Ivey Opinion
Ivey Opinion
Ivey Opinion
v.
PHILLIP D. IVEY, JR., GEMACO
INC., and CHENG YIN SUN,
Defendants.
Appearances:
JEREMY M. KLAUSNER
AGOSTINO & ASSOCIATES, PC
14 WASHINGTON PLACE
HACKENSACK, NJ 07601
On behalf of plaintiff
JEFFREY W. MAZZOLA
LAW OFFICES OF WILLIAM E. STAEHLE
445 South Street
P.O. BOX 1938
MORRISTOWN, NJ 07962-1938
On behalf of defendant Gemaco, Inc.
EDWIN JOSEPH JACOBS, JR.
MICHAEL F. MYERS
LOUIS M. BARBONE
JACOBS & BARBONE
1125 PACIFIC AVENUE
ATLANTIC CITY, NJ 08401
On behalf of defendants Phillip D. Ivey and Cheng Yin Sun
HILLMAN, District Judge
On October 21, 2016, the Court determined that defendants
Phillip D. Ivey and Cheng Yin Sun breached their contract with
the leading edge of the first card in the shoe before it was
dealt, giving them first card knowledge, and Ivey would bet
accordingly.
To make the edge-sorting scheme work, Ivey and Sun required
certain accommodations from Borgata: (1) a private area or pit
that Ivey and Sun breached their primary obligation to not use
marked cards in violation of the CCA, which constituted a breach
of contract to abide by the CCA. 2
damages what Borgata would have won had Ivey and Sun not
engaged in edge-sorting.
The court
When this Court concluded that Ivey and Suns use of marked
cards violated the CCA, that breach of the CCAs card-marking
provision is akin to the breach of the CCAs unshuffled card
provision in Golden Nugget.
did not cite to the exact same provisions of the CCA the Golden
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In sum
notes the chips Ivey redeemed for cash rather than deposited
into his front money account.
The
Borgata is
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Borgatas comps to
Ivey and Sun were provided for many reasons, including to entice
a celebrity gambler to its casino to attract more patrons, and
to endeavor to win presumably large sums from a high roller.
Because the comps were not tied to an obligation that Ivey win
or lose, or do anything in particular except to visit Borgata,
Borgata is not entitled to the return of the value of those
comps as part of its breach of contract damages.
CONCLUSION
We agree with the Plaintiff, that the rule of contract
remedies articulated in the Golden Nugget decision, is directly
applicable in this case of analogous facts and controlling state
regulatory law.
s/ Noel L. Hillman
NOEL L. HILLMAN, U.S.D.J.
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