Poker & Legamorons

A reader writes:

I know from the catechism that gambling is not immortal per se as long as it is fair, the money can afford to be lost, etc.

However, is a low-stakes home poker game sinful if there are state laws prohibiting such?

I have to confess that I know very little about gambling or what laws may apply to it, so I don’t know if there even are state laws prohibiting people from playing poker in their homes, but let’s suppose that there are.

Would it be immoral to violate these laws?

A good starting point in answering this question is to refresh ourselves on what the definition of a law is. According to St. Thomas Aquinas, a law

is nothing else than an ordinance of reason for the common good, made by him who has care of the community, and promulgated [ST I-II:90:4].

There are five elements that have to be present for something to count as a law on this view: (1) It has to be an ordinance, (2) it has to be in accord with reason, (3) it has to be oriented toward the common good, (4) it has to be made by someone with the right authority, and (5) it has to be promulgated so that the public knows what it is to do or not do.

Anything not meeting these criteria is not a law in the proper sense and is not binding, legally or morally from a Thomistic perspective. (That does not mean that you won’t go to jail for violating it, though. Dictatorships frequently have all kinds of unjust laws that serve as pretexts for locking inconvenient people up.)

Of the five conditions named above, it is clear that state laws against playing low-stakes poker in your home would meet seveal of them: In particular, they would seem to meet conditions (1), (4), and (5) right out of the gate, so the real question is whether they also meet conditions (2) and (3).

With regard to these conditions, it would seem that the common good does suggest at least some kind of regulation of gambling, like any entertainment. I wouldn’t want my next door neighbor running a casino out of his garage any more than I would want him running a disco or a bar or a boxing venue or a movie theater out of it. Zoning laws are directed toward the common good (even if one can quibble with any particular zoning law).

Given the history of the gambling industry, it would seem to be particularly subject to the need for regulation to keep it clean and fair.

(I know I wouldn’t want to play dabo in Quark’s bar; his wheel is rigged!)

So laws regulating gambling seem to be reasonable and (hopefully) directed toward the common good in general, but what about in this particular case?

Here let me introduce the concept of a legamoron.

A legamoron is a "legal oxymoron"–a law providing that something is illegal even though the government has no intention of enforcing the law rigorously.

The classic example of a legamoron is the speed limit. Almost everybody, at least sometimes, violates the speed limit by at least a little bit. And almost everybody does it deliberately at some point.

The government knows that (its own members do it just as much as everyone else) and that is one reason why there is "tolerance" shown for minor violations of the law (e.g., going two miles over the limit). If you commit a flagrant violation, though, expect to get nailed and to have every mile you were going over the limit charged against you.

Legamorons can be bad. There are some legamorons that should be rigorously enforced, even though they’re not. Many people today would put immigration laws in that category.

Legamorons can also be selectively enforced in ways that are unjust, such as enforcing traffic laws more rigorously in the case of some groups than others, leading to the "Driving while black" phenomenon.

But in principle legamorons can establish a kind of framework that helps keep society orderly by establishing a model for what should happen and providing a basis for prosecuting flagrant violations.

As I’ve said, I’m woefully ignorant of the laws regarding gambling (though I’m sure I’ll get enlightened in the combox), but assuming there are state laws that prohibit playing small-stakes poker in your home, I would be inclined to regard them as legamorons–statutes meant to provide a kind of societal "rule of thumb" that can be used as a hard rule when flagrant violations are committed, even though there is no intention or desire on the part of legislators to have them followed rigidly.

If someone is running a poker game in his house where tens of thousands of dollars are changing hands (y’know, the kind of money people might actually pull guns on each other over or that organized crime might take an interest in) then the state wants the ability to prosecute. But if someone is running a poker game where the pot never exceeds $50 then I don’t think the legislature cares about that any more than it cares about people going one mile over the speed limit (in most cases).

It thus strikes me that there is a case to be made that such laws are not intended–despite the imprecise way they may be written–to be applied to genuine small stakes poker games.

If they are then it seems to me that the question comes on the table of whether they meet the second condition for a law–that they have to be in accord with reason.

Given that gambling in general is not intrinsically immoral (a point that may not be recognized in some areas), and if we take it as given that poker can be played morally (if not then pick a form of gambling that you think can be played morally), it would seem that there would be a threshold below which the stakes of the game are so small that it is not rational to try to regulate it.

I mean, suppose people aren’t playing for money at all but just for "points," which can’t be redeemed for anything other than the satisfaction of having won so many points in an evening–a genuine zero-money game.

It would seem to me that it is not reasonable for the state to try to stop people from playing zero-stakes poker.

So let’s increase the size of the pot from nothing to something measured in pennies. It still strikes me that it would be irrational for the state to seriously prohibit such games.

Likewise if the pot is measured in individual dollars.

Or tens of dollars.

At some point, though, the pot becomes large enough that the state has a rational interest in regulating the game. Where that point is, I can’t say–and the legislature may have a hard time with it as well, which is the reason for many legamorons. (What the legislature is really concerned with in setting speed limits is keeping people from driving unsafely, but since it’s hard to define that precisely, they set a limit that ostensibly bars all driving over a certain speed in an area.)

I would guess that by the time thousands of dollars are being exchanged, the state has the ability to rationally intervene, though that is a personal opinion.

As long as one stays below the threshold of rational intervention–whatever that fuzzy threshold is–then by definition it is not rational for the state to prohibit a particular type of game and, according to Aquinas, the law would not bind morally (at least in this application of it).

Which is not to say that you won’t get fined or go to jail over violating it.

If you’re driving one mile over the limit, you may get a ticket, and if you’re running a low-stakes poker game in an area where it’s illegal, you may have the law come down on you.

That’s the risk you take.

Author: Jimmy Akin

Jimmy was born in Texas, grew up nominally Protestant, but at age 20 experienced a profound conversion to Christ. Planning on becoming a Protestant seminary professor, he started an intensive study of the Bible. But the more he immersed himself in Scripture the more he found to support the Catholic faith, and in 1992 he entered the Catholic Church. His conversion story, "A Triumph and a Tragedy," is published in Surprised by Truth. Besides being an author, Jimmy is the Senior Apologist at Catholic Answers, a contributing editor to Catholic Answers Magazine, and a weekly guest on "Catholic Answers Live."

29 thoughts on “Poker & Legamorons”

  1. Just thought I’d mention that, although it is a common perception that a law against “gambling” means a home poker game is illegal, that is not necessarily so.
    I dunno about other states, but here in Texas (in a nutshell) gambling is not actually a crime PROVIDED that the odds are even for all involved. So a private neighborhood poker game is legal (whatever the stakes), but if the host takes 10% of each pot for, say, “supplying the refreshments,” that’s an illegal gambling operation. Slot machines, craps, blackjack, and so on all have a built-in house advantage, so they’re out. Here’s the relevant section from Section 47.02, Texas Penal Code:
    (b) It is a defense to prosecution under this section that:
    (1) the actor engaged in gambling in a private place;
    (2) no person received any economic benefit other than personal winnings; and
    (3) except for the advantage of skill or luck, the risks of losing and the chances of winning were the same for all participants.
    There very well may be a similar provision in your state.

  2. Speaking for the state of Viginia I know of a poker game that was raided. Thousands of dollars were on the table and armed guards at the door. Eventually the state returned all the money. Why?
    The owner of the house was not taking any “cut” thus it wasn’t a business but only “friends” playing (although be it a couple of dozen people who had never met).
    …and I sweat when I put 50 cents on a full house.

  3. I’m not sure I see a case for equal-stakes gambling to be regulated at all. Slot machines, etc., or situations where the “house” gets an inordinate cut of the pot, sure. But if five friends want to get together and risk hundreds of thousands of dollars on a poker game, why should that be illegal, according to reason?
    Just because people might be more likely to pull guns is no reason, either. That’s a matter for gun laws, or laws directed at tracking or dealing with people who have a history of violent outbursts.
    Although in all seriousness, I can’t imagine any state prosecuting an equal-stakes game of any kind. After all, they get to tax your winnings, AND they got to tax the guys who had to pay you in the first place. If anything, it’s a matter of tax law regarding reporting of winnings.

  4. As a police officer in the state of New York, I’d just like to say that Mike and Martin covered the subject well. In my state, gambling is only illegal if someone other than a player is making money from the game, regardless of the amount wagered. Only if someone is charging an entrance fee or taking a percentage does the game become illegal.

  5. Your safest course is probably to invite a police officer to the game. If he looks askance or angry, cancel the game. If he shows up, however, be careful how you place your bets – cops tend to be pretty good poker players. Skill at bluffing is something they use professionlly.

  6. I’m just wondering… how are things like raffles and “Vegas Night” at the local parish hall or synagogue exempted? Obviously they benefit the house more than the player.
    I’ve never been at all comfortable with church raffles or other gambling and have always declined to participate. You have all sorts of people who might have gambling problems or might not really be able to afford to participate but do anyway out of some “guilt” or sense of obligation to help the church even though it may be beyond their means. It just makes me very uneasy. Any thoughts?

  7. “The government knows that (its own members do it just as much as everyone else) and that is one reason why there is ‘tolerance’ shown for minor violations of the law (e.g., going two miles over the limit).

    Actually, the tolerance has a lot tdo with the accuracy and precision of devices used to measure speed. IIRC, the margin of error on a typical radar gun is +-5 mph. Cops can’t stop you for going 5 mph over the speed limit because you could successfully challenge the ticket in court by claiming that you were travelling just under the speed limit and the gun overestimated your speed.

  8. In answer to your question, Augustine: They generally have to get a license to put on a game of chance.

  9. A law “is nothing else than an ordinance of reason for the common good, made by him who has care of the community, and promulgated”????????
    Well…guess that means that 95% of America’s laws aren’t really laws!!!! Most of them are for stealing money and harassment of citizens!!

  10. “…the margin of error on a typical radar gun is +- 5 mph.”
    That’s not what I was taught at radar school, Funky Dung. In fact, this is the first time I’ve heard anyone state this. The way I was trained, the radar gun is dead-on accurate. The only way it might register a little off would be if the radar operator were at a little bit of an angle to the vehicle, in which case, the radar would register a little lower than the vehicle was actually going.

  11. Jimmy, your link on the word “legamoron” seems to go to the TechCentralStation main page, rather than a specific article…

  12. “…the margin of error on a typical radar gun is +- 5 mph.”
    I believe that margin of error pertains to pacing a car using the speedometer. The speedometer is given the margin of error.

  13. Negative, Mike. I and, I presume, most police officers are trained to estimate speeds against a radar gun. We’re certified to estimate speeds to within +- 5 MPH.

  14. So is reading this blog and posting here during working hours a legamoron? Guess I better get back to work.

  15. In California, poker is recognized as a game of skill, rather than gambling. That’s a reasonable definition, since over the long run, the good players will always win the money of the bad players.

  16. This is kind of how I feel about 18, 19, and 20-year-olds’ use of alcohol.
    But maybe I’m just trying to rationalize my own freshman year in college…

  17. “Legamorons” can be bad, you are right, JO.
    Texas *had* one in the form of a sodomy law until 2003. Owing somewhat to its lax and arbitrary enforcement, it managed to get itself ruled unconstitutional amidst a US Supreme Court tirade about humans’ liberty interest in using our bodies both in “their spatial and in their more transcendent dimensions.”
    We need to make sure we’re serious about laws or even good ones will engender scofflaws.
    But the case was almost worth it just to read Scalia’s dissent. Read it here:
    http://www.orthodoxytoday.org/articles2/ScaliaLawrenceDissent.shtml
    Enjoy.

  18. So how would this idea of a legamoron and obligation to obey square with drinking laws? A minimum drinking age of 21 seems to square with some of the conditions but not others.
    Is it entirely in accord with reason when the mandatory minimum drinking age is at least in part arbitrary? Does it matter that states (in the US, at least) were (possibly) unconstitutionally compelled to past these laws?
    It would perhaps not be prudent for you to endorse underage drinking as moral on the blog, understandably. For the past year or so when dealing with this question on my campus and in my peer group in the context of 1 Corinthians 10:28, but I always wonder whether underage drinking is in itself immoral.

  19. I never understood the point of attaching a legal penalty to homosexuality. So, you find a man who has had gay sex. And what do you do to punish him? Throw him in jail with OTHER MEN. Yeah, that makes sense.
    Recording tv with your vcr has been a legamoron here in Australia. It’s illegal, but probably even the prime minister does it, and is practically unenforceable (unless, perhaps, you were playing them or selling them in a public place). Only recently has the government considered changing that old law when looking at amending copyright laws.

  20. That reminds me of when I used to participate in Model Congress in high school. I always managed to come up with brilliant propositions. My favorite was proposing the death penalty for attempted suicide. “If you can’t do it right, we’ll give you a hand!” (Of course, this was meant about as seriously as J. Swift’s exhortation to breed Irish children for food.)

  21. Like Augustine, I have never been comfortable with Church raffles or other Church gambling. For that matter, I have never been comfortable with any form of gambling, and have never engaged in it except playing poker with my great grandmother as a kid for pennys that I don’t think I even kept.
    Probably this is a direct result of my being brought up in the United Methodist Church, where it is still not allowed to have any alcohol or gambling in the church building, or I think on the property or as part of a church function. Even if this is the reason why gambling twinges my conscience as immoral and it is my psycological issue not derrived from the natural law, I still wonder if church gambling is such a good idea.
    Catholic gambling is such a joke among many Methodists and I suspect others. It fits so well into the idea of Catholics as morally loose and money-driven. Even if it is not illegal or intrinsically immoral, is it worth the harm to the image of the Catholic Church in the eyes of others?

  22. When I belonged to a WELS congregation, the official teaching of WELS is that charity should be given freely and for its own sake, citing the Biblical statement that “God loves a cheerful giver.”
    So we did not have any fundraisers of any sort. No raffles, no gambling, no bake sales. Nothing. We financed everything from the collection plate and other donations. When we did have community events like a car wash or a family fair, everything was free. It was done to make ourselves known in the community and to invite people to come visit with us and they could also take home free literature.
    So, perhaps, there’s also another thing that bothers me about the Church supporting itself through gambling. It’s that people are giving out of possibly impure motives. It may be more important to them that they might get something in return rather than giving money for the Church’s benefit simply for the sake of giving to support the Church.
    Obviously, the Church does not find anything morally wrong with the practice or else it would be suppressed. And the catechism is clear on the permissibility of gambling. (Although one might argue that having a fundraiser that involves gambling may be an invitation to sin for someone who might be afflicted with a gambling addiction and might cause them to stumble.) I still don’t like it, though. I accept it, but I don’t like it.

  23. “Given that gambling in general is not intrinsically immoral (a point that may not be recognized in some areas)”
    …or, as I recall, by St. Francis de Sales – review his Introduction to the Devout Life.

  24. Mr. Stoodley-
    With all due respect the idea that gambling should be suppressed in the Catholic church for the sake of others is the first step down a slippery slope we should want no part of. Why is it that we should stop doing something that we, as Catholics, consider to be morally licit for the sake of people who consider it illicit? If you draw the line at gambling what about drinking, what about eating pork, what about celebrating birthdays?
    The Catholic church has a long and establised moral order. Been thought about for centuries and there’s no reason that it should change simply for the sake of not offending others.
    Besides, as far as the Methodists go we outnumber them 75 million to 1.1 billion. If anything there’s far more of us that they can offend.

  25. It’s not that Catholics should refrain from licit activities just because someone else thinks it is sinful. In fact I doubt many Methodists today consider gambling in moderation to be sinful. Heck, lots of them don’t even believe in sin anymore (same can be said of Catholics of course).
    The thing is that by these sorts of activities (as opposed to eating pork or celebrating birthdays, or even drinking to some degree since we do consider any significant drunkeness a sin) we portray a very secular and laughable picture of the Church. I don’t know how many times I have heard my mother or her friends joking about the nuns that go down to Atlantic City and gamble. Then a bunch of the parish money comes from raffle tickets and bingo and such things rather than freely given donations. That’s a bad image.
    We don’t think drinking a bit is wrong, but we don’t fund every parish with a microbrew. We don’t think there is anything intrinsically wrong with theme parks, but you won’t find a Pope World with St. Paul’s Wild Waterslide and St. Benedict’s Haunted Monastery. Just because something is not intrinsically wrong does not mean it is a good idea as a fund raiser.

  26. They don’t write tickets for going two miles/hour over the speed limit? I gather you’ve never been driving in rural Vermont (I know people who’ve been nailed for 3 miles/hour over).

  27. “We don’t think drinking a bit is wrong, but we don’t fund every parish with a microbrew.”
    Historically many European monasteries have been funded by breweries. Certain Belgian Trappist abbeys are renowned for their beer, which is in fact a recognized style of beer called “Trappist Ale” (only those beers brewed in one of the Trappist abbeys that still brew beer are entitled to call their beer “Trappist Ale.” “Abbey Ales” are beers brewed by commercial breweries in the general style of Trappist Ales, and who license the names of abbeys for their product; also, any beer in that style is commonly called an “Abbey Ale”).
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trappist_beer

  28. No device made by man can measure without a margin of error. Radar gun manufacturers typically state in their product literature that the margin of error of a correctly calibrated radar gun is plus or minus 1 mph.

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