Stadium Casino RE LLC, Pet v. Pa Gaming Control Bd

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 17, 2024
Docket20 MM 2023
StatusPublished

This text of Stadium Casino RE LLC, Pet v. Pa Gaming Control Bd (Stadium Casino RE LLC, Pet v. Pa Gaming Control Bd) 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.

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Stadium Casino RE LLC, Pet v. Pa Gaming Control Bd, (Pa. 2024).

Opinion

[J-3-2024] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA MIDDLE DISTRICT

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

STADIUM CASINO RE, LLC, : No. 20 MM 2023 : Petitioner : Appeal from the Order of the : Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board : at No. 9923-2021 dated February 7, v. : 2023 : : SUBMITTED: January 22, 2024 PENNSYLVANIA GAMING CONTROL : BOARD, : : Respondent :

OPINION

JUSTICE DONOHUE DECIDED: July 17, 2024 Stadium Casino RE, LLC (“Stadium”) challenges the decision of the Pennsylvania

Gaming Control Board (“Board”) to award a Category 4 slot machine license to SC

Gaming OpCo, LLC and Ira Lubert (collectively “SC Gaming”). 1 We affirm.

Background

Gaming came to Pennsylvania twenty years ago with the enactment of the Race

Horse Development and Gaming Act (“Gaming Act”), 4 Pa.C.S. §§ 1101-1904. At that

1 This Court has exclusive jurisdiction over appeals from licensing determinations. 4 Pa.C.S. § 1204 (“The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania shall be vested with exclusive appellate jurisdiction to consider appeals of any final order, determination or decision of the board involving the approval, issuance, denial or conditioning of a slot machine license, the award, denial or conditioning of a table game operation certificate or the award, denial or conditioning of an interactive gaming certificate, an interactive gaming license, a casino simulcasting permit or a sports wagering certificate.”). time, the Gaming Act authorized three categories of slot machines licenses. Category 1

licenses permit slot machine gaming at licensed racetrack facilities. Id. § 1302(a).

Category 2 licenses permit slot machine gaming at a facility uncoupled from racetrack

facilities “in a city of the first class, a city of the second class or a revenue- or tourism-

enhanced location.” Id. § 1304(a). Category 3 licenses are reserved for facilities located

in “well established resort hotel[s]” that meet certain statutory criteria. Id. § 1305.

ln 2017, the General Assembly authorized Category 4 slot machine licenses. See

Act 42 of 2017, P.L. 419 (Oct. 30, 2017) (“Act 42”). 2 Through the amendments to the

Gaming Act effectuated by Act 42, the General Assembly provided that the Board could

issue up to ten Category 4 licenses to existing Category 1, 2 or 3 licensees in good

standing. The legislation provided that the process to obtain a Category 4 slot machine

license would begin with an auction, the winner of which would have the right to apply for

a license. 4 Pa.C.S. § 1305.2(a). Initial auctions were required to be held between

January 18, 2018 and July 31, 2018. Id. If a winning bid was not awarded through these

initial auctions, the Board was to hold subsequent auctions through August 31, 2018. Id.

§ 1305.2(b). If any subsequent auction failed to produce a bid, the General Assembly

provided that the Board could determine whether to conduct further auctions. Id. §

1305.2(b.1). In addition to fixing a timeframe for the auctions, the General Assembly also

set forth procedures for the auctions. Id. § 1305.2(c).

Pursuant to Act 42, the Board held five auctions between January and July 2018,

resulting in the award of four Category 4 licenses. One of the winning bidders, Mt. Airy

Casino, was unable to obtain the necessary funding, and so the Board ultimately denied

its application. Although not all of the ten statutorily-authorized Category 4 licenses were

2Category 4 slot machine licenses permit the operation of casinos with 300 to 750 slot machines. 4 Pa.C.S. § 1305.1.

[J-3-2024] - 2 awarded, the Board conducted no further auctions before the statutory deadline of August

31, 2018.

In 2019, via an amendment to the Fiscal Code, the General Assembly instructed

the Board to conduct up to five more auctions, between September 4, 2019 and

December 31, 2019, for the outstanding Category 4 licenses. 72 P.S. § 1724.1-E(c)(1).

The legislation also provided that if any auction failed to generate bids, the Board could

not hold any subsequent auctions. Id. § 1724.1-E(c)(2)(iv). In September 2019, the

Board conducted an auction but received no bids. Accordingly, it held no more auctions.

In May 2020, the General Assembly amended the Fiscal Code to authorize one

auction for any Category 4 licenses for which a bid had been submitted but the application

denied. Id. § 1724.1-E(e)(1). The May 2020 amendments also expanded the pool of

potential bidders; while in all previous auctions only Category 1, 2, or 3 licensees in good

standing were permitted to bid, the General Assembly allowed persons with ownership

interests in a slot machine licensee to participate in this auction. Id. § 1724.1-E(e)(2)(iv).

As only the Mt. Airy application had been denied, only one license was up for bid. The

Board held this auction, which is the center of the present dispute, on September 2, 2020.

The September 2, 2020 auction generated bids only from Stadium and Lubert.

Among other procedures established for the conduct of the auctions, Section 1305.2

requires the winning bidder to pay the bid within two days of the auction and to submit an

application for the Category 4 license within six months of the date payment is made. 4

Pa.C.S. §§ 1305.2(c)(7),(10)(i). Failure of the winning bidder to make timely payment

gives the second-highest bidder the right to apply for the license. Id. § 1305.2(c)(8).

Failure of the winning bidder to timely submit the application results in the forfeiture of the

right to apply for the license, as well as the amount of the winning bid. Id. § 1305.2(10)(ii).

[J-3-2024] - 3 Lubert submitted the winning bid of approximately $10 million. In conformance

with Section 1305.2(c)(7), he timely wired the amount of the bid from his personal account

to the Board. It is undisputed that although the funds were wired from Lubert’s account,

he did not pay the entire amount himself, as various individuals and entities contributed

funds toward the payment of the winning bid. Following payment of the bid amount,

Lubert began the application process. In January 2021, between the Board’s acceptance

of Lubert’s bid and the submission of his application, Bally’s Corporation announced that

it signed an agreement with Lubert to jointly design, develop, construct and manage the

casino planned for the Category 4 license. In March 2021, the application for the

Category 4 license was submitted by SC Gaming, an entity that Lubert represented he

wholly owned. Later that month, Stadium’s counsel began sending a series of letters to

the Board, copied to Lubert’s counsel, setting forth concerns that SC Gaming was

ineligible to apply for a Category 4 license because Lubert’s bid was funded by persons

not authorized to participate in the auction. The Board and counsel for Lubert responded.

Correspondence among these three continued as the application process proceeded.

Commonwealth Court Action

On July 21, 2021, Stadium filed a petition for review in the Commonwealth Court’s

jurisdiction naming both the Board and SC Gaming as respondents. Stadium sought

declarations that Lubert’s bid was invalid because he did not pay the entire amount with

his own funds and that the Board was without the authority to consider SC Gaming’s

application. Stadium also sought an injunction prohibiting the Board from further

considering SC Gaming’s application. Additionally, Stadium prayed for an exercise of the

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