Deaton v. Kentucky Horse Racing Authority

172 S.W.3d 803, 2004 Ky. App. LEXIS 348, 2004 WL 2756231
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 3, 2004
Docket2003-CA-002485-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 172 S.W.3d 803 (Deaton v. Kentucky Horse Racing Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deaton v. Kentucky Horse Racing Authority, 172 S.W.3d 803, 2004 Ky. App. LEXIS 348, 2004 WL 2756231 (Ky. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

SCHRODER, Judge.

A licensed thoroughbred trainer appeals an order of the Franklin Circuit Court which affirmed an opinion of the Kentucky Racing Commission 1 which affirmed and adopted a hearing officer’s recommendation to suspend the trainer for 150 days after one of his horses tested positive for Prozac. The trainer did not overcome the presumption created by 810 KAR 1:018 Section 3(3), nor did he show the penalty was unreasonable. Hence we affirm.

William E. Deaton (Deaton) is a licensed thoroughbred trainer with a contract to train and race horses owned by Dr. Joseph E. Kutz. Deaton and Kutz considered the possibility that one of their horses, Explo-do Red, expended too much energy prior to races due to his nervous nature. They also discussed possible solutions, including the possibility of using tranquilizers to improve the horse’s performance. Dr. Kutz placed Prozac into some liquid glucosamine and gave the mixture to Deaton, who fed it to Explodo Red (in with his feed), three times daily, for approximately ten days. On February 17, 2002, Explodo Red was entered into a claiming race at Turfway Park, where he finished second. The standard testing of his urine sample revealed the Prozac, which is a prohibited substance for horses in racing.

The Racing Stewards disqualified Explo-do Red’s second place finish and suspended Deaton for 150 days. Dr. Kutz was also disciplined but that case is not before this Court. Deaton appealed his suspension. Dr. Kutz wrote a letter to the Commission in which he confessed to placing Prozac into the Equinyl bottle that Deaton fed to Explodo Red. Dr. Kutz also maintained that Deaton did not know the Prozac was in the mixture. The hearing officer for the Commission found that Deaton did not know the mixture contained Prozac. Nevertheless, the hearing officer also concluded that:

*805 6. Under 810 ICAR 1:008, section 3 subsection (4) the trainer bears primary responsibility for the condition of all horses trained by him to ensure that no horse will race with prohibited drugs or medication.
7. Under 810 KAR 1:018, Section (3), subsection (2) a trainer is subject to disciplinary action if he participated in any manner in the administration of a banned substance.
8. In light of the stipulations, William Deaton violated regulations of 810 KAR 1:008, Section 3, subsection (4) and 810 ICAR 1:018 Section (3), subsection (2).
9. Deaton asserts that the penalty imposed by the Stewards is inappropriate for the misconduct because Dr. Kutz added the Prozac to the feed mixture he gave to Deaton. If the Kentucky Racing Commission were to accept the assertion 810 KAR 1:008 Section (3) subsection (4) would be rendered meaningless. The regulation was promulgated to stop the very abuse, which occurred in this case. Deaton is responsible for the care of the horses he races and it is his responsibility to be sure that those horse [sic] race free of prohibited drugs or medications. If Deaton is to accept any mixture to be given to the horse from any other person, even the owner of the horse, he is under an obligation to be sure that the mixture does not contain any prohibited drug or medication which would be in the horse’s system on race day.
10. The Stewards are given the authority to suspend a licensee for violation of an administrative regulation as may be deemed appropriate in keeping with the seriousness of the violation. Prozac is a Class 2 drug, which has a high potential for affecting the outcome of a race. As most other Class 2 drugs [Pjrozac is intended to alter the consciousness or the psychic state of humans, and has no approved or indicated use in a horse....

The Commission adopted the hearing officer’s findings of fact and conclusions of law and upheld the 150-day suspension.

On appeal to the circuit court, Deaton contended the burden of proof was wrongly placed upon him and the penalty was not justified. Deaton argued that the burden of proof was improperly shifted from the Commission to the trainer, asserting that 810 KAR 1:018, Sections 1 and 3 conflicts with KRS 13B.090, which puts the burden of proof in administrative hearings on the Commission. The Amicus Brief also stresses this argument. The circuit court affirmed, reasoning that the regulations did not amount to “burden shifting” but created an affirmative defense, and that the evidence showed Deaton did not exercise reasonable care, much less a high degree of care, in safeguarding the horse.

On appeal to this Court, Deaton alleges the Commission’s findings of fact are arbitrary and the conclusions of law were erroneous. Specifically, he contends 810 KAR 1:018, Section 3, subsection (3)(a) requires the Commission to show that Deaton failed to exercise a “high degree of care” in safeguarding the horse from tampering, that the Commission’s ruling made Deaton an insurer.

It is important for our analysis to review the administrative regulations involved. 810 KAR 1:008, Section 3, states, in part: “A licensed trainer shall bear primary responsibility for the proper care, health, training condition, safety, and protection against the administration of prohibited drugs or medication of horses in his charge.” 810 KAR 1:018, Section 1 provides, in part: “(1) While participating in a race, a horse shall not carry in its body any medication, drug, substance, or metabolic derivative, that: ... (b) Could serve *806 as a ... tranquilizer....” 810 KAR 1:018, Section 3(3) provides, in part:

If the commission determines that a horse had been administered a medication, drug, substance, or metabolic derivative thereof in violation of Section 1 or 2 of this administrative regulation, a licensed trainer, assistant trainer, groom, stable watchman, or other person having the immediate care and custody of a horse governed by the provisions of this administrative regulation shall be subject to disciplinary action if he does not establish that he had:
(a) Not been negligent by failing to exercise a high degree of care in safeguarding the horse from tampering....

This last section creates a presumption the trainer has to rebut. It does not change the burden of proof in 810 KAR 1:018, Section 3(3), or even KRS 13B.090(7). In a similar case involving harness racing (governed by Title 811 of the KAR), a panel of this Court dealt with similar regulations. Allen v. Kentucky Horse Racing Authority, Ky.App., 136 S.W.3d 54 (2004), involved a harness race at the Red Mile Racetrack in Lexington and a horse named CR Commando. Urine tests after two races revealed flunixin (an anti-inflammatory drug) in CR Commando’s urine and the purse money in both races was ordered returned and the owner/trainer fined. 811 KAR 1:090, Section 5 also creates a presumption:

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172 S.W.3d 803, 2004 Ky. App. LEXIS 348, 2004 WL 2756231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deaton-v-kentucky-horse-racing-authority-kyctapp-2004.