Pauline McKee v. Isle of Capri Casinos, Inc. and Ioc Black Hawk County, Inc. , 2015 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 50 ( 2015 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 14–0802
    Filed April 24, 2015
    PAULINE McKEE,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    ISLE OF CAPRI CASINOS, INC. and IOC BLACK HAWK COUNTY, INC.,
    Appellees.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County,
    Todd A. Geer, Judge.
    A casino patron who sued to recover a bonus allegedly won on a
    slot machine appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to
    the casino. AFFIRMED.
    Stephen J. Powell of Swisher & Cohrt, P.L.C., Waterloo, and
    Steven R. Enochian of Low McKinley Baleria & Salenko, Walnut Creek,
    California, for appellant.
    Stacey L. Cormican of Nyemaster Goode, Cedar Rapids, and Mark
    A. Schultheis of Nyemaster Goode, P.C., Des Moines, for appellees.
    2
    MANSFIELD, Justice.
    This case requires us to apply ordinary contract principles to an
    extraordinary event.    While playing a penny slot machine, a casino
    patron obtained a win of 185 credits, or $1.85, based on how the
    symbols had lined up. However, at the same time a message appeared
    on the screen stating, “Bonus Award - $41797550.16.”           The casino
    refused to pay the alleged bonus, claiming it was an error and not part of
    the game. The patron brought suit against the casino, asserting breach
    of contract, estoppel, and consumer fraud.     The district court granted
    summary judgment to the casino. The patron appealed.
    On appeal, we conclude the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment was proper. The rules of the game formed a contract between
    the patron and the casino, and the patron was not entitled to the bonus
    under those rules.     Further, the patron failed to prove the necessary
    elements of either promissory or equitable estoppel. At no time did the
    casino represent to her that a bonus would be available if she played the
    game, nor did the casino promise to pay the $41 million after the notice
    was displayed. In any event, the patron did not detrimentally rely on any
    representation by the casino. Finally, the patron failed to present proof
    of an ascertainable loss sufficient to warrant recovery on her consumer
    fraud claim.   We therefore affirm the district court’s ruling granting
    summary judgment to the casino on all three counts.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    On July 2, 2011, Pauline McKee, an eighty-seven-year-old
    grandmother of thirteen living in Antioch, Illinois, was attending a family
    reunion in Waterloo.     That evening, she and several members of her
    family gambled at the Isle Casino Hotel Waterloo operated by IOC Black
    Hawk County, Inc. (hereinafter jointly referred to as “the casino”), a
    3
    combination hotel and casino where some members of the reunion party
    were staying.   Around nine o’clock, one of McKee’s daughters invited
    McKee to sit down next to her and play a slot machine called “Miss
    Kitty.” McKee had played slot machines two to three times per year since
    she was approximately twenty-one years old, but had never played this
    particular game before.
    The Miss Kitty game is a penny slot machine manufactured by
    Aristocrat Technologies, Inc. (Aristocrat). It displays five reels and fifty
    paylines on a video screen.      To play the game, a patron selects the
    number of paylines and the amount bet per line.         One cent buys one
    credit, and one half credit buys one line. A player’s total bet is calculated
    by multiplying the number of credits by the number of lines bet.
    Therefore, although it is called a penny machine, it is possible to bet
    more than just one cent per spin. As with other slot machines, a person
    wins at the Miss Kitty game by lining up different combinations of
    symbols from left to right on the paylines.
    The game includes a button entitled “Touch Game Rules” in the
    lower left-hand corner of the screen. Tapping this button displays the
    rules that govern the game and a chart describing potential winning
    combinations of symbols, known as a paytable.         The first page of the
    rules reads as follows:
    TOTAL BET is the number of credits on the LINES
    button multiplied by the number on the BET button. TOTAL
    BET and lines played during the free games are the same as
    for the game that started the feature. Choose your number
    of paylines, then choose your bet per line to begin game.
    Highest win paid on any lit payline except for scatters which
    are added to payline wins. Scattered [moon emblem] wins
    added to payline wins. All wins shown in credits. All wins
    multiplied by credits bet per line except scatters. Wins on
    different lit paylines added. All wins on lines played except
    scatters which are added to payline wins.
    4
    MALFUNCTION VOIDS ALL PAYS AND PLAYS. . . .
    The next rules screen states, “All wins begin with leftmost reel, and
    pay left to right only on adjacent reels.” Additionally, the rules provide
    that when three “scattered moon” symbols appear left to right on
    adjacent wheels, the player wins double the total amount displayed.
    Furthermore, when three “scattered moon” symbols appear on the
    screen, the game enters a special mode called “Sticky Wild™ Free Games
    Feature” that lasts for ten games.        During these ten games, any wild
    symbol (represented by a Miss Kitty emblem) that appears on the screen
    “sticks” and stays in place for the rest of the ten games, thereby making
    it easier for the patron to complete winning patterns.
    The third rules screen explains there are eleven symbols other
    than the moon and Miss Kitty wild images, each with varying credit
    values.     The fourth screen displays the paytable entitled “Paylines.”
    Finally, a sign posted on the front of the machine reiterates,
    “MALFUNCTION VOIDS ALL PAYS AND PLAYS.”
    The parties agree that all the potential ways of winning from lining
    up various combinations of symbols are accurately listed in the rules and
    paytable.     The rules and paytable do not mention any additional
    bonuses, jackpots, or prizes available to a patron playing the Miss Kitty
    game.
    McKee did not read the rules of the game or look at the paytable
    before playing the Miss Kitty game. Around 10:00 p.m., after McKee had
    been using the machine for a while, she wagered $0.25 on a particular
    spin. The following message appeared:
    Credit   Bet     Win
    1810    25     185
    The reels have rolled your way!
    5
    Bonus Award - $41797550.16
    Beneath this message was a five-by-four configuration of symbols. It is
    undisputed that under the rules of the game, McKee was entitled to a
    win of 185 credits, or $1.85, based on that alignment of symbols. The
    dispute, of course, concerns the “Bonus Award” of $41,797,550.16.
    Believing she had won a large bonus, McKee and her daughter
    summoned a casino attendant to the machine. An employee responded
    and accessed the main door of the game to clean the central processing
    unit. The senior supervisor/shift manager on duty that night was also
    called to the machine to investigate. The supervisor photographed the
    display on the Miss Kitty machine. A slot technician restarted the game.
    The supervisor informed McKee and her daughter that she needed to
    make a few phone calls and gave McKee a $10 card to play other games
    while she waited.       Eventually, a casino manager instructed the
    supervisor to block off the machine pending further investigation. The
    supervisor paid McKee the $18.10 she had won on the Miss Kitty
    machine up to that point.     The supervisor explained the casino was
    looking into the machine and informed McKee her room would be paid
    for by the casino. No employee of the casino ever informed McKee that
    she would actually receive the $41,797,550.16 bonus.
    The next day, the vice president/general manager of the casino
    also investigated the incident and left a note and her business card for
    McKee. She concluded it was an “unusual situation” and comped the
    additional rooms that McKee’s family members were staying in.       She
    explained the casino had informed the Iowa Racing and Gaming
    Commission (IRGC) of the situation and that the machine would be
    secured and studied.
    6
    The IRGC conducted an independent investigation. As part of this
    investigation, it sent the hardware and software from the Miss Kitty
    machine to a testing laboratory, Gaming Laboratories Inc. (GLI), along
    with related documentation and other materials.                      GLI’s analysis
    concluded as follows:
    The logs on the machine do indicate that it thought it
    received a legacy bonus. 1 However, in reviewing the legacy
    bonusing aspect of SAS [the casino’s “slot accounting
    system”] it was noticed that the SAS legacy bonus command
    can send a bonus up to $99999.99, which is far less than
    was awarded by the game. Furthermore, the system does
    not support legacy bonusing. As a result, it appears the SPC
    board [hardware inside the Miss Kitty machine] erroneously
    determined that it received a legacy bonus award from the
    system and sent it to the game.
    ....
    In conclusion, GLI was unable to definitively determine
    the exact cause of the erroneous bonus award. However, it
    is apparent, based on the reviewed information that the
    bonus award was not valid. Unfortunately, given the lack of
    conclusive evidence, GLI cannot confidently speculate as to
    how the bonus amount was received and displayed at the
    gaming machine in question. However, it is highly likely that
    the erroneous message originated from the SPC 2.0
    communication board and was then relayed to the game.
    The IRGC also requested information from the manufacturer of the
    machine, Aristocrat.       Aristocrat responded to the IRGC with a letter
    concluding that the bonus displayed on the screen was an error. It noted
    it had previously issued a bulletin regarding the issue:
    ATI [Aristocrat Technologies, Inc.] has been aware of
    the possibility of an erroneous value being displayed under
    this type of situation, i.e., where “Legacy Bonusing” is
    enabled on the gaming machine without the required poll.
    1Although  the record is somewhat unclear as to what a “legacy bonus” is, it
    appears to be a form of bonus transmitted from the casino’s central system to the
    specific machine. Regardless, it is undisputed that bonuses were not a part of the Miss
    Kitty game.
    7
    In response to the possibility of this type of erroneous
    display, ATI previously provided a Technical Information
    Bulletin to the Industry in November, 2010. The Technical
    Bulletin outlined the issue and the course of action
    Aristocrat was taking in developing a new System Base and
    SPC2, as well as ATI’s recommendation to casinos for
    disabling of the bonus option as a preventative action.
    The technical bulletin the casino had received from Aristocrat
    described the problem as follows:
    A rare and unlikely circumstance has been discovered
    when legacy bonusing is enabled on the MKVI™ platform
    when used with the SPC2.0 – an erroneous bonus amount
    can be awarded to the machine, which may cause the
    machine to go into an attendant hand pay condition with the
    erroneous bonus amount displayed on the screen. Aristocrat
    believes that SPC2.0 component degradation over time may
    increase the susceptibility to this rare occurrence.
    An accompanying product notification described the solution to the
    problem as a “Non-Mandatory upgrade” and stated “[t]he conditionally
    revoked version must be replaced in the field by August 31, 2011.”
    The record also indicates that this machine had been serviced
    earlier in the evening of July 2 and that the CPU had been cleaned and
    reinstalled around 7:30 p.m.
    As a result of the IRGC’s investigation, administrator Brian
    Ohorilko wrote a letter to the casino manager concluding the bonus was
    an invalid display. The letter stated, in relevant part:
    Based on the information available and received, the
    jackpot amount displayed on the slot machine game screen
    is not valid. . . . The information pertaining to the maximum
    award was displayed on the pay table of the slot machine;
    therefore the maximum award information was available to
    the player prior to playing. In addition, the symbols on the
    slot machine game screen resulting from the spin by the
    patron demonstrated a combination that should pay out
    $1.85 as verified by the paytable on the slot machine . . . .
    ....
    8
    In summary, IRGC staff has confirmed that the slot
    machine game malfunctioned and did not operate in
    accordance with the representation made to the commission.
    Based on the IRGC’s determination that the bonus award
    displayed on the screen was not valid, the casino refused to pay McKee
    the $41,797,550.16.
    McKee filed suit against the casino in the Iowa District Court for
    Black Hawk County on January 26, 2012. She alleged the casino had
    breached a contract to pay her the bonus, the casino should be estopped
    from refusing to pay the award, and the casino’s actions violated Iowa’s
    Consumer Fraud Act. See Iowa Code § 714H.5 (2011).
    The casino moved for summary judgment.           In support of its
    motion, the casino attached numerous exhibits, including a copy of its
    license from the IRGC, a photograph of the screen displaying the award
    message, the Miss Kitty instruction screens and paytable, a copy of the
    IRGC’s letter, and excerpts from McKee’s deposition. McKee resisted the
    motion for summary judgment and submitted her own exhibits,
    including two depositions from McKee herself, numerous excerpts from
    depositions of casino employees, copies of the GLI and Aristocrat letters,
    interrogatory answers from her expert indicating the award was not the
    result of a malfunction, and the log from the slot machine in question.
    The district court granted the casino’s motion on all three counts
    in a ruling issued on October 15, 2013.     With respect to the contract
    claim, the court stated that all gambling contracts in Iowa are governed
    by chapter 99F. See Iowa Code ch. 99F. Observing that this chapter
    grants regulatory authority to the IRGC, the court concluded the rules of
    the game approved by the IRGC constituted the contract between McKee
    and the casino:
    9
    These written, approved rules of the Miss Kitty game
    formed the gambling contract between McKee and the
    casino. McKee could have read the rules of play had she
    chosen to do so. Although she did not actually read the
    rules of the game, she was nevertheless bound by them
    when she chose to play the game. By doing so, she entered
    into a written, binding, “aleatory” contract with the casino.
    [A]n aleatory contract is one in which a party’s duty to
    perform is conditioned upon some fortuitous event, such as
    winning at a slot machine. . . . Under the aleatory contract
    in this case, McKee promised to pay a certain amount of
    money and place bets, and the casino promised to give her
    an award based on what bets she made and the way the
    “reels” lined up at the end of the game of chance. On the
    play in question, the alignment of the reels entitled her to a
    prize of $1.85, and the casino paid it to her, fulfilling its side
    of the contract.
    ....
    In this case, Plaintiff seems to simultaneously argue
    that the “bonus” shown on the game screen was both
    directly related to the playing of the game, and completely
    separate from it. On the one hand, during the hearing on
    the current motion, Plaintiff asserted that the bonus shown
    on the screen was not related to the alignment of the reels,
    but rather to a “legacy bonus payout system.” Plaintiff
    argued that such bonuses are marketing tools not subject to
    IRGC regulation, analogous to such “bonuses” as free rooms
    or meals for loyal patrons. As such, Plaintiff argued, the
    bonuses exist outside the written rules of the game itself.
    The Court finds this argument unconvincing.
    Although the casino had enabled a “legacy bonus” feature on
    the slot machine, Plaintiff had no reason to believe that by
    playing the game she might be able to win any money
    beyond that related to the rules of the game.
    (Alteration in original.)   (Citations omitted.)   (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.)
    The court went on to grant summary judgment to the casino on
    McKee’s equitable and promissory estoppel claims as well.            It noted
    “neither version of estoppel can be used to undo the terms of an express,
    written contract.” It also concluded McKee’s promissory estoppel claim
    failed because she did not provide evidence of either a clear and definite
    promise or detrimental reliance. Additionally, the court rejected McKee’s
    10
    consumer fraud claim, reasoning that she had not suffered an
    “ascertainable loss of money or property” based on fraud. See Iowa Code
    § 714H.5(1). At most, McKee had not received a $41 million bonus she
    claimed to be entitled to.
    Subsequently, McKee filed a rule 1.904(2) motion asking the court
    to enlarge or amend its findings and reconsider its grant of summary
    judgment to the casino.       McKee argued the court should not have
    considered    the   IRGC’s   letter   determining   the   Miss    Kitty   game
    malfunctioned. She maintained the letter was irrelevant since the IRGC
    did not have jurisdiction to resolve disputes between casinos and
    patrons.    McKee also claimed the record evidence did not support the
    court’s conclusion that there was an express contract between her and
    the casino.     She further urged that whether or not the machine had
    “malfunctioned” was a question of fact that precluded summary
    judgment.     Likewise, McKee argued the evidence did not support a
    finding of summary judgment with respect to the estoppel or consumer
    fraud claims.    Finally, McKee requested the court to consider several
    depositions that had been taken after the summary judgment hearing
    but before the court’s ruling.
    The casino opposed McKee’s rule 1.904(2) motion, maintaining
    that McKee should not be permitted to offer new evidence and that the
    court’s initial ruling on summary judgment had been correct. On April
    23, 2014, the court ruled on McKee’s rule 1.904(2) motion. It stated it
    had reviewed all the new evidence, including McKee’s additional
    depositions, and still concluded that no issues of material fact precluded
    summary judgment in the casino’s favor.
    McKee appealed on May 14, and we retained the case. The casino
    moved to dismiss the appeal, claiming it was untimely.           It stated that
    11
    McKee’s rule 1.904(2) motion was filed for an improper purpose (to
    introduce new evidence), and therefore did not toll the period in which to
    file an appeal, resulting in an untimely notice of appeal. We ordered the
    motion to dismiss submitted with the appeal.
    II. Standard of Review.
    We review grants of summary judgment for correction of errors at
    law. Freeman v. Grain Processing Corp., 
    848 N.W.2d 58
    , 65 (Iowa 2014).
    “Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine issue of
    material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law.”   Rosauer Corp. v. Sapp Dev., L.L.C., 
    856 N.W.2d 906
    , 908 (Iowa
    2014). We view the record in the light most favorable to McKee because
    she is the nonmoving party.       See Shelby Cnty. Cookers, L.L.C. v. Util.
    Consultants Int’l, Inc., 
    857 N.W.2d 186
    , 189 (Iowa 2014).
    While actions brought under the Consumer Fraud Act are normally
    tried in equity and reviewed de novo, when they are resolved on a motion
    for summary judgment, our review is for the correction of errors at law.
    State ex rel. Miller v. Cutty’s Des Moines Camping Club, Inc., 
    694 N.W.2d 518
    , 524 (Iowa 2005).
    III. Timeliness of the Appeal.
    We first address the casino’s motion to dismiss McKee’s appeal as
    untimely.    Our court rules provide that a party must file a notice of
    appeal from a final order of the district court within thirty days. Iowa R.
    App. P. 6.101(1)(b). When an appeal is not filed within the limitations
    period, we do not have subject matter jurisdiction over the appeal. Baur
    v. Baur Farms, Inc., 
    832 N.W.2d 663
    , 668 (Iowa 2013).        However, if a
    party files a timely and procedurally proper motion under Iowa Rule of
    Civil Procedure 1.904(2), this extends the deadline for filing the notice of
    appeal to thirty days after the ruling on the motion. See Iowa R. App. P.
    12
    6.101(1)(b).   The casino contends that because McKee’s rule 1.904(2)
    motion was filed for an improper reason, it failed to toll the filing period
    for her appeal, and her subsequent notice of appeal was rendered
    untimely. See In re Marriage of Okland, 
    699 N.W.2d 260
    , 266–67 (Iowa
    2005) (“[A]n untimely or improper rule 1.904(2) motion cannot extend the
    time for appeal.” (Footnote omitted.)).
    Generally speaking, a party cannot use a rule 1.904(2) motion to
    introduce new evidence. See In re Marriage of Bolick, 
    539 N.W.2d 357
    ,
    361 (Iowa 1995) (“Motions under rule [1.904(2)’s predecessor] are
    permitted so that courts may enlarge or modify findings based on
    evidence already in the record. They are not vehicles for parties to retry
    issues based on new facts.”). However, that was not the only basis for
    McKee’s motion.     For example, McKee’s motion also challenged the
    district court’s repeated references to a “malfunction” in its summary
    judgment ruling, emphasizing that on the record as it existed before that
    ruling, whether the Miss Kitty machine had malfunctioned was a
    disputed issue of material fact.    Furthermore, McKee noted the casino
    had not requested summary judgment on the basis of an undisputed
    malfunction. The district court in fact modified this aspect of its original
    ruling when it acted on McKee’s motion.
    In Tenney v. Atlantic Associates, we determined the plaintiff’s
    motion was adequate to toll the appellate filing period, despite the fact
    the plaintiff had requested the court to consider new evidence, because
    the motion also had a proper purpose.       See 
    594 N.W.2d 11
    , 14 (Iowa
    1999). We noted:
    It is true the postjudgment motion relied on evidence that
    had not been included in the original resistance, but it also
    relied on evidence that had been included in the resistance. .
    . . The plaintiff’s motion asked the court to modify the
    13
    judgment in light of this [existing] evidence and was a proper
    motion . . . .
    
    Id. For similar
    reasons, we conclude McKee’s appeal was timely and the
    casino’s motion to dismiss should be denied.
    IV. Merits of the Summary Judgment Ruling.
    Having determined the appeal was timely, we turn now to the
    merits.     McKee contends the court committed legal error in granting
    summary judgment on the three counts of her petition: breach of
    contract, estoppel, and consumer fraud. We will address each in turn.
    A. Breach of Contract.      McKee claims summary judgment was
    inappropriate on her contract claim because the court incorrectly
    concluded there was an express contract. She urges us instead to find
    that only an implied contract existed and it should be for the factfinder
    to determine its terms. She further claims that any contract between the
    two parties was ambiguous, thereby generating another fact question for
    the jury.
    Gambling contracts are governed by traditional contract principles.
    See Blackford v. Prairie Meadows Racetrack & Casino, Inc., 
    778 N.W.2d 184
    , 189 (Iowa 2010).     A contract can be either express or implied.
    Rucker v. Taylor, 
    828 N.W.2d 595
    , 601 (Iowa 2013). We have recently
    explained the difference between express and implied contracts:
    When the parties manifest their agreement by words the
    contract is said to be express. When it is manifested by
    conduct it is said to be implied in fact. Both are true
    contracts formed by a mutual manifestation of assent by the
    parties to the same terms of the contract. The differentiation
    arises from the method of proving the existence thereof.
    
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted).     “[T]he law will not imply a
    contract where there is an express contract.” Scott v. Grinnell Mut. Reins.
    Co., 
    653 N.W.2d 556
    , 562 (Iowa 2002) (alteration in original) (internal
    14
    quotation marks omitted); see also 1 Richard A. Lord, Williston on
    Contracts § 1:5, at 40 (4th ed. 2007) (“The law may recognize an implied
    contract in the absence of an express contract on the same subject
    matter, but not where there is an express contract . . . .”).
    We agree with the district court that the Miss Kitty rules of the
    game are the relevant contract here and that they form an express
    contract.   “It is hornbook law that the rules of a contest constitute a
    contract offer and that the participant’s [entry into] the contest
    constitute[s] an acceptance of that offer, including all of its terms and
    conditions.”   Sargent v. N.Y. Daily News, L.P., 
    840 N.Y.S.2d 101
    , 103
    (App. Div. 2007) (first alteration in original) (internal quotation marks
    omitted); see also Anthony Cabot & Robert Hannum, Advantage Play and
    Commercial Casinos, 74 Miss. L.J. 681, 682–83 (2005) (“Casino-style
    gambling involves a contract, which is simply a promise, or set of
    promises, between the casino and the player.” (Footnote omitted.)).
    Further, it is undisputed the rules of the Miss Kitty game did not
    provide for any kind of bonus.       Hence, in our view, McKee had no
    contractual right to a bonus.      Any message appearing on the screen
    indicating the patron would receive a $41 million bonus was a gratuitous
    promise and the casino’s failure to pay it could not be challenged as a
    breach of contract. See Margeson v. Artis, 
    776 N.W.2d 652
    , 655 (Iowa
    2009) (“[C]ontract law exists to enforce mutual bargains, not gratuitous
    promises.”). Consider the other side of the coin: Suppose the symbols
    had aligned so that McKee was entitled to a payout under the rules of the
    game, but the machine did not inform her of a payout. Would the casino
    have been obligated to compensate her despite the absence of a
    notification that she had won? We think so.
    15
    Nor is it relevant that McKee failed to read the rules of the game
    before playing it. It is sufficient that those rules were readily accessible
    to her and she had an opportunity to read them. See Huber v. Hovey,
    
    501 N.W.2d 53
    , 55 (Iowa 1993) (“[F]ailure to read a contract before
    signing it will not invalidate the contract.    Absent fraud or mistake,
    ignorance of a written contract’s contents will not negate its effect.”
    (Citation omitted.)).
    Courts in other jurisdictions, when confronted with bonus payout
    claims against casinos, have regularly applied the foregoing standard
    contract principles. In Eash v. Imperial Palace of Mississippi, LLC, the
    Mississippi Supreme Court held a patron was limited to the $8000
    payout listed in the game’s rules rather than the $1,000,000 bonus that
    had appeared on the game screen. 
    4 So. 3d 1042
    , 1048 (Miss. 2009).
    Eash was playing a slot machine at the casino when a message scrolled
    across the screen reflecting a 200,000 credit “Jackpot” totaling
    $1,000,000.    
    Id. at 1043.
      The rules of the game as displayed on the
    machine, however, indicated the maximum available award was only
    $8000. 
    Id. at 1043–44.
    The court concluded that the display of a higher
    jackpot amount than was available under the posted rules did not create
    an ambiguity in the gambling contract:
    The fact that the electronic displays erroneously stated that
    Eash won $1,000,000 after she hit the winning combination
    does not create an ambiguity . . . . Though it unfortunately
    caused some confusion, there was no indication from
    anything on the machine before Eash began playing that
    indicated that a patron could win anything more than
    $8,000 with three double diamonds lined up on the pay line.
    In other words, there was no question, ex ante, as to what a
    winning combination was or what the corresponding award
    would be on the machine in this case.
    
    Id. at 1047.
                                       16
    In Pickle v. IGT, the same court turned down a slot machine
    player’s claim under similar circumstances.     
    830 So. 2d 1214
    , 1223
    (Miss. 2002). There the machine displayed three symbols that, per the
    rules of the game, were not a winning combination.          
    Id. at 1215.
    However, the machine simultaneously indicated the patron had won a
    jackpot, and the machine’s bells and whistles went off. 
    Id. at 1215–16.
    An investigation revealed that the displayed symbols correctly depicted
    the outcome of the game (i.e., not a winner) rather than the jackpot
    notification sounds. 
    Id. at 1218.
    The Mississippi Supreme Court upheld
    the investigator’s conclusion that “the symbols displayed by the
    machines correctly depicted the outcome of the game” and the patron
    was not entitled to the jackpot money despite the noises indicating a win.
    
    Id. at 1218,
    1222 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    In another case, the Alabama Supreme Court overturned a
    multimillion dollar award in favor of a casino patron, finding that
    genuine issues of material fact necessitated a trial.       Macon Cnty.
    Greyhound Park, Inc. v. Knowles, 
    39 So. 3d 100
    , 112–13 (Ala. 2009). The
    patron, Knowles, had been playing an electronic bingo machine at the
    casino when she hit a “snake eyes” combination, which was worth only
    two credits according to the game’s paytable.       
    Id. at 105–06,
    112.
    Nevertheless, the machine’s lights went off and the credits on the
    machine began to accumulate up to an amount worth at least
    $10,000,000.   
    Id. at 106.
      Knowles contended, in part, that the rules
    should not govern the disputed payout because they were not visible on
    the face of the machine, but rather were only viewable if she pushed a
    button to read them—an action she did not do. 
    Id. at 110.
    The court
    found it immaterial that Knowles had not actually read the rules. 
    Id. at 111–12.
    It further determined that summary judgment for Knowles was
    17
    improper because the casino’s evidence indicated the snake eyes display
    was worth only two credits. 
    Id. at 112.
    To the same effect is Miller v. Sodak Gaming, Inc., 93 F. App’x 847,
    848 (6th Cir. 2004). There, despite a patron’s claim she had won a $1.5
    million jackpot based on lights and music coming from the slot machine
    she was using, the court held she was not entitled to an award because
    there was “no genuine issue of material fact that Miller was not a jackpot
    winner under the rules of the game.” 
    Id. at 848–49.
    These authorities
    support the grant of summary judgment in this case.
    In contrast, the Louisiana Court of Appeals directed a casino to
    pay bonuses of $65,581.00 and $32,790.50 respectively to two patrons
    even though the bonuses were allegedly more than the maximum payout
    the machine had been programmed to award. Ledoux v. Grand Casino–
    Coushatta, 
    954 So. 2d 902
    , 904, 909 (La. Ct. App. 2007). In that case,
    two plaintiffs on separate occasions had played the same slot machine
    game. 
    Id. at 908.
    Both times, the monitor displayed a combination of
    three “7s” and indicated the patrons had won a “Bonus Spin.” 
    Id. When the
    patrons played the bonus round, the monitor on the machine
    indicated they had won the large jackpots in question.       
    Id. In both
    instances, although employees of the casino initially congratulated the
    patrons, the casino later refused to pay the bonuses because they were a
    higher amount than the machine was supposedly programmed to award
    for a display of three “7s.” 
    Id. at 908–09.
    Ledoux is distinguishable from the present case. There, the casino
    did not dispute that the rules of the game included a bonus wheel and
    that the patrons had qualified for a bonus; moreover, there was no
    indication in those rules that the amount of any given bonus was limited.
    See 
    id. at 909–10.
    This contrasts with the present case, where McKee
    18
    seeks an award of a random bonus not available under the rules of the
    game.
    Additionally, in Ledoux, after rejecting the casino’s rules-of-the-
    game defense, the court then turned to the issue of whether there had
    been a machine malfunction, a second defense asserted by the casino.
    
    Id. at 910.
    At that point, the court found the casino had not presented
    sufficient evidence to show a malfunction had in fact occurred. 
    Id. at 910–11.
    The court explained,
    [W]here there was no apparent malfunction indication by the
    slot machine itself, a casino may not rely on the argument
    that the machine was not intended to register the particular
    jackpot to deny payment. That is to say, there must [be]
    objective proof of a malfunction.
    
    Id. at 912.
        Here, the district court did not reach the question of
    malfunction, and neither do we.
    Another case where the patron prevailed because recovery was
    available under the rules of the game is IGT v. Kelly, 
    778 So. 2d 773
    ,
    774–75 (Miss. 2001) (en banc).      There the Mississippi Supreme Court
    found a patron was entitled to a large bonus for a display of a royal flush
    on a video poker game. See 
    id. at 779.
    A sign on the machine stated
    that a sequential royal flush in hearts would garner a large sum of
    money. 
    Id. at 774.
    In parentheses, the sign gave the example of a “10, J,
    Q, K, A” in hearts. 
    Id. at 775.
    Kelly played the machine and received an
    A, K, Q, J, 10 of hearts. 
    Id. at 774.
    The casino claimed that only an
    ascending royal flush—rather than a descending one like Kelly had
    received—was sufficient to win the prize. 
    Id. The gaming
    commission, in
    a finding upheld by the Mississippi Supreme Court, determined the
    patron should prevail because the sign did not specify that only
    19
    ascending royal flushes would win or that the example on the sign was
    only accurate if read from left to right. 
    Id. at 774,
    779.
    Unlike in Kelly, in this case, the rules made no mention of the
    possibility of bonuses or jackpots beyond the actual winnings based on
    different reel combinations. In short, “there was no question, ex ante, as
    to what a winning combination was or what the corresponding award
    would be on the machine.” 
    Eash, 4 So. 3d at 1047
    . The parties’ express
    contract did not include the possibility of winning a bonus, but was
    rather limited to the display of different reel combinations and their
    corresponding credit values.    Therefore, we conclude McKee should be
    limited to recovering the 185 credits worth $1.85 that the parties agree
    the   displayed   reels   amounted     to,   rather   than   the   additional
    $41,797,550.16 that did not correspond to the displayed reels or the
    paytable.
    McKee counters with several arguments. We will discuss each of
    them, but we do not believe any of them is sufficient to create a genuine
    issue of fact that would preclude summary judgment.            First, McKee
    argues that her agreement was not an express contract dictated by the
    rules of the game, but simply an implied one that she would get whatever
    the machine said she would get.         McKee cites no authority for this
    theory, and as noted above, it is contrary to precedent and general
    contract principles.
    Alternatively, McKee insists the “legacy bonus” is separate and
    apart from the Miss Kitty game, and that she had both an express
    agreement (the game) and an implied agreement (the bonus) with the
    casino. However, even assuming McKee could have had both an express
    agreement and an implied agreement with the casino at the same time,
    cf. 
    Scott, 653 N.W.2d at 562
    , she fails to explain the derivation of the
    20
    latter agreement. McKee had no understanding—implied or otherwise—
    that she might be eligible for legacy bonuses if she played at the casino,
    and she points to nothing that could have created an expectation in any
    patron that he or she might receive such a bonus. At most, the casino,
    through the machine, made a statement that McKee was going to receive
    a bonus, which it was entitled to withdraw so long as that statement was
    not part of a binding contract.
    McKee also maintains there is a fact issue whether the machine
    malfunctioned or not. Therefore, McKee continues, a trial needs to occur
    on whether the casino can avoid liability based upon the sign on the
    machine and the statement in the game rules that “MALFUNCTION
    VOIDS ALL PAYS AND PLAYS.”          However, we agree with the district
    court’s rule 1.904(2) ruling that the existence or not of a mechanical
    malfunction is beside the point.      It is only necessary to reach the
    malfunction defense if McKee otherwise could receive an award under
    the terms of the contract. Hypothetically, if the casino declined to pay an
    award that was otherwise payable based on the alignment of the
    symbols, the casino would then have to establish that the slot machine
    had a technical malfunction in order to avoid paying the award.       See,
    e.g., Sengel v. IGT, 
    2 P.3d 258
    , 262–63 (Nev. 2000) (upholding the gaming
    control board’s denial of a jackpot to the plaintiff after a slot machine’s
    reels stopped in a jackpot alignment due to a malfunction).      However,
    when the machine, as here, generates an award that is not within the
    rules of the game, isolating the cause of what happened is not necessary.
    It is sufficient for present purposes that the award was erroneous in the
    sense that it was not a part of the game.
    Along related lines, McKee maintains that the casino has failed to
    establish a mistake as a matter of law. Mistake, however, is a defense to
    21
    be raised when a party wants to avoid the effect of the actual contract
    terms. See Soults Farms, Inc. v. Schafer, 
    797 N.W.2d 92
    , 108–09 (Iowa
    2011) (“Where there has been a mistake, whether mutual or unilateral, in
    the expression of the contract, reformation is the proper remedy.”). The
    casino does not need to rely on a mistake defense because it is following
    the contract terms, not seeking to avoid them.
    On point is a decision of the Michigan Court of Appeals.            See
    Coleman v. State, 
    258 N.W.2d 84
    , 87 (Mich. Ct. App. 1977). In Coleman,
    the plaintiff was erroneously announced as the winner of a $200,000
    lottery prize. 
    Id. at 86.
    Although the district court had found for the
    plaintiff, the court of appeals reversed and rejected the plaintiff’s claim as
    a matter of law. 
    Id. at 87.
    The appellate court reasoned,
    A lottery winner’s entitlement to a prize is governed by
    the principles of contract law. In the instant case the
    bureau made a public offer that the purchaser of a lottery
    ticket would have a chance of winning a prize according to
    the advertised rules and procedures of the lottery. In
    purchasing her ticket Mrs. Coleman accepted that offer and
    agreed to the announced rules for determining prize winners.
    
    Id. at 86
    (citations omitted). The court further commented,
    In granting judgment for Mrs. Coleman, the lower
    court relied upon general principles of contract law
    pertaining to unilateral mistake and recision. The original
    contract between Mrs. Coleman and the bureau, however,
    was clear and unambiguous and there was no mistake as to
    its terms. The body of contract law relating to unilateral
    mistake and recision, therefore, is not applicable unless it
    can be established that a new contract was created between
    the bureau and Mrs. Coleman as a result of the erroneous
    award. . . .
    . . . In this case, the bureau did not impose additional
    conditions but only enforced the previously announced rules
    for the drawing.
    22
    
    Id. at 86
    –87; see also 
    Sargent, 840 N.Y.S.2d at 103
    –04 (finding the rules
    of the game governed rather than an erroneous notification that the
    plaintiff had won a prize).
    McKee further criticizes the casino for failing to heed the slot
    machine manufacturer’s warnings by continuing to use the Miss Kitty
    machine without affirmatively disabling the legacy bonus capability.
    However, this is a tort theory, rather than a contract one.                     From a
    contract law perspective, what matters is whether some express or
    implied agreement gave McKee a right to a bonus, not whether the casino
    may have been negligent. 2
    B. Estoppel.        McKee claims the trial court erred in granting
    summary judgment to the casino on her equitable and promissory
    estoppel causes of action, as well as in failing to consider equitable
    estoppel as a defense.
    Equitable estoppel requires McKee to prove the following elements:
    (1) The defendant has made a false representation or
    has concealed material facts; (2) the plaintiff lacks
    knowledge of the true facts; (3) the defendant intended
    2As an additional defense, the casino argues that the $41,797,550.16 bonus was
    invalid because it was far above the maximum award the IRGC had authorized for the
    game. See Iowa Code § 537A.4 (stating gambling contracts are void except for those
    authorized by statute, including under chapter 99F); 
    id. § 99F.4
    (conferring regulatory
    and supervisory jurisdiction over all gambling contracts to the IRGC); Iowa Admin. Code
    r. 491—11.4(3) (requiring submission of game rules to the IRGC in advance); 
    id. r. 491—11.4(5)
    (stating all gambling games are required to “operate and play in
    accordance with the representation made to the [Iowa Racing and Gaming C]ommission
    and the public at all times”).
    In Blackford, we stated, “The freedom to contract [for gambling under chapter
    99F] is not, however, unlimited. When a contract addresses an area of law regulated by
    a statute, the statutory provisions and restrictions are a part of the parties’ 
    contract.” 778 N.W.2d at 189
    . Here, the IRGC confirmed after the fact that the maximum award
    for the game, including any potential bonus, was $10,000. However, because we
    uphold the district court’s summary judgment based on traditional contract principles,
    we need not reach the casino’s additional argument that a $41 million bonus would
    have been illegal under regulatory provisions incorporated into the parties’ contract.
    23
    the plaintiff to act upon such representations; and (4) the
    plaintiff did in fact rely upon such representations to his
    prejudice.
    Sioux Pharm, Inc. v. Summit Nutritionals Int’l, Inc., 
    859 N.W.2d 182
    , 191
    (Iowa 2015) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The doctrine of equitable estoppel is a common law
    doctrine preventing one party who has made certain
    representations from taking unfair advantage of another
    when the party making the representations changes its
    position to the prejudice of the party who relied upon the
    representations.
    ABC Disposal Sys., Inc. v. Dep’t of Natural Res., 
    681 N.W.2d 596
    , 606
    (Iowa 2004).
    Here, there is no evidence the casino made a representation on
    which McKee relied to her prejudice. See Sioux Pharm, 
    Inc., 859 N.W.2d at 191
    (“Because Sioux Pharm did not rely on Summit’s website
    statement, it cannot prove equitable estoppel . . . .”). Until the “Bonus
    Award” message appeared on the screen, McKee had received no
    information about a bonus and therefore could not have played the game
    in reliance on the possibility of a bonus.      Nor is there evidence that
    McKee prejudicially relied on the machine’s display of a $41 million
    “Bonus Award” to pursue any subsequent course of action.
    McKee’s claim of promissory estoppel fails for similar reasons.
    “The theory of promissory estoppel allows individuals to be held liable for
    their promises despite an absence of the consideration typically found in
    a contract.” Schoff v. Combine Ins. Co. of Am., 
    604 N.W.2d 43
    , 48 (Iowa
    1999).   Promissory estoppel requires a party to prove “(1) a clear and
    definite oral agreement; (2) proof that plaintiff acted to his detriment in
    reliance thereon; and (3) a finding that the equities entitle the plaintiff to
    this relief.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Again, McKee has no
    evidence of detrimental reliance.     See, e.g., Merrifield v. Troutner, 269
    
    24 N.W.2d 136
    , 138 (Iowa 1978) (“Edgar cannot rely on promissory estoppel
    because he has not shown he relied to his detriment upon any promise
    made by Claudia.”).
    In Miller, the Sixth Circuit rejected the casino patron’s promissory
    estoppel claim under comparable circumstances. See 93 F. App’x at 851.
    The patron in Miller had played a slot machine that did not register a
    winning series of symbols. 
    Id. at 849.
    Miller claimed, however, that the
    lights and sounds of the machine indicated a jackpot win. 
    Id. The court
    determined the casino should not be estopped from denying payment to
    Miller.   The court reasoned, “There is no evidence, however, that [the
    defendant gaming machine operator] made a promise to pay a primary
    progressive jackpot when a player did not win pursuant to the clearly
    posted rules of the game.” 
    Id. at 851.
    Likewise, in this case, the rules and paytable of the Miss Kitty
    game listed all the winning combinations of reels and did not include the
    possibility of additional bonus wins. The only possible representation of
    a bonus, i.e., the “Bonus Award” message, did not induce detrimental
    reliance on McKee’s part. The district court therefore properly granted
    summary judgment to the casino on McKee’s estoppel claims.
    C. Consumer Fraud. Chapter 714H is the Private Right of Action
    for Consumer Frauds Act. See Iowa Code § 714H.1. It prohibits certain
    unfair and fraudulent acts:
    A person shall not engage in a practice or act the person
    knows or reasonably should know is an unfair practice,
    deception, fraud, false pretense, or false promise, or the
    misrepresentation, concealment, suppression, or omission of
    a material fact, with the intent that others rely upon the
    unfair practice, deception, fraud, false pretense, false
    promise, misrepresentation, concealment, suppression, or
    omission in connection with the advertisement, sale, or lease
    of consumer merchandise . . . .
    25
    
    Id. § 714H.3(1).
       The act establishes a private right of action: “A
    consumer who suffers an ascertainable loss of money or property as the
    result of a prohibited practice or act . . . may bring an action at law to
    recover actual damages.” 
    Id. § 714H.5(1).
    We agree with the district court that McKee cannot show “an
    ascertainable loss of money or property.”     See 
    id. McKee’s consumer
    fraud claim rises or falls with her breach of contract claim. If McKee had
    no contractual right to the bonus, and we have already determined she
    did not, then she could not have suffered an ascertainable loss of money
    or property when she was denied that bonus. This is analogous to the
    situation in Blackford, where we held the plaintiff’s lack of a contractual
    right to a jackpot foreclosed his conversion claim. 
    See 778 N.W.2d at 190
    . In addition, McKee made money on her gambling that evening, so
    she had no out-of-pocket loss.
    McKee cites a decision of the Missouri Court of Appeals that
    reversed the dismissal of a casino patron’s consumer fraud claim. See
    Raster v. Ameristar Casinos, Inc., 
    280 S.W.3d 120
    , 131 (Mo. Ct. App.
    2009). In Raster, the casino made changes to its compensation program,
    which was like a frequent-flyer program and rewarded customers based
    on their overall gaming volume. See 
    id. at 123.
    These changes included
    restructuring the point-award formulas so it was more difficult to earn
    certain awards or achieve elite status. 
    Id. at 123–24.
    The casino sent a
    letter to its program members, including the plaintiffs, indicating that
    “[n]othing really has changed” despite the new formulas and policies. 
    Id. at 124
    (internal quotation marks omitted).         The plaintiffs thought
    otherwise and brought claims under that state’s consumer fraud act
    which, much like Iowa’s, required the plaintiffs to have suffered an
    “ascertainable loss” due to an unfair act “in connection with the sale or
    26
    advertisement of any merchandise.” 
    Id. at 128
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted).   The appellate court concluded that the claims should go
    forward. 
    Id. at 131.
    We find Raster distinguishable. This is not a situation as in Raster
    where the casino changed the rules of the game after the plaintiffs had
    spent money and accumulated points, which were now devalued by the
    casino’s rule changes. See 
    id. at 123–24.
    Rather, in this case, the rules
    of the game did not provide for the bonus in question and McKee
    therefore did not suffer an “ascertainable loss” when the casino refused
    to pay it. See Iowa Code § 714H.5(1).
    V. Conclusion.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s grant of
    summary judgment.
    AFFIRMED.