Bensalem Racing Ass'n v. Pennsylvania State Harness Racing Commission

19 A.3d 549, 2011 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 113, 2011 WL 944196
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 21, 2011
Docket1053 C.D. 2010, 2710 C.D. 2010
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 A.3d 549 (Bensalem Racing Ass'n v. Pennsylvania State Harness Racing Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bensalem Racing Ass'n v. Pennsylvania State Harness Racing Commission, 19 A.3d 549, 2011 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 113, 2011 WL 944196 (Pa. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge BROBSON.

These consolidated appeals arise out of a proceeding before Respondent Pennsylvania Harness Racing Commission (Harness Commission) on a petition of Intervenor Chester Downs and Marina, LLC d/b/a Harrah’s Chester Casino & Racetrack (Harrah’s Chester) for permission to conduct telephone account wagering pursuant to Section 218(b) of the Race Horse Indus *551 try Reform Act, Act of December 17, 1981, P.L. 485, as amended, 4 P.S. §§ 325.101-.402 (Reform Act). Petitioners Bensalem Racing Association, Inc. and Keystone Turf Club, Inc. jointly d/b/a Philadelphia Park Racetrack (Philadelphia Park) seek to appeal three (3) orders issued by the Harness Commission in that proceeding: (1) a May 27, 2010 Order, which the Harness Commission designated as a “Conditional Approval Order” (First Approval Order); (2) a May 27, 2010 Order denying Philadelphia Park’s Petition to Intervene (Intervention Order); and (3) a September 30, 2010 Order, which the Harness Commission designated as the “Final Order” granting approval to Harrah’s Chester (Second Approval Order). For the reasons that follow, we reverse as to the Harness Commission’s Intervention Order. As a result, we must vacate the First Approval Order and the Second Approval Order and remand for further proceedings. 1

I. BACKGROUND

Since April 2003, Harrah’s Chester has been duly licensed by the Harness Commission to conduct harness horse racing and pari-mutuel wagering at its facility pursuant to the Reform Act. On or about April 1, 2010, Harrah’s Chester filed a verified petition with the Harness Commission, seeking permission to conduct telephone account wagering under Section 218(b) of the Reform Act, which provides, in pertinent part:

Each commission may upon request by any licensed corporation grant permission to the licensed corporation to conduct a telephone account wagering system; provided, however, that all telephone messages to place wagers must be to a place within the race track enclosure: And further provided, That all moneys used to place telephone wagers be on deposit in an amount sufficient to cover the wager at the race track where the account is opened. Each commission may promulgate rules or regulations to regulate telephone account wagering.... All telephone account wagering systems shall be solely operated by the licensed corporations.

4 P.S. § 325.218(b). 2 Harrah’s Chester filed an amended petition on or about May 25, 2010. In both its original and amended petition, it proposed an account wagering system (AWS) that it contended complied in all respects with the Reform Act and the Harness Commission’s regulations. Part of the proposed system included the use of a third-party contractor.

On April 23, 2010, Philadelphia Park filed its verified petition to intervene with the Harness Commission. The petition included nineteen (19) numbered paragraphs. Philadelphia Park also attached to its intervention petition a proposed “Motion to Dismiss and Answer in Opposition to Account Wagering Petition.” On or about May 3, 2010, Harrah’s Chester filed a response to the intervention petition. The response had two parts: (1) a preliminary statement in the nature of a general denial, and (2) a paragraph-by-paragraph response. In the paragraph-by-paragraph *552 response, Harrah’s Chester denied sixteen (16) of the nineteen (19) paragraphs in the intervention petition and denied as stated a seventeenth. In all, then, Harrah’s Chester purported to admit only the allegations contained in two (2) paragraphs of the intervention petition. (Reproduced Record (R.R.) 26a, 56a-57a.) We can discern, however, some additional, undisputed facts based on further scrutiny of the papers.

Philadelphia Park (i.e., its constituent owners) is licensed by the Harness Commission to conduct harness racing and pari-mutuel waging. It is also approved to conduct telephone account wagering under Section 218(b) of the Reform Act. Philadelphia Park has engaged in each of these licensed and authorized activities at its facility in southeastern Pennsylvania. Harrah’s Chester’s facility is located within a 35-mile radius of the Philadelphia Park facility. (Id. 25a-26a, 56a.) Indeed, Harrah’s Chester’s primary market area (PMA) 3 and Philadelphia Park’s PMA partially overlap. (Id. 27a, 59a.) Based on these undisputed facts, neither the parties nor the Harness Commission dispute that Philadelphia Park and Harrah’s Chester are competitors in harness racing and pari-mutuel gaming and, if the Harness Commission’s approval orders stand, will be (or even currently are) competitors in telephone account wagering.

In support of intervention, Philadelphia Park relied on its status as a current competitor of Harrah’s Chester and a prospective competitor of Harrah’s Chester in the area of telephone account wagering. Philadelphia Park’s intervention papers express concern over the impact that a new entrant into the telephone account wagering market would have on the existing market — “the grant of Harrah’s Chester’s application will only serve to cannibalize the existing market.” (Id. at 27a.) Har-rah’s Chester denied this assertion. (Id. at 58a-59a.) Philadelphia Park also, however, conceded in its intervention papers that it does not have an exclusive right to conduct telephone account wagering in its PMA. It nonetheless articulated the following concern:

While Harrah’s Chester may have equal rights to conduct account wagering within the shared portions of the [PMA], [Philadelphia Park] has a direct, substantial and immediate interest in ensuring that such account wagering is conducted in conformance with the requirements and protections, specifically designed for [Philadelphia Park’s] benefit, in the Reform Act and Horse and Harness Racing Commission Regulations.

(Id. 27a-28a.) 4

The alleged legal deficiencies in Har-rah’s Chester’s petition for approval of its AWS are more specifically set forth in Philadelphia Park’s proposed answer and motion to dismiss the petition for approval (attached as an exhibit to Philadelphia Park’s intervention petition):

Overall, [Philadelphia Park] opposes the relief requested because the account wagering system proposed by Harrah’s Chester is violative of numerous requirements of Section 218(b) of the Reform Act.... Summarily, in violation of these laws, Harrah’s Chester’s account wager *553 ing business is to be operated almost entirely by an out-of-state account wagering company which would routinely accept account wagers originating in Pennsylvania, is not solely operated by a licensed corporation, and is not operated exclusively by Harrah’s Chester’s licensed employees.

(Id. at 33a-34a (footnotes omitted).) Philadelphia Park also avers the following:

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Bluebook (online)
19 A.3d 549, 2011 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 113, 2011 WL 944196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bensalem-racing-assn-v-pennsylvania-state-harness-racing-commission-pacommwct-2011.