Judges: W.A. DREW EDMONDSON, Attorney General of Oklahoma
Filed Date: 3/29/1999
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Dear Representative Leist,
¶ 0 This office has received your request for an Attorney General Opinion in which you ask, in effect, the following question:
Whether hunting with hounds in competition for a stake, when thestake is comprised of pooled entrance fees paid by contestants,is a violation of Oklahoma law.
¶ 1 You inquire about the legality of a practice where persons enter hounds into a contest, sometimes known as a "money hunt," in which these hounds hunt other animals in competition. To participate in such contests, contestants make an outlay of cash or other item(s) of value as entrance fees, which are pooled. The pooled entrance fees, constituting the stake for the contest, are then distributed to winning contestants in gradations varying in accordance with the performance of their hunting hounds.
¶ 2 In responding to your inquiry we analyzed the statutes and case law of Oklahoma, as well as the case law of other jurisdictions, relating to gambling.
¶ 3 As discussed in Attorney General Opinion 95-6, dated March 30, 1995, Oklahoma has an extensive scheme of criminal statutes that forbids nearly every manner of gambling. As part of these restrictions against gambling, "commercial gambling" is specifically prohibited, 21 Ohio St. 1991 and Supp. 1998, §§981-988, and is a felony punishable by a term of imprisonment for not more than ten years and/or by a fine of not more than $25,000. 21 Ohio St. 1991, § 982[
B. Whether "Money Hunts" are "Bets."
¶ 4 To determine whether "money hunts" are violative of Oklahoma's anti-commercial gambling statutes, the threshold question is whether a "money hunt" constitutes a "bet" as set forth in 21 O.S. Supp,1998, § 981(1). Importantly, Oklahoma's anti-commercial gambling statute defines the term "bet" as:
[A] bargain in which the parties agree that, dependent upon chance, or in which one of the parties to the transaction has valid reason to believe that it is dependent upon chance, one stands to win or lose something of value specified in the agreement.
21 O.S. Supp. 1998, § 981[
¶ 5 An agreement, whether express or implied, exists between "money hunt" contestants that some stand to gain something of value, while others stand to lose something of value, namely winnings from the pooled entrance fees. These winnings, funded by pooled entrance fees, are distributed to contestants in varying gradations based upon the performance of their hunting hounds in the contest. Implicit in this agreement is that winning or losing is, in some measure, "dependent upon chance."
¶ 6 The term "chance" has received some attention from Oklahoma courts. In the case State v. Koo,
It is argued that football and baseball games are games of skill and not chance. While it is true that the outcome of certain activities are solely dependent upon skill and include no elements of chance, it would be an improper interpretation of [21 O.S. Supp. 1998, § 981[
21-981 ](1)] to say that it was void as it applied to football and baseball games because the participant exercised skill or a lack thereof in determining the outcome of a game. Any result over which a party to a bet does not have control can be considered to be chance. . . ."What a man does not know and cannot find out is chance as to him, and is recognized as chance by the law."
Id. at 892, citing Dillingham v. McLaughlin,
¶ 7 The element of chance is evinced by the very nature of a "money hunt." The outcome of a "money hunt" cannot be foreseen, but rather befalls from fortune, hazard, and uncontrollable contingencies. Notwithstanding the potential that the hunting hound's skill, or lack thereof, may affect the ultimate outcome of a "money hunt," such skill cannot eliminate the materiality of chance in a "money hunt." The hunter's skill can be negated by the skill of its prey in evading capture; indeed the predictability of animals is inherently limited and teeming with hazard. Without doubt, the ultimate outcome of a "money hunt" is unknown, unknowable, outside the control of the contestants, and as such, dependent upon chance. Therefore, the elements of bargain and chance being present, "money hunts" meet the definition of a "bet" as set forth in 21 O.S. Supp. 1998, §981[
¶ 8 For purposes of this analysis, however, it is imperative to recognize that 21 O.S. Supp. 1998, § 981 excludes certain transactions and activities from the definition of the term "bet," including:
[O]ffers of purses, prizes or premiums to the actual participants in public and semipublic events, as follows, to wit: Rodeos, animal shows, expositions, fairs, athletic events, tournaments and other shows and contests where the participants qualify for a monetary prize or other recognition. This subparagraph further excepts an entry fee from the definition of "a bet" as applied to enumerated public and semipublic events.
21 O.S. Supp. 1998, § 981[
¶ 9 Thus, the question becomes whether "money hunts" are offers of "purses, prizes or premiums" to actual participants in a public or semipublic events of the type and nature enumerated in21 O.S. Supp. 1998, § 981[
¶ 10 The phrase "purses, prizes or premiums," and the individual terms therein, have been the topic of much analysis by the courts of other states, and have a definite and well-known meaning at common law. The law on this issue draws a distinction between contests for "purses, prizes or premiums" contributed solely by associations or other persons that do not compete for the "purses, prizes or premiums," and contests where the stake is contributed by the contestants themselves, and the successful contestant is to have the fund thus created.1 In the case of "purses, prizes or premiums," the donor or person offering the same has no chance of gaining back the "purse, prize or premium" offered but, "if he abides by his offer, he must lose it," whereas in the case of a "stake, bet or wager," each party interested therein has a chance of gain and suffers a risk of loss. Pompano Horse Club v. State,
¶ 11 As applied, "money hunts" are not offers of "purses, prizes or premiums" to actual participants in public or semipublic events of the type and nature enumerated in 21 O.S.Supp. 1998, § 981[
¶ 12 In general, when a person or association sponsors or conducts contests for "purses, prizes or premiums," and the moneys or items of value paid to such person or association for the right of participation in such contest become part of the person or association's general assets, and the "purses, prizes, or premiums" are paid out to contestants without regard to such contributions, such activities will not be considered a "bet."See, e.g., People ex rel. Lawrence v. Fallon,
¶ 13 We must also emphasize the Oklahoma Legislature's incorporation of the term "offers" in 21 O.S. Supp. 1998, §981[
C. "Money Hunts" Violate Prohibitions Against CommercialGambling
¶ 14 Having decided that a "money hunt" constitutes a "bet" under Oklahoma's anti-commercial gambling statute, it is clear that the "money hunts," and the activities associated therewith, are among those proscribed by 21 O.S. Supp. 1998, § 982[
¶ 15 It is, therefore, the official Opinion of the AttorneyGeneral that:
"Money hunts" in which: (a) persons enter hounds into a contestwhere the hounds hunt other animals in competition; (b) for theopportunity to participate in such contests, contestants make anoutlay of cash or other items of value as entrance fees, whichare pooled; and (c) the pooled entrance fees, constituting thestake for the contest, are then distributed to winningcontestants in gradations varying in accordance with theperformance of their hunting hounds, violate the anti-commercialgambling laws of Oklahoma at 21 Ohio St. 1991 and Supp. 1998, §§981-988.
W.A. DREW EDMONDSON ATTORNEY GENERAL OF OKLAHOMA
STEPHEN L. JANTZEN ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL
[A]ny place, room, building, vehicle, tent or location which is used for any of the following: making and settling bets; receiving, holding, recording or forwarding bets or offers to bet; conducting lotteries; or playing gambling devices. Evidence that the place has a general reputation as a gambling place or that, at or about the time in question, it was frequently visited by persons known to be commercial gamblers or known as frequenters of gambling places is admissible on the issue of whether it is a gambling place.
Without doubt, sites where "money hunts" take place are locations where bets are made, settled, received and held.