TEXAS THOROUGHBRED BREEDERS ASSOCIATION v. Donnan

202 S.W.3d 213, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 1620, 2006 WL 476617
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 28, 2006
Docket12-04-00129-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 202 S.W.3d 213 (TEXAS THOROUGHBRED BREEDERS ASSOCIATION v. Donnan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TEXAS THOROUGHBRED BREEDERS ASSOCIATION v. Donnan, 202 S.W.3d 213, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 1620, 2006 WL 476617 (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

DIANE DEVASTO, Justice.

Appellants Texas Thoroughbred Breeders Association (“TTBA”), Dave Hooper, and Sue Cook challenge the trial court’s entry of a judgment ordering a permanent injunction and awarding Appellees Jim Donnan and Gerald Mackey $250,195.83 in damages for negligence and defamation. We vacate the trial court’s judgment and dismiss this case for want of jurisdiction.

Background

Donnan and Mackey are the owners of a thoroughbred horse named Chauffe Au Rouge. 1 They acquired the horse in the summer of 2001 and entered it in races in Louisiana shortly thereafter. When he bought the horse, Donnan knew that it was “Texas-bred.” However, in order to race Chauffe Au Rouge in select Texas races, the horse would have to become an “Accredited Texas-bred” horse. The decision to qualify a horse as an accredited Texas- *215 bred horse rests with TTBA. The difference between “Texas-bred” and “Accredited Texas-bred” may seem razor thin at first glance. However, the distinction between the two serves as the basis for this litigation because TTBA first accredited and then rescinded its accreditation of Chauffe Au Rouge as an “Accredited Texas-bred” horse.

In Hatley v. American Quarter Horse Ass’n, 552 F.2d 646, 654-55 (5th Cir.1977), a case reviewing a district court’s decision concerning the registration of a quarter horse, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit stated, “Federal review of quarter horse registrations for state law [due process] violations is rare and curious, but nonetheless proper, [citation omitted] The district court ventured into the thorny and treacherous thicket of Texas law and emerged unscathed.” In order to properly understand the context of this appeal, we shall likewise venture into the “thorny and treacherous thicket of Texas law” regarding the microcosm that is Texas thoroughbred horse racing.

The Rules, Laws, and Governing Entities of Thoroughbred Horse Racing in Texas

Horse racing officially came to Texas with the passage of the Texas Racing Act (“the Act”) in 1986. See Acts 1986, 69th Leg., 2nd C.S., ch. 19, § 1. The purpose of the Act is “to provide for the strict regulation of horse racing and greyhound racing and the control of pari-mutuel wagering in connection with that racing.” Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 179e, § 1.02 (Vernon Supp. 2005). The Act created the Texas Racing Commission (the “commission” or “TRC”) and mandated that

[t]he commission shall regulate and supervise every race meeting in this state involving wagering on the result of greyhound or horse racing. All persons and things relating to the operation of those meetings are subject to regulation and supervision by the commission. The commission shall adopt rules for conducting greyhound or horse racing in this state involving wagering and shall adopt other rules to administer this Act that are consistent with this Act. The commission shall also make rules, issue licenses, and take any other necessary action relating exclusively to horse racing or to greyhound racing.

Id. § 3.02(a). The Act allows the commission or a section of the commission to appoint a committee of experts, members of the public, or other interested parties to advise the commission or a section of the commission about a proposed rule. Id. § 3.02(f). The Act also mandates that the commission, in adopting rules and in the supervision and conduct of racing, shall consider the statewide effect of a proposed commission action on the state’s agricultural, horse breeding, and horse training industries. Id. § 3.02(g).

TTBA is a nonprofit corporation that promotes thoroughbred breeding, racing, and owning in Texas. It is also designated by the Act as the official state horse breed registry for accredited Texas-bred thoroughbred horses. 2 Id. § 9.02. An “accredited Texas-bred horse” (“ATB”) is defined in the Act as “a Texas-bred horse that meets the accreditation requirements of the state breed registry of that breed of horse.” Id. § 1.03(22). The Act defines a “Texas-bred horse” as

a horse qualified under the rules of the commission that is:
*216 (A) sired by a stallion standing in Texas at the time of conception and foaled by a mare in the mare’s lifetime if the mare is bred back to a stallion standing in Texas;
(B) foaled by a mare bred outside Texas and brought into Texas to foal at any time in the mare’s lifetime if the mare is bred back to a stallion standing in Texas; or
(C) a Thoroughbred or Arabian horse foaled in Texas by an accredited Texas-bred mare if the mare was bred outside Texas and returned to Texas on or before August 15 of the calendar year of conception.

Id. § 1.03(21). The Act further provides that the state horse breed registries shall make reasonable rules to establish the qualifications of ATBs “to promote, develop, and improve the breeding of horses in this State.” Id. § 9.01. Rules adopted by a registry are subject to TRC approval. Id.

The Act mandates that an “association” 3 shall provide for the running of races limited to ATBs, each to be known as a “Texas-bred race.” Id. § 9.03(a). To encourage the breeding of horses in the state of Texas, any ATB finishing first, second, or third in any race in Texas, except for a restricted stakes race, shall receive a purse supplement. Id. § 9.03(b). The Act mandates that TTBA “shall act in an advisory capacity to the association and the commission for the purpose of administering the provisions of [Texas-bred racing].” Id. An ATB thoroughbred horse that finishes first, second, or third in any race other than a Texas-bred race shall receive an owner’s bonus award as a purse supplement. Id. § 9.03(c). TTBA pays the winners of the ATB races with funds received from TRC. The TRC obtains the funds from associations that withhold a percentage of the total amount wagered on each race that is run at a horse racing facility. Id. § 6.08(d), (f), (j).

The Accreditation of Chauffe Au Rouge as an ATB

Donnan acquired Chauffe Au Rouge in the summer of 2001 and began racing it in Louisiana. He learned that in order for the horse to run in an accredited Texas-bred horse race, he would have to obtain accreditation for Chauffe Au Rouge from TTBA. Donnan spoke with Jennifer Gibbs, TTBA’s accreditation manager, about obtaining accreditation for Chauffe Au Rouge as an ATB. Gibbs told Donnan that she was familiar with the horse, but that she would have to call him back after checking its background.

While researching Chauffe Au Rouge’s background, Gibbs found that High Rent, its mother, was an ATB when Chauffe Au Rouge was foaled.

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202 S.W.3d 213, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 1620, 2006 WL 476617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-thoroughbred-breeders-association-v-donnan-texapp-2006.