Trombetta Return

16 Pa. D. & C.2d 363, 1958 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 210
CourtFayette County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedJune 19, 1958
Docketnos. 150, 151
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 Pa. D. & C.2d 363 (Trombetta Return) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fayette County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trombetta Return, 16 Pa. D. & C.2d 363, 1958 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 210 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1958).

Opinions

Bane, J.,

— This is a proceeding in rem instituted and prosecuted by the Attorney General of the Commonwealth for the forfeiture and destruction of 40 multiple coin pinball machines, of the bingo or “in-line” type, alleged to constitute gambling devices.

On June 20, 1957, in the execution of a series of search warrants, the State police, in cooperation with local officers, seized the machines at various places in and near the cities of Uniontown, Brownsville and Connellsville, in this county. Subsequently return was made and petition filed for orders to destroy them. A [364]*364rule was then issued, answers filed and testimony taken before the writer of this opinion. Arguments have since been heard by the court en banc. We are all satisfied that all the machines, approximately half of which have been shown by credible testimony to have been used and employed by respondents for unlawful gambling, are gambling devices per se.

The Commonwealth presented two separate petitions one at no. 150, June sessions, 1957, Commonwealth Docket, listing those machines seized while in the process of being used in violation of the gaming laws of the Commonwealth, in that money was distributed as prizes, and the other at no. 151, June sessions, 1957, Commonwealth Docket, listing those machines where there was no evidence of actual pay-off in cash to any player, but of the same type and construction, all having been designed and manufactured by the Bally Manufacturing Company of Chicago, 111.

Another machine, known as “Gunsmoke” or “Hunter” type was included in the petition at no. 150, June sessions, 1957, Commonwealth Docket, and stipulated to be a gambling device per se.

While several variations or types of pinball machines were seized in the instant proceedings, it is not disputed that they are all fundamentally the same in character and operation, all possess the same basic features and are multiple coin in-line bingo type pinball machines. The difference between the machines is solely confined to the innumerable variations of the “added game features” and as the features are varied between machines, so are they given a variety of distinctive names. These variations are occasioned and made necessary because players soon tire of the same machine, and to maintain player interest they are transferred from establishment to establishment as the need arises.

[365]*365The Bally multiple coin pinball machines are a far cry from the simplicity of the early machines described in Wigton’s Return, 151 Pa. Superior Ct. 337. They possess numerous new and ingenious electrical devices contrived to excite abnormally the gambling instinct, to entice the player to deposit more and more coins, to control and increase the odds against the player as the machine is functioning and to reduce to virtual zero any opportunity for skillful play. Each has what is called a “knockdown button” to cancel free games won, without playing them, thereby permitting their ready conversion to cash; meters to record the number of replays won, the total number of games paid for and the number of free plays cancelled by means of the “knockdown button.” The control mechanism within each such machine functions in such a manner that, as respects the “added game” or “extra ball” features, the result to the player who deposits coin after coin to obtain them, is dependent wholly on chance.

Since most of the testimony, as well as the photographic exhibits offered in evidence concern the Bally “Show Time” machine, we shall confine our specific discussion largely to it. The machine is mounted on four legs, which have on the base of each an adjustable caster or screw-plate, ostensibly designed to level the machine. It stands about three and one-half feet high and has an inclined horizontal playing field, under glass, dotted with numerous pegs, bumpers, rubber rings, spring bumpers, lights and 25 numbered holes, and one so called “return ball” hole at the extreme front end of the playing field. To the rear of this horizontal playing field rises a vertical score board or back-plate, also under glass, which visibly records the progress of the game as it is played, as well as the ultimate result. Both boards are attractively and artistically decorated. The vertical score board dis[366]*366plays a large card or square, which contains a series of numbers, 25 in all, corresponding to the numbered holes on the horizontal playing field. These numbers are joined or connected by vertical, horizontal or diagonal interlocking red, green and yellow lines. The large square is further subdivided into four small squares, each containing four numbers, called “magic squares”. At the bottom of the large square are four subdivided horizontal numbers called the “magic line”. The four magic squares are identified by the letters, “A”, “B”, “C” and “D”, and the magic line by the letter “E”. On the front end of the frame surrounding the horizontal playing field and nearest the player are five buttons, each correspondingly lettered “A”, “B”, “C”, “D” and “E”. If a player should be successful in illuminating any one or more of the magic squares, or the magic line, the pressing of the appropriate lettered button permits the player to rotate the four numbers within the lighted square or line to a more advantageous position, thereby enhancing the possibility of his getting three, four or five numbers “inline”. These in-line numbers must be consecutive and further joined by the yellow, red or green lines, either vertically, diagonally or horizontally, and if so, a win is scored, much as in the game of bingo.

Surrounding this numbered square on the vertical score board are the so-called “extra” game features, represented by appropriate figures. The object of these added features is to encourage the player to try for the opportunity of increasing his chances to win free games. These are scored by a “free game” recording meter visible to the player in the upper left corner of the vertical score board. Thus the player knows at any given time the total number of free games to his credit. Each such free game is equivalent in value to the monetary unit required to operate the machine and [367]*367may be used, by pushing a button, for the same purposes which would otherwise be accomplished by the insertion of coins. Each time the player pushes this button, the free games are reduced by one and the meter records this fact. Thereafter, he may continue to use his available free games until they are exhausted, in which event the meter will have returned to zero. Should he desire to continue further play, he can then only activate the machine by the insertion of a coin in a slot located on the front or player’s end of the machine. Each of these multi-coin pinball machines are so designed that they can be altered to take nickels, dimes or even quarters, by merely changing the chute device beneath the coin slot.

Immediately below the “free game meter” is a green rectangular square upon which is lettered, “Corners Score Green 5-In-Line”. If this feature is illuminated on the vertical score board and the player should be successful in 'depositing four balls in each of the four corner numbers, he would score the same number of free games for these four balls as if he had in fact five such balls “in-line”. Here again we point out the significance of the added features hereinbefore described as the “magic squares” and the “magic line”. The two corners located on the right side of the machine’s numbered square are fixed numbers, and the player would have to deposit two balls in each of said corners.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Pa. D. & C.2d 363, 1958 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trombetta-return-paqtrsessfayett-1958.