Judges: WINSTON BRYANT, Attorney General
Filed Date: 12/3/1993
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The Honorable Doug Wood State Representative P.O. Box 7078 Sherwood, Arkansas 72116
Dear Representative Wood:
This is in response to your request for an opinion on the legality of a proposed "bingo concept." Specifically, you ask whether a failure of consideration would exist to "exempt [the game] from the definition of a lottery," where a nonprofit corporation elects to provide bingo games for its members, or the general public, and in furtherance of this objective pays a fee to a professional bingo operator to conduct the games, but does not require or accept any consideration from the players, even though prizes are awarded by the operator. You also ask whether it makes any difference that the fee paid to the operator does not come from membership dues, but from ordinary sales revenue of the organization, and whether it makes any difference if the organization is nonprofit or for profit. Finally, you ask whether the term "lottery" should be broadly interpreted or narrowly construed by the Arkansas Supreme Court.
It is my opinion that the question you have raised will be one of fact in each instance. It is my opinion, generally, however, that if consideration is ultimately paid by the participants, no matter how indirectly, consideration exists sufficiently to render the activity unlawful in Arkansas. See, e.g., Monte Carlo Parties, Ltd. v. Webb,
It is my opinion that if the nonprofit corporation pays the operator's fee from membership dues of the bingo participants, sufficient consideration exists. It is also my opinion, depending upon the facts, that even if the bingo operator's fee is paid from "other sales revenue" of the organization, sufficient consideration might exist if this "other sales revenue" is generated from bingo participants.1 In the former instance, the bingo participants would clearly be ultimately responsible for paying the consideration which makes up the fee from which the prizes are paid. Their membership dues would establish consideration for them to play the game. In the latter instance, the question of consideration would turn upon the exact nature of the "sales revenue" generated, and whether it was generated from bingo participants. For example, in Animal Protection Society of Durham, Inc., v. State,
In response to the final question posed in your request regarding the construction of the term "lottery" as used in the Arkansas Constitution, I should note that the Arkansas Supreme Court has construed this term on many different occasions. See e.g. Scott v. Dunaway,
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Deputy Attorney General Elana C. Wills.
Sincerely,
WINSTON BRYANT Attorney General
WB:cyh