Department of Business & Professional Regulation, Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering v. Dania Entertainment Center, LLC

229 So. 3d 1259
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedNovember 8, 2017
DocketCASE NO. 1D16-4275
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 229 So. 3d 1259 (Department of Business & Professional Regulation, Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering v. Dania Entertainment Center, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Business & Professional Regulation, Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering v. Dania Entertainment Center, LLC, 229 So. 3d 1259 (Fla. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

WOLF, J.

Appellant, the Department of Business and Professional Regulation, Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering, challenges an order of an Administrative Law Judge from the Division of Administrative Hearings concluding that the Division’s notice of intent to repeal Florida Rules of Administrative Procedure 61D-11.001(17) and 61D-11.002(5) was an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority. We agree with the ALJ that the repeal had the effect of a rule. The Division has failed to challenge on appeal the ALJ’s conclusion that the rule was invalid for failure to comply with section 120.54(1), Florida Statutes, which governs the preparation and consideration of statements of estimated regulatory costs. We, therefore, affirm that portion of the order. However, we specifically reject the portion of the ALJ’s order that concluded the Division does not have the authority to repeal the rules that it previously adopted. Both sides agree that the Division has this< authority. 1

Facts

The ALJ made extensive factual findings that have not been disputed on appeal. Appellees are all cardrooms that are regulated by the Division. As part of this oversight, cardrooms are required to submit to the Division for approval their “internal controls,” which must include “[a] list of all authorized games offered for play and a description of the rules of play and wagering requirements for each game.” Fla. R. Admin. P. 61D-lL019(4)(i).

In 2011, the Division began authorizing internal controls for a particular type of card game called a “designated player' game.” As defined by the ALJ:

[In a] designated player game ... a designated player plays his or her hand against each other player at the table, instead of all players competing against each other. ... However, a designated player is not a cardroom operator.
In traditional “pool” poker games, each player bets into a central pool, with the winning hand(s) among all of the players collecting from the pool of bets, minus the cardroom rake.
In designated player games, each player at the table makes an individual bet, and compares their hand against the designated player’s hand. If the player’s hand is better than the designated player’s hand, then the designated player pays the player from the designated player’s stack of chips. If the designated player’s hand is better than the player’s hand, then the designated player collects the" player’s wager. At an eight-seat table, it is as though there are seven separate “player versus designated player” games.

As requests to offer these games increased, the Division initiated rulemaking in order “to establish the parameters under which designated player games would be authorized.” Over the course of the next several years, the Division conducted a series of rulemaking workshops' and received feedback from the cardrooms, which included proposed versions of the rules. The goal of both the Division and the industry was to avoid violating the statutory prohibition against offering a “banking game,” which is “a game in which the house is a participant in the game, taking on players, paying winners, and collecting from losers or in which the cardroom establishes a bank against which participants play.” § 849.086(2)(b), Fla. Stat.

Ultimately, the industry suggested a version of a rule that stated the designated player cannot be required to cover all of the potential wagers that could be made by the other players. The cardrooms explained, “Multiple jurisdictions have determined a key element to a banked card game is the house requiring all wagers be covered. We propose this language to distinguish between lawful games and impermissible banked games.”

In July 2014, three years after the rule-making process began, the Division adopted two new rules that had been proposed by the cardrooms. Rule 6lD-11.001(17) defines the term “designated player”:

“Designated player” means the player identified by the button as the, player in the dealer position.

Fla. R. Admin. P. 61D-11.001(17). Rule 61D-11.002(5) provides criteria for house rules:

(5) Card games that utilize a designated player that covers other, players’ wagers shall be governed by the cardroom operator’s house rules. The house rules shall:
(a) Establish uniform requirements to be a designated player;
(b) Ensure that'the dealer button rotates around the card table in a clockwise fashion on a hand by hand basis to provide each player desiring to be the designated player an equal opportunity to participate as the designated player; and
(c)Not require the designated player to cover all potential wagers.

Fla. R. Admin. P. 61D-11.002(5).

The Division continued to authorize designated player games through mid-2015. In October 2015, the Division published a notice of intent to repeal rules 61D-11.001(17) and 61D-11.002(5). The Division also proposed adding a new rule that would state, “Player banked games, established by the house, are prohibited.”

At a public hearing in December 2015, Division director Jonathan Zachem explained1 the purpose of the proposed changes was to conform the rules with section 849.086, which he believed “does not allow* designated player games.”

After the hearing, the Division ‘began instructing its employees not to approve internal controls for designated player games because, as one Division employee testified, the Division’s position had “turned around” on the issue of whether designated player games were permitted by the statute.

Also in December 2015, the Division filed a series of administrative complaints against cardrooms offering designated player games. Zachem conceded that a cardroom could have been.operating in full compliance with its Division-approved internal controls and still have been the subject of an administrative complaint.

Appellees filed individual petitions challenging the validity of the proposed rule changes, and those petitions were consolidated.

The notice of rulemaking stated the División did not prepare a statement of estimated regulatory costs (SERC)' because it concluded that the proposed rules would not have a financial impact in excess of $200,00Q. Appellees submitted a good-faith proposal for a lower cost regulatory alternative (LCRA). They estimated that the prohibition on designated player games would cost them more than $87,000,000 over a 5-year period. The LCRA suggested that the increased regulatory cost could be avoided by not repealing the rules and instead maintaining' the Division’s ■ longstanding interpretation, of section 849.086 as permitting designated player games. Due to the high anticipated regulatory cost, -appellees -argued that the Division was required to file a SERC.

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Bluebook (online)
229 So. 3d 1259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-business-professional-regulation-division-of-pari-mutuel-fladistctapp-2017.