THE PEOPLE ex rel. BILL LOCKYER, as Attorney General, etc., Plaintiff and Appellant, v. PACIFIC GAMING TECHNOLOGIES, Defendant and Respondent.
No. B134202
Second Dist., Div. One
July 27, 2000
82 Cal.App.4th 699
THE PEOPLE ex rel. BILL LOCKYER, as Attorney General, etc., Plaintiff and Appellant, v. PACIFIC GAMING TECHNOLOGIES, Defendant and Respondent.
COUNSEL
Bill Lockyer, Attorney General, Richard Frank, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Sara J. Drake, Acting Assistant Attorney General, and Timothy M. Muscat, Deputy Attorney General, for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Edward J. Horowitz for Defendant and Respondent.
OPINION
VOGEL (Miriam A.), J.—Pacific Gaming Technologies (PGT) places VendaTel vending machines in bus stations, truck stops, and other places where people are likely to buy prepaid telephone calling cards. Unlike ordinary vending machines, the VendaTel has a “sweepstakes” feature that pays out money. The VendaTel looks like a slot machine. It acts like a slot machine. It sounds like a slot machine. The trial court nevertheless said that
FACTS
PGT has marketed its telephone card vending machines in other parts of the country. In 1997, when it decided to market the VendaTel in California, PGT knew there might be a problem and voluntarily contacted the Attorney General (who represents the Division of Gambling Control of the Department of Justice). On August 26, 1998, representatives of the Attorney General‘s office inspected the VendaTel. On August 31, the Attorney General filed this action for declaratory and injunctive relief, asking for a determination that the VendaTel is an illegal gambling device and slot machine within the meaning of sections
Notes
- The VendaTel is a large freestanding metallic box (about the same size as a slot machine) with a large video display monitor. A computer inside each VendaTel operates the machine.
- At the top of the video display monitor, the user is informed, “This is not a gaming device” and, below that, “$ DISCOUNTS $ PRE-PAID PHONE CALLS.” The word “Sweepstakes” is prominently displayed, with an explanation that each user has the opportunity to win a cash prize of $1 to $100.
- To operate a VendaTel, the user inserts a bill ($1, $5 or $10) into the machine‘s bill acceptor, then (once for each dollar inserted) pushes a red button located on a control panel below the video display monitor. There is another button that offers instructions in Spanish.
- The VendaTel responds with audio and visual displays. The audio sounds like a slot machine. The screen shows three animated spinning reels with depictions of United States currency (in denominations ranging from $1 to $100). The bills spin in the same manner that fruit and other things spin on slot machines. When the reels stop spinning, the user wins the “sweepstakes” if three identical bills are aligned. If the user wins, the machine announces, “You‘ve just won 10 bucks” (or whatever the amount may be). The cash prize is the amount of the aligned bills (e.g., if the three $100 bills are aligned, the prize is $100). Win or lose, the user receives a ticket for each dollar inserted. The top part of the ticket shows the result of the “sweepstakes” (and may be redeemed at the business where the machine is located). The bottom part of the ticket is the telephone calling card (in the form of a personal identification number which may be used to place one call for up to five minutes of prepaid telephone time anywhere in the United States). If the user has inserted more than $1, the screen flashes, “Press Button to Spin Again!”
- All users who insert money into the VendaTel are eligible to win a cash prize. Conversely, a user may enter the sweepstakes without purchasing a telephone card. To do so, the user fills in and mails a postcard provided for that purpose. When PGT receives the postcard, a free opportunity is exercised on the user‘s behalf (at a “dedicated” VendaTel). If the user wins the sweepstakes, PGT mails a check to the user.
On this evidence and on a demonstration of the VendaTel conducted in the courtroom, the trial court held that the VendaTel is not a slot machine, lottery or other controlled game. The State‘s motion was denied, PGT‘s
DISCUSSION
The State contends the VendaTel contains “the elements of a slot machine.” We agree, and therefore do not consider the parties’ other arguments.
Subdivision (1) of section
Given the plain language of section
As the Third District explained in Trinkle v. Stroh, supra, 60 Cal.App.4th 771, section
Each Match 5 Jukebox consisted of a standard jukebox with a “Match 5” device attached to the top. “The front panel of the Match 5 device contained thirty colored lights, five each of six different colors. Players deposited $1 into a bill validator or coin slot in the jukebox (not in the Match 5 device) and selected four songs to be played. These machines would not operate if less than $1 was deposited. Before each song was played, the lights on the
The owners insisted that their Match 5 Jukebox was exempt under section
The Match 5 Jukebox, said the court, was simply an “‘attempt to circumvent the gaming laws by adding the element of chance and prize to a vending machine. Once the element of chance is added, people are no longer paying just for the product regardless of the value given that product by the vender. From the perspective of the [Match 5 Jukebox] player-purchases, they may be paying for both the songs and the chance at winning. Indeed, many players may care little about the songs. Their main focus may be the game. This is particularly true when the machine requires that four songs be selected. The potential cash payoff may be more attractive than the four songs one is forced to select.‘” (Trinkle v. Stroh, supra, 60 Cal.App.4th at p. 782.)
According to Trinkle, “section
We are not impressed with PGT‘s efforts to avoid the rules announced in Trinkle. PGT says “the trial court in Trinkle found that many players were attracted to the potential cash payoff and cared little about the four songs they were compelled to purchase,” but that “the Attorney General presented no similar evidence with regard to PGT‘s telephone card vending machine, nor may any such inference be drawn from the manner in which the machine dispenses the telephone cards.” There is nothing in the opinion in Trinkle to suggest that “evidence” on that point was presented to the trial court, only the logical inference that there, as here, any reasonable person looking at the machine would recognize its true purpose and the probable intent of its users. PGT says that its machine, unlike the Match 5 Jukebox, does not increase the payoff with each use or automatically connect a chance at a prize with the sale of a product. So what? With or without those features, the VendaTel meets the statutory definition of an illegal slot machine (
The problem with our dissenting colleague‘s attack on Trinkle is that it suffers from the same flaw he finds in Trinkle. Either way, we must resort to implication. Trinkle notes that section
Since the undisputed evidence establishes that the user of a VendaTel (whom PGT usually calls a “customer” but sometimes slips and calls a “player“), without any skill whatsoever but rather as the result of an element of chance obtained by the insertion of money, may become entitled to receive prize money in addition to the telephone calling card, and thereby receives more than the amount of consideration paid, the trial court‘s decision is plainly wrong. The State‘s motion should have been granted, PGT‘s motion denied. (
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the trial court with directions to enter a new judgment in favor of the State of California (and, in furtherance thereof, to hold such additional hearings, if any, as may be required). The State is awarded its costs of appeal.
Aragon, J.,* concurred.
ORTEGA, Acting P. J.—I dissent. In my view, the more specific exemption statute excludes the VendaTel from the prohibition of the more general anti-slot-machine legislation.1
The legality of ordinary vending machines (those which dispense uniform merchandise for exact consideration and provide no element of chance) is beyond dispute. This case, however, concerns the legality of a machine
*Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
According to the majority, sections
Sections
The majority‘s approach, construing section
Given that the last substantive changes to the slot machine statutes were made in 1950, the time is probably ripe for the Legislature to reconsider these statutes. Should the Legislature decide to vacate the exemption for machines which are both slot machines and vending machines, it could repeal section
SECTION 330a
In 1911, the California Legislature enacted section
A. Ordinary Vending Machines Are Not Prohibited
Ordinary vending machines, or machines that consistently deliver the exact item purchased for exact consideration, are not illegal slot machines because they contain no element of chance. Nothing in the language of section
One authority similarly states: “It appears to be generally conceded that ordinary slot vending machines which only vend merchandise or service of a
B. Vending Machines With an Added Element of Chance
After section
Two diverging California trial decisions, both published in Ragland California Superior Court Decisions, illustrate the judicial uncertainty regarding the legality under section
Because the customer would always know exactly what the next nickel would buy, one superior court held that the gum machine was not a slot machine in violation of section
Another superior court, however, found the same gum machine as in Potter was a slot machine in violation of section
C. Strict Construction of Section 330a—Chapman v. Aggeler
In 1942, this division published Chapman v. Aggeler, supra, 47 Cal.App.2d 848, which strictly construed section
The machines in Chapman could be adjusted for use either as ordinary vending machines or as vending machines that dispensed both merchandise and, on random occasions, metal slugs, chips, or tokens in varying numbers. The machines were seized while in Chapman‘s shop for storage or repair.
This division ruled that Chapman‘s mere possession of the machines did not violate section
This same issue had been addressed two years before Chapman in People v. Kay, supra, 38 Cal.App.2d Supp. 759. The machines in Kay were slot machines that, unlike the machines in Chapman, could only be used for gambling. They had three rotating reels that depicted different pictures. Depending on which combination of pictures appeared when the reels stopped, the machines would pay varying sums in tokens or coins, or nothing at all.
Kay held that section
In Chapman, this division disagreed with Kay and applied a strict construction to section
Significantly, Chapman refused to read into section
SECTIONS 330b AND 330.1
In 1950, the Legislature passed two more bills dealing with slot machines, Assembly Bill No. 34, which added section
Both sections
Neither section
As for machines that are both gambling devices and vending machines, however, sections
SECTION 330.5
The first portion of section
Because section
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
The broad effect of sections
To adopt the Attorney General‘s position, however, would be to ignore the plain meaning of section
“It is settled that ‘“We are required to give effect to statutes ‘according to the usual, ordinary import of the language employed in framing them.’ [Citations.]“’ [Citation.] Stated otherwise, ‘When statutory language is thus clear and unambiguous there is no need for construction, and courts should not indulge in it.’ [Citations.]
By giving effect to the limited exemption created by section
In order to limit section
As one author stated, “one of the problems with many state statutes is that they were drafted with older devices in mind.” (Rychlak, Video Gambling Devices, supra, 37 UCLA L.Rev. at p. 587.) In addition, “Problems with gambling laws often develop when new sections are simply added to existing laws, instead of repealing the outdated provisions and replacing them with the new provisions.” (Id. at p. 590.)
In any event, it is not entirely clear what the Legislature intended when it created the section
Following the enactment of sections
The wisdom of outlawing slot machines but permitting machines that are both slot machines and vending machines is for the Legislature to decide. As this Division noted in Chapman v. Aggeler, supra, 47 Cal.App.2d 848, the Legislature has seen fit to legalize many forms of gambling. We cannot assume the Legislature intended to outlaw the nickel gum machine simply because it outlawed the cigar machine. As this Division cautioned in Chapman: “[I]n passing upon laws relating to gambling nothing can be taken for granted. . . . When legislators speak through statutes, their enactments must be given a strict interpretation. The law must be applied as it is written. It cannot be extended by judicial interpretation.” (Id. at p. 853.)
In my view, Trinkle v. Stroh (1997) 60 Cal.App.4th 771, which limited section
Trinkle‘s analysis would be correct if section
Trinkle expressly refused to consider the types of machines that existed in 1950 when the three statutes were enacted. (Trinkle v. Stroh, supra, 60 Cal.App.4th at p. 783.) Accordingly, Trinkle failed to articulate a sufficient reason to ignore the plain wording of section
Respondent‘s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied November 1, 2000.
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.