MEMORANDUM OPINION
In this unusual diversity case, a Virginia plaintiff hopes to use her home state’s laws against gambling to help her recover from New Jersey casinos the large gambling losses she incurred there. Plaintiff Najia Rahmani alleges that defendants Boardwalk Regency Corporation (“Boardwalk”) and Resorts International Hotel, Inc. (“Resorts”) induced her to travel to New Jersey and squander her money in their casinos. She further alleges that her acceptance of such inducements created a contract between the parties, but that these contracts were void as a matter of Virginia law. She therefore seeks restitution of all monies she has lost gambling in defendants’ New Jersey casinos over the past thirteen years. For the reasons that follow, plaintiffs effort fails; the law sensibly affords no remedy in these circumstances.
I. 1
Rahmani is a Virginia citizen, while defendants Resorts and Boardwalk are New Jersey corporations that own and operate gambling casinos. Resorts owns and operates Resorts International Casino, in Atlantic City, New Jersey, while Boardwalk owns and operates Caesars, another gambling establishment in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
Rahmani’s first experience with casino gambling occurred in 1984 when she visited Resorts. During that visit, Resorts employees noticed that Rahmani lost a considerable sum of money, and that she appeared to be a wealthy woman. As a result of these observations, Resorts repeatedly contacted Rah-mani in Virginia over the course of the next thirteen years and induced her to return to
Rahmani filed suit on February 11, 1998, arguing that her agreements with Resorts and Boardwalk were void under Virginia law and seeking rescission of the contracts and restitution of the money she gambled and lost at the casinos over the thirteen-year period. She alleged other state law claims as well, including negligence and “unlawful harassment.” On April 4, 1998, Boardwalk’s Motion to Dismiss was granted; on July 17, 1998, Resorts’ Motion to Dismiss was granted, and Counts I, II, III, V, and VI were dismissed with prejudice in their entirety. Count IV, a forgery claim, was dismissed without prejudice to allow Rahmani leave to amend her Complaint solely on this count, as requested by Rahmani’s counsel. This memorandum opinion sets forth the reasons for the dismissals.
II.
As this is a diversity case, Virginia’s choice-of-law rules govern.
See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
To determine where the last act necessary to complete the contracts occurred, it is important to identify with some precision just what the contracts were. In this regard, Rahmani alleges that the contracts consisted of the defendants’ promise of limousines and free accommodations (the offer) and her agreement to travel to Atlantic City to enjoy these amenities and gamble (the acceptance). 2 Accordingly, under Rahmani’s theory, the last act necessary to form the contracts, namely Rahmani’s acceptance of the offers, occurred in Virginia. Thus, Rahmani argues, Virginia law should apply.
Boardwalk and Resorts counter by arguing that common sense suggests that the contracts were formed not in Virginia, but in New Jersey when Rahmani placed her bets at the casino gambling table. Resorts attacks Rahmani’s characterization of the contracts on the ground that such contracts could not have been enforced under Virginia law for they would lack the mutuality required for formation of a valid contract in Virginia.
3
Thus, if after arriving in Atlantic
Although not free from doubt, the argument for application of New Jersey law is more persuasive. No mutually enforceable obligations were created until Rahmani placed a bet at a New Jersey gambling table.
Given that New Jersey law governs, Rahmani’s claims for rescission and restitution plainly fail. In New Jersey, “[cjasino gambling has been legal ... since 1977, and the casino industry is purely a creature of statute.”
Hakimoglu v. Trump Taj Mahal Assoc.,
Under New Jersey law, therefore, the casino gambling contracts are valid. Not only does the CCA legalize casino gambling generally, it specifically recognizes and authorizes the very activity Rahmani complains of, namely the practice of offering junkets to people with a propensity to gamble for the purpose of encouraging them to travel to New Jersey to do so. See N.J.S.A. 5:12-29 and 5:12-102 (defining junkets and setting forth conditions for junkets). 4 Accordingly, under New Jersey law, the contracts are valid and enforceable, and thus Rahmani cannot sue for their rescission or for restitution.
III.
Given the closeness of the choice of law issue, it is worth noting that Rahmani fares no better under Virginia law. To begin with, it is readily apparent that Virginia affords Rahmani no contract remedies. If, as Rahmani asserts, the last act necessary to the contract occurred in Virginia, the contract created, putting aside the absence of mutuality, would be deemed a gambling contract under Virginia law.
5
Such a contract, of course, is void under Virginia law;
6
it is
Nor does Virginia law afford Rahmani any statutory remedies for the losses she incurred at casino gambling tables in New Jersey. To be sure, Virginia’s statutes re-fleet an unambiguous hostility to gambling. Thus, § 11-15 of the Virginia Code provides for the return of gambling losses sought within the three month statutory limit.
8
But § 11-15 cannot be applied to gambling losses that occur lawfully outside Virginia.
9
A state cannot invalidate the lawful statutes of another state or penalize activity that lawfully occurs in another state.
10
Put another way, the Virginia General Assembly has no power to invalidate lawful gambling taking place wholly outside of Virginia.
See, e.g., Edgar v. MITE Corp.,
For the foregoing reasons, Count I (rescission and restitution) and Count II (equitable accounting) must be dismissed.
IV.
Rahmani also asserted a number of other claims. In Count III, Rahmani alleged that the defendants “negligently permitted and encouraged [her to] continue to gamble even though they knew, or should have known, that she was a compulsive gambler.” Under Virginia’s choice of law rules, tort claims are governed by the law of the place of the wrong.
McMillan v. McMillan,
Rahmani has adduced no New Jersey law to support her suggestion that Boardwalk and Resorts had a legal duty to stop her from gambling. To the contrary, there is New Jersey case authority suggesting that no such duty exists.
See Hakimoglu,
Count V alleges that defendants harassed Rahmani “by persistently and continuously soliciting” her business. Rahmani does not provide any relevant authority holding that either New Jersey or Virginia recognizes such a tort. 11 Thus, this count must be dismissed.
Finally, in Count VI Rahmani alleges that Boardwalk violated two criminal fraud statutes, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1028 and 1546. These statutes do not provide for any private cause of action, and Rahmani suggests no basis for implying a private cause of action under these statutes.
See Suter v. Artist M.,
Appropriate orders have issued.
The Clerk is directed to send a copy of this Memorandum Opinion to all counsel of record.
Notes
. At the 12(b)(6) stage, the allegations as pled in the complaint are taken as true.
See Martin Marietta Corp. v. International Telecom. Satellite Org.,
. Mutual promises in Virginia are sufficient consideration to support the formation of a contract.
See Adams, Payne & Gleaves v. Indiana Wood Preserving Co.,
.
See, e.g. Piland Corporation v. REA Construction Co.,
.New Jersey law defines a junket as "[a]n arrangement the purpose of which is to induce any person selected or approved for participation therein on the basis of his ability to satisfy a financial obligation related to his ability or willingness to gamble or on any other basis related to his propensity to gamble, to come to a licensed casino hotel for the purpose of gambling, and pursuant to which, and as consideration for which, any or all of the cost of transportation, food, lodging, and entertainment for said person is directly or indirectly paid by a casino licensee or employee or agent thereof.” N.J.S.A. § 5:12-29.
.
See Hughes v. Cole,
. "All wagers, conveyances, assurances, and all contracts and securities whereof the whole or any part of the consideration be money or other valuable thing won, laid, or bet, at any game, horse race, sport or pastime ... shall be utterly void.” Va.Code § 11-14;
see also Kennedy v. Annandale Boys Club, Inc.,
. It is a well settled principle that Virginia courts will not enforce a contract validly formed in another state if that contract would offend the public policy of Virginia; thus, a gambling contract that would be valid in the state where it was formed will not be enforced in Virginia.
See Hughes,
. Under this section, "[a]ny person who shall, by playing at any game or betting on the sides or hands of such as play at any game, lose within twenty-four hours, the sum or value of five dollars, or more, and pay or deliver the same, or any pari thereof, may, within three months next following, recover from the winner, the money or the value of the goods so lost and paid or delivered, with costs of suit in civil action .... ” Va.Code § 11-15.
. Even if § 11-15 applied, recoupment of most if not all of Rahmani's losses would be barred by the statute’s three month limitations period. Only losses occurring after November 11, 1997 would be timely.
.
See Bigelow v. Virginia,
. Virginia case law does not support the suggestion that such a cause of action exists in Virginia. But there is at least some New Jersey authority suggesting that such a cause of action might exist in New Jersey.
See Paternoster v. Shuster,
