There is no ground for believing that the eight thousandth ticket was ever put into the numerical wheel; and therefore the question is, Whether the drawing, which took place, was valid ? It is obvious, that the ^effect is diminished, or increased, according to the number of tickets ; and, consequently, that the chances of the tickets actually drawn, were different, among themselves, from what they would have been, if the true number had been put into the wheel: so that, even as to them, the stipulations were not fulfilled ; and the mistake ought to be corrected. But the argument is a fortiori as to the owner of the lost ticket; for the others had a chance, although not that stipulated in the scheme ; which was in some degree compensated, as the omission diminished the number of competitors. Whereas the owner of the lost ticket had no chance at all; but was deprived of his right altogether. He is therefore an injured man ; and the rest of the adventurers have no right to insist that he shall not have an opportunity of redress. It was said, by Mr. Hay, that the contract was only between the commissioners on one side, and each adventurer in his own right, upon the other; and therefore, that the loss to one ticket holder was nothing to the rest; but the injured person should seek redress from the commissioners. That,- however, is not a true representation of the case; for the adventurers were joint partners in the lottery as far as respected the drawing of it, although the chances and the profits arising from them respectively, were several; they were therefore pro hac vice, socially interested, and must be understood as having jointly stipulated among themselves to assist each other in procuring a drawing according to the scheme, that each might have the profit, which fortune might allot him. The argument, therefore, that none but the party injured is concerned with his loss from misconduct in the drawing of the lottery, is not correct ; for the nature of their engagement to each other is, that there shall be a drawing according to the scheme ; and that they will jointly assist in effecting it. The rest, therefore, cannot
The mistake vitiates the whole drawing : which ought, therefore to be set aside, and a new one directed. For it makes no difference that a single ticket only was missing, as the owner of that was an injured man, and the general risk, as to the rest of the holders, was necessarily changed. I am for reversing the decree, that a redrawing of the lottery, may take place.
concurred; and the entry was as follows :
“This day came the parties, by their counsel, and the court having maturely considered the transcript of the record of the decree aforesaid, and the arguments of counsel, is of opinion, That in lotteries, every purchaser of a ticket is an equal adventurer, and, as such, has a right with every other adventurer, to an equal chance for a prize ; and that, as a ticket numbered 3556 was not, by neglect or accident, put into the wheel before the lottery, in the proceedings of this cause mentioned, was drawn, that ticket had not an equal chance with the tickets of the other adventurers ; or rather had no chance at all, to draw a prize. And that, although no fraud, collusion or evasion, was practised by the managers, or their agents, in their conduct or proceedings respecting the said lottery, yet as there was a mistake in the number of tickets put into and drawn out of both wheels of the said lottery, the mistake might have affected the chances of others, as well as that of the owner of the ticket No. 3556, and therefore ought, in equity, to be rectified ; which can only be done by a redrawing of the said lottery according to the original scheme thereof; and that the appellee ought not to be benefitted by the mistake aforesaid, or to be paid the five hundred ^dollars drawn under such error and mistake, as a prize to, and by his ticket. Therefore it is decreed and ordered that the decree aforesaid be reversed and annulled, and that the appellee pay to the appellants their costs by them expended in the prosecution of their appeal aforesaid here. And this court proceeding to make such decree as the said superior court of chancery ought to have pronounced, it is further decreed and ordered that the bill of the appellee be dismissed, and that the parties bear their own costs in the said superior court of chancery.”