Untitled California Attorney General Opinion ( 1988 )


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  •              TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    State of California
    JOHN K. VAN DE KAMP
    Attorney General
    ------------------------------
    :
    OPINION              :
    :
    of                 :     No. 87-906
    :
    JOHN K. VAN DE KAMP      :      April 20, 1988
    Attorney General        :
    :
    JACK R. WINKLER        :
    Assistant Attorney General :
    :
    -------------------------------------------------------------
    THE HONORABLE THOMAS W. SNEDDON, JR., DISTRICT ATTORNEY
    OF SANTA BARBARA COUNTY, has requested an opinion on the following
    question:
    May a charitable organization lawfully sponsor and
    conduct a "casino night" event for which tickets are sold to the
    general public where those attending would be given chips with
    which to play roulette, twenty-one and similar casino games and the
    chips won by the players would be used at the end of the event to
    (1) acquire raffle tickets to be drawn for valuable merchandise or
    (2) bid at auction for valuable merchandise?
    CONCLUSION
    A charitable organization may not lawfully sponsor or
    conduct a "casino night" event for which tickets are sold to the
    general public where those attending would be given chips with
    which to play roulette, twenty-one, and similar types of games and
    the chips won by the players would be used at the end of the event
    to (1) acquire raffle tickets to be drawn for valuable merchandise
    or (2) bid at auction for valuable merchandise.
    ANALYSIS
    We are informed that a charitable organization proposes
    to sponsor a "casino night" dinner event to which it will sell
    tickets to the general public.    Each person attending would be
    given chips with which to play roulette, twenty-one, and similar
    types of "casino games." At the end of the evening the players
    would use the chips they had won either to acquire raffle tickets
    to be drawn for valuable merchandise or to bid at auction for
    valuable merchandise.   The merchandise would be donated to the
    charitable organization by local merchants.        The charitable
    organization would use the ticket proceeds only for charitable
    purposes. We are asked whether such an event would be lawful under
    California's gambling laws.    We conclude that it would not be
    lawful.
    Background
    California's laws have always placed restrictions on
    certain forms of gambling.       Article IV, section 27 of the
    California Constitution of 1849 provided that "No lottery shall be
    allowed by this state, nor shall the sale of lottery tickets be
    allowed."    An act to license gaming passed March 14, 1851
    prohibited "all banking games, and games having a percentage" and
    made violations a misdemeanor and also prohibited, with the same
    penalty, the playing of "the game known as 'French monte' or 'Three
    card game,' or the game known as 'Loop' or 'String game,' or the
    game known as 'Thimbles,' (a shell game) or the game known as
    'Lottery.'" The same act authorized counties to license gaming
    houses in which all but the games outlawed by name could be played.
    The   Constitution   of   1879   continued the   lottery
    prohibition in article IV, section 26 which provided: "The
    Legislature shall have no power to authorize lotteries or gift
    enterprises for any purpose, and shall pass laws to prohibit the
    sale in this State of lottery or gift enterprise tickets, or
    tickets in any scheme in the nature of a lottery." The Legislature
    enacted chapters in the Penal Code prohibiting lotteries and other
    forms of gaming.
    The Penal Code contains one chapter on lotteries (§§ 319­
    328), another on gaming (§§ 330-337s) and another on horse racing
    (§§ 337.1-337.9). The chapter on lotteries makes many forms of
    participation in a lottery a misdemeanor and section 3271 prohibits
    endless chain schemes.     The gaming chapter defines gaming in
    section 330 and prohibits slot machines, bookmaking and fixing
    sporting events among other things. The chapter on horse racing
    prohibits touting among other things.
    The California Constitution has been amended to allow
    specified forms of gambling. Article IV, section 19 now provides:
    "(a) The Legislature has no power to authorize
    lotteries and shall prohibit the sale of lottery tickets
    in the State.
    1
    Section reference are to the Penal Code unless otherwise
    indicated.
    2.                          87-906
    "(b) The Legislature may provide for the regulation
    of horse races and horse race meetings and wagering on
    the results. [Originally adopted June 27, 1933 as art.
    IV, § 25a.]
    "(c) Notwithstanding subdivision (a) the Legislature
    by statute may authorize cities and counties to provide
    for bingo games, but only for charitable purposes.
    [Added June 8, 1976.]
    "(d) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), there is
    authorized the establishment of a California State
    Lottery. [Added Nov. 6, 1984.]
    "(e) The Legislature has no power to authorize, and
    shall prohibit casinos of the type currently operating in
    Nevada and New Jersey. [Added Nov. 6, 1984.]"
    From the beginning of statehood, California statutes have
    prohibited certain forms of gambling and allowed others. State
    statutes on gambling leave considerable scope for local regulation
    because the state has not preempted the whole field of gambling
    regulations. ( Sullivan v. Fox (1987) 
    189 Cal. App. 3d 673
    , 678.)
    We assume that no local ordinance is applicable since none was
    referred to in the question. Our task is to determine whether the
    "casino night" event contemplated by the question involves any of
    the forms of gambling prohibited by state law.            Since the
    description of the event provided us speaks of roulette, twenty-one
    and similar types of "casino games" we assume that the event will
    not involve slot machines, horse racing, sporting events, or bingo.
    Our analysis will therefore focus on whether the "casino night"
    event violates California statutes prohibiting gaming and
    lotteries.
    Gaming
    Penal Code Section 330 defining gaming provides:
    "Every person who deals, plays, or carries on,
    opens, or causes to be opened, or who conducts, either as
    owner or employee, whether for hire or not, any game of
    faro, monte, roulette, lansquenet, rouge et noire, rondo,
    tan, fan-tan, stud-horse poker, seven-and-a-half, twenty-
    one, hokey-pokey, or any banking or percentage game
    played with cards, dice, or any device, for money,
    checks, credit, or other representative of value, and
    every person who plays or bets at or against any of said
    prohibited games, is guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall
    be punishable by a fine not less than one hundred dollars
    ($100) nor more than one thousand dollars ($1,000), or by
    imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding six months,
    or by both such fine and imprisonment."
    3.                           87-906
    The crime defined in section 330 has two essential
    elements: (1) The game must be one of those proscribed and (2) the
    game must be played for money or representative of value. We will
    examine each of these elements to determine their application to
    the "casino night" described above.
    Section 330 proscribes 12 games by name and two
    categories of games denominated "any banking or percentage game
    played with cards, dice, or any device," when played as described
    therein. Two of the twelve games listed by name are mentioned in
    the question, roulette and twenty-one. While many of the games
    listed have fallen into disuse all of them are prohibited by
    section 330 when played for money or representative of value. The
    games listed by name are prohibited by section 330 whether or not
    they are played as banking or percentage games. (People v. Gosset
    (1892) 
    93 Cal. 641
    , 646.) Section 330 prohibits the named games
    even though they are played with variations in the usual method of
    play. In People v. 
    Gosset, supra
    , at page 643, the court held
    there was no error in refusing an instruction that "faro is played
    with a full deck of fifty-two cards." The court stated:
    ". . . , when a prohibited game is played in all
    other respects in the usual way, and according to its
    established rules, the purpose of the law cannot be
    thwarted by the simple devise of playing it with one or
    two cards less than the number usually employed.
    Otherwise no statute against a particular game would be
    of any value."
    A banking game is one where there is a fund against which
    everybody has the right to bet, the bank taking all that is lost by
    the bettors and paying out all that is won by them. (People v.
    Carroll (1889) 
    80 Cal. 153
    , 157-158; People v. Ambrose (1953) 
    122 Cal. App. Supp. 2d 966
    , 970.) "Banking game has come to have a fixed
    and accepted meaning: the 'house' or 'bank' is a participant in the
    game, taking on all comers, paying all winners, and collecting from
    all losers." (Sullivan v. Fox (1987) 
    189 Cal. App. 3d 673
    , 678.)
    A percentage game encompasses "any game of chance from
    which the house collects money calculated as a portion of wagers
    made or sums won in play, exclusive of charges or fees for use of
    space and facilities." ( Sullivan v. 
    Fox, supra
    , at p. 679.) A
    game may be a percentage game whether or not the house or bank
    participates as a player in the game. (Walker v. Meehan (1987) 
    194 Cal. App. 3d 1290
    , 1299-1301.)
    If one of the similar types of "casino games" referred to
    in the question is either a banking game or percentage game, as
    those terms have been defined by the courts, which is played with
    cards, dice, or any device it is prohibited by section 330 when it
    is played for money or representative of value.
    4.                          87-906
    Next we consider the requirement of section 330 that the
    game must be "played for money, checks, credit, or other
    representative of value." In      People v. 
    Carroll, supra
    , the
    information charged the defendant with conducting a banking game
    known as wheel of fortune in violation of section 330. The Supreme
    Court reversed the conviction stating (at p. 155):
    "The information charges no offense under this
    section [section 330] of the code, or any other.      To
    constitute it an offense to conduct the game, it must be
    'played for money, checks, credit, or any other
    representative of value.'     The information does not
    charge that the game was    played for money, but that
    defendant conducted it for money. It may be that those
    who were engaged in the game were playing for amusement,
    and paid the defendant a fixed sum, in no way dependent
    upon the result of the game, for conducting it. This
    would be within the allegations of the information, but
    it would not be a public offense or within the statute."
    (Emphasis added by the court.)
    Thus there is no violation of section 330 unless the players are
    playing the game for money or representative of value, i.e., with
    the expectation of winning money or representative of value. If
    the game is played without any expectation of winning money or
    representative of value there is no violation of section 330 even
    though the players may have paid something "in no way dependent
    upon the result of game" for the privilege.
    In Ex parte Williams, (1906) 7 Cal.Unrep. 301 (Court of
    Appeal, Third District), 
    87 P. 565
    , the defendant was convicted of
    violating section 330 for conducting a banking game by means of a
    slot machine which his customers played for cigars. The machine
    was operated by dropping a nickel in the slot and pressing a lever
    which would cause a cylinder to move and display a combination of
    cards thereon.    If the combination appearing was one of the
    designated winning poker hands the player received a designated
    number of cigars.    For other combinations the player received
    nothing.   On habeas corpus the court discharged the prisoner
    because the slot machine was played for cigars and not "for money,
    checks, credits, or other representatives of value." The court
    applied the rule of construction known as ejusdem generis to
    construe the words "other representative of value" to be limited to
    the same class of things as money, checks and credits. The court
    said: "Neither is it plain that the Legislature had in mind any
    kind of property other than money, the thing most common for use in
    such games, and its representative such as checks and demands for
    the payment of money." Finally the court said: "There is nothing
    in section 330 which prohibits gambling for cigars."
    In In re Lowrie (1919) 
    43 Cal. App. 564
    the defendant was
    charged   with conducting a dice game known as Razzle Dazzle
    5.                         87-906
    described in detail in the complaint. On habeas corpus the court
    held that the game was not a lottery as the complaint charged but
    that the facts alleged did constitute an offense defined in section
    330 of the Penal Code and remanded the defendant to custody. The
    complaint alleged that the game was played with five dice rolled
    simultaneously from a cup. Each player would pay the defendant one
    dollar and receive ten chips in return. Play began when a player
    made a bet by putting one or more of his chips on the board and the
    defendant then rolled the dice and counted the number of pairs he
    rolled. The player then rolled the dice and counted the number of
    pairs he rolled.    If the player rolled more pairs or the same
    number of pairs with higher numbers he won and the defendant gave
    him the same number of chips he bet in addition to the chips he had
    bet. If the player lost the defendant kept the chips that were
    bet. Play then passed to the next player where the process was
    repeated. When play was over the players purchased merchandise
    with the chips they had with each chip valued at ten cents.
    The court first concluded that the game was a banking
    game and then stated that the game the defendant conducted "was not
    played for cigars or other merchandise, but for chips, each of
    which under the agreement and scheme represented the value of ten
    cents and was redeemable at such value by the defendant as banker,
    in merchandise selected by the winner of the chips, and hence they
    were representative of the value of the merchandise so received in
    exchange therefor." The court added that "the merchandise given in
    exchange for the chips must be deemed of value and the value of the
    goods which, in accordance with the scheme, were given in exchange
    for the chips won was represented by the chips, possessing no
    intrinsic value whatever. Hence, conceding the correctness of the
    Williams case, wherein it was held that the cigars constituting the
    stakes were not representative of value, it is distinguishable from
    the facts in the present case in that the chips played for were,
    under the scheme and agreement, intended to and did represent ten
    cents each in value, to be paid for and redeemed in merchandise."
    While Lowrie distinguished the Williams case we think the
    distinction is illusory. If the merchandise for which the chips
    were redeemed in Lowrie "must be deemed to have value" represented
    by the chips we fail to see why the cigars in Williams did not also
    have value which was represented by the winning combination of
    cards on the cylinder of slot machine. In our view an appellate
    court would now reject the ejusdem generis construction of Williams
    and hold that when the game is played directly for valuable
    merchandise that such merchandise is "representative of value"
    within the meaning of section 330.
    When we combine the lessons of the Carroll and Lowrie
    cases we see that whether chips are representative of value within
    the meaning of section 330 depends on whether the chips may be
    redeemed for money or something of value and not on what, if
    anything, was paid for the chips. If we assume that the player
    6.                          87-906
    pays money for chips having no intrinsic value of their own which
    he then uses to participate in the game and wins additional chips
    in the process, unless he can redeem the chips he has won for money
    or representative of value it cannot be said that he "played" the
    game for money or representative of value as Carroll construed
    section 330. This is the reason the Lowrie case focused on the
    fact that the chips were redeemable for merchandise instead of the
    fact that the players had paid ten cents each for the chips. As we
    shall see this is in sharp contrast to the consideration element of
    a lottery which focuses upon what the players have paid for the
    chance to win.
    Thus where the game is played for chips which may be
    redeemed for merchandise the chips represent the value of such
    merchandise and hence are "representative of value" within the
    meaning of section 330. In the "casino night" described the chips
    are not assigned a particular monetary value (like the ten cents in
    the Lowrie case) but this does not detract from the fact that they
    have the value of the merchandise for which they are redeemed and
    are thus "representative of value".     This is particularly true
    where the chips are used to buy merchandise at auction at the end
    of the event.    When the chips are used instead to buy raffle
    tickets a new factor is added to the scheme in that the redemption
    of the chips for merchandise is conditioned upon winning the
    raffle.   In our view the fact that redemption of the chips for
    merchandise is conditioned upon winning a raffle does not render
    them valueless or prevent them from constituting a "representative
    of value" within the meaning of section 330. In other words the
    chance to win the raffle has a value which is represented by the
    chips.
    We conclude that when persons make a wager with chips
    (whether acquired by gift or purchase) at a game of roulette or
    twenty-one or any other game prohibited by section 330, when the
    chips won may be used to (1) acquire raffle tickets to be drawn for
    valuable merchandise or (2) bid at auction for valuable
    merchandise, the chips are "representative of value" and section
    330 is violated.
    Lotteries
    Since the "casino night" described in the question
    includes a raffle and the playing of casino games which may be
    lotteries we now consider the statutory definition of a lottery.
    Section 319 provides:
    "LOTTERY DEFINED. A lottery is any scheme for the
    disposal or distribution of property by chance, among
    persons who have paid or promised to pay any valuable
    consideration for the chance of obtaining such property
    or a portion of it, or for any share or any interest in
    7.                          87-906
    such property, upon any agreement, understanding,      or
    expectation that it is to be distributed or disposed   of
    by lot or chance, whether called a lottery, raffle,    or
    gift enterprise, or by whatever name the same may      be
    known."
    A lottery has three essential elements: (1) a prize; (2)
    distributed by chance; and (3) consideration. (California Gasoline
    Retailers v. Regal Petroleum Corporation (1958) 50 Cal 2d 844,
    851.)   The statutory definition refers to the prize as "property"
    without any restrictive words and it has been held that the word
    "property" in section 319 is used in its most general sense.
    (People v. Settles (1938) 29 Cal.App.2d (Supp.) 781, 786.)       It
    includes real and personal property, money, goods, chattels, things
    in action, evidence of debt and obligations. (Id.) The courts have
    recognized the following kinds of property to satisfy the prize
    element of a lottery: $500 in cash, People v. Gonzales (1944) 
    62 Cal. App. 2d 274
    , 275; a Buick automobile, Holmes v. Saunders (1952)
    
    114 Cal. App. 2d 389
    , 390; five dollars worth of merchandise, People
    v. Bardaty (1934) 139 Cal.App. (Supp.) 791, 793; a free trip to
    Catalina, People v. Cardas (1933) 137 Cal.App. (Supp.) 788, 789­
    790; the right to play further games free, People v. 
    Settles, supra
    , at page 786. (Cf. Gayer v. Whelan (1943) 
    59 Cal. App. 2d 255
    ,
    263 in which the court held that the amusement afforded by a free
    game on a pinball machine was not a representative or thing of
    value within the meaning of section 330a prohibiting possession of
    a gambling device.)    The valuable merchandise for which raffle
    tickets are drawn referred to in the question would constitute a
    prize under the lottery statute.
    A prize must be distinguished from a bet between two
    persons upon an uncertain future event. In People v. Postma (1945)
    69 Cal.App.2d (Supp.) 814 the defendants were engaged in bookmaking
    on horse races.    The court held that the defendants were not
    operating a lottery because there was nothing put up as a prize.
    (We hasten to add that bookmaking is outlawed by § 337a.) At page
    818 the court stated:
    "When two persons bet with each other, it cannot be
    said that either of them, or the stakeholder, if there is
    one, has offered any property for disposal or
    distribution to persons who have paid a consideration for
    the chance of obtaining it. Each bettor has put up his
    own property on a venture and at risk of losing it, but
    has not paid for the chance of winning that of the other
    bettor. This is true at least where but two persons or
    two opposing sets of persons are concerned in the bet, as
    here. In the case of a pari-mutuel pool to which many
    persons contribute, there are, perhaps (eliminating the
    question of chance), more persuasive reasons for
    considering the scheme a lottery than we find here."
    (Citing cases.)
    8.                           87-906
    The second element of a lottery requires that the prize
    be distributed by chance. Whether the distribution of a prize is
    distributed by chance is to be determined from the perspective of
    the players. Where the person conducting the scheme arbitrarily
    selects the winner the chance element of a lottery is present
    because "as to the purchaser it is uncertain, it is chance that
    luck and good fortune will give a large return for a small outlay."
    (People v. Hecht (1931) 119 Cal.App. (Supp.) 778, 787.) On the
    other hand where the persons conducting the scheme remove all
    element of chance in determining the winner by fraudulently
    contriving to have one of themselves selected as the winner the
    scheme is not a lottery. ( People v. Carpenter (1956) 
    141 Cal. App. 2d 884
    , 888.)    A trading stamp scheme is not a lottery
    because redemption of the stamps does not depend on chance. ( Ex
    Parte Drexel (1905) 
    147 Cal. 763
    , 768.)
    Distribution of the prize may depend on skill rather than
    chance. Competitive shooting at a target is a game of skill and
    the fact that an entry fee is charged to compete for a prize at
    such a game does not convert the sport into a game of chance. (See
    Brown v. Board of Police Commissioners (1943) 
    58 Cal. App. 2d 473
    ,
    477.)   Frequently a game will have elements of both skill and
    chance. A game is not one of skill merely because that element
    enters into the result in some degree, or one of chance solely
    because chance is a factor in producing the result. ( People v.
    
    Settles, supra
    , at p. 787.) It is the character of the game rather
    than a particular player's skill or lack of it that determines
    whether the game is one of chance or skill.       The test is not
    whether the game contains an element of chance or an element of
    skill but which of them is the dominating factor in determining the
    result of the game. (In re Allen (1962) 
    59 Cal. 2d 5
    , 6.) Whether
    skill or chance dominates a particular game can be a difficult
    question of fact. (See People v. 
    Settles, supra
    , at pp. 787-788.)
    The courts have held the following methods to be
    distribution by chance.      Drawing the winning ticket from a
    container; People v. Cardas (1933) 137 Cal.App. (Supp.) 788, 789­
    790. Spinning wheels to determine winning number;       People v.
    Gonzales (1944) 
    62 Cal. App. 274
    , 277. Playing tango 2; Einzig v.
    Board of Police Commissioners (1934) 
    138 Cal. App. 664
    ; People v.
    Babdaty (1934) 139 Cal.App. (Supp.) 791. Adding dart throwing to
    qualify winners of tango game presented question on which the jury
    might reasonably have found either way as to whether skill or
    2
    "Tango" is a game similar to bingo using bingo like cards in
    which the players participate in the selection of the      letter-
    numbers drawn by taking turns throwing a rubber ball into a table
    of wooden pockets containing a pocket for each possible letter-
    number combination. As a rule the ball bounces around a lot before
    settling in a pocket.
    9.                          87-906
    chance was the dominant factor in determining the result. (People
    v. 
    Settles, supra
    , 29 Cal.App.2d (Supp.) 781, 787.) Picking winners
    of five successive horse races in betting in a "5-10" pool3 was
    held to be a lottery as a matter of law. (Finster v. Keller (1971)
    
    18 Cal. App. 3d 836
    .) A contest in which participants paying one
    dollar each selected the most appropriate captions for six cartoons
    in which prizes were awarded the best by a panel of judges was held
    to be a distribution by chance, because the elements of a bona fide
    contest of skill were not present. ( People v. Rehm (1936) 13
    Cal.App.2d (Supp.) 755, 757.) The game of Ringo consisting of a
    bingo game in which players paid 25 cents for each card or got a
    free card if they tossed a small ring over a peg and the winner, to
    qualify for the prize had to toss a larger ring over a larger peg
    was held to be a game in which the game of bingo, one of pure
    chance, dominates. ( People v. Shira (1976) 
    62 Cal. App. 3d 442
    ,
    462.)
    In In re Allen (1962) 
    59 Cal. 2d 5
    the court held that the
    game of bridge was a game in which skill predominated and thus was
    not a game of chance. Draw poker is a game of chance. (Lavick v.
    Nitzberg (1948) 
    83 Cal. App. 2d 381
    , 382-383.) Roulette has been
    described as "a banking and a percentage game." (Vasey v. Campbell
    (1906) 
    4 Cal. App. 451
    , 453.)     Rolling the ball into the groove
    above a spinning roulette wheel would appear to involve little
    skill, and none which would affect the place on the wheel on which
    the ball finnaly comes to rest. Shooting craps and other games in
    which the result depends on a throw of dice are generally held to
    be games of chance. (38 Am.Jur.2d, § 40; 66 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 276,
    283 (1983).) Keno is a game of chance. (64 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 114,
    116 (1981).) Twenty-one, or blackjack as it is sometimes called,
    is a game of chance. ( Jacques v. State Board of Equalization
    (1957) 
    155 Cal. App. 2d 448
    ; 65 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 123, 128; 66
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 276, 280.) In Tooley v. U.S. (D.Nev. 1955) 
    134 F. Supp. 162
    , 166-167, the court observed:
    "No one will question the fact that craps, twenty-
    one and roulette are games of chance with percentages
    heavily loaded in favor of the house, yet there are some
    expert players, cross-roaders, who can outplay and break
    the house even on these admitted gambling games. But
    that does not convert these games from games of chance to
    games of skill."
    3
    While skill may dominate successful performance of a single
    event chance rapidly overtakes skill when one wagers on the
    successful repetition of that event. Thus a basketball player who
    sinks 2 free throws out of 3 for the season has less than an even
    chance (2/3x2/3=4/9) to sink two in a row, less than one chance in
    three (2/3x2/3x2/3=8/27) to sink three in a row and less than one
    chance in five (16/81) to sink four in a row.
    10.                          87-906
    Applying the distribution by chance element of a lottery
    to the "casino night" described in the request, we note that both
    roulette and twenty-one are games of chance, not of skill. Both
    games therefore constitute lotteries when played for prizes by
    players who have paid a consideration for the chance to win.
    Similar "casino games" of chance, such as craps, would also
    constitute lotteries when played in like manner. It is assumed
    that the "drawing" of the winning raffle tickets referred to in the
    question will be selected at random from a container holding all
    the eligible raffle tickets.       Thus the distribution of the
    merchandise as prizes would be by chance making the a raffle a
    lottery if the players paid a consideration for the chance to win.
    The third element of a lottery is consideration. The
    question of consideration is to be determined from the standpoint
    of the holders of the tickets who might win the prize, not from the
    standpoint of those who are conducting the event. ( People v.
    Cardas (1933) 137 Cal.App. (Supp.) 788, 791; Cal. Gas Retailers v.
    Regal Petroleum Corp. (1958) 
    50 Cal. 2d 844
    , 860.) This follows
    clearly from the statutory definition that it is the distribution
    of property by chance "among persons who have paid or promised to
    pay any valuable consideration for the chance of obtaining such
    property or a portion of it." ( Cal. Gas Retailers v. Regal
    Petroleum 
    Corp., supra
    , at p. 860.)
    The kind of consideration necessary for a lottery is not
    as extensive as the consideration necessary for a contract. Civil
    Code section 1605 provides that "any benefit conferred, or agreed
    to be conferred, upon the promisor, by any other person, to which
    the promisor is not lawfully entitled, or any prejudice suffered,
    or agreed to be suffered, by such person, other than such as he is
    at the time of consent lawfully bound to suffer, as an inducement
    to the promisor, is a good consideration for a promise."       The
    benefit conferred language will not suffice as consideration for a
    lottery because it is what is paid by the ticket holder that
    determines consideration for a lottery, not what benefit is
    conferred on the sponsor.     Thus the fact that the sponsor's
    business is enhanced does not provide the consideration necessary
    to make a promotion a lottery. ( Cal. Gas Retailers v. Regal
    Petroleum 
    Corp., supra
    , at p. 862.)
    The question to be answered on the consideration element
    was stated three ways by the court in People v. 
    Cardas, supra
    , at
    pages 790-791: Was a valuable consideration paid for the chance of
    winning the prize by those who stood to win? Was anything of value
    hazarded upon the chance by them? Did the holders of the prize
    tickets pay a valuable consideration for the chance? Since the
    statutory definition requires that the consideration necessary is
    a "valuable one" paid, or promised to be paid by the one receiving
    the ticket, the fact that a ticket holder must go to the place of
    business of the sponsor of the scheme to deposit the ticket stub
    11.                          87-906
    cannot be considered the necessary consideration. ( Cal. Gas
    Retailers v. Regal Petroleum 
    Corp., supra
    , at pp. 861-862.)
    The consideration to make a transaction a lottery need
    not be paid exclusively for the chance to win the prize. It is
    sufficient that the consideration be paid for something else and
    the chance to win the prize. ( People v. Gonzales (1944) 
    62 Cal. App. 2d 274
    , 279-280; Holmes v. Saunders (1952) 
    114 Cal. App. 2d 389
    , 390-391; Cal. Gas Retailers v. Regal Petroleum 
    Corp., supra
    ,
    at p. 859.)
    A game does not cease to be a lottery because some are
    admitted to play without paying for the privilege, so long as
    others paid for their chances. ( People v. Shira (1976) 
    62 Cal. App. 3d 442
    , 460.)
    Where, in a business promotion plan, there is a general
    and indiscriminate distribution of free prize tickets whether or
    not the recipients have made a purchase and valuable prizes are
    awarded to those holding winning tickets selected by chance, the
    plan is a gratuitous distribution of property, not a lottery
    because the ticket holders did not pay a valuable consideration for
    their tickets. ( People v. 
    Cardas, supra
    ; People v. 
    Carpenter, supra
    ; and Cal. Gas Retailers v. Regal Petroleum 
    Corp., supra
    .)
    While it is simple to state the foregoing rules announced
    by the courts to determine the consideration element of a lottery
    their application to particular cases can be difficult. One reason
    is the difficulty in choosing which rules apply.       Where prize
    tickets are given both to those who have made a purchase and those
    who have not, does the rule that the consideration need not be paid
    exclusively for the chance to win apply so the purchase price paid
    is not only for the merchandise but also for the chance to win?
    Does the rule that the game does not cease to be a lottery because
    some play free while others must pay apply? Or it this just a
    business promotion with a gratuitous distribution of property? The
    key to which of these rules apply lies in whether the distribution
    of free tickets has been "general and indiscriminate". Only when
    the court concludes that the distribution of free tickets is such
    that it can realistically be said that the person who bought
    merchandise did not pay for his ticket because he could have got
    one free without making the purchase will it be concluded that the
    person did not pay a valuable consideration for the chance to win
    the prize. (People v. 
    Shira, supra
    , at pp. 459-460.)
    In Cal. Gas Retailers v. Regal Petroleum 
    Corp., supra
    , at
    page 859, the court rejected any mechanical application of rules to
    determine whether a scheme is a lottery. Quoting from 34 American
    Jurisprudence 650 the court said:
    ". . . that no sooner is the term 'lottery' defined
    by a court, than ingenuity evolves some scheme within the
    12.                          87-906
    mischief discussed, although not quite within the letter
    of the definition given; but an examination of the many
    cases on the subject will show that it is very difficult,
    if not impossible, for the most ingenious and subtle mind
    to devise any scheme or plan, short of a gratuitous
    distribution of property, which has not been held by the
    courts of this country to be in violation of the lottery
    laws. . . . The court will inquire, not into the name,
    but into the game, however skillfully disguised, in order
    to ascertain if it is prohibited."
    Thus the courts will cut to the heart of the scheme to determine
    whether the players paid a valuable consideration for the chance to
    win the prize however that consideration may be disguised.       An
    examination of six cases which have considered the element of
    consideration in a lottery will provide some insight on how
    California courts have applied the rules discussed above.
    In Holmes v. 
    Saunders, supra
    , a numbered ticket was
    provided to each person who paid $1 for a six months subscription
    to a publication in a subscription drive.      The holder of the
    winning ticket to be drawn on a specified date at the Oakland
    Auditorium Arena would receive a Buick automobile. The court held
    this was a lottery stating that "the consideration to make such a
    transaction a lottery need not be paid exclusively for the chance
    to win the prize.    It is sufficient that the consideration, as
    here, be paid for something else and the chance to win the prize."
    In People v. 
    Cardas, supra
    , a theater owner advertised
    that free trips to Catalina would be given to the holders of
    winning prize tickets.       Five thousand prize tickets were
    distributed with programs in the neighborhood of the theater and
    2000 others were distributed to passing motorists. Others were
    handed out in front of the theater to patrons and non-patrons
    alike.   No prize tickets were given by the cashier who sold
    admission tickets and it was not necessary to buy an admission
    ticket to secure a prize ticket.     The prize ticket stubs were
    deposited in a receptacle outside the theater. The drawing was
    held on the stage but the winning numbers were announced both
    inside and outside the theater. A person with a winning ticket
    could enter the theater to claim the prize without paying an
    admission.   The court held that this was not a lottery because
    "those who purchased admission tickets and received prize tickets,
    . . . could not be said to have paid a consideration for the prize
    tickets since they could have received them free."
    People v. 
    Gonzales, supra
    , was another theater promotion
    involving five theaters. Every two weeks $500 was awarded in a
    "cash night" drawing to the holder of the winning ticket.      The
    winning number was determined by spinning wheels and announcing it
    simultaneously over the public address systems in all five
    theaters.   One minute was given for the holder of the winning
    13.                          87-906
    ticket to claim the prize. One prize ticket was given for each
    admission ticket bought at the time of purchase and another was
    handed to each patron as they left the theater.      No ticket was
    given to anyone who had not paid for an admission. There were no
    announcements or participation outside the theater. The court held
    the cash night to be a lottery. The court distinguished People v.
    
    Cardas, supra
    , at page 281 by "the fact that there was a general
    and indiscriminate distribution of the drawing tickets irrespective
    of whether admission was paid; that attendance inside the theater
    was not a prerequisite to participation in the drawing; and
    announcement was made outside the theater for the benefit of non-
    customers."
    Cal. Gas Retailers v. Regal Petroleum 
    Corp., supra
    ,
    involved an advertising and merchandising plan by the operators of
    several gas stations. Prize tickets were given away free to anyone
    who asked for them, and to many who did not ask for them both at
    and away from the stations.      Receipt of the tickets was not
    dependent on any purchase. Ticket stubs had to be deposited at one
    of the stations. Winning ticket numbers were drawn periodically
    and posted at each station. The winner had a week to claim his
    prize. In some cases the scheme was financed by adding a cent to
    the price of the gasoline which was passed on to the customers.
    The court held there was no lottery because it clearly appeared
    from the record that any person could have received a ticket, free
    for the asking, without making any kind of purchase.
    In Polonsky v. City of South Lake (1981) 
    121 Cal. App. 3d 464
    the court held that where the city issued a limited number of
    building permits to those applicant lot owners selected by lot, the
    fact that the city charged a fee to the applicants to pay for the
    cost of notifying all lot owners of the plan did not constitute
    consideration necessary to make the plan a lottery.
    People v. 
    Shira, supra
    , involved a game called "Ringo"
    played in an amusement zone in Long Beach. The defendant had a
    city license for his "Amusement-Skill" business.          The game
    consisted of a regular bingo game, preceded by a small ring toss
    phase to qualify those who would play the bingo game, and followed
    by large ring toss to qualify the bingo winner for the prize. In
    the small ring toss each person was given small red ring free of
    charge. If he succeeded in tossing it over a small peg he would
    get two bingo cards free and could participate in the bingo game
    without charge. If he missed the toss he could buy a small white
    ring for 25 cents and receive two bingo cards with it. Those who
    succeeded in tossing the white ring over the peg got their 25 cents
    back but not if they missed. In either case they played the bingo
    cards. Only 12 percent of those playing bingo got their cards free
    by successfully tossing the small rings. After winning at bingo
    the person won the prize only if he succeeded in tossing a larger
    ring over a larger peg. The court held that Ringo was an illegal
    lottery because the vast majority of the bingo players must pay a
    14.                          87-906
    valuable consideration (25 cents) for the chance to win and the
    game of bingo, one purely of chance, dominated over the skill
    involved in the ring tosses.    The court analyzed the  Cardas,
    Gonzales, Carpenter, and Regal cases at great length. The court
    stated (at p. 459):
    "We construe the implicit holdings of those four
    cases to be, as they pertain to the presence or absence
    of the element of consideration, that in order for a
    promotional giveaway scheme to be legal any and all
    persons must be given a ticket free of charge and without
    any of them paying for the opportunity of a chance to win
    the prize. Conversely, a promotional scheme is illegal
    where any and all persons cannot participate in a chance
    for the prize and some of the participants who want a
    chance to win must pay for it."
    "In Cardas, Carpenter, and Regal the schemes lacked
    the element of consideration and were legal because there
    was a general and indiscriminate system of distribution
    of the drawing tickets and the money paid by the patrons
    for the admission ticket to the theater or for gasoline
    was no more than consideration for viewing the movie or
    for the gasoline itself. The element of consideration in
    the promotional scheme in Gonzales and the scheme were
    illegal   because   there   was   not   a   general   and
    indiscriminate distribution of the drawing tickets and
    money paid for an admission ticket to the theater also
    constituted consideration paid for the chance at the
    prize."
    In the "casino night" described in the question we are
    advised that the chips are "given" to those buying tickets to the
    event. There is no indication that any of the chips to be used at
    the games would be given away free to those who did not buy
    tickets. Thus there is no general and indiscriminate distribution
    of free chips to make this a gratuitous distribution of property.
    Instead we believe the courts would find that a portion of the
    price paid for the "casino night" tickets paid for the chips and
    thus provided the consideration requisite for a lottery.
    The players use the chips first to play the casino games
    at which they would either lose some or all of their chips or win
    more of them.   Some of the "casino games", including roulette,
    would constitute lotteries in that the players paid valuable
    consideration for the chips for the chance to win a prize. After
    the games are over we are advised that the players would use the
    chips they had left or had won to buy raffle tickets for valuable
    merchandise. As section 319 indicates, a raffle is another name
    for a lottery. The valuable merchandise (the prize) is distributed
    by chance (drawing the winning ticket) to those who have paid a
    valuable consideration (for the chips) for the chance to win.
    15.                          87-906
    The other use of the chips referred to in the question is
    their use in bidding at an auction for valuable merchandise. Since
    the auction comes at the end of the event most of the chips used at
    the auction will be those which have been won at the gaming tables.
    The auction provides the means of converting those chips into
    valuable merchandise, making them "representative of value" and an
    essential element making the playing of such games a violation of
    section 330.
    Participation
    In addition to the elements discussed above a person must
    participate in a prohibited game or lottery in a manner specified
    by statute to violate the gaming and lottery laws. Merely being a
    spectator does not violate either law.
    Section 330 provides that "every person who deals, plays,
    or carries on, opens, or causes to be opened, or who conducts,
    either as owner or employee, whether for hire or not" a game
    prohibited therein and "every person who plays or bets at or
    against any of said prohibited games" is guilty of a misdemeanor.
    Anyone who carries on or conducts a prohibited game played for
    money violates section 330 whether or not he is an employer or
    employee. (People v. Sam Lung (1886) 
    70 Cal. 515
    , 517.) Applying
    this language to the "casino night" described, those who deal,
    play, or bet at or against a prohibited game as well as those who
    open, cause to be open, carry on or conduct a prohibited game would
    violate section 330.
    Section 320 provides that "Every person who contrives,
    prepares, sets up, proposes, or draws any lottery, is guilty of a
    misdemeanor." Section 321 provides that "Every person who sells,
    gives, or in any manner whatever, furnishes or transfers to or for
    any other person any ticket, chance, share, or interest, or any
    paper, certificate, or instrument purporting or understood to be or
    to represent any ticket, chance, share, or interest in, or
    depending upon the event of any lottery, is guilty of a
    misdemeanor." Section 322 provides that "Every person who aids or
    assists, either by printing, writing, advertising, publishing, or
    otherwise in setting up, managing, or drawing any lottery, or in
    selling or disposing of any ticket, chance, or share therein, is
    guilty of a misdemeanor." Section 326 provides that "Every person
    who lets, or permits to be used, any building or vessel, or any
    portion thereof, knowing that it is to be used for setting up,
    managing, or drawing any lottery, or for the purpose of selling or
    disposing of lottery tickets, is guilty of a misdemeanor."
    Applying this language to the "casino night" described,
    those who propose, prepare, set up, furnish chips with the "casino
    night" tickets, transfer raffle tickets for chips, assist in the
    raffle drawing, or in some other manner participate in a lottery in
    16.                          87-906
    a manner prohibited by the above quoted sections are guilty of a
    misdemeanor.
    The question states that the "casino night" will be
    sponsored and conducted by a charitable organization. Of course
    this will be done by individuals who are acting on behalf of the
    organization.   If any of these individuals do any of the acts
    prohibited by the gaming or lottery statutes the fact that they
    acted on behalf of a charitable organization will not provide any
    defense to such violations. Nor will the fact that the proceeds of
    the "casino night" will be used only for charitable purposes
    provide any defense to their violations. (See 64 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen.
    114, 117 (1981).) The only exception in California's gambling laws
    for charities is that provided in section 326.5 authorizing cities
    and counties to authorize certain organizations to conduct bingo
    games for charitable purposes only.
    We conclude that a charitable organization may not
    lawfully sponsor or conduct a "casino night" event for which
    tickets are sold to the general public where those attending would
    be given chips with which to play roulette, twenty-one, and similar
    types of games and the chips won by the players would be used at
    the end of the event to (1) acquire raffle tickets to be drawn for
    valuable merchandise or (2) bid at auction for valuable
    merchandise.
    * * * * *
    17.                          87-906
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 87-906

Filed Date: 4/20/1988

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017