MEC Oregon Racing, Inc. v. Oregon Racing Commission

225 P.3d 61, 233 Or. App. 9, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 2145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 30, 2009
Docket700263; A138804
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 225 P.3d 61 (MEC Oregon Racing, Inc. v. Oregon Racing Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MEC Oregon Racing, Inc. v. Oregon Racing Commission, 225 P.3d 61, 233 Or. App. 9, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 2145 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

LANDAU, P. J.

Petitioner MEC Oregon Racing, Inc., dba Portland Meadows, petitions for review of an order of the Oregon Racing Commission denying its request to add a form of wagering on historical — as opposed to live — horse races known as “Thoroughbred Mania” to its previously approved race meet license.1 The commission’s order denied MEC Oregon’s request on a number of different grounds, including that Thoroughbred Mania is not a form of “mutuel” wagering that is permitted by law and that, in any event, the commission’s authority to approve mutuel wagering on horse races is limited to live races. The commission further concluded that Thoroughbred Mania wagering machines are prohibited “slot” machines or “gray” machines. On review, MEC Oregon contends that each of the bases for the commission’s denial of its request is erroneous as a matter of law. We conclude that the commission correctly determined that, even if Thoroughbred Mania is a form of mutuel wagering, the commission’s authority to approve such wagering on horse races is limited to live races. We therefore affirm on that basis and do not address MEC Oregon’s other contentions.

We begin with a description of the regulatory context for MEC Oregon’s request and the commission’s decision. All race meets held in Oregon are subject to licensing and regulation by the Oregon Racing Commission. ORS 462.010 - 462.740. A “race meet” is any exhibition of animal racing where the “mutuel” system of wagering is used in conjunction with any race. ORS 462.010(2). “Mutuel” wagering is defined as “a system whereby wagers with respect to the outcome of a [12]*12race are placed with a wagering pool in which the participants are wagering with each other and not against the operator.” ORS 462.010(8).2

ORS 462.700 provides that, in addition to the mutuel wagering authorized at the race meet “upon the premises of a race course,” a race meet licensee may conduct off-race course mutuel wagering in accordance with ORS 462.700 to 462.740 and the Oregon Racing Commission rules. ORS 462.710(1) provides that the commission may authorize “off-race course mutuel wagering”

“(a) [o]n races held at the licensee’s race course; or
“(b) [o]n races held at race courses outside this state.”

The commission is authorized and required to adopt administrative rules implementing its authority to license off-race course mutuel wagering. ORS 462.250(6); ORS 462.270(3); ORS 462.740. In OAR 462-110-0010(15), the commission has defined “off-track wagering” as “[p]ari-mutuel wagering conducted on a race at a location other than the racecourse where the race is actually held.”

ORS 462.720(1) sets forth the requirements for the “pooling” of wagered moneys in off-race course mutuel wagering. It provides, in part:

“All moneys wagered in off-race course mutuel wagering on races held at race courses in this state shall he included in the computation of the mutuel pool for that race at the race course. Subject to rules adopted by the Oregon Racing Commission and upon application of the race meet licensee, the commission may authorize:
“(a) Moneys wagered in off-race course mutuel wagering at locations outside this state on races held at race courses in this state to he included in the computation of the mutuel pool for the race at the Oregon race course.
“(b) Moneys wagered in off-race course mutuel wagering at locations in this state on races held at race courses [13]*13outside this state to he included in the computation of the mutuel pool for the race at the race course

(Emphasis added.)

With the foregoing regulatory framework in mind, we turn to the facts of this case, which we draw from the findings contained in the commission’s final order. Since 2001, MEC Oregon has operated Portland Meadows, a horse racing facility in Portland, under a race meet license granted by the commission. The current race meet license requires MEC Oregon to run 60 days of nine races each at Portland Meadows. Those are “live” days, when races are actually run on the Portland Meadows track. On live days, patrons at Portland Meadows may place wagers on (1) the races that will be run on the Portland Meadows track that day, (2) races that are simulcast3 from other venues, and (3) games offered on a small number of video lottery terminals (VLTs) that are located at the facility with permission of the Oregon Lottery Commission. On “dark” days, when Portland Meadows does not offer live racing, patrons at the track may still wager on races simulcast from other venues and may play the VLTs.

The “totalizator,” or “tote,” is an electronic system used by petitioner to facilitate mutuel wagering. It consists of a network of computers and wagering terminals linked by modems and a frame-relay system, which electronically combines wagers into “pools.” When a wager is entered into the system, based on pool totals, the totes record and display changes in the betting patterns and recalculate mutuel odds and projected payoffs in timed intervals. A totalizator facilitates wagering on horse races because it allows complex wagers beyond simple bets like win, place, and show.

[14]*14In its order, the commission described the totalizator’s ability to facilitate different types of mutuel wagers:

“As totalizators became more powerful, the forms of wagers that could be placed became more exotic.[4] Increasingly complex bets such as the daily double, then a quinella, then an exacta, then a trifecta and a super trifecta became available. Now there are numerous ways in which to place wagers on racing. * * * In some instances, like Choose 6, one wagerer might be betting on the first 6 races while another bettor is betting on the last 6. The pool is shared but they are not wagering on the same races. In some instances, no one wins the pool and the pool is carried over. It is possible that there might be only one wagerer eligible for the carryover pool. However, he or she is wagering against people who have wagered on that offering in the past. Wagering in Oregon is permitted on races all over the world. Some of those races are shown after they actually ran because they ran at times that would be in the middle of the night in Oregon. Some of those races are never shown, but betting on them is lawful.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 P.3d 61, 233 Or. App. 9, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 2145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mec-oregon-racing-inc-v-oregon-racing-commission-orctapp-2009.