Borgata v. Ivey

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Borgata v. Ivey
Court District of New Jersey
Citation 2016 WL 6138239
Date decided October 21, 2016

Facts

  • Baccarat = baccara = punto banco = a card game about banking = a casino game
  • Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa = "Borgata" = plaintiff = a casino in Atlantic City = Marina District Development Co., LLC
  • Phillip Ivey = "Ivey" = a world-renowned professional poker player
  • Ivey approached Borgata to play high-stakes baccarat
  • Ivey requested several accommodations including
    1. a dealer who spoke Mandarin Chinese,
    2. an 8-deck shoe of Gemaco cards, &
    3. automatic card shuffler
    4. “Kelly” Sun, one of the most successful female gamblers in history, be seated next to him
  • Ivey & Sun were engaging in edge sorting
  • Ivey won $10,000,000 (10 million) in 2012 at Borgata
  • Borgata learned that the London casino Crockfords had lost millions of dollars to Ivey & had accused Ivey of a scam

Procedural History

Borgata sued Ivey for

  1. fraud &
  2. material mis-representation of "superstition", &
  3. breach of contract for not abiding by the New Jersey Casino Control Act

Issues

  1. Does a gambler's failure to play in compliance with state gambling law constitute a breach of contract?
  2. Is a party's failure to disclose reasons for a request a material mis-representation amounting to fraud?

Holding

  1. Yes. A gambler's failure to comply with state gambling law can constitute a breach of contract with a casino.
  2. No. A failure to disclose motives that doesn't lead to deterimental reliance isn't a material mis-representation amounting to fraud.

--

  • Ivey has breached his contract with Borgata. (Borgata won on the breach of contract.)
  • Ivey hasn't mis-represented by citing superstition. Believing in Ivey's superstitions isn't detrimental reliance. (Ivey won the on the fraud claim.)

Reasons

Judge Hillman: Under the New Jersey Casino Control Act, it is unlawful to use marked cards. The Act doesn't define marked cards; marked cards are done by physically altering the cards. Ivey was using the cards in a prohibited manner.

Rule

In this New Jersey court's opinion, edge sorting is cheating.

Resources