315 Mass. 687 | Mass. | 1944
The defendant entered into a written contract dated September 14, 1937, entitled “Bank Night”
“Bank Night” in theatres has twice been considered by this court, Commonwealth v. Wall, 295 Mass. 70, and Commonwealth v. Heffner, 304 Mass. 521, and no detailed statement of the provisions of the contract need be made. Affiliated Enterprises, Inc., the licensor, undertook to provide certain supplies, and the defendant promised to make weekly payments. One clause was,- “The license herein granted is subject to all municipal, county, state and federal laws.” There were instructions, which the defendant agreed to follow “in order that said Bank Night may be used uniformly by all licensed theatres,” which stressed that all persons, whether patrons of the theatre or not, should be allowed to register, that the drawings of the winning number should be announced outside the theatre, and that a reasonable time should be allowed for the appearance of the winner, who, if not in the theatre, should be admitted without charge.
It could not be ruled solely on the basis of the agreement that some theatre patrons would pay the price of admission in part in order to obtain a chance for a prize, with the inevitable result that there would be facts to constitute a lottery. Commonwealth v. Wall, supra, and Commonwealth v. Heffner, supra. See also Commonwealth v. Payne, 307 Mass. 56; Commonwealth v. McLaughlin, 307 Mass. 230. The agreement not being intrinsically illegal, the burden was on the defendant to show by evidence that it was unlawful.
Exceptions overruled.