"Any person playing for money or other valuable thing * * * at billiards, pool, tennis, bowls or shuffleboard, or A.B.C. or E.O. table, or other table * * * or with any slot machine or device in the nature of a slot machine, or with any other instrument, engine apparatus or device having one or more figures or numbers thereon, is guilty of a misdemeanor." (Italics supplied.)

The fact that defendants might also have been properly indicted under another section does not alter the problem.

I think there can be no doubt that the machines here are in the nature of slot machines. As our courts have held, the three components of a gaming episode are price, chance and prize. Here the price is irretrievably collected from the player by the use of the provided slot. The second element, that of chance, is provided by what takes place consequent upon the propulsion of the ball. The third element or prize is realized by the human agency which supplements the machine and "pays off," as the vernacular has it, on the basis of the so-called "free games." The supplementing of the human agency for the awarding of the prize is what defendants rely on as presenting a complete distinction between these machines and slot machines in the ordinary sense of that term. I cannot agree that there is any such complete distinction. The first two components of the gaming episode are taken care of in their entirety by the subject machines. The third one the machine partially takes care of: it determines by the chance operation of its parts what the prize is to be. All that defendants were required to do respecting the prize was physically to bestow it, which they did. In a word, they simply made good what the machine awarded.

"Device" is a broad, inclusive term; and the words "in the nature of" admit of wide approximation in varying degrees. Any respect in which the machine in question is less mechanical in its gambling than the more elaborate self-paying slot machine is made up by defendants' doing what the machine fails to do, which is but the single, ultimate detail of the *208 gaming venture. We may take it also from what defendants' counsel said in his opening statement to the court, that a measure of latitude is to be accorded the category that embraces gambling devices of the slot machine kind. Counsel said:

"We are, of course, all familiar, by observation rather than practice, with the so-called `one-armed bandit' and devices of that nature, many of which are border-line unto these; but which have a pocket out of which moneys are discharged in keeping with certain mechanical features built within the machine." (Emphasis supplied.)

The tenor of defendants' argument would presuppose there can be no such thing as a variant of a slot machine in the stricter sense, that there must be the mechanical money dispensing feature or it is not "in the nature of a slot machine." Common sense is to the contrary.

Defendants make the further contention that these are devices not of chance but of skill. The element of skill here, if it exists at all, is to be found solely in the attainment of exquisite precision in the force with which the ball is propelled upward by the plunger as the player releases it. Of course, the highest degree of skill is theoretically conceivable in anything, even though it is not at all to be looked for.

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108 A.2d 111, 32 N.J. Super. 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ricciardi-njsuperctappdiv-1954.