Smith v. Kentucky State Racing Commission

697 S.W.2d 153, 1985 Ky. App. LEXIS 591
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 14, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 697 S.W.2d 153 (Smith v. Kentucky State Racing Commission) 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
Smith v. Kentucky State Racing Commission, 697 S.W.2d 153, 1985 Ky. App. LEXIS 591 (Ky. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

LESTER, Judge.

This is an appeal from a summary judgment denying a mandatory injunction which would have required appellees to pay for certain laboratory and testing services out of private rather than public funds expended in connection with the horse racing industry.

To employ a modern-day colloquialism, the “bottom line” of this appeal is who is going to pay for the detection and prevention of the use of drugs, stimulants and improper devices in horse races — the industry or the public? The lower court determined the public should, hence, their representative, taxpayer Smith, appeals.

From the time of her admission to the Union, citizens of this great Commonwealth have regarded, not from a lack of national patriotism, the call to the colors as meaning an abiding interest in horse racing as now symbolized by the Bluegrass Stakes, the Jim Beam Spiral Stakes, the twin spires of Churchill Downs, and that greatest of all sporting events, The Kentucky Derby. In such an industry, fortunes are made or lost in but a few brief moments on the chance that one’s particular selection will win, place or show. In an effort to insure that more would be won than lost, certain entrepreneurs devised a scheme whereby drugs, stimulants, or other devices would be administered to horses thereby giving certain advantages in passing the finish line in a first, second, or third position.

In order to thwart these devious undertakings, the 1960 General Assembly enacted KRS 230.240(1) and (3). In part, the first section mandated:

The commission shall promulgate rules and regulations for effectively preventing the use of improper devices, the administration of drugs or stimulants or other improper acts for the purpose of affecting the speed or health of horses in races in which they are to participate, and in connection therewith the commission is authorized to acquire, operate and maintain, or to provide by contract for the maintenance and operation of, a testing laboratory and related facilities, for the purpose of saliva, urine or other tests, and to purchase supplies and equipment for and in connection with such laboratory or testing processes. The expense of the laboratory or other testing processes, whether furnished by contract or otherwise, together with all supplies and equipment used in connection therewith, shall be paid by the various associations licensed under KRS 230.210 to 230.360 in such manner and in such proportions as the commission may by rule provide.

while the later subsection required:

Each person, as a condition precedent to the privilege of receiving a license under KRS 230.210 to 230.360 to conduct a thoroughbred race meeting, shall be deemed to have agreed that it will pay such expenses and compensation as provided in this section and as may be actually and reasonably incurred.

The foregoing statutory provisions applied to the normal horse racing industry, but by 1974 there developed a tangent but related event, the harness races, which also generated a desire to win considerable sums. In order to dispel the potential evils that arose with regular horse racing, the Legislature created the Kentucky Harness Racing Commission as well as enacting KRS 230.660(1) and (3) which contained identical language as that quoted above only applicable to the sulky events.

1982 brought a re-enactment of subsection (1) of KRS 230.260 by creating a new subsection. However, the content remains the same as the specific sentences which concern us in this litigation are embodied in KRS 230.240(2) so that it now appears as follows:

The commission shall promulgate rules and regulations for effectively preventing the use of improper devices, the administration of drugs or stimulants or other improper acts for the purpose of affecting the speed or health of horses in races in which they are to participate, and in connection therewith the commission is authorized to acquire, operate and [155]*155maintain, or to provide by contract for the maintenance and operation of, a testing laboratory and related facilities, for the purpose of saliva, urine or other tests, and to purchase supplies and equipment for and in connection with such laboratory or testing processes. The expense of the laboratory or other testing processes, whether furnished by contract or otherwise, together with all supplies and equipment used in connection therewith, shall be paid by the various associations licensed under KRS 230.210 to 230.360 in such manner and in such proportions as the commission may by rule provide.

Former subsection (3) is now (4) but remains unchanged.

The record does not reveal how the commissions paid for their drug detection and testing services in the past, but recently, at least, according to the complaint, they expended public funds which were budgeted for those purposes in 1974 through an appropriation bill. This disturbed taxpayer Smith who commenced this action in 1984 to stop this course of financial conduct, seeking to place the costs upon the “various associations licensed under KRS 230.-210 to 230.360” and their counterparts in the harness racing category. It is evident that the Franklin Circuit Court disagreed with appellant for he now addresses his arguments to this court.

The lower tribunal, relying on several leading cases dealing with statutory construction, George v. Scent, Ky., 346 S.W.2d 784 (1961), Bischoff v. Hennessey, Ky., 251 S.W.2d 582 (1952), and Skaggs v. Fuffe, 226 Ky. 337, 98 S.W.2d 884 (1936), sought to give the statute meaning to the effect that the commissions may adopt a rule absolving the licensed associations from paying for the services and putting that burden upon public funds. The court fortified its view with observing that the General Assembly had appropriated funds for that purpose as well as enacting KRS 230.265 providing for an equine research council. From these two acts, the court concluded:

By appropriating the funds to the defendants from 1974 through 1982, and by adopting KRS 230.265, the General Assembly has ratified the manner in which these defendants have interpreted KRS Chapter 230 and more specifically KRS 230.240

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
697 S.W.2d 153, 1985 Ky. App. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-kentucky-state-racing-commission-kyctapp-1985.