Plаintiff appeals from a judgment denying its prayer for an accounting of the profits of a gaming enterprise in Reno, Nevada.
By agreement of August 29, 1955, defendant (who controlled the same through nominees) agreеd to sell to plaintiff a certain building in Reno wherein it conducted a gambling *178 casino under state license as well as a bar, restaurant and other activities. The base price having been fixed at $550,000, it was provided that the buyer should apply for and obtain gaining licenses and that thereupon the sale should be consummated and “ [a]t the time of such consummation you [buyer] will be given credit for all profits from the date of aсceptance of this proposal to the date of such consummation, and likewise shall suffer all losses during said period of time. If losses exist you shall pay the same at the time of the consummation of thе sale.” Buyer forthwith applied for requisite gaming licenses and, pending their approval and issuance, the seller’s nominee continued to operate the property, including the gambling hall, until November 11, 1955, when thе United States Government put an end to it by seizing in satisfaction of tax liens against defendant some $30,000 in coins and currency on the gambling tables, emptying the slot machines and appropriating all money contained therein; it also attached the bank accounts of defendant in the sum of about $23,000. This seizure resulted from failure of defendant to pay the approximate sum of $88,000 owing by it to the Government for delinquent taxes. The casino remained closed until December 1955, when plaintiff’s licenses were granted and the gaming operations resumed. Between August 29 and November 11 the operations on the premises were profitable, the net income being $55,470.90, the greater portion of which was derived from the gambling.
Plaintiff sued for an accounting of said profits and for other relief. The trial judge held that this was a gambling contract opposed to the public policy of California, found that all other issues had become immaterial and denied any relief. 1
The contract in question, though made in California, re
*179
quired performance in Nevada through carrying on a business that was and is there licensed and “a lawful enterprise in Nevada.”
(Las Vegas Hacienda, Inc.
v.
Gibson,
- Nev. - [
Defendant having reaped profits bеlonging to plaintiff under the terms of the contract, a right of accounting naturally arises unless the taint of gambling renders the above cited cases inapplicable. It should be remembered that the rights of no member of the public are involved, merely the contractual rights of the parties to a deal involving the running of a gambling casino in Nevada, a lawful project.
Two lines of cases discuss the problem of whether thе courts of the forum will recognize and enforce a gambling contract which is valid in the state where the cause of action arose but would have been contrary to local public policy had it bеen performed in the state of the forum. They of course arrive at different results. (See anno, in
In certain of the decisions in this state gambling is declared
contra bonos mores (Braverman
v.
Horn,
Loranger
v.
Nadeau,
In these modern days Californians cannot afford to be too pious about this matter of gambling. Stud poker is contrary to good morals (so it seems), but not draw poker or draw low ball poker
(Remmer
v.
Municipal Court,
Horse racing was said in
Hankins
v.
Ottinger,
County fairs are placed in the same status as licensеd race tracks for betting on horse races (§§ 19560-19573).
One of the major differences between the California license and one issued by Nevada is that the former legalizes the licensed gambling (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 19594) but the latter does not
(West Indies, Inc.
v.
First National Bank of Nevada,
California is so definitely committed to the doctrine that public policy concerning gambling is a matter for the legislature rather than the courts, that no injunсtion will issue against the conducting of an unlicensed gambling establishment except as prescribed by statute. So held in
People
v.
Lim,
All this leaves little room for California courts to be shocked or to prate of public morals or public policy when confronted with an application for relief upon a contract for the operation of a licensed gambling parlor within the State of Nevada. Such a contract is one for the accomplishment of a legal objective, certainly not contrary to the public policy of Nevada and essentially not in conflict with that underlying the California Horse Racing Law. 2
The briefs of counsel proceed largely upon the hypothesis that the contract in question contemplated an unlawful objective. But that is not the ease. It plainly provided for the doing of lawful acts in a lawful mannеr (conducting a Nevada gambling casino) and cannot fairly be said to be opposed to the public policy of this state.
Judgment reversed.
Fox, P. J., and McMurray, J. pro tem., * * concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied September 20, 1961.
Notes
Though it complains that several other important issues were thus ignored, respondent says in its brief: “Nevertheless, for the purpose of considering the legal issue on this appeal, it must be assumed that respondent did undertake to account to appellant for the profits derived from operation of the gaming casino and other parts of the premises sold.” The issues thus left unresolved are mentioned in the court’s finding IX as follows: “The Court makes no finding respecting the issue of novation, or as to the legality or illegality, or enforceability or unenforceability, of the contract under Nevada law, or on any other issuе not found on above, for the reason that the case is disposed of by the findings made. The defendant asserts no defense that the contract was not legal or unenforceable in the State of Nevada and no presumption is indulged in by the Court that the law of Nevada is the same as the pf California on the question pf enfprceabilitjjr,”
True, the statute solemnly declares that ‘1 [t]he purpose of this chapter is to encourage agriculture and the breeding of horses in this State” (5 19401), but the customers are inclined to smile when this laudable phase of the activity is mentioned.
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council,
