72 Ind. App. 572 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1920
—This cause, originating in the Allen
The court’s ruling upon the demurrer is the only error assigned.
The facts, substantially as stated by appellants in their brief, are as follows: At the time of the transactions involved in this case the appellants constituted a partnership under the name of the American Copying Company, whose business had to do with putting on advertising campaigns for retail merchants in different localities. The system was worked out as follows: Contracts were procured from several merchants in a locality similar to the contract filed as an exhibit with the amended complaint in this action. The appellants then printed and distributed what they called their Automobile Stamp Directory for that locality, which contained the display advertisements of all the contracting merchants, and also blank spaces in each directory for the purpose of pasting therein 100 purchase stamps. The purchase stamps were printed by the appellants and furnished, as provided in the contracts, to the merchants at so much per hundred. It was provided in the contracts that the merchants were to give these stamps to their customers, one stamp to be given at time of purchase for each ten cents represented in the purchase, the merchant agreeing to order from the appellants at the
In this instance the appellants procured .the, contracts of several merchants in the city of Fort Wayne, Indiana, among them the appellees., In those contracts the appellees’ store was the one designated to give out tickets in exchange for the filled directories. Performance of the contracts was entered upon, the
After tendering performance of the contract on their part and making an effort to get the appellees and other contracting merchants to comply with their contracts, which efforts were unsuccessful, the appellants brought several suits against said merchants in the Allen Circuit Court at Fort Wayne for damages for the breach of their contracts. Among them was the present action, from the judgment in which this appeal is taken.
The substantial question in this case is as to the character of the contract which was the basis of the action, and the terms of which have been hereinbefore set out, as to whether it is in violation of the law of the state and infringes upon the principles of public policy.
It is provided by §2464 Burns 1914, Acts 1905 p.-584, that whoever sells a lottery ticket or tickets, or a share' or shares in any lottery scheme or gift enterprise, of aids or abets any person or persons to engage in the same for the division of property, to be determined by chance, or makes or draws any lottery scheme or gift enterprise for a division of property
It is contended by appellant that the contract involved does not contemplate a division of the property by chance; that the only property given away is an automobile which is not subject to division. They further argue that the holders of the tickets were not to get them by any scheme of chance, but by the purchase of merchandise in certain quantities, and that the number of tickets that each person should hold was dependent upon the amount of merchandise purchased. Even this step is within the inhibition of our statute if we adopt the definition .of a gift enterprise as given in the acts of 1871 for the District of Columbia. But let us look to the further steps which are contemplated, and in analyzing the contract and in determining the steps which it contemplates in the enterprise which it presents we shall deem it our duty to read between the lines, if 'necessary, to discover the real purpose and intent of the contracting parties; and if by our reading we discover that the real purpose, though not expressed in so many words, was eventually to violate the law of the state or offend public policy, then no relief can be granted to the appellants, even though the unlawful design and purpose of the transaction has been cleverly covered by the language used. Appellants say that after the •title passes to the holders of the tickets jointly, the contract does not contemplate the commission of any unlawful act by such joint owners in the division of the property amongst them. We may well accept the statement of the appellants that the contract does not contemplate the division of an automobile among
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.