Kelly SONNENBERG, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. AMAYA GROUP HOLDINGS (IOM) LIMITED, formerly known as Oldford Group, Ltd., et al., Defendants-Appellees. Judy Farhner, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Tiltware, LLC, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 15-1885, 15-1887
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit
Argued Nov. 2, 2015. Decided Jan. 15, 2016.
810 F.3d 509
Alain Jeffrey Ifrah, Attorney, Rachel Hirsch, Attorney, Ifrah PLLC, Washington, DC, William J. Niehoff, Attorney, Laura Schrick, Attorney, Mathis Marifian & Richter LTD, Belleville, IL, for Defendants-Appellees.
Before BAUER, POSNER, and KANNE, Circuit Judges.
POSNER, Circuit Judge.
The four plaintiffs have filed between them two diversity suits, governed by the substantive law of Illinois, against a variety of persons and companies that host Internet gambling websites. They contend that the defendants owe them the
An Illinois statute imposes criminal penalties on anyone who “knowingly establishes, maintains, or operates an Internet site that permits a person to play a game of chance or skill for money or other thing of value by means of the Internet or to make a wager upon the result of any [such] game.”
Casey Sonnenberg and Daniel Fahrner claim that each lost $50 or more at Internet gambling sites operated by one or more of the defendants. But if a person entitled by
The mothers’ claims are timely. Their problem (which would equally beset their sons’ suits, were those suits not time-barred) is that the defendants are not the winners of any game that any of the plaintiffs (or their sons) played. The defendants are the gambling sites, not the persons who won from Daniel and Casey in a game hosted by the site (and the mothers didn‘t even gamble at any of the sites). A winner would be a person whom a player had played with and lost to. Ranney v. Flinn, 60 Ill.App. 104, 104 (1894); cf.
Faced with this barrier to their claims under the Loss Recovery Act, the plaintiffs ask us to read a civil cause of action into the criminal provisions aimed at the owners and operators of illegal sites—a civil cause that would entitle the plaintiffs to damages measured by their losses.
The plaintiffs also invoke
Creating legal remedies for gambling losses as a way to discourage gambling seems a lost cause, since the usual gambling “loss” is not a real loss and hence is not a real spur to litigation unless the game is rigged. A gambler knows that the money he puts in the pot is at risk. It is not a risk he has to take; he takes it because he hopes to win the pot, or simply because he likes gambling or risk taking in general. If he loses $50 he may well say to himself “I‘d rather have won, but $50 wasn‘t too high a price to pay for a night of gambling, and en route to losing $50 I did after all win some nice pots and get compliments from the guys I was playing with.”
The judgment dismissing the suits is AFFIRMED.
POSNER
Circuit Judge
