Casino Magic Corp. v. Ladner

666 So. 2d 452, 1995 WL 702775
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1995
DocketNO. 94-CC-00299-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 666 So. 2d 452 (Casino Magic Corp. v. Ladner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casino Magic Corp. v. Ladner, 666 So. 2d 452, 1995 WL 702775 (Mich. 1995).

Opinion

666 So.2d 452 (1995)

CASINO MAGIC Corporation; Grand Casinos, Inc.; Mississippi Gaming Commission; Stuart C. Irby, Jr., Chairman; W.W. Gresham, Commissioner; Robert C. Engram, Commissioner; Paul Harvey, Executive Director; and Mike Moore, Attorney General
v.
Terryl M. Ladner and Terry's Seafood, Incorporated.

NO. 94-CC-00299-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

November 30, 1995.

*453 Michael C. Moore, Attorney General; Carole Brand Edds, R. Stewart Smith, Jr., Sp. Asst. Attorneys General; R. David Kaufman, Brunini Grantham Grower & Hewes, Kathryn H. Hester and Thomas B. Shepherd, III, Watkins Ludlam & Stennis, Jackson, for Appellants.

Mack Cameron, Jackson, for Appellees.

Before HAWKINS, C.J., and SULLIVAN and JAMES L. ROBERTS, Jr., JJ.

JAMES L. ROBERTS, Jr., Justice, for the Court:

INTRODUCTION

This case deals primarily with the appealability of a denial by the Mississippi Gaming Commission of a site proposed by a Mississippi landowner seeking gaming approval for his land. The Mississippi Gaming Commission denied the appellants' site request but was reversed by the Hancock County circuit court. We find that the Mississippi Gaming Commission acted within its statutory parameters and accordingly reverse and render the circuit court's ruling, finding that it lacked jurisdiction under these facts. We also find that the lower court's denial of the attempted intervenors' request for intervention, which was appealed by Grand Casino and Casino Magic, should be dismissed as we find that the trial court originally lacked jurisdiction over the merits of the case which naturally encompasses the trial court's jurisdiction to hear the intervention motion. Accordingly, this case is reversed and rendered in part and dismissed in part.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

This case began procedurally on December 17, 1990, when Bay St. Louis attorney Joseph W. Gex, on behalf of Terryl M. Ladner and Terry's Seafood, Inc. (hereinafter "Ladner"), requested the Mississippi State Tax Commission (formerly performing the duties of the Mississippi Gaming Commission, hereinafter "MGC") to determine whether Ladner's Bayou Caddy property on the Mississippi Gulf Coast was a legal site for gaming under the Mississippi Gaming Act. Mark T. Smith, Senior Enforcement Agent for the Gulfport Alcohol Beverage Control Division of the Mississippi State Tax Commission, performed an on-site inspection of Ladner's property, reviewed USGS maps of the area, and decided on December 31, 1990, that the site was not lawful because it was in a bayou where cruise ships were not permitted under MGC Regulation No. 2. The Interim Executive Director of the MGC, Lester Herrington, recommended and was concurred with by the MGC's unanimous vote on January 3, 1991, that the site was not lawful but that a hearing would be available if requested within fifteen days.

After additional evidence was provided by Ladner's expert, Dr. Ervin G. Otvos, who alleged that the Ladner property is the westward extension of the Mississippi Sound due to natural geological formations occurring over the last three thousand years, and site inspections were performed by MGC officers, the MGC January 3, 1991, decision was reaffirmed by unanimous vote on October 30, 1991. Aggrieved by the MGC's affirmance, Ladner filed a petition for review on November *454 27, 1991, in the Circuit Court of Hancock County pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. § 75-76-121. The MGC filed its Answer on December 27, 1991, alleging that Ladner had failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted and had not perfected his appeal within the twenty days required under § 75-76-121. Subsequently, the Hancock County trial judge entered an order on April 17, 1992, remanding the case to the MGC for further hearings to compile a record on the matter (as the existing record was inadequate for a review) and to redetermine the lawfulness of Ladner's proposed site.

A formal hearing was subsequently conducted by MGC Hearing Officer Bruce Nourse on June 10, 1992. Evidence was presented by both Ladner and the attorney general on the lawfulness of the proposed site. The hearing was followed by an official meeting of the MGC on June 24, 1992. The matter of Ladner's property was brought before the MGC by Ladner's attorney and the attorney general's office in the form of a presentation which reiterated the evidence produced during the June 10 hearing.

Ladner maintained his position that his property was the westward extension of the Mississippi Sound making the site legal under statutory law and the MGC's own regulations. The attorney general's office and the hearing officer, Bruce Nourse, maintained that the site was on a bayou, according to local fishermen and maps identifying the path of the water as Bayou Caddy, precluding the site from being proper under MGC Regulation No. 2 and Miss. Code Ann. § 97-33-7. The testimony of Mark Smith, based upon his site inspection and the maps' labels indicating that the water for the site was a bayou and not part of the Mississippi Sound, was the MGC's primary evidence to refute Dr. Otvos' research. Mr. Nourse recommended that the preliminary site approval be denied once again since he felt it was a bayou and thus prohibited by Regulation No. 2. The MGC voted unanimously to uphold Mr. Nourse's recommendation and denied Ladner's site approval.

Once again aggrieved by the MGC's refusal to recognize the Ladner property as the westward extension of the Mississippi Sound, and thus a lawful site, Mr. Ladner filed his Petition for Review with the Hancock County Circuit Court on July 11, 1992, seeking to have the MGC's denial of the preliminary site approval reversed. On August 14, 1992, the MGC and the attorney general filed their Answer stating that (1) the circuit court lacked jurisdiction to review a denial of a preliminary site determination, (2) that Ladner had failed to state a ground upon which relief could be granted and (3) that Ladner was not entitled to any relief sought. On April 6, 1993, the Honorable Judge James E. Thomas ruled and entered an order holding that (1) jurisdiction was proper, (2) the Ladner site qualified under the Mississippi Gaming Act and was not prohibited by the MGC's Regulation No. 2, (3) the body of water for the proposed site emptied into the Mississippi Sound, (4) the MGC's denial was in excess of the authority granted to it by the Legislature and was arbitrary and capricious, and (5) thus that the site should have been approved, and reversed the MGC's denial.

The MGC filed a Motion to Stay Enforcement of the Judgment and a Motion to Reconsider and Present Newly Discovered Evidence. On April 26-7, 1993, Mississippi Riverboat Amusement, Casino Magic Corporation, President Casinos and Grand Casinos filed motions for leave to intervene, which Ladner opposed. The circuit court heard all motions on May 20, 1993, and rendered its decision on all pending motions on February 10, 1994. The February 10 decision denied all motions to intervene and reconsider the prior reversal of the MGC's denial of site approval. The trial court reaffirmed its previous decision to reverse the MGC's denial of site approval by stating:

This court finds that it has jurisdiction of the parties and subject matter and that venue is proper with this court ... This court finds that the Ladner site on Bayou Caddy which is the subject of this litigation is qualified for gaming activities under Mississippi law.

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Bluebook (online)
666 So. 2d 452, 1995 WL 702775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casino-magic-corp-v-ladner-miss-1995.