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Gaming Act 1845

The Gaming Act 1845[1] (8 & 9 Vict. c. 109) was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. The Act's principal provision was to deem a wager unenforceable as a legal contract. The Act received royal assent on 8 August 1845. Sections 17 and 18, though amended, remained in force until 1 September 2007.

Gaming Act 1845[1]
Act of Parliament
Long titleAn Act to amend the Law concerning Games and Wagers.
Citation8 & 9 Vict. c. 109
Territorial extent 
  • England and Wales
  • Scotland
  • Ireland
Dates
Royal assent8 August 1845
Commencement8 August 1845[2]
Repealed1 September 2007[3]
Other legislation
Repeals/revokesGaming Act 1664
Amended by
Repealed byGambling Act 2005, s.356(3)(d) & Sch.17
Relates toGaming Act 1892
Status: Repealed
Text of statute as originally enacted
Revised text of statute as amended
Text of the Gaming Act 1845 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk.

Background edit

Increasing concern as to the damaging social effects of gambling[4] gave rise to a select committee of the House of Commons whose recommendations were implemented by the Act.[5] The policy of the Act was to discourage betting.[6]

However, following a 2001 report by Sir Alan Budd,[7] in 2002, the UK government accepted that wagers should cease to be unenforceable as contracts, seeking to introduce a new liberalised regulatory regime in order to encourage the gambling industry.[8]

Repeals edit

Sections 1 to 9 and 15 and 16 and 19 to 24 and 26, and the First and Second Schedules, were repealed by Part I of Schedule 6 to the Betting and Gaming Act 1960.

Sections 10 to 14 and the Third Schedule were repealed by section 1 of, and the Schedule to, the Billiards (Abolition of Restrictions) Act 1987

Section 25 was repealed by Part XIX of Schedule 1 to the Statute Law (Repeals) Act 1976

This Act was repealed for Northern Ireland by article 187(4) of, and Schedule 21 to, the Betting, Gaming, Lotteries and Amusements (Northern Ireland) Order 1985 (S.I. 1985/1204 (N.I. 11)).

The whole Act was repealed in the Republic of Ireland by the Gaming and Lotteries Act 1956.

Exclusion edit

This Act was excluded by section 16(4) of the Gaming Act 1968.

Section 1 – Repeal of part of the Unlawful Games Act 1541 edit

Section 1 repealed the Unlawful Games Act 1541 (33 Hen. 8. c. 9), as to so much

  • whereby any game of mere skill, such as bowling, coyting, cloyshcayls, half bowl, tennis or the like, was declared an unlawful game,
  • which enacted any penalty for playing at any such game of skill as aforesaid,
  • which enacts any penalty for lacking bows or arrows, or for not making and continuing butts,
  • which regulates the making, selling, or using of bows and arrows,
  • requires the mayors, sheriffs, bailiffs, constables, and other head officers within every city, borough, and town within the Realm, to make search weekly, or at the farthest once a month, in all places where houses, alleys, plays, or places of dicing, carding, or gaming shall be suspected to be had, kept, and maintained,
  • as makes it lawful for every master to license his or their servants, and for every nobleman and other having manors, lands, tenements, or other yearly profits for term of life, in his own right or in his wife's right, to the yearly value of an hundred pounds or above, to command, appoint, or license, by his or their discretion, his or their servants or family of his or their house or houses to play at cards, dice, or tables, or any unlawful game.

It provides such commandment, appointment, or licence shall not avail any person to exempt him from the danger or penalty of playing at any unlawful game or in any common gaming house.

Section 15 – Repeal of other laws edit

Section 15 repeals the following:

  • as relates to Gaming Act 1710 (9 Ann. c. 19) and
  • as renders any person liable to be indicted and punished for winning or losing, at play or by betting, at any one time, the sum or value of ten pounds, or within the space of twenty-four hours the sum or value of twenty pounds.

Section 17 – Cheating at play edit

This section created an offence. At the time of its repeal this section read:

. . . every person who shall, by any fraud or unlawful device or ill practice in playing at or with cards, dice, tables, or other game, or in bearing a part in the stakes, wages, or adventures, or in betting on the sides or hands of them that do play, or in wagering on the event of any game, sport, pastime, or exercise, win from any other person to himself, or any other or others, any sum of money or valuable thing, shall -

[(a)on conviction on indictment be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years; or
(b)on summary conviction be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months or to a fine not exceeding two hundred pounds or to both.]

The words of enactment at the start were repealed by the Statute Law Revision Act 1891.

The words in square brackets were substituted for the words "be deemed guilty of obtaining such money or valuable thing from such other person by a false pretence, with intent to cheat or defraud such person of the same, and, being convicted thereof, shall be punished accordingly" by sections 33(2) and 36(3) of, and Part III of Schedule 2 to, the Theft Act 1968.

Two hundred pounds

Section 32(2) of the Magistrates' Courts Act 1980 provided that the reference to two hundred pounds was to be construed as a reference to the prescribed sum.

The following cases are relevant:

  • R v Darley (1826) 1 Stark NP 359, (1826) 171 ER 497
  • Cooke v Stratford (1844) 13 M & W 379, (1844) 2 Dow & L 399, (1844) 4 LT (OS) 138a
  • R v Hudson (1860) Bell CC 263
  • R v O'Connor and Brown (1881) 45 LT 512, (1881) 46 JP 214, (1881) 15 Cox 3
  • R v Moore, 10 Cr App R 54, CCA
  • R v Lawler, 14 JP 561
  • R v Governor of Brixton Prison, ex parte Sjoland and Metzler [1912] 3 KB 568, 29 TLR 10, 77 JP 23
  • R v Leon [1945] KB 136, 30 Cr App R 120, 61 TLR 100, CCA
  • R v Butler, 38 Cr App R 57, CCA
  • R v Clucas and O'Rourke [1959] 1 WLR 244, [1959] 1 All ER 438, 43 Cr App R 98, 123 JP 203, CCA
  • R v Harris and Turner [1963] 2 QB 442, [1963] 2 WLR 851, [1963] 2 All ER 294, 47 Cr App R 125, CCA

In 2005, Kwong Lee, Martin Fitz and Shuhal Miah were found guilty of cheating at roulette under this section.[9]

Section 18 – Gambling contracts deemed void edit

This section concerned whether unpaid winnings accrued from gambling could be sued for in a court of law. The Act made it clear that they could not because winnings from gambling were to be treated as a "debt of honour" and as such could not be treated as a financial debt. The Act read:

All contracts or agreements, whether by parole or in writing, by way of gaming or wagering, shall be null and void; and no suit shall be brought or maintained in any court of law and equity for recovering any sum of money or valuable thing alleged to be won upon any wager, or which shall have been deposited in the hands of any person to abide the event on which any wager shall have been made: Provided always, that this enactment shall not be deemed to apply to any subscription or contribution, or agreement to subscribe or contribute, for or towards any plate, prize, or sum of money to be awarded to the winner or winners of any lawful game, sport, pastime, or exercise.

This section was extended by the Gaming Act 1892.

However, a bet on the Horserace Totalisator Board, also known as The Tote, did not fall within the scope of the Act.[10]

Further, by the 1980s, it was feared that complex commercial risk management instruments and contracts, such as derivatives could fall foul of the Act. Provision was made that a contract would not be void if at least one of the parties entered into it for legitimate business purposes.[11][12] The exemption is now found in the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 s 412.[13]

The Gambling Act 2005 removed the "debt of honour" clause that made gambling winnings exempt from legal action if they were not paid. This meant that unpaid winnings could now be pursued in a court of law.

Section 19 – Feigned issues abolished edit

Court of law or equity that desired to have any question of fact decided by a jury had it presented in the form of feigned issues, by stating that a wager was laid between two parties interested in respectively maintaining the affirmative and the negative of certain propositions. It was enacted that in every case where any court of law or equity desires to have any question of fact decided by a jury it should the directly state the question of fact in dispute, with such persons being plaintiffs and defendants as the court may direct, rather than as a feigned issue of a wager.

Ireland and Northern Ireland edit

The Act was in force in Ireland until partition. It consequently became the law of the Irish Free State on 6 December 1922, and then of its successor states until its repeal in 1956. When the autonomous region of Northern Ireland seceded from the Irish Free State and rejoined the United Kingdom on 7 December 1922, the Act became the law of Northern Ireland until repeal.

Cases edit

  • Close v Wilson [2011] EWCA Civ 5, a promise to money paid under an agreement to bet cannot be enforced because of the Gaming Act 1892 s 1, but the payer has a claim in restitution for the winnings and for any money used for purposes other than betting.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b The citation of this Act by this short title was authorised by the Short Titles Act 1896, section 1 and first schedule. Due to the repeal of those provisions, it is now authorised by section 19(2) of the Interpretation Act 1978.
  2. ^ This Act came into force on the date on which it received royal assent because no other date was specified: The Acts of Parliament (Commencement) Act 1793
  3. ^ Gambling Act 2005 (Commencement No. 6 and Transitional Provisions) Order 2006, SI 2007/3272, art.2(4)
  4. ^ Miers (2002) p.20
  5. ^ House of Commons (1844)
  6. ^ Hill v. William Hill (Park Lane) Limited [1949] AC 530, at 548 per Viscount Simon
  7. ^ Budd (2001)
  8. ^ Gambling Review (2002) 4.7/ r.108
  9. ^ "Trapped by a sting that won too much". TimesOnline. London. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 4 August 2007. - this article implies that the three were the first to be convicted under the Act but many cases are cited in Richardson, P. J., ed. (2007). Archbold: Criminal Pleading, Evidence and Practice. London: Sweet & Maxwell. pp. 22–70. ISBN 978-0-421-94830-3.
  10. ^ Tote Investors v Smoker [1968] 1 QB 509
  11. ^ Financial Services Act 1986, s.63
  12. ^ Schwartz, R. J.; Smith, C. W. (1997). Derivatives Handbook: Risk Management and Control. Wiley. pp. p.183. ISBN 0471157651.
  13. ^ 412.— Gaming contracts. (1) No contract to which this section applies is void or unenforceable because of– (a) Article 170 of the Betting, Gaming, Lotteries and Amusements (Northern Ireland) Order 1985; or (2) This section applies to a contract if– (a) it is entered into by either or each party by way of business; (b) the entering into or performance of it by either party constitutes an activity of a specified kind or one which falls within a specified class of activity; and (c) it relates to an investment of a specified kind or one which falls within a specified class of investment. (3) Part II of Schedule 2 applies for the purposes of subsection (2)(c), with the references to section 22 being read as references to that subsection. (4) Nothing in Part II of Schedule 2, as applied by subsection (3), limits the power conferred by subsection (2)(c). (5) "Investment" includes any asset, right or interest. (6) "Specified" means specified in an order made by the Treasury.

References edit

  • Birley, D. (1993). Sport and the Making of Britain. Manchester: Manchester University Press. pp. p.204. ISBN 071903759X. (Google Books)
  • Budd, A (2001) , Department for Culture, Media and Sport
  • Gambling Review (2002) Cm.5397
  • House of Commons (1844) Report from the Select Committee on Gaming HC1844/297
  • Miers, D. (2004). Regulating Commercial Gambling: Past, Present, and Future. London: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199276153.
  • Smith, C.; Monckom, S. (2001). Smith and Monckom's The Law of Betting, Gaming and Lotteries. London: LexisNexis. ISBN 0406903131.

gaming, 1845, vict, parliament, united, kingdom, principal, provision, deem, wager, unenforceable, legal, contract, received, royal, assent, august, 1845, sections, though, amended, remained, force, until, september, 2007, parliamentparliament, united, kingdom. The Gaming Act 1845 1 8 amp 9 Vict c 109 was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom The Act s principal provision was to deem a wager unenforceable as a legal contract The Act received royal assent on 8 August 1845 Sections 17 and 18 though amended remained in force until 1 September 2007 Gaming Act 1845 1 Act of ParliamentParliament of the United KingdomLong titleAn Act to amend the Law concerning Games and Wagers Citation8 amp 9 Vict c 109Territorial extent England and WalesScotlandIrelandDatesRoyal assent8 August 1845Commencement8 August 1845 2 Repealed1 September 2007 3 Other legislationRepeals revokesGaming Act 1664Amended byBetting and Gaming Act 1960Billiards Abolition of Restrictions Act 1987Theft Act 1968Repealed byGambling Act 2005 s 356 3 d amp Sch 17Relates toGaming Act 1892Status RepealedText of statute as originally enactedRevised text of statute as amendedText of the Gaming Act 1845 as in force today including any amendments within the United Kingdom from legislation gov uk Contents 1 Background 2 Repeals 3 Exclusion 4 Section 1 Repeal of part of the Unlawful Games Act 1541 5 Section 15 Repeal of other laws 6 Section 17 Cheating at play 7 Section 18 Gambling contracts deemed void 8 Section 19 Feigned issues abolished 9 Ireland and Northern Ireland 10 Cases 11 See also 12 Notes 13 ReferencesBackground editIncreasing concern as to the damaging social effects of gambling 4 gave rise to a select committee of the House of Commons whose recommendations were implemented by the Act 5 The policy of the Act was to discourage betting 6 However following a 2001 report by Sir Alan Budd 7 in 2002 the UK government accepted that wagers should cease to be unenforceable as contracts seeking to introduce a new liberalised regulatory regime in order to encourage the gambling industry 8 Repeals editSections 1 to 9 and 15 and 16 and 19 to 24 and 26 and the First and Second Schedules were repealed by Part I of Schedule 6 to the Betting and Gaming Act 1960 Sections 10 to 14 and the Third Schedule were repealed by section 1 of and the Schedule to the Billiards Abolition of Restrictions Act 1987Section 25 was repealed by Part XIX of Schedule 1 to the Statute Law Repeals Act 1976This Act was repealed for Northern Ireland by article 187 4 of and Schedule 21 to the Betting Gaming Lotteries and Amusements Northern Ireland Order 1985 S I 1985 1204 N I 11 The whole Act was repealed in the Republic of Ireland by the Gaming and Lotteries Act 1956 Exclusion editThis Act was excluded by section 16 4 of the Gaming Act 1968 Section 1 Repeal of part of the Unlawful Games Act 1541 editSection 1 repealed the Unlawful Games Act 1541 33 Hen 8 c 9 as to so much whereby any game of mere skill such as bowling coyting cloyshcayls half bowl tennis or the like was declared an unlawful game which enacted any penalty for playing at any such game of skill as aforesaid which enacts any penalty for lacking bows or arrows or for not making and continuing butts which regulates the making selling or using of bows and arrows requires the mayors sheriffs bailiffs constables and other head officers within every city borough and town within the Realm to make search weekly or at the farthest once a month in all places where houses alleys plays or places of dicing carding or gaming shall be suspected to be had kept and maintained as makes it lawful for every master to license his or their servants and for every nobleman and other having manors lands tenements or other yearly profits for term of life in his own right or in his wife s right to the yearly value of an hundred pounds or above to command appoint or license by his or their discretion his or their servants or family of his or their house or houses to play at cards dice or tables or any unlawful game It provides such commandment appointment or licence shall not avail any person to exempt him from the danger or penalty of playing at any unlawful game or in any common gaming house Section 15 Repeal of other laws editSection 15 repeals the following Gaming Act 1664 16 Cha 2 c 7 Gaming Act 1710 9 Ann c 19 as was not amended by Gaming Act 1835 5 amp 6 Will 4 c 41 Gaming Act 1744 18 Geo 2 c 34 as relates to Gaming Act 1710 9 Ann c 19 and as renders any person liable to be indicted and punished for winning or losing at play or by betting at any one time the sum or value of ten pounds or within the space of twenty four hours the sum or value of twenty pounds Section 17 Cheating at play editSee also Cheating law This section created an offence At the time of its repeal this section read every person who shall by any fraud or unlawful device or ill practice in playing at or with cards dice tables or other game or in bearing a part in the stakes wages or adventures or in betting on the sides or hands of them that do play or in wagering on the event of any game sport pastime or exercise win from any other person to himself or any other or others any sum of money or valuable thing shall a on conviction on indictment be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years or b on summary conviction be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months or to a fine not exceeding two hundred pounds or to both The words of enactment at the start were repealed by the Statute Law Revision Act 1891 The words in square brackets were substituted for the words be deemed guilty of obtaining such money or valuable thing from such other person by a false pretence with intent to cheat or defraud such person of the same and being convicted thereof shall be punished accordingly by sections 33 2 and 36 3 of and Part III of Schedule 2 to the Theft Act 1968 Two hundred poundsSection 32 2 of the Magistrates Courts Act 1980 provided that the reference to two hundred pounds was to be construed as a reference to the prescribed sum The following cases are relevant R v Darley 1826 1 Stark NP 359 1826 171 ER 497 Cooke v Stratford 1844 13 M amp W 379 1844 2 Dow amp L 399 1844 4 LT OS 138a R v Hudson 1860 Bell CC 263 R v O Connor and Brown 1881 45 LT 512 1881 46 JP 214 1881 15 Cox 3 R v Moore 10 Cr App R 54 CCA R v Lawler 14 JP 561 R v Governor of Brixton Prison ex parte Sjoland and Metzler 1912 3 KB 568 29 TLR 10 77 JP 23 R v Leon 1945 KB 136 30 Cr App R 120 61 TLR 100 CCA R v Butler 38 Cr App R 57 CCA R v Clucas and O Rourke 1959 1 WLR 244 1959 1 All ER 438 43 Cr App R 98 123 JP 203 CCA R v Harris and Turner 1963 2 QB 442 1963 2 WLR 851 1963 2 All ER 294 47 Cr App R 125 CCAIn 2005 Kwong Lee Martin Fitz and Shuhal Miah were found guilty of cheating at roulette under this section 9 Section 18 Gambling contracts deemed void editThis section concerned whether unpaid winnings accrued from gambling could be sued for in a court of law The Act made it clear that they could not because winnings from gambling were to be treated as a debt of honour and as such could not be treated as a financial debt The Act read All contracts or agreements whether by parole or in writing by way of gaming or wagering shall be null and void and no suit shall be brought or maintained in any court of law and equity for recovering any sum of money or valuable thing alleged to be won upon any wager or which shall have been deposited in the hands of any person to abide the event on which any wager shall have been made Provided always that this enactment shall not be deemed to apply to any subscription or contribution or agreement to subscribe or contribute for or towards any plate prize or sum of money to be awarded to the winner or winners of any lawful game sport pastime or exercise This section was extended by the Gaming Act 1892 However a bet on the Horserace Totalisator Board also known as The Tote did not fall within the scope of the Act 10 Further by the 1980s it was feared that complex commercial risk management instruments and contracts such as derivatives could fall foul of the Act Provision was made that a contract would not be void if at least one of the parties entered into it for legitimate business purposes 11 12 The exemption is now found in the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 s 412 13 The Gambling Act 2005 removed the debt of honour clause that made gambling winnings exempt from legal action if they were not paid This meant that unpaid winnings could now be pursued in a court of law Section 19 Feigned issues abolished editCourt of law or equity that desired to have any question of fact decided by a jury had it presented in the form of feigned issues by stating that a wager was laid between two parties interested in respectively maintaining the affirmative and the negative of certain propositions It was enacted that in every case where any court of law or equity desires to have any question of fact decided by a jury it should the directly state the question of fact in dispute with such persons being plaintiffs and defendants as the court may direct rather than as a feigned issue of a wager Ireland and Northern Ireland editThe Act was in force in Ireland until partition It consequently became the law of the Irish Free State on 6 December 1922 and then of its successor states until its repeal in 1956 When the autonomous region of Northern Ireland seceded from the Irish Free State and rejoined the United Kingdom on 7 December 1922 the Act became the law of Northern Ireland until repeal Cases editClose v Wilson 2011 EWCA Civ 5 a promise to money paid under an agreement to bet cannot be enforced because of the Gaming Act 1892 s 1 but the payer has a claim in restitution for the winnings and for any money used for purposes other than betting See also editHistory of gambling in the United KingdomNotes edit a b The citation of this Act by this short title was authorised by the Short Titles Act 1896 section 1 and first schedule Due to the repeal of those provisions it is now authorised by section 19 2 of the Interpretation Act 1978 This Act came into force on the date on which it received royal assent because no other date was specified The Acts of Parliament Commencement Act 1793 Gambling Act 2005 Commencement No 6 and Transitional Provisions Order 2006 SI 2007 3272 art 2 4 Miers 2002 p 20 House of Commons 1844 Hill v William Hill Park Lane Limited 1949 AC 530 at 548 per Viscount Simon Budd 2001 Gambling Review 2002 4 7 r 108 Trapped by a sting that won too much TimesOnline London Archived from the original on 5 May 2013 Retrieved 4 August 2007 this article implies that the three were the first to be convicted under the Act but many cases are cited in Richardson P J ed 2007 Archbold Criminal Pleading Evidence and Practice London Sweet amp Maxwell pp 22 70 ISBN 978 0 421 94830 3 Tote Investors v Smoker 1968 1 QB 509 Financial Services Act 1986 s 63 Schwartz R J Smith C W 1997 Derivatives Handbook Risk Management and Control Wiley pp p 183 ISBN 0471157651 412 Gaming contracts 1 No contract to which this section applies is void or unenforceable because of a Article 170 of the Betting Gaming Lotteries and Amusements Northern Ireland Order 1985 or 2 This section applies to a contract if a it is entered into by either or each party by way of business b the entering into or performance of it by either party constitutes an activity of a specified kind or one which falls within a specified class of activity and c it relates to an investment of a specified kind or one which falls within a specified class of investment 3 Part II of Schedule 2 applies for the purposes of subsection 2 c with the references to section 22 being read as references to that subsection 4 Nothing in Part II of Schedule 2 as applied by subsection 3 limits the power conferred by subsection 2 c 5 Investment includes any asset right or interest 6 Specified means specified in an order made by the Treasury References editBirley D 1993 Sport and the Making of Britain Manchester Manchester University Press pp p 204 ISBN 071903759X Google Books Budd A 2001 Gambling Review Report Department for Culture Media and Sport Gambling Review 2002 A Safe Bet for Success Cm 5397 House of Commons 1844 Report from the Select Committee on Gaming HC1844 297 Miers D 2004 Regulating Commercial Gambling Past Present and Future London Oxford University Press ISBN 0199276153 Smith C Monckom S 2001 Smith and Monckom s The Law of Betting Gaming and Lotteries London LexisNexis ISBN 0406903131 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gaming Act 1845 amp oldid 1161526930, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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