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The Revised Statutes (1 R.S. p. 665, § 26) declare that every lottery, game, or device of chance in the nature of a lottery, by whatsoever name it may be called, other than such as have been authorized by law, shall be deemed unlawful. It must have been set on foot for the purpose of disposing of property. (People
v. Payne,
Where a pecuniary consideration is paid, and it is determined by lot or chance, according to some scheme held out to the public, what and how much he who pays the money is to have for it, that is a lottery. (State v. Clarke,
Now is there any doubt, but that the plaintiff sold and delivered the goods to the defendants that they might be thus disposed of? The referee finds, that they were so put up by the plaintiff as that each package of lesser value either had concealed in it a ticket, or had in it no ticket, on which was the name of some one of the articles of greater value; that these packages of lesser value were exposed for sale with the packages of greater value in view; that each purchaser of a package of lesser value was made to know, before his purchase was made by him, that if he by chance got a package in which was concealed a ticket, he was also entitled to an article from those of greater value, which was named upon that ticket. The referee also finds, that the plaintiff had reasonable cause to believe, that when he sold the goods to the defendants, they intended to use them in violation of the statutes against lotteries. Upon these *428 findings of fact, his judgment for the plaintiff cannot be sustained, unless he is right in his conclusion of law: "That the bare knowledge of the plaintiff that the defendants intended to use said goods unlawfully is not sufficient to vitiate the contract of sale, and render it illegal and void."
We are not left to the rules of the common law alone, to determine whether this conclusion of law is correct. The statutes against lotteries have provisions touching the subject. Section 38 of the Revised Statutes above cited (1 R.S., 668, § 38) declares that every sale of any goods, for the purpose of aiding in a lottery, is void and of no effect. It is difficult to perceive how a sale of goods so packed and arranged as to enable the purchaser, without alteration or readjustment of them, to carry out a scheme, which when accomplished is an unlawful lottery; and sold thus with knowledge, or with reasonable cause for belief, that the purchaser by the disposal to the public of the goods thus arranged intended to violate the statutes against lotteries, is not a sale for the purpose of aiding in such lottery. It cannot be otherwise. The sale by the plaintiff to the defendants was to aid in carrying on an unlawful lottery, and was void. As the sale was unlawful and void, the contract of sale was the same and cannot be enforced. It is in violation of a penal and prohibitory statute, and the court cannot lend the aid of the law to carry it out and enforce it in favor of a party to it.
Nor does this conclusion rest alone upon the prohibition of section 38 above cited. The plaintiff cites, as an authority in his favor, Tracy v. Talmage (
The acts of the plaintiff bring him within the principle established by those authorities. We know of no authority in this State which is in conflict with that principle.
The order appealed from should be affirmed and judgment rendered for defendants on the stipulation.
All concur.
Order affirmed and judgment accordingly.
