PROPOSED RULES
Original Notice.
Preproposal statement of inquiry was filed as WSR 99-07-095 with a published date of April 7, 1999.
Title of Rule: Washington blackjack.
Purpose: Legislation was passed in 1997 allowing house-banked card games, which would include traditional blackjack. Washington blackjack is a derivative of blackjack; therefore, it no longer needed, or, in the alternative should be revised to its pre-1996 version. Three versions of this rule are under consideration, copies of which are shown below.
Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 9.46.070.
Summary: See Purpose above.
Reasons Supporting Proposal: See Purpose above.
Name of Agency Personnel Responsible for Drafting: Susan Arland, Lacey, (360) 438-7654, ext. 374; Implementation: Ben Bishop, Lacey, (360) 438-7640; and Enforcement: Sherri Winslow, Lacey, (360) 438-7654, ext. 301.
Name of Proponent: Staff, governmental.
Rule is not necessitated by federal law, federal or state court decision.
Explanation of Rule, its Purpose, and Anticipated Effects: See Purpose above.
Proposal Changes the Following Existing Rules: See Purpose above.
No small business economic impact statement has been prepared under chapter 19.85 RCW. Proposal is exempt under RCW 19.85.025(2), therefore, a small business economic impact statement is not required.
Section 201, chapter 403, Laws of 1995, does not apply to this rule adoption. This agency does not choose to make section 201, chapter 403, Laws of 1995 apply to this rule adoption.
Hearing Location: DoubleTree Inn, 252 North 20th Avenue, Pasco, WA 98301 [99301], (509) 547-0701, on June 11, 1999, at 1:30 p.m.
Assistance for Persons with Disabilities: Contact Susan Yeager by May 31, 1999, TDD (360) 438-7638, or (360) 438-7654, ext. 302.
Submit Written Comments to: Susan Arland, Mailstop 42400, Olympia, WA 98504-2400, fax (360) 438-8652, by May 31, 1999.
Date of Intended Adoption: June 11, 1999.
April 21, 1999
Susan Arland
Rules Coordinator
OTS-2905.3
AMENDATORY SECTION(Amending WSR 95-23-109, filed 11/22/95, effective 1/1/96)
WAC 230-40-125
Washington blackjack--Rules of play--Wagering limits.
Washington blackjack is a nonhouse-banking card game permitted in Class A and E card rooms. Washington blackjack shall be played in the following manner:
(1) Fees to play Washington blackjack shall only be assessed on a time basis and collected using the direct collection method as defined in WAC 230-40-050.
(2) Up to six standard fifty-two-card decks shall be used with suits disregarded and each
card valued numerically only as follows: Ace equal 1 or 11; face cards (King, Queen, Jack)
equal 10 each; others according to their spots, 10 to 2. The number of decks used shall be
established by house rule. The cards shall be dealt from a shoe at all times. The game is played
with ((either a house dealer and a player/banker or)) a player who is ((a)) both the dealer((/)) and
banker (dealer/banker).
(((2))) (3) When starting a new table the cards are cut to determine who the first
dealer/banker will be. The dealer/banker shall announce the amount of money that he or she will
put into the bank. If a minimum bank ((may be)) is established as per individual house rule it
shall not exceed five hundred dollars. ((If a house dealer is used, the banker delivers the bank to
the dealer and the dealer shall place a marker reading "banker" on the bet line in front of the
banker.
(3))) (4) Once the bank has been established, the player to the immediate left of the dealer/banker places his/her wager on the bet line and the dealer/banker covers that wager by matching it with a like amount of chips. Each player makes their wager in turn and each wager is immediately matched by the dealer/banker. The maximum and minimum wager may be set by house rule but in no event shall the maximum wager exceed twenty-five dollars. If the bank runs out of money (tapped out) prior to the commencement of the deal, then only those players with a wager covered will be dealt a hand.
(((4))) (5) The play begins with the dealer/banker dealing one card face up to each
covered player including himself/herself, one more card face up to each covered player, and then
one down card to himself/herself. A player may be dealt more than one hand by house rule. ((When a house dealer is used, no cards are dealt to the banker.)) If a player holds an ace and a
face card or a ten, it is a "natural" 21 and the player collects 1.5 times the amount of their bet
from the dealer/banker, unless the dealer/banker also has a natural which results in a tie (push). All ties result in the players and the dealer/banker recovering their wagers.
(((5))) (6) If the dealer/banker has a "natural," he/she collects the wagers from players
who do not have a "natural." If the dealer/banker does not have a "natural," he/she pays off any
player with a "natural" starting with the first one to the left of the dealer/banker. Should the
dealer/banker not have enough money in the bank to make up the 1.5 for one payoff due on a
"natural," then those hands and wagers will be frozen in place until the additional wagers are
made up or the hand is over. If after the hand is over, a dealer/banker cannot cover the 1.5 for
one, the player shall get the amount of wager that was covered by the dealer/banker.
(((6))) (7) If the dealer/banker does not have a "natural," play continues with the player
on the dealer/banker's immediate left. The dealer/banker deals cards face up, one by one, as that
player calls for them. The player's aim is to total 21 or as close to 21 without going over. When
a player is satisfied with their total, they shall declare "stand." If the player wants more cards,
the player declares "hit." If a player goes over a 21 point count, the hand is a "bust" and they
must turn the hand down, while the dealer/banker collects the bet. The dealer/banker does the
same with each remaining player. Any player who stands must wait while the dealer/banker
draws his or her cards. If the dealer/banker goes bust, each standing player is paid the amount of
their wager. If the dealer/banker "stands," the down card is turned up and players whose totals
are higher than the dealer(('s))/banker's are paid. The dealer/banker collects from any player
whose total is less. Action is always to the left of the dealer/banker. Any frozen wagers needing
to be "made up" will be done in order, to the left of the dealer/banker from losing wagers the
dealer/banker collects.
(((7))) (8) Should the dealer/banker not be able to cover all frozen wagers then those
frozen wagers are released to the winning players and the deal passes immediately to the left at
which time the new dealer/banker shall announce the amount of the bank and shuffle the cards. The same shall apply if the dealer/banker has no money in the bank. The dealer/banker may, if
allowed by house rule, add to their bank in between hands.
(((8))) (9) Upon completion of the shuffle, the player to the right of the dealer/banker
shall cut the cards. After the cards have been placed into the shoe the dealer/banker shall insert a
blank card approximately three quarters of the way through the deck(s). A dealer/banker may
deal from the shoe until he/she reaches the blank card. After the blank card appears, the
dealer/banker may continue dealing that hand, but will not start a new hand. ((If a house dealer
is used, he/she returns the remaining chips in the bank to the banker.)) The player on the
dealer/banker's immediate left shall be offered the opportunity to be the next dealer/banker ((or
banker)). The discards may only be reshuffled to complete the last hand.
(((9))) (10) Once wagers are placed and covered on the bet line, no player, including the
dealer/banker, may touch those wagers until the winner has been determined. Any player
touching the wagers may be ruled to have fouled and their wager forfeited.
(((10))) (11) Any player who lifts their cards up from the table or slides their cards out of
their own playing area shall be ruled to have fouled and their wager may be forfeited.
(((11))) (12) No player may "buy" the bank. The bank must pass around the table to the
left and no player can authorize ((anyone other than a house dealer)) another person to deal for
him or her. No player may be the dealer/banker for more than one consecutive shoe before
passing the bank((: Provided, That when there are less than five players at a table a player may
deal more than one consecutive shoe only when the remaining players have passed the deal)).
(((12))) (13) The dealer/banker must stand on seventeen or above and must take hits on
sixteen or below. If a dealer/banker has an ace, it shall be counted as eleven if it brings his or
her total to seventeen or more (but not over twenty-one). Provided, the house may elect to play
a "soft seventeen," which occurs when the dealer(('s))/banker's first two cards are an ace valued
at eleven and a six. If the house elects to play a soft seventeen, house rules must specify that the
dealer/banker must hit a soft seventeen, and must stand on a hard seventeen and any eighteen or
above. House blackjack rules must be posted in plain view to the players and the house must
ensure they are consistently followed.
(((13))) (14) The conditions for doubling down shall be set by house rule, provided that
the wager may be doubled and the player received only one more card. The player must then
stand on those three cards. If the dealer(('s))/banker's bank is insufficient to cover a double
down wager, the player may wager an amount equal to the dealer(('s))/banker's remaining bank. The dealer/banker must then cover that wager. If the dealer/banker has no bank then a player
may not double down.
(((14))) (15) If the dealer(('s))/banker's face-up card is a ten, face card or ace, he/she may
look at their face-down card to see if they have a natural; if his/her face-up card is anything else,
they may not look at their face-down card until their turn comes to draw.
(((15))) (16) If the dealer/banker's face-up card is an ace, the house may allow the player
banking the game to offer an "insurance" bet against losing to the dealer/banker's possible
natural. The dealer/banker, before looking at his/her down card, inquires if any player wants
insurance. A player who desires insurance places an amount equal to half his/her present wager
on his/her own hand. When this bet is made, the dealer/banker looks at his/her down card. If it
is a 10 count, the dealer/banker turns it face up and announces a natural. The insurance bettor is
paid off at a rate of 2 to 1, and they lose their original wager. If the dealer/banker's down card is
not a 10 count card, the player loses his/her insurance bet and continues playing on their original
wager.
(17) If a player's first two cards are a pair, then that player may split the pair into two separate hands. The amount of the player's original bet then goes on one of the cards, and they must place an equal amount as a bet on the other card. If the dealer/banker does not have enough in their bank to cover the doubled bet, the dealer/banker must cover an amount equal to the value of their remaining bank. The player then has the option to divide the wagers in any manner between the two hands, not to exceed the allowable limit per hand. If the dealer/banker has no bank then the player may divide their wager in any manner between the two hands, unless the player's original bet was a minimum allowed in that game then they may not split their pair. Additional splits shall be determined by house rule.
(((16))) (18) The dealer/banker will pay only on the value of the cards held by the player
and shall not pay on the number of cards received or the card sequence.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 9.46.070 (1)-(4), (7), (8), (11), (12), (14), (20) and 9.46.110 (3), (4). 95-23-109, § 230-40-125, filed 11/22/95, effective 1/1/96. Statutory Authority: RCW 9.46.070. 93-13-062 (Order 240), § 230-40-125, filed 6/17/93, effective 7/18/93. Statutory Authority: Chapter 9.46 RCW. 91-21-053 (Order 228), § 230-40-125, filed 10/15/91, effective 11/15/91; 91-05-047 (Order 220), § 230-40-125, filed 2/14/91, effective 3/17/91. Statutory Authority: RCW 9.46.070 (11) and (14). 90-11-058, § 230-40-125, filed 5/15/90, effective 6/15/90. Statutory Authority: RCW 34.05.220(4), [34.05].230 and 9.46.070 (11) and (14). 90-05-032 (Order 205), § 230-40-125, filed 2/14/90, effective 3/17/90.]
Washington blackjack is a nonhouse banking card game permitted in Class A and E card rooms. Washington blackjack shall be played in the following manner:
(1) Fees to play Washington blackjack shall only be assessed on a time basis and collected using the direct collection method as defined in WAC 230-40-050.
(((1))) (2) No more than two ((Up to six)) standard fifty-two-card decks shall be used
with suits disregarded and each card valued numerically only as follows: Ace equal 1 or 11;
face cards (King, Queen, Jack) equal 10 each; others according to their spots, 10 to 2. The
number of decks used shall be established by house rule. The cards shall be dealt from a shoe at
all times. The game is played with ((either a house dealer and a player/banker or)) a player who
((is a)) deals the cards and banks the game (dealer/banker).
(((2))) (3) When starting a new table the cards are cut to determine who the first
dealer/banker will be. The dealer/banker shall announce the amount of money that he or she will
put into the bank. If a ((A)) minimum bank ((may be)) is established as per individual house
rule, it shall not exceed five hundred dollars. ((If a house dealer is used, the banker delivers the
bank to the dealer and the dealer shall place a marker reading "banker" on the bet line in front of
the banker.))
(((3))) (4) Once the bank has been established, the player to the immediate left of the
dealer/banker places his/her wager on the bet line and the dealer/banker covers that wager by
matching it with a like amount of chips. Each player makes their wager in turn and each wager
is immediately matched by the dealer/banker. The maximum and minimum wager may be set
by house rule but in no event shall the maximum wager exceed twenty-five dollars. If the bank
runs out of money (tapped out) prior to the commencement of the deal, then only those players
with a wager covered will be dealt a hand.
(((4))) (5) The play begins with the dealer/banker dealing one card face up to each
covered player including himself/herself, one more card face up to each covered player, and then
one down card to himself/herself. A player may be dealt more than one hand by house rule. ((When a house dealer is used, no cards are dealt to the banker.)) If a player holds an ace and a
face card or a ten, it is a "natural" 21 and the player collects one and a half ((1.5)) times the
amount of their bet from the dealer/banker, unless the dealer/banker also has a natural which
results in a tie (push). All ties result in the players and the dealer/banker recovering their
wagers.
(((5))) (6) If the dealer/banker's face-up card is a ten, face card or ace, he/she shall look
at their face-down card to see if they have a natural; if his/her face-up card is anything else, they
may not look at their face-down card until their turn comes to draw. If the dealer/banker has a
"natural," he/she collects the wagers from players who do not have a "natural." If the
dealer/banker does not have a "natural," he/she pays off any player with a "natural" starting with
the first one to the left of the dealer/banker. Should the dealer/banker not have enough money in
the bank to make up the one and a half ((1.5)) for one payoff due on a "natural," then those
hands and wagers will be frozen in place until the additional wagers are made up or the hand is
over. If after the hand is over, a dealer/banker cannot cover the one and a half ((1.5)) for one,
the player shall get the amount of wager that was covered by the dealer/banker.
(7) If the dealer/banker's face-up card is an ace, the licensee, by house rule, may allow the player banking the game to offer an "insurance" bet against losing to the dealer/banker's possible "natural." The dealer/banker, before looking at his down card, inquires if any player wants insurance. A player who desires insurance places an amount equal to half his/her present wager on his/her own hand. When this bet is made, the dealer/banker looks at his/her down card. If it is a 10 count, the dealer turns it face up and announces a "natural." The insurance bettor is paid off at a rate of 2 to 1 and, unless they have a "natural," lose their original wager. If the dealer/banker's down card is not a 10 count card, the player loses his/her insurance bet and continues playing on their original wager.
(((6))) (8) If the dealer/banker does not have a "natural," play continues with the player
on the dealer/banker's immediate left. The dealer/banker deals cards face up, one by one, as that
player calls for them. The player's aim is to total 21 or as close to 21 without going over. When
a player is satisfied with their total, they shall declare "stand." If the player wants more cards,
the player declares "hit." If a player goes over a 21 point count, the hand is a "bust" and they
must turn the hand down, while the dealer/banker collects the bet. The dealer/banker does the
same with each remaining player. Any player who stands must wait while the dealer/banker
draws his or her cards. If the dealer/banker goes bust, each standing player is paid the amount of
their wager. If the dealer/banker "stands," the down card is turned up and players whose totals
are higher than the dealer/banker's are paid. The dealer/banker collects from any player whose
total is less. Action is always to the left of the dealer/banker. Any frozen wagers needing to be
"made up" will be done in order, to the left of the dealer/banker from losing wagers the
dealer/banker collects.
(((7))) (9) Should the dealer/banker not be able to cover all frozen wagers then those
frozen wagers are released to the winning players and the deal passes immediately to the left at
which time the new dealer/banker shall announce the amount of the bank and shuffle the cards. The same shall apply if the dealer/banker has no money in the bank. The dealer/banker may, if
allowed by house rule, add to their bank in between hands.
(((8))) (10) Upon completion of the shuffle, the player to the right of the dealer/banker
shall cut the cards. After the cards have been placed into the shoe the dealer/banker shall insert a
blank card approximately three quarters of the way through the deck(s). A dealer/banker may
deal from the shoe until he/she reaches the blank card. After the blank card appears, the
dealer/banker may continue dealing that hand, but will not start a new hand. ((If a house dealer
is used, he/she returns the remaining chips in the bank to the banker.)) The player on the
banker/dealer's immediate left shall be offered the opportunity to be the next dealer/banker ((or
banker)). The discards may only be reshuffled to complete the last hand.
(((9))) (11) Once wagers are placed and covered on the bet line, no player, including the
dealer/banker, may touch those wagers until the winner has been determined. Any player
touching the wagers may be ruled to have fouled and their wager forfeited.
(((10))) (12) Any player who lifts their cards up from the table or slides their cards out of
their own playing area shall be ruled to have fouled and their wager may be forfeited.
(((11))) (13) No player may "buy" the bank. The ((bank)) deal must pass around the
table to the left and no person ((player)) can authorize another person ((anyone other than a
house dealer)) to deal for him or her. No player may be the dealer/banker for more than one
consecutive shoe before passing the bank. A new player entering the game may not participate
as the dealer/banker until at least two other players have dealt. If a player does not wish to deal
and passes the deal, that player may not play in the first two hands conducted by the next
dealer/banker. A dealer/banker may, after completing one full hand, pass the deal and be able to
participate in the next hand. ((: Provided, That when there are less than five players at a table a
player may deal more than one consecutive shoe only when the remaining players have passed
the deal.))
(((12))) (14) The dealer/banker must stand on seventeen or above and must take hits on
sixteen or below. If a dealer/banker has an ace, it shall be counted as eleven if it brings his or
her total to seventeen or more (but not over twenty-one). Provided, That the licensee, by house
rule, may allow ((house may elect to)) play of a "soft seventeen," which occurs when the
dealer/banker's first two cards are an ace valued at eleven and a six. If the ((house)) licensee
elects to play a soft seventeen, house rules must specify that the dealer/banker must hit a soft
seventeen, and must stand on a hard seventeen and any eighteen or above. House blackjack rules
must be posted in plain view to the players and the house must ensure they are consistently
followed.
(((13))) The conditions for doubling down shall be set by house rule, provided that the
wager may be doubled and the player receives only one more card. The player must then stand
on those three cards. If the dealer's bank is insufficient to cover a double down wager, the player
may wager an amount equal to the dealer's remaining bank. The dealer must then cover that
wager. If the dealer has no bank then a player may not double down.
(((14) If the dealer's face-up card is a ten, face card or ace, he/she may look at their
face-down card to see if they have a natural; if his/her face-up card is anything else, they may
not look at their face-down card until their turn comes to draw.
(((15))) (16) If a player's first two cards are a pair, then that player may split the pair into
two separate hands. The amount of the player's original bet then goes on one of the cards, and
they must place an equal amount as a bet on the other card. If the dealer/banker does not have
enough in their bank to cover the doubled bet, the dealer/banker must cover an amount equal to
the value of their remaining bank. The player then has the option to divide the wagers in any
manner between the two hands, not to exceed the allowable limit per hand. If the dealer/banker
has no bank then the player may divide their wager in any manner between the two hands, unless
the player's original bet was a minimum allowed in that game then they may not split their pair. Additional splits shall be determined by house rule.
(((16))) (17) The dealer/banker will pay only on the value of the cards held by the player
and shall not pay on the number of cards received or the card sequence.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 9.46.070 (1)-(4), (7), (8), (11), (12), (14), (20) and 9.46.110 (3), (4). 95-23-109, § 230-40-125, filed 11/22/95, effective 1/1/96. Statutory Authority: RCW 9.46.070. 93-13-062 (Order 240), § 230-40-125, filed 6/17/93, effective 7/18/93. Statutory Authority: Chapter 9.46 RCW. 91-21-053 (Order 228), § 230-40-125, filed 10/15/91, effective 11/15/91; 91-05-047 (Order 220), § 230-40-125, filed 2/14/91, effective 3/17/91. Statutory Authority: RCW 9.46.070 (11) and (14). 90-11-058, § 230-40-125, filed 5/15/90, effective 6/15/90. Statutory Authority: RCW 34.05.220(4), [34.05].230 and 9.46.070 (11) and (14). 90-05-032 (Order 205), § 230-40-125, filed 2/14/90, effective 3/17/90.]
Reviser's note: The typographical errors in the above section occurred in the copy filed by the agency and appear in the Register pursuant to the requirements of RCW 34.08.040.
Reviser's note: RCW 34.05.395 requires the use of underlining and deletion marks to indicate amendments to existing rules. The rule published above varies from its predecessor in certain respects not indicated by the use of these markings.
Reviser's note: The bracketed material preceding the section above was supplied by the code reviser's office.
OTS-3081.1
REPEALER
The following section of the Washington Administrative Code is repealed:
WAC 230-40-125 | Washington blackjack--Rules of play--Wagering limits. |