Lendell Gaming, LLC v. PGCB, Aplt.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 20, 2025
Docket30 MAP 2024
StatusPublished

This text of Lendell Gaming, LLC v. PGCB, Aplt. (Lendell Gaming, LLC v. PGCB, Aplt.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lendell Gaming, LLC v. PGCB, Aplt., (Pa. 2025).

Opinion

[J-86A-2024, J-86B-2024, J-86C-2024, J-86D-2024 and J-86E-2024] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA MIDDLE DISTRICT

TODD, C.J., DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, BROBSON, McCAFFERY, JJ.

BETTER BETS VENTURES, LLC, : No. 27 MAP 2024 : Appellee : Appeal from the Order of the : Commonwealth Court at No. 386 CD : 2022, entered on October 12, 2023, v. : Reversing and Remanding the : Decision of the Pennsylvania : Gaming Control Board at No. 9378- PENNSYLVANIA GAMING CONTROL : 2020 entered on March 23, 2022 BOARD, : : ARGUED: November 19, 2024 Appellant :

MICHAEL BROZZETTI, : No. 28 MAP 2024 : Appellee : Appeal from the Order of the : Commonwealth Court at No. 387 CD : 2022, entered on October 12, 2023, v. : Reversing and Remanding the : Decision of the Pennsylvania : Gaming Control Board at No. 9379- PENNSYLVANIA GAMING CONTROL : 2020 entered on March 23, 2022 BOARD, : : ARGUED: November 19, 2024 Appellant :

FRANK BROZZETTI, : No. 29 MAP 2024 : Appellee : Appeal from the Order of the : Commonwealth Court at No. 388 CD : 2022, entered on October 12, 2023, v. : Reversing and Remanding the : Decision of the Pennsylvania : Gaming Control Board at No. 9380- PENNSYLVANIA GAMING CONTROL : 2020 entered on March 23, 2022 BOARD, : : ARGUED: November 19, 2024 Appellant : LENDELL GAMING, LLC, : No. 30 MAP 2024 : Appellee : Appeal from the Order of the : Commonwealth Court at No. 389 CD : 2022, entered on October 12, 2023, v. : Reversing and Remanding the : Decision of the Pennsylvania : Gaming Control Board at No. 9082- PENNSYLVANIA GAMING CONTROL : 2020 entered on March 23, 2022 BOARD, : : ARGUED: November 19, 2024 Appellant :

RICHARD TEITELBAUM, : No. 31 MAP 2024 : Appellee : Appeal from the Order of the : Commonwealth Court at No. 390 CD : 2022, entered on October 12, 2023, v. : Reversing and Remanding the : Decision of the Pennsylvania : Gaming Control Board at No. 9083- PENNSYLVANIA GAMING CONTROL : 2020 entered on March 23, 2022 BOARD, : : ARGUED: November 19, 2024 Appellant :

OPINION

JUSTICE WECHT DECIDED: March 20, 2025 The law commonly known as the Video Gaming Act 1 requires applicants for

licenses to operate video gaming terminals to demonstrate that they possess “good

character, honesty and integrity.”2 The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board concluded

that the applicants in this case were unable to meet this criterion due to their participation

in the so-called “skill games” industry. It denied them licenses on that basis. The

Commonwealth Court reversed the Board’s decision. Because we agree that the Board

1 4 Pa.C.S. §§ 3101-4506. 2 Id. §§ 3301(b)(11); 3502(b); 3504(c).

[J-86A-2024, J-86B-2024, J-86C-2024, J-86D-2024 and J-86E-2024] - 2 painted with too broad a brush in assessing the character of the applicants, we endorse

the Commonwealth Court’s rationale. However, because that court went too far in

ordering the Board on remand to “issue the requested licenses,” 3 without regard for any

other requisites for licensure, we remand to the Board for further consideration of the

applications in light of this opinion, without directing any particular result of such

consideration.

The instant appeal necessarily touches upon the nature of “skill games”—devices

that have become widespread throughout Pennsylvania over the past decade, and that

are commonly operated in businesses (such as bars, restaurants, convenience stores,

and similar establishments) that the Board has not licensed to offer legal gambling.

Although “skill games” share certain features with gambling, proponents of these devices

contend that they are lawful to operate in such establishments because they rely

predominantly upon the skill of the player rather than the element of chance.

Importantly, the question before us is not whether “skill games” are, in fact, lawful

to operate in unlicensed facilities, or whether they constitute unlicensed slot machines,

unlawful gambling devices, or the like. Questions of that nature are implicated in other

appeals pending before this Court, the merits of which we do not comment upon here.4

For present purposes, it suffices to observe that, during the periods relevant to the

applications at issue, the legality of skill games was (in the Board’s words) “debatable,”5

and that certain Pennsylvania courts had determined that the devices are lawful, or are

3 Better Bets Ventures v. Pa. Gaming Control Bd., 304 A.3d 66, 79 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2023). 4 See POM of Pa., LLC v. Dep’t of Revenue, 2, 5, & 6 EAP 2024; In re Three Pa. Skill Amusement Devices, 50 MAP 2024. 5 Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board, Corrected Adjudication, Nos. 9082 - 9083- 2020, 9239 - 9240-2020, 9378 - 9380-2020, 3/24/2022 (“Corrected Adjudication”), at 31.

[J-86A-2024, J-86B-2024, J-86C-2024, J-86D-2024 and J-86E-2024] - 3 not subject to regulation under the Gaming Act. 6 The issue before us concerns the

Board’s sweeping character judgment about all individuals who have engaged in this

enterprise while under the belief that their actions were lawful—a belief that was

reasonably justified by judicial decisions. Whether these judicial decisions were, in fact,

correct is not the subject of this litigation. With that caveat, we turn to the matter at hand.

I. Background

With Act 42 of 2017, 7 the General Assembly added Part III to Title 4 of the

Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes. Act 42 provides for the licensure and operation of

a new category of gambling device called a video gaming terminal. 8 The Video Gaming

Act establishes several categories of licenses, two of which are relevant to this appeal.

Section 3502 of the Video Gaming Act sets forth the requirements to obtain a “terminal

operator license,” which authorizes an entity to place and operate video gaming terminals

6 Pennsylvania Race Horse Development and Gaming Act, 4 Pa.C.S. §§ 1101- 1904; see, e.g., POM of Pa., LLC v. Dep’t of Revenue, 221 A.3d 717, 724-37 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019) (en banc) (holding that the Gaming Act does not apply to “skill games” operated in unlicensed premises). Although the Commonwealth Court published this decision in 2019, an appeal therefrom is only now before this Court because the Commonwealth Court did not enter a final, appealable order in the litigation until January 16, 2024. 7 Act of October 30, 2017, P.L. 419, No. 42. 8 Act 42 of 2017 also amended the definition of a “slot machine” in the Gaming Act to include a “skill slot machine” and a “hybrid slot machine.” The Gaming Act now defines a “skill slot machine” as a “slot machine in which the skill of the player, rather than the element of chance, is the predominant factor in affecting the outcome of the game,” and defines a “hybrid slot machine” as a “slot machine in which a combination of the skill of the player and elements of chance affect the outcome of the game.” 4 Pa.C.S. § 1103. As noted above, the Commonwealth Court has determined that, notwithstanding these new definitions, “skill games” operated in unlicensed facilities are not subject to the requirements of the Gaming Act at all. See POM of Pa., 221 A.3d at 724-37; supra n.6. More recently, another en banc panel of the Commonwealth Court declared that these definitions in the Gaming Act are inapplicable to the criminal statute that addresses the unlawful operation of slot machines and gambling devices, 18 Pa.C.S. § 5513. See In re Three Pa. Skill Amusement Devices, 306 A.3d 432, 437-45 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2023) (en banc). Appeals from both of these decisions remain pending in this Court. See supra n.4.

[J-86A-2024, J-86B-2024, J-86C-2024, J-86D-2024 and J-86E-2024] - 4 on its premises.

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