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The State of California - State and Consumer Services Agency
LEGAL AFFAIRS
400 R Street, Suite 3090
Sacramento, CA 95814-6200
RULES PROHIBITING LOTTERIES
(California Penal Code section 319 and following)
January, 1999
California law prohibits lotteries. A lottery is any scheme for the
disposition of property by chance among persons who have paid or promised to pay any value
for the chance of obtaining the property, with the understanding that it will be disposed
of by chance. #1 The name by which the scheme is known is immaterial.
There are three elements which must be present in order for a scheme
to constitute a lottery. There must be (1) a prize, (2) consideration, and (3)
distribution of the prize by chance. #2 For a
scheme to be a lottery, all three elements must be present.
California courts have interpreted these elements broadly. The
courts have found a "prize" to include almost any kind of property, such as
money, a trip, personal property or an automobile. #3
In one case, the prize was money which could be obtained only if the participant
successfully progressed through the scheme's several phases. #4 The prize in
another case was the right to play a free game. #5
The second element of a lottery is the payment of consideration by
the participant in order to be eligible to win a prize. "Consideration" may be
any kind of value. The courts have found consideration where participants paid $.25 in
exchange for a Bingo card or for small plastic rings used to play a part of a game which
was a lottery, #6 and where participants paid $1.00 in exchange for a short subscription
to a bulletin and a ticket for a drawing. #7 Even an empty beverage container, when deposited in
a reverse vending machine, has been found to be consideration. #8 However, the postage necessary to return an entry
form is not consideration. #9
Because it is not always clear whether a scheme includes the
consideration element, the courts have declared rules for deciding whether consideration
is present. In order for consideration not to be present in a scheme, the courts
have declared that anyone must be eligible to win a prize without making any purchase. In
such a scheme, if some people may pay money -- for example, solely as an
admission charge or solely for a product -- consideration is not necessarily present.
However, if eligibility to win a prize is limited to those who have paid money -- for
example, to make a purchase, or for a ticket or as an admission charge to an event or an
establishment -- consideration is considered to be present. Finally, if some persons must
pay in order to have a chance at a prize while others do not, consideration is considered
to be present. #10
The final element of a lottery is distribution of the prize "by
chance." The chance element can be present in a scheme even if it contains elements
of skill, as long as chance is the dominant factor in determining the outcome.
#11 Thus, bridge is a game of skill, although there is an element of chance
resulting from the deal of the cards. #12 Bingo, on the other hand, is a game
of chance. #13
There are two major exceptions to the law prohibiting lotteries. The
operation of the California State Lottery is authorized by the California Constitution.
The Constitution also empowers the Legislature to authorize cities and counties to provide
for bingo games, but only for charitable purposes. #14
Example of a Lottery
Assume that a chain of stores conducts a promotion in which $50
worth of merchandise is given to several customers each week. In order to be eligible to
win the prize, a customer must write his or her name and telephone number on the back of
one or more of the chain's cash register receipts, and deposit the receipt in a box at one
of the chain's stores. Several receipts are drawn by each store at random each week, and
the winners are notified by telephone. In addition, each store awards prizes randomly each
week to two people who walk into the store.
This scheme is a lottery and is therefore unlawful under Penal Code
section 319. The prize and distribution-by-chance elements clearly are present. Since not
all persons are eligible to win a prize, and since, in order to be eligible to win a
prize, a person must make a purchase, consideration is present in the scheme. The
consideration element is not removed from the scheme by allowing some people to have a
chance at a prize without paying.
Endless Chain Schemes
A pyramid sales scheme (called an "endless chain scheme"
in California) also may be a lottery. An "endless chain" is a plan for
distributing property under which a participant pays valuable consideration for the chance
to receive compensation for getting one or more additional persons to participate in the
plan, or for the chance to receive compensation when one of those additional persons
introduces a new participant. (The term "compensation" does not include payment
based on sales to an ultimate consumer whose purchase is not made in order to participate
in the plan.)
The law prohibits endless chain schemes which fit this definition.
#15 California courts reviewing endless chain schemes
have concluded that they are inherently deceptive. The reason is that the rewards promised
by the scheme can only accrue to any level of participants in the pyramid if it grows to
another level. Obviously, the point ultimately will be reached where the necessary further
recruitment is impossible. #16
A scheme that is an endless chain often contains the three elements
of a lottery. An endless chain scheme typically awards a participant cash or product
bonuses or rebates based on his or her sales volume and on the sales volume of
participants below him or her in the pyramid. Such an award satisfies the
"prize" element in the definition of a lottery. Such an award based on sales to
a non-participating ultimate consumer also would satisfy this element of the definition.
Endless chain schemes typically require participants to purchase
products or memberships, or to make financial commitments in order to be eligible for
bonuses or rebates. Such a purchase satisfies the "consideration" element in the
definition of a lottery.
Finally, a scheme that is an endless chain typically distributes the
prize "by chance," as that term is defined in the lottery context. In an endless
chain, chance is the dominating factor because a participant's success depends in major
part on the activities of the scheme's promoters #17 and the activities of those
below the participant in the chain. #18 Further, the success of a participant in an
endless chain also depends in major part on the saturation of the market which occurs as
the pyramid expands, which typically is not within the participant's control. #19
Example of an endless chain scheme that is a lottery: A
company markets its products through a hierarchy of salespeople called consultants. A
person enters the program and becomes a consultant by being sponsored by another
consultant, and by paying $25 to the company for registration. Each consultant is
encouraged to purchase a sample inventory of products from his or her sponsoring
consultant, but the company literature says that a consultant is not required to make any
purchase. Nonetheless, company policy encourages the purchase of the sample inventory and
payment of the registration fee as a package, and a consultant cannot earn commissions
without purchasing inventory.
The company encourages consultants to recruit others and to sell its
products to the recruits, who in turn are encouraged to recruit others and to sell the
company's products to them, through three "generations." Retail sales also may
occur. The consultant can purchase products for resale only from his or her sponsoring
consultant, who has purchased the products from the company. The company encourages all
consultants to purchase products in advance of need.
The consultant earns commissions on his or her own sales and on the
sales of the consultants in his or her network, who must purchase their products from him
or her. The consultant also receives rebates on the products purchased from the sponsoring
consultant based on the total sales volume of the consultant's network.
The consultant can earn promotions to consultant 2 and consultant 3
by achieving specified sales volumes by his network and specified volumes of purchases for
resale to his network. Consultant 2's and 3's receive increased commissions, greater
rebates on products purchased, and bonuses, all of which are determined by sales and
purchase volumes.
This scheme is both an endless chain and a lottery. It is an endless
chain because the consultant pays consideration for the chance to introduce additional
consultants into the scheme and to receive compensation from their sales. The scheme also
depends on an endless chain of middlemen (new consultants), encourages inventory purchases
by consultants at all levels, and does not emphasize retail sales. (The latter are other
features of endless chain schemes which have been identified by California courts.) #20
This scheme is also a lottery. The prize element is present in the
form of commissions, rebates, and bonuses. The consideration element is present because
participants must purchase products in order to receive the commissions, rebates, and
bonuses. The element of distribution by chance is present in that a participant's success
depends in major part on the activities of the scheme's promoters, the activities of those
below the participant in the chain, and also on the saturation of the market as the chain
expands.
Penalties and Enforcement
Any person who prepares or operates a lottery, furnishes lottery
tickets, or assists a lottery is guilty of a misdemeanor. #21 Any property
offered for distribution through a lottery is subject to summary attachment and is
forfeited to the State. #22 Any person who prepares, proposes, or
operates an endless chain scheme which fits the definition given above is guilty
of a public offense punishable by imprisonment in county jail or state prison. #23
Misdemeanor provisions also prohibit any person from selling any
share or interest in any lottery, or any share or interest which depends on the event of
any lottery; from receiving valuable consideration upon an agreement to repay any sum or
to deliver any property if any lottery ticket or number in any lottery wins or loses; and,
from promising to pay any sum or to deliver any property upon any contingency which
depends on the drawing of any ticket in any lottery. #24
The forfeiture and misdemeanor provisions are enforceable by the
Attorney General or by any district attorney. The lottery and endless chain provisions
also may be enforced through civil court actions filed by private parties, district
attorneys, the Attorney General, certain city attorneys, and agencies of the state.
#25 Depending on the nature of the civil action,
remedies include civil penalties of up to $2,500 for each violation, injunction, and
restitution. #26 If the lottery includes false
or misleading statements, remedies may include an additional civil penalty of up to $2,500
for each violation. #27
A participant in an endless chain scheme may rescind (revoke) his or
her contract with the scheme, and may recover payments made under the scheme (less
payments received from the scheme). #28
Prepared by:
Senior Staff Counsel
January, 1999
NOTICE: The Department of Consumer Affairs strives to make
its legal guides accurate in every respect. However, this legal guide is only a guideline,
and is not a definitive statement of the law. Questions about the law's application to
specific circumstances should be directed to an attorney.
This publication is available on the Internet. See the Department of
Consumer Affairs' homepage at www.dca.ca.gov.
This document may be copied, if all of the following conditions are
met: the meaning of the copied text is not changed; credit is given to the Department of
Consumer Affairs; and all copies are distributed free of charge.
1 Penal Code section 319.
2 E.g., California Gasoline Retailers v. Regal Petroleum of Fresno, Inc.
(1958) 50 Cal.2d 844 [330 P.2d 778].
3 E.g. Regal Petroleum; People v. Cardas (1933) 137 Cal.App.Supp.
788 [28 P.2d 99]; People v. Gonzales (1944) 62 Cal.App.2d 274 [144 P.2d 605].
4 People v. Shira (1976) 62 Cal.App.3d 442 [133 Cal.Rptr. 94].
5 People v. Settles (1938) 29 Cal.App.2d (Supp.) 781 [78 P.2d 274].
6 People v. Shira.
7 Holmes v. Saunders (1952) 114 Cal.App.2d 389 [250 P.2d 269].
8 64 Ops. Atty. Gen. 629 (1981). Penal Code section 319.5, enacted subsequent
to the Attorney General's opinion, states that the deposit of an empty beverage container
in a reverse vending machine does not constitute "consideration."
9 Haskell v. Time Inc. (E.D.Cal. 1994) 857 F.Supp. 1392.
10 People v. Shira.
11 People v. Shira.
12 In re Allen (1962) 59 Cal.2d 5 [27 Cal.Rptr. 168].
13 People v. Shira.
14 California Constitution, Article IV, section 19; see Penal Code section 326.5.
15 Penal Code section 327.
16 People v. Bestline Products, Inc. (1976) 61 Cal.App.3d 787, 879 [132 Cal.Rptr. 767].
17 Webster v. Omnitrition
18 Cf. Finster v. Keller (1971) 18 Cal.App.3d 836 [96 Cal.Rptr. 241].
19 Securities and Exchange Commission v. Glenn W. Turner Enterprises, Inc. (D. Or. 1972) 438 F.Supp. 766,
aff'd (9th Cir. 1973) 474 F.2d 476.
20 People v. Bestline Products, Inc.; Bounds v. Figurettes, Inc. (1982) 135 Cal.App.3d 1 [185 Cal.Rptr. 480].
"Operate" a lottery is explained in People v. Sanchez (1999) 62 Cal.App.4th 460, 469, 471 [72 Cal.Rptr.2d 782, 787, 788-789]
("operate" does not apply only to creators and designers of the scheme; "operate" denotes ongoing conduct which advances the
program of an existing entity; here, the defendants called participants to announce meetings, held many meetings in their home, conducted the meetings
and lectured at them, explained the scheme's rules and requirements, prepared pyramid charts and collected money)
21 Penal Code sections 319, 322, 323, 326..
22 Penal Code section 325.
23 Penal Code section 327.
24 Penal Code sections 321, 324.
25 Business and Professions Code sections 17200, 17204, 17206.
26 Business and Professions Code sections 17203, 17206, Civil Code section 1689.2.
27 Business and Professions Code section 17500.
28 Civil Code section 1689.2.
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