NORTH CAROLINA APPEALS COURT RULES THAT POKER IS A
GAME OF CHANCE
4 May 2007
Decision follows a similar conclusion reached
earlier this year in the UK
The North Carolina Appeals Court established a US legal
precedent this week by upholding the decision of a lower
court regarding poker in North Carolina, stating
"...while skillful players can reduce the chance factor,
they cannot control the turn of a card." Poker will
therefore remain illegal in North Carolina unless new
situations arise.
The issue dates back to 2004, when businessman Howard
Fierman (see previous InfoPowa report) wanted to open up
a poker club in Raleigh, NC. He consulted the former
District Attorney for the area, James Hardin, as to the
legality of such an operation and was informed by the D.
A. that it was a misdemeanor to play poker in the state.
This led to Fierman losing the lease to the building
where he had hoped to open up "The Joker Club" and led
him to file an injunction against Hardin.
In 2005, the Durham County Superior Court heard the case
between Fierman and Hardin. Fierman staunchly supported
that poker was a game of skill, not chance, and thus
wasn't bound by the statutes in place in the North
Carolina legal system. The Durham County Superior Court
didn't agree, however, and on May 23rd of 2005, found in
favour of the former District Attorney on the case.
Fierman persisted in his quest, however and in August of
2006, the case was heard before the North Carolina Court
of Appeals. Noted poker writer and player Roy Cooke,
Florida poker tournament operator Frank Martin and
several others testified to the fact that poker is a
game of skill over luck. While luck may prevail in a
short term aspect, they stated, over long term
expectations the skill of players will overtake luck.
Only one person testified on behalf of the State.
Richard Thornell, an officer in the state's Alcohol Law
Enforcement division, who stated he had played poker for
almost four decades. In that time, he testified, while
skill did have some effect on the game, luck was the
ultimate prevailing factor.
In the decision rendered by Judge Ann Calabria and
agreed to by fellow Judges Martha Geer and Barbara
Jackson, the Court of Appeals pointed out that Fierman
had not met the proof necessary to challenge the
standing statutes on several points. As to the
skill/luck question, the Appellate Court judges found
that the claims of Fierman and his fellow testifiers
didn't stand up.
In the decision of the Appellate Court, Jackson stated,
"During oral arguments, counsel for plaintiff analogized
poker to golf, arguing that while a weekend golfer
might, by luck, beat a professional golfer such as Tiger
Woods on one hole, over the span of eighteen holes,
Woods' superior skill would prevail. The same would be
true for a poker game, plaintiff contended, making
poker, like golf, a game of skill."
"This analogy, while creative, is false. In golf, as in
bowling or billiards, the players are presented with an
equal challenge, with each determining his fortune by
his own skill. Although chance inevitably intervenes, it
is not inherent in the game and does not overcome skill,
and the player maintains the opportunity to defeat
chance with superior skill. Whereas in poker, a skilled
player may give himself a statistical advantage but is
always subject to defeat at the turn of a card, an
instrumentality beyond his control. We think that is the
critical difference."
"For the reasons stated above, we determine that chance
predominates over skill in the game of poker, making
that game a game of chance under N.C. General Statute
14-292 (2005). Accordingly, the decision of the trial
court should remain undisturbed."
Earlier this year, a UK court came to the same
conclusion.
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
More news here.
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