OPINION OF THE COURT
Plаintiff is the victim of a variant of the old pyramid club which has surfaced under the guise of the "airplane game”. For $1,500 paid to the "pilot”, a person or group of persons could buy 1 of 8 seats on an "airplane”. Above the 8 "passengеrs” were 4 "crew members”, 2 "copilots” and a "pilot”. When all of the passenger seats were sold then the old airрlane would split into two with the passengers becoming crew members, the crew members becoming copilots and the copilots becoming pilots. The original pilot would take the $12,000 from the new passengers and "pilot out”. The new pilots and crew would then try to sell the seats in their planes so the whole process could be repeated.
Here plaintiff contributed $1,250 toward a seat in a plane
Here the defendant appears to have been as duped as plaintiff. There is no evidence that she in any way organized or managed the scheme. Her only role at any of the mеetings was take a bow without saying anything when she piloted out.
Similarly, although alleged by plaintiff, there is no proof that defеndant committed fraud. Apparently she believed what she told plaintiff and everyone else on her "plane”. Indeed plaintiff testified that she made no money on the transaction, her winnings being eaten up by losses in a prior crash and by her subsequent purchase of a seat on a $3,000-a-seat plane. So there is certainly none of the clear and convincing proof of an intentional misrepresentation required to establish a fraud claim. (Jo Ann Homes at Bellmore v Dworetz,
Thus the question presented is whether a loser in an illegal pyramid scheme can recover the moneys she gave the apparеntly innocent beneficiary of her game. The one case in the
However, a more persuasive authority is sections 5-419 and 5-421 of the Generаl Obligations Law which allow a gambling loser to recover his losses from the winner. They manifest a policy that someone who has been fortunate enough to have made money from an illegal gambling scheme must disgorge his winnings to the loser. Apрlying such policy here is more persuasive than in the more typical gambling case. There the winner presumably would hаve won because he was luckier or perhaps as in gambling games like poker or in bets on sporting events had mоre skill or foresight. Here defendant won because she came first; the first participant has an inherent and usually decisive edge over the latecomer. There is no reason to let defendant keep what she won in so inherently unfаir a game.
An analogous result was reached in Valentin v La Prensa (
While as stated earlier defendant’s dissipation of her winnings in other airplane games is an indication of her good
The court is entering judgment for plaintiff and against defendant for $1,250.
