Wolf v. Oregon Lottery Commission

149 P.3d 303, 209 Or. App. 670, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 1934
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 13, 2006
DocketA125420
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 149 P.3d 303 (Wolf v. Oregon Lottery Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolf v. Oregon Lottery Commission, 149 P.3d 303, 209 Or. App. 670, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 1934 (Or. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

*672 SCHUMAN, J.

Petitioners seek review of a rule adopted by the Oregon Lottery Commission (Lottery) establishing the compensation that the Lottery pays to retailers, mostly restaurants, taverns, and convenience stores, who make video lottery games available to the public. 1 Petitioners assert that the Lottery exceeded the legislature’s grant of authority when it promulgated the rule because the statute setting the Lottery’s task, ORS 461.445, required the Lottery to consider retailers’ “reasonable rate of return,” and nothing in the rule or in the rulemaking record indicates that the Lottery did so. We agree with petitioners. The rule is invalid.

Under ORS 183.400(4), we may invalidate an agency’s rule only if we find that, in adopting it, the agency violated the constitution, exceeded the agency’s statutory authority, or failed to comply with applicable rulemaking procedures. Petitioners do not contend that the Lottery violated rulemaking procedures. They do, however, contend that the rule exceeds the Lottery’s statutory authority and that it violates the provision of Article XV, section 4(3), of the Oregon Constitution that dictates how the Lottery must spend its proceeds. We begin and end with the subconstitutional question, Planned Parenthood Assn. v. Dept. of Human Res., 297 Or 562, 565, 687 P2d 785 (1984), because our disposition of that question obviates our need to address the constitutional challenge.

*673 I. THE LOTTERY’S RETAILER COMPENSATION RULE

The rule at issue, former OAR 177-040-0026 (May 27,2004), 2 declares that the Lottery’s payment to a “retailer,” that is, to a business that makes video lottery available to the public, equals a percentage of the proceeds of video lottery wagering (“game shares”) that takes place at the business less payment of prizes: “The compensation amount the Lottery shall pay a retailer for the sale of video lottery game shares is calculated on a percentage of net receipts during a business year.” The rule then announces two compensation *674 options, each setting rates based on net receipts. Under the first option, called the “3-Tier Option,” retailers who take in up to $175,000 in net receipts per year receive 32.5 percent of the proceeds; retailers with net receipts between $175,000 to $475,000 per year receive an additional 26 percent on proceeds exceeding $175,000; and retailers who sell $475,000 or more receive an additional 17 percent on net receipts exceeding $475,000. The “2-Tier Option,” likely preferred by retailers with a high volume of video lottery sales, pays the retailer 26 percent of net receipts up to $650,000 and 19 percent of net receipts exceeding $650,000.

II. INTERPRETATION OF ORS 461.445

To determine whether an agency’s rule is beyond the authority granted to the agency by statute, we must begin with “an examination of * * * the statutory provisions authorizing the rule[.]” ORS 183.400(3)(b). Here, the authorizing statute, ORS 461.445, provides:

“In establishing its schedule of payments to contractors, the Oregon State Lottery Commission shall undertake to develop a system that maximizes the net revenue to the state for the public purpose consistent with providing a reasonable rate of return for contractors.”

Our “examination” of the statute entails interpretation, and that task begins with the phrase “undertake to develop.” The Lottery argues that, by using that phrase, the legislature requires the Lottery only “to attempt to maximize state revenues to the extent it can do that while providing retailers a reasonable rate of return.” (Emphasis in original.) In the Lottery’s view, the “statute is hortatory.” In support of its position, the Lottery points out that, according to Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary 2491 (unabridged ed 2002), “undertake” is synonymous with “attempt.”

We are not persuaded. First, although Webster’s does point to the word “attempt” as a synonymous cross-reference for the word “undertake,” it points to a number of other synonyms, including, “guarantee,” “promise,” “contract,” and “covenant.” Further, Webster’s defines “undertake” to mean, variously, “take in hand,” “enter upon,” “set about,” “take upon oneself solemnly or expressly,” “put oneself under *675 obligation to perform,” and “accept as a charge.” Id. The dictionary, as usual, offers a smorgasbord of definitions. Some of them support the Lottery’s position and some undercut it. A more meaningful method of interpreting the term is to ask whether the legislature would enact operative legislation (as opposed to a general, introductory policy statement preceded by a “whereas” clause or its functional equivalent) containing explicit, substantive standards (such as “maximize [ ] the net revenue” and “reasonable rate of return”), couched in mandatory terms {“shall undertake”), if the legislature’s intention was merely to give advice. We conclude that, in context, the term “undertake” imposes a genuine mandate. The Lottery is charged with the duty to develop a system, and to do so subject to an express constraint: to maximize state revenue consistent with providing retailers a reasonable rate of return.

The parties dispute the precise nature of that constraint. The Lottery explained its understanding during the rulemaking process and does so again on judicial review: The constraint requires the Lottery to balance competing interests, giving due regard to each. Petitioners strenuously disagree:

“In order to meet the statutory mandate, the ultimate question the Lottery must answer is this: Do the commission rates maximize net revenue to the state? To answer that question, the Lottery needs to consider what a reasonable rate of return to retailers is, but only in the context of determining whether that rate will maximize net revenue to the state. * * * That is, the Legislature did not direct the Lottery to ‘maximize net revenue’ and ‘provide a reasonable rate of return to retailers.’ Rather, it directed the Lottery to set rates ‘consistent with’ providing a reasonable rate of return. The distinction is crucial. The two phrases are not on equal footing. The statute does not require or authorize the Lottery to attempt to find a ‘balance’ between maximizing revenue and providing a reasonable rate of return to retailers. To the contrary, the legislature simply recognized that in order to maximize revenue, retailers must receive a reasonable rate of return.

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Related

Wolf v. Oregon Lottery Commission
182 P.3d 180 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2008)
Friends of the Columbia Gorge, Inc. v. Columbia River Gorge Commission
179 P.3d 706 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 P.3d 303, 209 Or. App. 670, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 1934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-oregon-lottery-commission-orctapp-2006.