Court Opinion

ID: 7980483
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:04:45.14719+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:01.719981
License: Public Domain

Holt, J.
In the municipal court of Duluth defendant was convicted of the offense _of selling a lottery ticket. He appealed to the district court of St. Louis county, but the conviction was sustained and he now appeals to this court.
*60The complaint is attacked as insufficient. The substance of the charging part is that defendant at the time and place named did wilfully and wrongfully sell to one Charles Anderson “a ticket, chance, share and interest in a lottery, to-wit: A ticket and chance on certain personal property to-wit: One (1) suit of clothes represented by the said Wolford to be of the value of Forty-eight and no/100ths Dollars”, and the said Anderson paid to said Wolford one dollar therefor. We think the complaint shows a violation of section 8728, Gr. S. 1913, which provides: “Every person who shall sell, give, or in any way whatever furnish or transfer to or for another a ticket, chance, share or interest, or any paper, certificate, or instrument purporting to be or to represent a ticket, chance, share, or interest in or dependent upon the event of a lottery * * * shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.”
The ticket or instrument received in evidence, and which the state claims is the lottery ticket sold, is so evidently drawn with a view to accomplish the very same purpose which the instrument in State v. Moren, 48 Minn. 555, 51 N. W. 618, was designed to effect, that it must come within the condemnation of that case. The effort by recital and change of language to prevent its being held an interest in a scheme of chance does not alter the fact. There is, to be sure, no direct reference to a drawing, but how is the tailoring company, which agrees to select each week from the holders of such tickets or instruments one to receive the $48 suit upon which, perhaps, only a dollar has been paid, to determine the lucky one? If not by lottery or chance, how is it to be done? Neither party to the scheme would consider the selection fair if left to the will of the company. They must have intended that some sort of drawing of lots should determine the choice. As aptly remarked by the district court: “There may have been, as a matter of fact, no element of chance involved so far as the tailoring company was concerned, but there certainly was so far as the customer was concerned. It was only by some turn of the wheel of fortune, entirely beyond his control, that he might be one of the lucky customers to receive a suit for less than forty-eight ($48.00) dollars.” In State v. United States Exp. Co. 95 Minn. 442, 104 N. W. 556, some significant remarks are made con-*61eerning the omission of the so-called contract to specify how the favored one was to be ascertained.
We think the ticket or instrument sold by defendant was an interest in a lottery within the purview of the statute despite its cunningly devised form.
The judgment is affirmed.