186 Iowa 872 | Iowa | 1919
The five notes, and one other for $105, which was paid before this action was commenced, were given in payment of a quantity of merchandise, consisting of a Claxton piano and player, a quantity of table silverware, and a miscellaneous assortment of advertising and other material necessary for carrying out the terms of a contract, which provided for a “trade extension campaign” in the interest of defendant, a mercantile copartnership, with its place of business at Dunlap, Iowa. The articles of merchandise purchased are the same as were included i-n the contract set out in full in Brenard Mfg. Co. v. J. D. Sketchley Store, 185 Iowa 694.
Briefly, the scheme set forth in the contract and printed instructions to defendant was as follows: The piano and player were to constitute a grand prize, to be given to a contestant receiving the highest number of “votes.” “Votes” were obtained by selling cards to customers of defendant, entitling the holder to merchandise to the amount shown upon the card, and also to a credit for a designated sum upon the retail price of silverware, which the customer might purchase of the defendant. Premiums were to be given to contestants, from time to time, for the purpose of increasing their Activities in the interest of the campaign for trade extension, and to increase the number of “votes” to be cast in the contest for the grand prize, in favor of each contestant. To obtain contestants, defendant agreed to furnish plaintiff with the name and address of each school teacher, together with the members of the various school boards, within a radius of ten miles of Dunlap, and to select 150 names from its customers and those of its competitors, to be nominated as contestants, plaintiff agreeing to write them letters, explaining the method of carrying on the contest. Each candidate nominated as contestant, upon signing an agreement to enter the race for the grand prize, was given a “Queen Esther” silver spoon, free. Provision was
The territory surrounding Dunlap did not prove a fruitful one for the production of contestants., Persons of proper age, and otherwise suitably endowed, residing in. that .rich and prosperous community, were not attracted by the prospect of winning the “mahogany” finished piano and player, or a few pieces of presumably not particularly desirable silver tableware; and, notwithstanding the fact an enthusiastic propagandist was sent from the home office, but little interest was aroused upon the part of either the contestants or the public. The scheme languished and shortly died, leaving the defendant in possession of the merchandise, advertising matter, etc., received by plaintiff under the contract. No premiums appear to have been earned by the contestants, and defendants still have the piano player and silverware, except the few “Queen Esther” spoons that were given to prospective contestants, and the merchandise was, at the time of the trial, in possession of defendant.
The defenses interposed by defendant to the notes were: (a) Total failure of consideration; and (b) that the consideration for the notes as a gambling contract, which provided for a distribution of the merchandise purchased for prizes to the contestants, in such a manner as to constitute a lottery, and, therefore, prohibited by statute and contrary to public policy and void.
Section 28, Article S, of the Constitution, prohibits the legislature from authorizing a lottery, or the sale of lottery tickets,
“If any person make or aid in making or establishing, or advertise or make public any scheme for any lottery; or advertise, offer for sale, sell, negotiate, dispose of, purchase or receive any ticket or part of a ticket in any lottery or number thereof; or have in his possession any ticket, part of a ticket, or paper purporting to be the number of any ticket of any lottery, with intent to sell or dispose of the same on his own account or as the agent of another, he shall be imprisoned in the county jail not more than thirty days, or be fined not exceeding one hundred dollars, or both.”
Authorities uniformly agree that the three elements necessary to constitute a lottery are: (a) A consideration; (b) the element of chance; and (c) a prize. State v. Perry, 154 N. C. 616 (70 S. E. 387); Hull v. Ruggles, 56 N. Y. 424; Cross v. People, 18 Colo. 321 (32 Pac. 821); Eastman v. Armstrong-Byrd Music Co., supra.
Many advertising propositions and alleged schemes for trade extension have been before the appellate courts, and there is a want of harmony in their decisions, due often, perhaps, to the peculiar wording of the statutes upon which the decision rests. Formerly, “guessing contests,” wherein the contestants sought to estimate the number of beans in a bag, or the number of votes that would be cast at a coming election, were generally sustained by the courts; but the recent trend of decisions is to hold that an element of chance is involved in contests of this nature. Waite v. Press Pub. Assn., 155 Fed. 58; Stevens v. Cincinnati Times-Star Co., 72 Ohio St. 112 (73 N. E. 1058); State v. Mumford, 73 Mo. 647; Quatsoe v. Eggleston, 42 Ore. 315 (71 Pac. 66).
A contract providing for a “popularity contest,” in which an automobile was the grand prize to be given the contestant receiving the largest number of votes, which were issued to contestants for each subscriber obtained for the Crittenden Record Press, a newspaper published at Marion, was sustained by the Kentucky. Court of Appeals in Commonwealth v. Jenkins, supra, as a valid contract, and not in violation of the statutes of. that state. The scheme for obtaining votes' and awarding the grand prize in the above case was similar to the method provided by the contract in the case at bar.
Counsel for appellant relies upon the holding of the Supreme Court of Michigan, in Boston P. & M. Co. v. Seckinger, 198 Mich. 812 (164 N. W. 263), wherein .a contract somewhat similar to the contract under consideration was held to be against public policy and void. The decision of the Michigan court is based upon the statute of that state, and the contract is especially ' condemned because of numerous provisions which, if carried out, would be unfair and dishonest to the contestants; but none of these are found in the contract under consideration.
No other grounds for reversal are argued by counsel for appellant. It follows that the judgment of the court below must be and is — Affirmed.