SugarHouse HSP Gaming, LP v. Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board

136 A.3d 457, 635 Pa. 335, 2016 WL 1228804
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 29, 2016
Docket175 EM 2014, 176 EM 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 136 A.3d 457 (SugarHouse HSP Gaming, LP v. Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board) 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
SugarHouse HSP Gaming, LP v. Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board, 136 A.3d 457, 635 Pa. 335, 2016 WL 1228804 (Pa. 2016).

Opinions

ORDER

PER CURIAM.

AND NOW, this 29th day of March, 2016, for the reasons expressed in the accompanying Opinion, the Order of the Gaming Control Board Court is hereby AFFIRMED in part, VACATED in part, and the matter is REMANDED for further proceedings on the following issues. First, regarding the question of the eligibility of Stadium Casino, LLC (“Stadium”) to apply for a Category 2 slot machine license under 4 Pa.C.S. § 1304(a), the Board is directed to consider whether Watche Manoukian, as an affiliate of Stadium, was eligible to apply for a Category 1 slot machine license at the time Stadium applied for the Category 2 slot machine license which is the subject of this appeal. Second, the Board is directed to consider whether the financial interest, if any, Manoukian may have in Stadium due to certain financial transactions and commitments of financial support he made during the applica[342]*342tion process violates the prohibitions in 4 Pa.C.S. § 1330. Specifically, the Board should consider whether Manoukian, by virtue of his pledged commitment to [redacted] or through any other financial transaction, would possess, post-licensure, a financial interest in Stadium in excess of the 33.3% threshold established by Section 1330.

Jurisdiction relinquished.

OPINION

Justice TODD.

In these appeals which we have consolidated for purposes of our disposition, we review challenges raised by Petitioner SugarHouse HSP Gaming, LP (“SugarHouse”)1—the present holder of a Category 2 slot machine license and operator of the Sugar House Casino in the City of Philadelphia—to the award by the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board (“Board”) of the last remaining Category 2 slot machine license for the City of Philadelphia to Stadium Casino, LLC (“Stadium”).2 We also consider challenges raised by Petitioner Market East Associates (“Market East”)3—an unsuccessful applicant for that license—to the Board’s award of the license to Stadium. After review, we affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand to the Board for further proceedings regarding the question of whether Stadium’s ownership structure comports with the requirements of 4 Pa.C.S. §§ 1304(a) and 1330.

I. Background

In July 2004, our General Assembly enacted the Pennsylvania Race Horse Development and Gaming Act (“Gaming Act”), 4 Pa.C.S. §§ 1101-1904. In this legislation, the General Assembly established three separate classifications of slot machine licenses for which a “licensed racing entity or person” [343]*343was eligible to apply. 4 Pa.C.S. § 1301. A Category 1 license allows the holder to place and operate slot machines at a licensed racetrack facility at which pari-mutuel wagering on live thoroughbred or harness racing takes place. A Category 2 license permits the licensee to place and operate slot machines at any facility, without requiring that the facility also be licensed to conduct thoroughbred or harness racing. Id. § 1304. A Category 3 license empowers the owner or subsidiary of the owner of a “well-established resort hotel” with 275 or more rooms to place and operate slot machines in a separate area of the hotel facility which is reserved exclusively for gaming. Id. § 1305.

With respect to Category 2 licenses, Section 1304 of the Gaming Act further provides that the Board is authorized to award not more than two Category 2 licenses within a city of the first class, i.e., Philadelphia, and not more than one Category 2 license within a city of the second class, i.e., Pittsburgh.4 Relevant to the present matter, in 2006, the Board awarded one of the two Category 2 licenses allocated for the City of Philadelphia to SugarHouse to build and operate a casino in the City of Philadelphia. The Board awarded the second Category 2 license at that time to the organization “Foxwood’s Casino Philadelphia” (“Foxwood”), but that license was subsequently revoked on December 23, 2010 because Foxwood could not secure the necessary financing to build and operate its planned casino.

Subsequently, SugarHouse encountered permitting and approval difficulties with the City of Philadelphia which delayed the commencement of construction. Gaming Board Adjudication (“Adjudication”), 11/18/14, at 118. These delays, coupled with the economic downturn in 2008 which hampered the availability of credit all over the country, prompted Sugar-House to request permission from the Board to build a smaller facility that it pledged to expand once business conditions improved. The Board granted this request in 2009, and, subsequently, in September 2010, SugarHouse constructed [344]*344and opened an “interim” facility, which is located on the eastern side of Philadelphia near the Delaware River at 1080 North Delaware Avenue. In 2014, SugarHouse began construction on an expansion of that casino to increase both its overall size and the number of gaming offerings available for patrons. When these improvements are done, the number of slot machines at the SugarHouse casino is projected to rise to 2,200 from its current number of 1,900; the current number of presently available banked table games5 is projected to increase from 80 to 90; and 25-30 poker tables will be added to SugarHouse’s available gaming offerings.6

Because of the revocation of Foxwood’s Category 2 license in 2010, the Board restarted the application process for that license, and it set a deadline of November 16, 2012, for receipt of applications. The Board ultimately received six applications, of which two were withdrawn. The four remaining applicants considered by the Board were submitted by Stadium, Market East, PHL Local Gaming and Tower Entertainment.7

In its application, Stadium proposed to convert an existing ten-story Holiday Inn, located on Packer Avenue in South Philadelphia between 10th and Darían Streets and immediately adjacent to Philadelphia’s “Stadium District,” where its professional sports’ venues8 are all situated, into an integrated [345]*345hotel, gaming and entertainment facility. The proposed integrated facility would feature, on multiple floors, a total of 71,500 square feet of space devoted to gaming, as well as a 2,600-space self-parking garage, a 200-room hotel, a spa, pool and fitness center, six restaurants, a concert hall seating 1,000 people, and a rooftop deck. Stadium projected that 2,013 slot machines, 92 banked table games, and 33 non-banked poker games would occupy the gaming space within the facility.

Market East’s application detailed its plans to build a 17-story combination hotel and casino located in the heart of Philadelphia, in the “Center City” area, at the corner of 8th and Market Streets. This building would offer, on two floors, a total of 116,820 square feet of space for gaming containing 2,400 slot machines, 82 banked table games and 30 poker tables. Additional amenities would include six restaurants, a sports bar, various retail shops, outdoor terraces, and a 1,200-seat showroom. Market East proposed to construct underneath the hotel a parking garage holding 752 self-parking, and 1,000 valet-parking spaces.

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136 A.3d 457, 635 Pa. 335, 2016 WL 1228804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sugarhouse-hsp-gaming-lp-v-pennsylvania-gaming-control-board-pa-2016.