Judges: MIKE BEEBE, Attorney General
Filed Date: 1/5/2005
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The Honorable Jimmy "Red" Milligan State Representative Post Office Box 68 Yellville, Arkansas 72687-0068
Dear Representative Milligan:
I am writing in response to your request for an opinion on the following question:
May the Veterans of Foreign Wars as a 501(c)(19) organization accept donations as payment for bingo cards and issue a tax receipt to the donor? Additionally, may merchandise prizes be issued to the winners with the possibility of trading the prizes back to the Veterans of Foreign Wars for cash?
RESPONSE
Correspondence attached to your request indicates that these questions relate to a "proposal for a legally operated bingo game."
It is my opinion that the answer to both of your questions is "no." The only way to make charitable bingo of the kind you describe legal is to pass a constitutional amendment addressing the issue. Accord, Ops. Att'y Gen.
Although there is no controlling Arkansas Supreme Court case on "donation" bingo, at least one circuit court has ruled that the acceptance of "donations" for the purpose of playing bingo does not legalize the activity. On this basis and in light of available case law from other states, one of my predecessors concluded that the acceptance of "donations" does not eliminate the consideration necessary to constitute a lottery or gambling. Similarly, my predecessor and I have concluded that it does not matter from a legal standpoint if the prizes awarded take the form of cash or merchandise. There has not been any pertinent change in the applicable law since the issuance of these opinions and I have found no basis upon which to disagree with them. I should note, however, that criminal prosecution of bingo is left to the local prosecuting attorneys. Consultation with the local prosecuting attorney is therefore advisable.
Question 1 — May the Veterans of Foreign Wars as a 501 (c)(19)organization accept donations as payment for bingo cards and issue a taxreceipt to the donor?
In my opinion the answer to this question is "no." The Arkansas Supreme Court has specifically recognized that playing bingo for money constitutes the criminal offense of gambling. See Billy/Dot, Inc. v.Fields,
(1) Consideration is paid to play or participate;
(2) Playing or participating creates the chance to win a prize; and
(3) The game is controlled entirely by chance, and winning is not influenced by the player's skill or judgment.
See Scott v. Dunaway,
Your first question inquires as to whether the acceptance of "donations" rather than some type of straight admission charge would obviate the illegality of the game. One of my predecessors, in Op. Att'y Gen.
All three elements of a lottery are present. The elements of prize and chance are not disputed. While the issue of consideration was disputed at trial, the evidence shows that the vast majority of bingo patrons in fact pay money in order to participate in the various games. The fact that these payments may be called donations is not, on this issue, significant. The defendants admit that if a significant portion of the bingo patrons chose to play for free, the bingo game would collapse. The game did not cease to be a lottery because some of the players were admitted to play for free, so long as others continued to pay for their chances. [Citations omitted.] The presence of non-paying participants did not change the status of those who paid. If it is a lottery as to those who pay, it is necessarily a lottery as to those who do not pay for their chances. [Emphasis original.]
State ex rel. Bryant v. Razorback Room Inc., et. al., No. 91-7596 (Pulaski County Chancery, 6th Div., September 29, 1992). (Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law at 10-11, 23-24 and 37-38). See also, Op. Att'y Gen.
As noted in Opinion
In addition, the fact that the sponsoring entity is a tax exempt charitable corporation does not change the result. In Op. Att'y Gen.
In my opinion, therefore, the acceptance of "donations" by a tax-exempt organization1 does not eliminate the "consideration" required to constitute an unlawful gambling activity or a lottery.
Question 2 — Additionally, may merchandise prizes be issued to thewinners with the possibility of trading the prizes back to the Veteransof Foreign Wars for cash?
In my opinion the answer to this question is also "no." It is clear, in my opinion, with respect to the "prize" element listed above, that it makes no difference whether the prize awarded is in the form of merchandise or cash. Each can constitute a "prize" and therefore the third element of prohibited gambling or "lotteries." As I stated in Op. Att'y Gen.
The particular issue that your question raises is whether a bingo operation in which the game is played for the chance to win a prize rather than cash violates the criminal statutes. [Footnote omitted.] It is my opinion that such a bingo operation does violate the criminal anti-gambling statutes.
The criminal statutes do not define the term "gambling," nor has the Arkansas Supreme Court interpreted the term in a published opinion. . . . The common meaning of a term can be gleaned from a standard dictionary. The verb" to gamble" is defined in the Merriam-Webster as follows:" To play a game for money or other stakes." Merriam-Webster Dictionary at 296. This interpretation of the concept of "gambling" is supported by specific language in the statute prohibiting the operation of illegal "gaming devices." That statute refers to "any game of chance, or at which any money or property may be won or lost[.]" A.C.A. §
5-66-104 (emphasis added). See also A.C.A. §5-66-105 (referring to "money or other valuable thing"); Rankin v. Mills Novelty Co.,182 Ark. 561 ,32 S.W.2d 161 (1930) (interpreting the predecessor statute to A.C.A. §5-66-104 ).Because the anti-gambling statutes contain nothing that would change this common-usage meaning of the concept of "gambling," I conclude that the legislature intended the concept of gambling, as referred to in the anti-gambling statutes, to entail the playing of a game for a chance to win either cash or a prize.
For this reason, I conclude that the scenario you have described does violate the criminal anti-gambling statutes, despite the fact that the bingo games that are conducted in that scenario pay off in prizes rather than cash.
Id. at 2. (Emphasis in original).
In my opinion, therefore, the answer to your second question is "no." As stated previously, however, criminal prosecution of bingo is left to the local prosecuting attorneys. Consultation with the local prosecuting attorney is therefore advisable.
Deputy Attorney General Elana C. Wills prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
MIKE BEEBE Attorney General
MB:ECW/cyh