Taconic Racing & Breeding Ass'n v. Vermont Department of Public Safety

296 A.2d 257, 130 Vt. 388, 1972 Vt. LEXIS 288
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 3, 1972
Docket34-71
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 296 A.2d 257 (Taconic Racing & Breeding Ass'n v. Vermont Department of Public Safety) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taconic Racing & Breeding Ass'n v. Vermont Department of Public Safety, 296 A.2d 257, 130 Vt. 388, 1972 Vt. LEXIS 288 (Vt. 1972).

Opinions

Keyser, J.

This is an action brought by the appellee, Taconic Racing & Breeding Association, Inc., under the declaratory judgment act, 12 V.S.A. §§ 4711-4712. The primary question raised by the defendant’s appeal is the interpretation of 81 V.S.A. § 620 relating to police protection at the race track.

Section 620 provides as follows:

“Every licensee shall maintain adequate police protection as may be determined by the commissioner of public safety of the state of Vermont, within the grounds or pari-mutuel enclosure and public highways adjacent to the location of such track. Expenses for such designated police protection shall be borne by the licensee and no funds therefor shall be expended from the appropriation of the department of public safety for that protection.”

The parties filed an agreed statement of facts which established the following facts in the findings of the court. The appellee owns and operates the Green Mountain Park Race Track located in the town of Pownal, Vermont. It maintains a regular schedule of horse races and has done so since 1963. The Vermont Racing Commission granted a license to the appellee which permitted it to conduct pari-mutuel wagering on thoroughbred and harness racing at the petitioner’s race track.

On May 9, 1963, the then commissioner of public safety, pursuant to 31 V.S.A. § 620, issued an order dictating the requirements for adequate police protection within the grounds of pari-mutuel enclosures and public highways adjacent to the location of the track. The order also required the plaintiff to provide sufficient security officers within the park to cope with any situation that might arise. The parties stipulated that the plaintiff has at all times complied with said order as it related to adequate police protection, specifically in the area of traffic control and security officers.

[390]*390The commissioner’s order also provided that “the Vermont State Police will have a detail of from one to two uniformed officers stationed in the State Police Office at the race track. This State Police unit will have radio contact with other units of the State Police. The State Police will have a detail of detectives from the Bureau of Criminal Investigation on duty at the race track during all racing periods.” This paragraph of the order is at most a statement of the commissioner’s intention to assign state police officers at the track. It does not define their duties or functions or that the cost of the assignment was made subject to reimbursement of the state.

The issue for this Court to decide is whether the commissioner of public safety may assign members of the state police force at the licensee’s race track and collect the cost for their salary and expenses under 31 V.S.A. § 620.

Since 1963, as shown by said order, the Vermont Department of Public Safety has assigned one or more officers to the state police office at the race track. These officers are regular state police officers employed by the department of public safety and were paid both salary and expenses by checks issued and signed by the Vermont state treasurer. Upon issuance of said checks, the state treasurer then debited the amount of the checks to the appropriation of the department of public safety.

Acting under 31 V.S.A. § 620, the department of public safety charged the appellee with the cost of the state police officers assigned by the commissioner of public safety to provide protection at the track and required payment thereof by the licensee. The appellee paid, under protest, the amounts thus billed to it, the total of which covering the years 1963 through 1967 amounted to something over $36,000. This action was brought by the appellee to recover the sums it has thus paid and to enjoin the state from attempting to collect any further reimbursements for their costs under the commissioner’s order of 1963.

Following the agreed statement of facts, the court by No. 15 of its findings found:

“That the assignment of the Vermont State Police at said racetrack is not included in the phrase ‘adequate police protection’ as used in the statute.”

[391]*391The rules pertaining to statutory construction were summarized in State v. Goyet, 120 Vt. 12, 66, 132 A.2d 623 (1957):

“The underlying rule of statutory construction is to discover the intent of the Legislature in doing what it has done or attempted. Town of Randolph v. Montgomery, 109 Vt. 133, 136, 194 A. 481. It is the fundamental rule of statutory construction that the intention of the Legislature must be ascertained and given effect. Pelton’s Exr. v. Dumas, 117 Vt. 13, 16, 84 A.2d 408. The intention of the Legislature constitutes the law. State Highway Board v. Gates, 110 Vt. 67, 73, 1 A.2d 825; Riley v. Riley’s Estate, 114 Vt. 297, 300, 44 A.2d 153. When words of common use are found in the statute, they are to be taken in their ordinary sense, unless a contrary intention clearly appears. State v. Levine, 117 Vt. 320, 322, 91 A.2d 678.”

The statute, 31 V.S.A. § 620, is, by its nature, a delegation by the legislature to an administrative official of a duty connected with the application of law. Village of Waterbury v. Melendy, et al., 109 Vt. 441, 450, 199 A. 236 (1938). The commissioner of public safety is the head of a legislatively created administrative agency. 3 V.S.A. Chapter 9. The commissioner may only perform duties and exercise powers imposed by law. 3 V.S.A. § 203. These powers and duties are to “. . . be prescribed in terms definite enough to serve as a guide to those who have the duty imposed upon them.” State v. Auclair, 110 Vt. 147, 163-64, 4 A.2d 107 (1939).

As found in Webster’s New International Dictionary, 3rd Edition, “maintain” means “to hold or keep in any particular state of efficiency or validity, to sustain against opposition or danger, to uphold and provide for.”

In this case, the directions to the commissioner of public safety are most clear. The statute states that the licensee is to maintain adequate police protection. It designates the commissioner as the person who is to determine what is to be adequate police protection that the licensee is required to maintain. 31 V.S.A. § 620. The statute mentions nothing about the commissioner himself maintaining a two-man, or any, state police detachment at the race track. Under the statute, the commissioner was merely to determine what con[392]*392stituted adequate police protection, and it then became the duty of the licensee to implement it, which it did. The legislature imposed no duty upon the commissioner to maintain any police protection; that duty was mandated to the licensee. 31 V.S.A. § 620.

Not only did the commissioner of public safety overstep his powers granted under 31 V.S.A.

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Bluebook (online)
296 A.2d 257, 130 Vt. 388, 1972 Vt. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taconic-racing-breeding-assn-v-vermont-department-of-public-safety-vt-1972.