In Re Owner-Trainer Topper

165 N.E.2d 19, 109 Ohio App. 289, 11 Ohio Op. 2d 49, 1959 Ohio App. LEXIS 821
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 16, 1959
Docket1531
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 165 N.E.2d 19 (In Re Owner-Trainer Topper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Owner-Trainer Topper, 165 N.E.2d 19, 109 Ohio App. 289, 11 Ohio Op. 2d 49, 1959 Ohio App. LEXIS 821 (Ohio Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

Guernsey, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law by the Ohio State Racing Commission from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Crawford County in an appeal from an order of the commission purporting to indefinitely suspend the licenses previously granted by the commission to A. P. Topper as an owner and trainer of race horses. The Common Pleas Court found that the order of the commission was not supported by reliable, probative, or substantial evidence and was not in accordance with law and the judgment of the court was that the order of the commission suspending the license be reversed, set aside, and held for naught, and that Topper be restored to all rights and privileges which he had lost by reason of the order of suspension.

The evidence is undisputed that Bright Sun, a horse owned by Topper, won the first race on May 2, 1958, the first day of the season, at Painesville Raceway; that, at approximately 8:40 p. m., he was taken from the racetrack to the retention area for the purpose of permitting Dr. Cragg, the track veterinarian, to obtain saliva and urine samples; that the saliva sample was immediately obtained, but the veterinarian was unable to obtain a urine sample prior to about 11:50 p. m., when the horse was removed from the retention barn and returned to its own stable by its groom acting pursuant to the order of Topper, his employer; that under the directions of the veterinarian his assistants tried unsuccessfully several times to obtain a urine sample by holding a jar with their hands and by holding a jar placed between the tines of a three-tine pitchfork beneath the horse; that the usual implement used to obtain *291 such samples, i. e., an aluminum tube fixed to the end of a wooden handle, which tube drained its contents into a glass bottle affixed to its base, was, through oversight, not available on this first day of the racing season; that, although the horse’s own attendants were permitted to “cool out” and otherwise attend to the horse so long as their activities did not interfere with the obtaining of the required samples, during attempts to obtain the urine sample and at the end of the cooling out process the horse was placed in a stall which had large cracks in its walls where the horse was exposed to drafts and could see and hear the activity on the racetrack and hear horses being loaded and unloaded from trucks in the vicinity of the retention area; that Topper stayed in the grandstand until the last race was over and was not in the retention area at any time until immediately prior to the time Bright Sun was removed to his own stable; that before Bright Sun was removed Topper inquired of Dr. Cragg whether he would send one of his assistants or himself go with Bright Sun to its own stall for the purpose of attempting to there obtain the urine sample; that the veterinarian then declined to send an assistant or himself go with the horse and advised Topper that he, the veterinarian, did not consent to his removal of the horse from the retention area; that Bright Sun’s driver, or groom, were at all times present in the retention area while the horse was there, but were excluded from the stall in which Bright Sun was placed, and at no time interfered in any manner with the attempts to obtain the urine sample;' and that Dr. Cragg reported the incident to the Ohio State Racing Commission which cited Topper to appear on the following charge:

“In that the said owner-trainer A. P. Topper on or about May 2, 1958, at Painesville Raceway in Painesville, Ohio, did remove from the Ohio State Racing Commission retention area the horse ‘Bright Sun,’ winner of the first race on May 2, 1958, at such race track, before a urine ■ specimen had been obtained from the said horse without the consent of and over the objection of Dr. Alan P. Cragg, D. V. M., Ohio State Racing Commission veterinarian, such action on the part of A. P. Topper being in direct violation of Rule 261, Ohio Rules of *292 Racing, pertaining to interference with the taking of any specimen and amounting to improper practice and conduct detrimental to the best interests of racing within the meaning of Rule 68, Ohio Rules of Racing.”

At the hearing, requested by Topper, in addition to testimony bearing on the evidence heretofore mentioned, Dr. Cragg testified, among other things, that in most cases winning horses are retained in the retention area until urine samples are obtained, but that “horses that pose a problem, when I have the men available, we will return to the barn in an effort to obtain a urine sample”; that the conditions and surroundings of the retention area would make some horses very nervous, but that he did not know whether Bright Sun was a nervous horse; that it is more difficult to obtain a urine specimen from a nervous horse than one which is not; that, after he caused the horse to be removed, Topper told him that he thought the horse was being kept an unreasonable time and that he was afraid that something would happen to the horse, that it would get sick or something; that he told Topper before he took the horse that he had four horses in the retention area and three men working for him, that he would send a man with Bright Sun to Bright Sun’s stable as soon as he had one free; that if a horse is kept in a drafty place especially while it is in a warm and heated condition it is subject to be tied up, that it can catch a cold and get congestion of the lungs, that it can become muscle sore and muscle stiffened; that it is a fact and “well known and an accepted piece of knowledge from veterinarians in general that if a horse has not passed urine in two and a half hours that the stimulant from the urine goes back into the bloodstream of the horse and in some cases will cause a horse to tie up in their kidneys and also may cause serious other injuries”; that the horse’s own stall was probably much tighter than those in the retention area without cracks where a draft might blow through; and that a couple of nights following the incident in question Bright Sun was in another race, and the veterinarian went with the horse to its own.stall and got a sample in a time which may have been about two minutes.

In addition to testimony bearing on the undisputed evi *293 dence hereinbefore mentioned. Topper testified, among other things, that he told the veterinarian before he took the horse that the horse might tie up or catch a cold; that the veterinarian advised him that he did not have a man available to go with the horse to his own stable; that the veterinarian told him that he would keep the horse in the retention area as long as he wanted to; that he took the horse because he thought the horse might “tie up or something would happen to the horse that he wouldn’t be any account the rest of the season”; that he had had experience with other horses tying up for not urinating for various reasons; and that at the time in question he was not familiar with Rule 261 of the commission.

On this evidence the commission found Topper in violation of Rules 261 and 68 and made the following order:

“Upon consideration of the foregoing, it is the order of the Ohio State Racing Commission that owner-trainer A. P. Topper stands suspended indefinitely for violation of Rules 261 and 68, Ohio Rules of Racing.”

Although this order purports to suspend Topper, and not his licenses, the parties and the lower court treated it as a suspension of licenses, and we willNdo likewise.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 N.E.2d 19, 109 Ohio App. 289, 11 Ohio Op. 2d 49, 1959 Ohio App. LEXIS 821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-owner-trainer-topper-ohioctapp-1959.