The Honorable Jeremy Hutchinson State Representative 718 Parliament Street Little Rock, AR 72211
Dear Representative Hutchinson:
I am writing in response to your request for an opinion on the legality of an amateur poker league. Your request sets forth the factual background of your request including a brief overview of the poker league in question. Host establishments pay a fee to the league to have the tournaments hosted at their restaurants and bars. The players in the tournaments must register with the league. Registration costs nothing. There are no annual fees. There is no door fee to play in the tournaments hosted and no actual money is wagered in the tournaments. Rather, a number of poker chips are equally distributed to each participant and the participants are forbidden by league rules to wager any money or other item of value in the tournaments. The league has proposed awarding prizes to the winners of the tournaments. With this information as the background, you ask the following:
1. Do the Arkansas anti-gambling statutes or the anti-lottery provision of the Arkansas Constitution prohibit the activities of the league described above, including hosting a poker tournament in which participants do not pay to participate and are prohibited from wagering, but have the ability to win a prize?
2. Is the answer to question 1 different if the league does not award prizes or if the value of the prizes is less than a certain dollar amount?
3. Are the answers to question 1 and 2 different if the game being played is something other than poker, such as Monopoly or Yahtzee?
RESPONSE
In my opinion, the activity of the league as described above would likely be found by a court to be neither a lottery as prohibited by the Arkansas Constitution nor illegal gambling prohibited under A.C.A. §§
Question 1. Do the Arkansas anti-gambling statutes or the anti-lotteryprovision of the Arkansas Constitution prohibit the activities of theleague described above, including hosting a poker tournament in whichparticipants do not pay to participate and are prohibited from wagering,but have the ability to win a prize?
I do not believe that the Arkansas anti-gambling statutes or the constitutional prohibition on lotteries prevent the activities of the league as you have described them.
In my opinion, the constitutional prohibition on lotteries does not apply to this situation. The Arkansas Constitution provides, "No lottery shall be authorized by the State, nor shall the sale of lottery tickets be allowed." Ark. Const. Art.
There does not appear to be consideration paid to participate in the poker tournaments as you have described the situation. Consideration may not be directly or indirectly contributed by the participants of the game or contest at issue. See, e.g. Op. Att'y Gen.
It is ultimately a question of fact as to whether the participants are paying consideration to participate, but I do not believe that it is likely that a court would make such a finding on the facts as you have described them. The participants are not directly offering consideration to participate in the tournaments. There are no annual dues paid to the league. You note that the host establishments are hoping to profit from an increased volume of food and beverage sales. As long as the playing of the poker game is not dependent on the food and beverage sales, such as through but not limited to a minimum food or beverage requirement or cover charge, and so long as the participants are not indirectly paying consideration for a chance to win through inflated food and beverage prices which the host establishment uses to fund the purchase of the prizes, I do not believe that the participants are paying consideration to play in the tournament as you have described it.
With regard to the other two elements of a lottery, as you noted in your request, the league is considering awarding prizes at the tournaments. If the league were to award prizes, the "prize" element of lottery would therefore be met. I cannot conclusively address, however, whether poker would be considered a game controlled entirely by chance. The winners must be determined by "chance alone," and that the outcome be "wholly dependent upon the element of chance." Scott,
The Arkansas Code prohibits gambling on poker games in Ark. Code Ann. §
If any person shall be guilty of betting any money or any valuable thing on any game of brag, bluff, poker, seven-up, three-up, twenty-one, vingt-et-un, thirteen cards, the odd trick, forty-five, whist, or at any other game at cards, known by any name now known to the law, or with any other or new name or without any name, he shall, on conviction be fined in any sum not less than ten dollars ($10.00) nor more than twenty-five dollars ($25.00).
Id. (emphasis added). This statute makes it is illegal to bet with money or any other thing of value, directly or indirectly, on the outcome of a card game. As noted in the discussion of the constitutional prohibition on lotteries above, the situation as you have described does not appear to involve wagering on these games. Absent a wager, I believe that the Arkansas courts would not find this to be prohibited gambling.
In addition, I do not believe that the host establishments would be considered "gambling houses" under the Arkansas Code. The statutory prohibition on gambling includes a prohibition on the keeping of "gambling houses." Specifically, the code provides:
Every person who shall keep, conduct, or operate, or who shall be interested, directly or indirectly, in keeping, conducting, or operating any gambling house or place where gambling is carried on, or who shall set-up, keep, exhibit or cause to be set up, kept, or exhibited . . . any gambling device, or who shall be interested directly, or indirectly in running any gambling house . . . either by furnishing money, or other articles for the purposes of carrying on any gambling house shall be deemed guilty of a felony and on conviction shall be confined in the Department of Correction for not less than one (1) nor more than three (3) years.
A.C.A. §
The Arkansas Supreme Court has explained that "the essence of the offense set out in §
On a similar analysis, I do not believe that the host establishments would be considered to be exhibiting gaming devices under A.C.A. §§
The host establishments where the poker tournaments are occurring are licensed by the Arkansas Alcohol Beverage Control Board ("ABC") according to your description. You have indicated that the ABC has "advised the League that their activities constituted gambling activities and could subject participating host establishments to disciplinary actions by ABC." The Arkansas Code prohibits certain licensed sellers of alcoholic beverages from allowing "gambling with cards . . . or any other form of gambling in the place designated by the license[.]" A.C.A. §
Permitt[ing] gambling or games of chance or [keeping] any gambling device, machine, or apparatus upon the permitted premises[.]
Ark. Alcohol Bev. Control Reg. 3.19(1)(C).
As discussed above, I do not believe that the situation you have described would support a finding of gambling. Furthermore, I do not believe that the situation supports a finding that gambling devices are being kept or used on the host establishment premises. From my understanding, ABC has based its interpretation of the gambling statutes on language from Pre-Paid Solution v. City of Little Rock,
The machines operate as follows. A patron paces a $1 bill in the machine, and the machine prints an "Emergency Long Distance Telephone Card" good for three minutes of long distance. At the same time, the machine registers a number of play credits. The patron may then play a game on the machine "similar to tic-tac-toe on a 3 x 3 matrix consisting of various symbols which may be lined up for additional points." These points may then be redeemed for a cash prize ranging from $1 to $1,000. Additionally after using the prepaid telephone card, the patron may mail the used card to Appellants for a supplemental drawing for various prizes such as electronics or airline tickets. If a patron does not wish to purchase a telephone card but still wants to play the game, he or she may use one of the self-addressed, stamped post cards provided at the store and mail it to Appellants for a free-play certificate. A patron may then redeem the free-play certificate for a $1 bill to play the game.
Pre-Paid,
I do not believe that ABC's interpretation of the language in Pre-Paid is appropriate under the situation you have described. With respect to the possible property interest in playing in the league tournaments, I believe that the lack of consideration to participate in the tournaments prevents a property interest, such as the one in Pre-Paid, supra, from being wagered. In Pre-Paid, 343 Ark., as well as Rankin, 182 Ark., the court was addressing a device where money had to be inserted for a product and also the opportunity to play a game where more prizes could be awarded. Furthermore, the court noted that, while the appellant in Pre-Paid offered a chance to play the game for free, it involved giving a one dollar bill to the potential player which then become "property" that he or she may win or lose.
In contrast, under the facts you describe, the league does not require dues or a table fee to play in the tournaments. If the establishments are not charging a cover, offering unreasonable "specials," or charging inflated food and beverage prices, such as those described above in the discussion of consideration for a lottery, there does not appear to be a property interest offered either by the player directly or indirectly, or supplied to the players by the league or host establishment. It has been recognized that awarding prizes to the winners of a competition is not inherently gambling when the players have nothing to lose. See Op. Att'y Gen.
Consequently, in my opinion, in the specific situation you have described, there does not appear to be a lottery under the constitutional prohibitions on lotteries, illegal gambling under the statutory prohibition on gambling, or the illegal exhibition of gaming devices when an amateur poker league accepts a fee from host establishments to run poker tournaments at no cost to the participants in the tournaments and award prizes to the top participants.
Question 2. Is the answer to question 1 different if the league does notaward prizes or if the value of the prizes is less than a certain dollaramount?
See answer to Question 1 above.
Question 3. Are the answers to question 1 and 2 different if thegame being played is something other than poker, such as Monopolyor Yahtzee?
In my opinion, the answers to Question 1 and Question 2 would remain the same. The only difference between the first two questions and the third question you have posed is the game or contest being played.
With respect to the constitutional prohibition on lotteries, this would only affect whether the game was based solely on chance in the distribution of prizes. That remains a fact question to be decided by a court of law. If the situation remains as you have described it except for the game of poker being replaced with the game of Monopoly or Yahtzee, then it does not appear to violate the constitutional prohibition on lotteries or the anti-gambling statutes for the same reasons described above, i.e. the absence of consideration required to play. With respect to the statutory prohibition on gambling, A.C.A §
If any person shall be guilty of betting any money or any valuable thing on any game of hazard or skill, he shall on conviction be fined in any sum not less than ten dollars ($10.00) not more than twenty-five dollars ($25.00).
A.C.A. §
Assistant Attorney General Joel DiPippa prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
MIKE BEEBE Attorney General
MB:JMD/cyh
