Bedford Sportspark, Inc. v. Leslie

155 N.E.2d 730, 80 Ohio Law. Abs. 124, 1959 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 351
CourtSummit County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedFebruary 3, 1959
DocketNo. 213946
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 155 N.E.2d 730 (Bedford Sportspark, Inc. v. Leslie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bedford Sportspark, Inc. v. Leslie, 155 N.E.2d 730, 80 Ohio Law. Abs. 124, 1959 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 351 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

[125]*125OPINION

By WATTERS, J.

On August 11, 1958, the Council of the Village of Northfield, Summit County, Ohio, adopted ordinance 1,958-14 entitled, “An Ordinance Providing for an Admissions Tax,” as follows: (See Exhibit “A” attached to the Answer.) Section I A:

“There is hereby levied and imposed upon every person who pays an admission charge for the right or privilege to enter a theatre; auditorium; dance hall; roller or skating rink; athletic field; swimming pool; outdoor amusement park; automobile or motorcycle race or contest; horse race meeting; meeting at which horse racing is conducted for any stake, purse or award; horse show; circus; side show attraction; or any other public exhibition or performance for profit, within the Municipality of Northfield, a tax of three per centum (3%) on the amount of money paid for the ticket or right of admission thereto.”

Section I B:

“Such tax shall apply to every admission charge for any such place or event sponsored within the Municipality of Northfield notwithstanding that the sale of the ticket or right of admission was made outside the corporate limits of the Municipality.”.....

Section III A:

“The tax hereby levied and imposed shall be paid by and collected from the person seeking admission to the place or event sponsored at the' time the admission charge thereto is paid to the person receiving payment thereof.”.....

Plaintiff, Bedford Sportspark, Inc., is an Ohio corporation, for profit engaged in the business of operating horse racing meetings upon its premises located in the Village of Northfield. It operates under permit from the Ohio State Racing Commission, and conducts horse racing meetings, on specified dates, wherein the pari-mutuel system of wagering is permitted under the Ohio Racing Act.

The plaintiff corporation refuses to comply with the provisions of said ordinance and brings this action to enjoin the assessment or collection of said admission tax in the grounds that it violates the provisions of §3769.08 R. C. of the State of Ohio.

The defendant, Robert C. Leslie, Clerk-Treasurer of and on behalf of such Village, maintains that said ordinance is in all respects legal and proper generally, insofar as the plaintiff corporation and all other permit holders are concerned, in that said ordinance does not assess any license, excise tax or fee against the pari-mutuel take of a permittee conducting horse race meetings; that the admission tax is levied against the one paying the admission price, and not against the licensee.

The original, final Horse Racing Act was passed June 22, 1933, as Amended Senate Bill 372,115, Laws of Ohio, page 367. It became §§1079-1 to 1079-14, both inclusive, GC. See §1079-8 GC. It became effective •June 28, 1933.

Effective in 1953 the R. C. became §§3769.01 to 3769.14, and §1079-8 GC as §3769.08 R. C., was amended to increase the take from the wagering to the State Commission.

[126]*126In 1953, effective 7-21-53, §3769.081 R. C., was added which gave the right to the various municipalities wherein race meets are held to collect through the Racing Commission, from the permit holder, a certain percent of the wagering take, not to exceed $10,000.00 for any given year.

Later, effective in June, 1957, §3769.08 R. C., was further amended to its present form, and §3769.082 R. C., was passed to provide the “Ohio Fair Purse Fund,” which has no bearing in the instant controversy. It was an aid to horse racing at the county fairs, and as a needed financial lift to them.

The original statute §1079-8 GC, and its successor statute §3769.08 R. C., all provided, and now provides, that:

“No other license or excise tax or fee, except as provided in §§3769.01 to 3769.14, inclusive R. C., shall be assessed or collected from such licensee by any county, township, district, municipal corporation, or other body having power to assess or collect a fax or fee.”

It will be noted that the entire horse Racing Act is in contravention of the constitutional provision against conducting lotteries in the State of Ohio, which has brought the so-called bingo operation to grief. It is also in contravention of all the various anti gambling provisions of our state law and local ordinances. The Act permits pari-mutuel wagering or gambling at the track, but the so-called “bookie” operators are still illegal.

It is, therefore, necessary to hold that the whole Horse Racing Statute should be strictly construed. It gives the permit holders and patrons certain rights and immunities to do what otherwise would be an illegal gambling operation, and sets out certain contributions or splits the permit holder must make or share with the State, local governments and the county fair organizations, and then provides that nothing else shall be taken from the take of the permit holder or licensee, by any county, municipality, etc.

Does this mean that such bodies cannot levy an admission tax such as the one before us against the one paying the admission, or from the permit holder outside of the pari-mutuel take?

Has the State preempted generally the field of such an admission tax as we have here?

The State of Ohio had an admission tax law passed in 115 Ohio Laws 657 at the same session of the Legislature that passed the Horse Racing Act in 1933, the latter being 115 Ohio Laws 171 and Amended finally in 115 Ohio Laws 367 (1933).

That admission tax act became §5544-2 GC, and, as pertinent, reads as follows:

“A tax of 1% for each 10 cents or fraction thereof paid for admission to any place — to be paid by the person paying for such admission.”

Under it, the assessment was against the person paying to be collected by the person collecting or receiving the admission price.

In 1936, effective December 30th, said section was amended (§5544-2 GC) to 3% upon the amount received. This made the tax payable by the person receiving the admission.

It became under the amendment an admission tax — a gross receipts tax, payable by the person receiving the admission price.

[127]*127See 149 Oh St 1, Leader v. Glander; 48 Abs 148, Shallat v. Glander.

The Legislature repealed this admission tax law in 1947 (122 Ohio Laws 459). So the State is no longer'in the admission tax field.

Accordingly, generally, a municipality has the power to levy excise taxes for revenue where the State has not preempted the field.

See 147 Oh St 58, Haefner v. City of Youngstown, Syllabus (3).

So generally then the Village of Northfield had and has the full power to levy the admission excise tax in question here. There is no question on that.

Now we come to the question of whether §3769.08 R. C., prohibits the Village from levying an admission tax under its said ordinance against those who pay an admission to plaintiff race track.

As stated herein before, the Act must be strictly construed. All the contributions the permittee (plaintiff) has to make, plaintiff claims, under the said statute, is a percentage of the take passing through the betting machines subject to a $10,000.00 yearly limitation to the local jurisdiction (under §3769.081 R. C.).

There is nothing in §3769.08 R.

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Related

Village of Northfield v. Northeast Ohio Harness
468 N.E.2d 911 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
155 N.E.2d 730, 80 Ohio Law. Abs. 124, 1959 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bedford-sportspark-inc-v-leslie-ohctcomplsummit-1959.