Court Opinion

ID: 9855422
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-24 06:24:39.062099+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:34:30.771865
License: Public Domain

Hood, J.
Defendants John Lopez and Phillip Bradley White were bound over in separate cases to the Washtenaw Circuit Court on charges of: (1) keeping or maintaining a game of skill or chance for hire, gain, or reward, MCL 750.303; MSA 28.535 (count i); (2) permitting the use of a gambling apparatus on their premises, MCL 750.302; MSA 28.534 (count ii); and (3) permitting gambling at a bar, MCL 436.50; MSA 18.1021. Defendant White was also charged with maintaining a place with devices for registering debts and buying or selling betting pools, MCL 750.304; MSA 28.536. The circuit court ordered count i quashed and count ii dismissed in each case. The people appeal by leave granted the orders in both cases. Because the issues involved were the same, this Court consolidated the cases in its October 6, 1989, order. We reverse.1
Counts i and n involved the operation of video poker machines in defendants’ bars. When a player accumulated points on a machine, the bartender would pay the player in cash on the basis of the point total._
*308I
With respect to count i, the people argue that the circuit court erred in granting defendants’ motions to quash. We agree.
In reviewing the decision of an examining magistrate to bind over a defendant, the circuit court should not substitute its decision for that of the magistrate and should overturn the magistrate’s decision only if it appears from the record that an abuse of discretion occurred. People v Talley, 410 Mich 378, 385; 301 NW2d 809 (1981). Our task in assessing the circuit court’s decision to quash charges is to determine whether the examining magistrate committed an abuse of discretion. People v Cowley, 174 Mich App 76, 79; 435 NW2d 458 (1989).
Defendants were charged under MCL 750.303(1); MSA 28.535(1) with keeping or maintaining a game of skill or chance for hire, gain, or reward. Specifically, this section provides:
A person who for hire, gain or reward, keeps or maintains a gaming room, a gaming table, game of skill or chance, or game partly of skill and partly of chance, used for gaming, or who permits a gaming room, or gaming table, or game to be kept, maintained, or played on premises occupied or controlled by the person, is guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by imprisonment for not more than 2 years, or a fine of not more than $1,000.00.
A person who aids, assists, or abets in the keeping or maintaining of a gaming room, gaming table, or game, is guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by imprisonment for not more than 2 years, or a fine of not more than $1,000.00.
However, MCL 750.303(2); MSA 28.535(2) provides an exemption from subsection (1) for certain desig*309nated devices. The exemption at issue in this appeal states:
Subsection (1) does not apply to a mechanical amusement device which may through the application of an element of skill reward the player with the right to replay the mechanical device at no additional cost if the mechanical amusement device is not allowed to accumulate more than 15 replays at 1 time; the device'is designed so that accumulated free replays may only be discharged by reactivating the device for 1 additional play for each accumulated free replay; and the device makes no permanent record directly or indirectly of the free replays awarded.
We believe that the circuit court, in ruling that the district court abused its discretion, erroneously held that the video poker machines came within the exemption because they were limited to fifteen replays. The circuit court reached this faulty conclusion on the basis of our Supreme Court’s decision in Automatic Music & Vending Corp v Liquor Control Comm, 426 Mich 452; 396 NW2d 204 (1986), app dis 481 US 1009; 107 S Ct 1880; 95 L Ed 2d 488 (1987).
In Automatic Music, the Court, after ruling that a video poker machine was a gambling device within the context of MCL 750.303(1); MSA 28.535(1), went on to consider the relevance and constitutionality of the exemption of subsection (2). Id., pp 458-461. The Court first held that the exemption did not unconstitutionally deny equal protection because the fifteen-replay limitation was not arbitrary and was rationally related to a legislative goal of prohibiting the use of such machines for cash payoffs. Id., p 459. The Court concluded that the Legislature could reasonably have believed that a larger number of free replays *310would create a greater incentive to make cash payoffs and that limiting the accumulation of replays to a small number (fifteen) would avoid the problem. Id., pp 459-460. The Court then found that the exemption was not unconstitutionally vague because the language of MCL 750.303(2); MSA 28.535(2) was "perfectly comprehensible.” Id., p 460.
However, the Automatic Music Court also concluded that the poker machine in that case did not qualify for the exemption because it allowed the accumulation of more than fifteen replays, there was a button on the machine which allowed the discharge of all free replays, and a permanent record of the number of replays awarded was kept in the machine. Id., pp 457-458.
We believe that, while the Court in Automatic Music found that the fifteen-replay limitation was constitutional, it was not pronouncing a blanket rule that a person who keeps or maintains a machine that meets the fifteen-replay requirement was exempt from prosecution under subsection (1) even if evidence illustrates that the machines were used for gambling. It is necessary to keep in focus the facts involved in the Automatic Music case. There was no suggestion in that case that a player of the poker machine involved could win cash. As a factual matter, the evidence demonstrated that the free replays had to be used as games on the machine. Thus, the Court in Automatic Music was not faced with a situation where money was exchanged.
Automatic Music stands solely for the proposition that the fifteen-replay limitation was a constitutionally sound means of classifying machines exempt from MCL 750.303(1); MSA 28.535(1). It does not hold that, simply because a machine is limited to fifteen replays, it is automatically ex*311empt from being considered a gambling device. Such an assertion would seem contrary to our Legislature’s intent in enacting the statutory scheme governing gambling (MCL 750.301 et seq.; MSA 28.533 et seq.) to suppress an activity "injurious to the morals and welfare” of the citizenry. Michigan ex rel Comm’r of State Police v Nine Money Fall Games, 130 Mich App 414, 419; 343 NW2d 576 (1983). Therefore, the circuit court’s reliance on Automatic Music was misplaced.
However, we choose not to end our analysis here because defendant White contends that the exemption in subsection (2) of MCL 750.303; MSA 28.535 should be read in conjunction with the exemption in subsection (3), which provides in pertinent part:
Subsection (1) does not apply to a slot machine if the slot machine is 25 years old or older and is not used for gambling purposes.
Defendant White argues that the Legislature did not use the language "not used for gambling purposes” in subsection (2) as it did when subsection (3) was added in 1979. Specifically, defendant asserts that this omission evidences the Legislature’s intent in subsection (2) to exclude devices even if they were used for gambling purposes. We feel that this interpretation is illogical and borders on the ridiculous.
First, we believe that the "not used for gambling purposes” language in subsection (3) was used because old slot machines are often antiques or collectors’ items and are used for display purposes only. Thus, the Legislature did not want to make mere possession of such machines, which ordinarily have no other purpose but gambling, subject to prosecution under subsection (1). The use of specific language delineating that machines not be *312used for gambling purposes was not necessary in subsection (2). The omission of this language in no way demonstrated a legislative intent to permit the use of mechanical amusement devices for gambling. Defendant’s interpretation of subsection (2) would produce absurd results, and statutes should be construed to avoid ridiculous and unreasonable consequences. Michigan Humane Society v Natural Resources Comm, 158 Mich App 393, 401; 404 NW2d 757 (1987).
The district court did not abuse its discretion in binding over defendants on count i in both cases. Thus, the circuit court erroneously granted defendants’ motions to quash. People v Cowley, supra.
ii
The people next argue that the circuit court erred in dismissing count ii.
In count ii, defendants were charged with permitting the use of a gambling apparatus on their premises in violation of MCL 750.302(1); MSA 28.534(1), which prescribes:
Keeping and occupying building for gaming, etc. —except as provided in subsection (2), any person, or his agent or employee who shall, directly or indirectly, keep or occupy or assist in keeping or occupying any common gambling house or any building or place where gaming is permitted or suffered or who shall suffer or permit on any premises owned, occupied or controlled by him any apparatus used for gaming or gambling or who shall use such apparatus for gaming or gambling in any place within the state of Michigan, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by imprisonment in the county jail not more than 1 year or by a fine of not more than $500.00.
The circuit court ruled in both cases that this *313provision applied to or prohibited only those devices which were used exclusively for gambling. This conclusion was based on People v Lippert, 304 Mich 685; 8 NW2d 880 (1943), and Michigan ex rel Comm’r of State Police v One Helix Game, 122 Mich App 148; 333 NW2d 24 (1982). However, close examination of these cases indicates that they are distinguishable and inapposite.
First, Lippert dealt with the legality of the mere possession of á gambling apparatus and thus only considered the possession portion of MCL 750.302(1); 28.534(1). In addition, Lippert did not deal with devices which could have dual purposes of gambling and amusement. Second, One Helix Game also dealt with possession under the statute. Furthermore, One Helix Game involved the seizure and destruction of a gambling apparatus under MCL 750.308; MSA 28.540. Neither Lippert nor One Helix Game concerned that portion of MCL 750.302(1); MSA 28.534(1) at issue in the instant cases (permitting the use of an apparatus for gambling). The holdings in Lippert and One Helix Game dealing with devices used solely for gambling are inapplicable, and the circuit court’s reliance upon these cases was erroneous.
Our review of the language of MCL 750.302(1); MSA 28.534(1) in no way reveals that its application is limited to devices exclusively used for gambling. Our Supreme Court in Automatic Music ruled that the video poker machine at issue was a gambling device. Id., pp 457-458. The Court opined that such games required: (1) price or consideration; (2) chance; and (3) a prize or reward of free replays, which are things of value. Id. While Automatic Music involved MCL 750.303; MSA 28.535, we find the Court’s holding that video machines can be gambling devices dispositive. Thus, § 302(1) was applicable to the machines in these cases. The *314district court did not abuse its discretion in binding over defendants, and the circuit court erred in dismissing count ii in both cases. People v Cowley, supra.
hi
In light of the foregoing conclusions, we reverse the circuit court orders in both oases quashing count i and dismissing count n.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Gribbs, P.J., concurred.

 At the time these cases were argued, defendant Lopez had not filed a brief on appeal.