West Flagler Associates, Ltd. v. Department of Business & Professional Regulation, Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering , 2017 Fla. App. LEXIS 6170 ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •        Third District Court of Appeal
    State of Florida
    Opinion filed May 3, 2017.
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    ________________
    No. 3D16-2311
    Lower Tribunal Nos. 2015-30307, 2015-30305
    ________________
    West Flagler Associates, Ltd.,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    The Department of Business and Professional Regulation, Division
    of Pari-Mutuel Wagering,
    Appellee.
    An Appeal from the Department of Business and Professional Regulation,
    Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering.
    The Lockwood Law Firm, John M. Lockwood, Thomas J. Morton and Kala
    Kelly Shankle (Tallahassee), for appellant.
    Jason Maine, General Counsel, and Dwight O. Slater, Chief Appellate
    Counsel (Tallahassee), for appellee.
    Before ROTHENBERG, EMAS and FERNANDEZ, JJ.
    EMAS, J.
    West Flagler Associates, Ltd. (“West Flagler”) appeals a final order of the
    Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, Division of Pari-
    Mutuel Wagering (“the Division”), which denied West Flagler’s two applications
    for summer jai alai permits. For the reasons that follow, we affirm, holding that
    the Division properly construed and applied section 550.0745(1), Florida Statutes
    (2015).
    BACKGROUND
    West Flagler is the owner of a pari-mutuel permit and is one of seven permit
    holders authorized to conduct pari-mutuel pools on exhibition sports in Miami-
    Dade County. In 2015, West Flagler filed two separate applications with the
    Division, each application seeking a new summer jai alai permit pursuant to
    section 550.0745(1), which provides:
    The owner or operator of a pari-mutuel permit who is
    authorized by the division to conduct pari-mutuel pools
    on exhibition sports in any county having five or more
    such pari-mutuel permits and whose mutuel play from
    the operation of such pari-mutuel pools for the 2
    consecutive years next prior to filing an application
    under this section has had the smallest play or total
    pool within the county may apply to the division to
    convert its permit to a permit to conduct a summer jai
    alai fronton in such county during the summer season
    commencing on May 1 and ending on November 30 of
    each year on such dates as may be selected by such
    permittee for the same number of days and performances
    as are allowed and granted to winter jai alai frontons
    within such county. If a permittee who is eligible under
    2
    this section to convert a permit declines to convert, a
    new permit is hereby made available in that
    permittee's county to conduct summer jai alai games
    as provided by this section, notwithstanding mileage
    and permit ratification requirements.
    (Emphasis added).
    West Flagler’s first application for a new summer jai alai permit was based
    on state fiscal years 2012-13 and 2013-14 (“the First Application”); its second
    application was based on state fiscal years 2013-14 and 2014-15 (“the Second
    Application”).    In each application, West Flagler took the position that South
    Florida Racing Association (“SFRA”) was the permit holder with the smallest play
    or total pool for each of the relevant fiscal periods, and thus, that SFRA was
    eligible to convert its pari-mutuel permit to a summer jai alai permit. West Flagler
    asserted that, because SFRA declined on each occasion to convert its permit to a
    summer jai alai permit, section 550.0745(1) required that a new summer jai alai
    permit be created and made available for each of those two-year periods.
    On July 10, 2015, the Division denied both of West Flagler’s applications.
    As to the First Application, the Division concluded that there was no single permit
    holder with the smallest play or total pool for fiscal years 2012-13 and 2013-14.1
    1 Based upon its calculations, the Division instead determined that West Flagler
    was the permit holder with the smallest play or total pool for fiscal year 2012-13,
    and Summer Jai Alai Partnership was the permit holder with the smallest play or
    total pool for fiscal year 2013-14. To be entitled to convert a permit, however, the
    statute requires a permit holder to have had the smallest play or total pool for both
    of those fiscal periods.
    3
    As to the Second Application, the Division concluded that Summer Jai Alai
    Partnership (“SJAP”) was the permit holder with the smallest play or total pool for
    fiscal years 2013-14 and 2014-15, and because SJAP was already the holder of a
    summer jai alai permit, it was not eligible under the statute to “convert” its existing
    summer jai alai permit to a “new” summer jai alai permit. Therefore, no new
    summer jai alai permit was created for those fiscal periods.
    West Flagler filed petitions for administrative hearings on each application
    denial.   The petitions were consolidated and referred to the Department of
    Administrative Hearings.
    Two issues of statutory construction were central to the determinations made
    at the final hearing, held before an Administrative Law Judge: (1) Whether the
    term “smallest play or total pool,” as used in section 550.0745(1), includes only
    live wagers2 and intertrack wagers,3 or whether that term also includes “simulcast
    export” wagers4 (i.e., out-of-state wagers); and (2) Whether under section
    550.0745(1), a summer jai alai permit holder is eligible to “convert” its existing
    summer jai alai permit into a “new” summer jai alai permit.
    2 Live wagers are those accepted at a permitted Florida facility on a race or game
    performed live at that facility.
    3 Intertrack wagers are those accepted at a permitted Florida facility on a race or
    game transmitted from and performed live at, or simulcast rebroadcast from,
    another permitted Florida facility.
    4 Simulcast export wagers are those accepted at an out-of-state facility on a race or
    game performed live at a permitted Florida facility.
    4
    West Flagler’s position was that the statutory term “play or total pool”
    should be construed to include live wagers and intertrack wagers, but not simulcast
    export wagers. Applying such a construction, SFRA would have had the smallest
    play or total pool in Miami-Dade County for the relevant years. Thus, West
    Flagler contended, because SFRA was eligible to convert its permit but declined to
    do so, two new summer jai alai permits were available, and West Flagler’s
    applications for each of those permits should have been granted.
    By contrast, the Division asserted that the calculation of “play or total pool”
    does include simulcast export wagers, and that if such wagers were included in the
    calculation, West Flagler had the smallest play or total pool for the 2012-13 fiscal
    year, while SJAP had the smallest play or total pool for fiscal years 2013-14 and
    2014-15. Thus, as to the First Application (covering fiscal years 2012-13 and
    2013-14), there was no permit holder eligible to convert and consequently no new
    permit was available. For the Second Application, SJAP was the permit holder
    with the lowest play or total pool for 2013-14 and 2014-15. However, SJAP was
    already a summer jai alai permit holder, and the Division asserted that one cannot
    “convert” a summer jai alai permit to a summer jai alai permit, and therefore, no
    new summer permit was available for that fiscal period either.
    After a final hearing, the ALJ issued its recommended order, wherein it
    concluded, inter alia, that:
    5
     Simulcast export wagers should be included in the calculation of which pari-
    mutuel has the “smallest play or total pool” within the county;
     There was no summer jai alai permit available in Miami-Dade County for
    the period encompassing fiscal years 2012-13 and 2013-14 because West
    Flagler had the smallest play or total pool for 2012-13 (including simulcast
    export wagers) and SJAP had the smallest play or total pool for 2013-14
    (including simulcast export wagers);
     SJAP had the smallest play or total pool for the 2013-14 and 2014-15 fiscal
    years;
     SJAP is already the holder of a summer jai alai permit, so it cannot
    “convert” that existing permit to a summer jai alai permit and therefore, no
    new summer jai alai permit was created.
    Accordingly, the ALJ recommended that the Division deny both of West
    Flagler’s applications.   Thereafter, the Division issued its final order, which
    approved and adopted the ALJ’s findings of fact, and denied each of West
    Flagler’s applications for new summer jai alai permits. This appeal followed.
    ANALYSIS
    “This court reviews an ALJ’s findings of fact for competent, substantial
    evidence, while reviewing an ALJ’s conclusions of law de novo.” J.S. v. C.M.,
    
    135 So. 3d 312
    , 315 (Fla. 1st DCA 2012).            However, the “administrative
    6
    construction of a statute given by those charged with its enforcement and
    interpretation is entitled to great weight, and the courts will not depart from such a
    construction unless it is clearly erroneous or unreasonable.” West Flagler Assoc.,
    Ltd. v. Dep. of Bus. & Reg., 
    139 So. 3d 419
    , 421 (Fla. 1st DCA 2014).
    There are two conclusions of law, based upon the ALJ’s and the Division’s
    statutory construction of section 550.0745(1), which we must review in this appeal:
    (1) whether the calculation of a pari-mutuel facility’s “play or total pool” includes
    simulcast export wagers (i.e., out-of-state wagers); and (2) whether an existing
    summer jai alai permit holder is eligible to “convert” its existing summer jai alai
    permit to a new summer jai alai permit. 5
    Issue #1: Does the calculation of a pari-mutuel facility’s “play or total
    pool” include simulcast export wagers?
    As discussed above, if simulcast export wagers are included in a pari-mutuel
    facility’s “play or total pool,” as applied to section 557.0745(1), then there was no
    single permit holder with the smallest play or total pool for fiscal years 2012-2013
    5 We reject West Flagler’s assertion that the Division’s findings of fact regarding
    the accuracy of the amounts of the simulcast export wagers are not supported by
    competent substantial evidence. In its recommended order, the ALJ sets forth the
    process of calculating the wager amounts and determined, specifically with regard
    to simulcast export wagers, that the Division relies on information reported to it by
    the totalizator (the “tote”), who is contracted by the permit holder to provide those
    numbers. Those numbers are then audited by the Division to ensure that wagers
    are accounted for and paid. There is competent substantial evidence in the record
    to support these findings and the determination that the amounts of the simulcast
    export wagers were accurate. We affirm without further discussion the other claims
    raised by West Flagler in this appeal.
    7
    and 2013-2014, no eligible permit to be converted, and West Flagler’s First
    Application was properly denied.
    West Flagler contends that pursuant to this court’s precedent in South
    Florida Racing Association v. State, Department of Business & Professional
    Regulation, Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering, 
    201 So. 3d 57
     (Fla. 3d DCA 2015),
    only live wagers and intertrack wagers should be included in the calculation of a
    permit holder’s “play or total pool.” It is true that in South Florida Racing this
    court held that both live wagers and intertrack wagers are to be included in the
    calculation of play or total pool. Significantly, however, the question of whether
    simulcast export wagers should also be included in that calculation was never
    raised, briefed or argued in South Florida Racing, and therefore was never
    considered by this court. Specifically, the issue in South Florida Racing was
    whether only live wagers should be included in the “smallest play or total pool”
    calculation, or whether, as South Florida Racing contended, both live wagers and
    intertrack wagers should be included.
    The statute at issue here is the same statute that was at issue in South Florida
    Racing:
    The owner or operator of a pari-mutuel permit who is
    authorized by the division to conduct pari-mutuel pools
    on exhibition sports in any county having five or more
    such pari-mutuel permits and whose mutuel play from
    the operation of such pari-mutuel pools for the 2
    consecutive years next prior to filing an application under
    8
    this section has had the smallest play or total pool within
    the county may apply to the division to convert its
    permit to a permit to conduct a summer jai alai fronton in
    such county during the summer season . . . .
    § 557.0745(1), Fla. Stat. (emphasis added).
    However, in South Florida Racing, 201 So. 3d at 61, the pertinent portion of
    the statute this court was required to construe was “within the county,” as the
    Division argued that only live wagers and wagers made at other tracks within
    Miami-Dade County should be calculated in determining who had the “smallest
    play or total pool.” This court rejected that argument, holding that the “within the
    county” language limited which owners and operators (only those within Miami-
    Dade County) qualified to convert their permit, but did not limit which wagers
    (intra-county v. inter-county) should be counted in the calculation. Therefore, we
    held, even wagers placed outside Miami-Dade County (via intertrack wagers)
    should be included in the calculation of “smallest play or total pool.” Because it
    was not presented as an issue to this court, however, South Florida Racing did not
    address or determine whether wagers placed outside the State (simulcast export
    wagers) must also be included calculation of which permit holder had the “smallest
    play or total pool.”
    We can discern nothing in the language of the statute which would require,
    for the purpose of calculating the smallest play or total pool under section
    557.0745(1), drawing a distinction between intertrack wagers and simulcast export
    9
    wagers. As this court recognized in South Florida Racing, 201 So. 3d at 61,
    “[a]lthough ‘total pool’ is not statutorily defined, the term ‘pari-mutuel wagering
    pool’ is defined to mean ‘the total amount wagered on a race or game for a single
    possible result,’” and “[n]othing in Chapter 550 of the Florida Statutes limits the
    total pool to solely physical in-county wagers.” Id. Our determination in the
    instant case—that the statutory language includes simulcast export wagers—is
    consistent with our analysis in South Florida Racing, and the contrary construction
    proposed by West Flagler would conflict with the plain meaning of section
    550.0745(1).6
    Thus, because we conclude that simulcast export wagers are to be included
    in a calculation of the play or total pool, the ALJ correctly determined that West
    Flagler had the smallest total pool in 2012-13, and that SJAP had the smallest total
    6 West Flagler contends that, in construing section 550.0745(1), we should define
    the term “total pool” synonymously with the term “handle.” The term “handle” is
    statutorily defined, and means “the aggregate contributions to pari-mutuel pools.”
    § 550.3551(2)(b). Significant to West Flagler’s argument, the “handle” does not
    include “any wagers accepted by an out-of-state pari-mutuel permitholder.” Id. In
    support of its position, West Flagler argues that the First District, in West Flagler
    Associates, Ltd. v. Department of Business & Professional Regulation, 
    139 So. 3d 419
    , 421 (Fla. 1st DCA 2014), used “total pool” and “handle” interchangeably and
    thereby ascribed the same meaning to them. Though the First District’s opinion in
    West Flagler Associates may have used the terms “total pool” and “handle”
    interchangeably in its opinion, the issue in that appeal did not involve the
    distinction between these two terms in construing “total pool” under section
    550.0745(1), and such a short-hand description, utilized by our sister court for ease
    of reference, is neither dispositive of, nor even persuasive in, our consideration of
    the issue addressed in the instant appeal.
    10
    pool in 2013-14.   Because no single permit holder had the smallest play or total
    pool for both of these fiscal periods, there was no available permit to convert and
    the First Application was therefore properly denied.
    Issue #2: Is an existing summer jai alai permit holder eligible to convert
    its summer jai alai permit to a “new” summer jai alai permit?
    The Second Application raises a separate issue, because the Division does
    not dispute that SJAP was the permit holder with the smallest play or total pool for
    fiscal years 2013-14 and 2014-15. Rather, the Division contends that SJAP was
    not eligible to convert its permit under section 550.0745(1) because SJAP’s only
    permit is already a summer jai alai permit, and a summer jai alai permit cannot be
    “converted” to a summer jai alai permit. Therefore, because there is no permit
    holder who is eligible to convert its permit, no new permit was created, and West
    Flagler’s Second Application was properly denied. We agree.
    Again, section 550.0745(1) provides:
    The owner or operator of a pari-mutuel permit who is
    authorized by the division to conduct pari-mutuel
    pools on exhibition sports in any county having five or
    more such pari-mutuel permits and whose mutuel play
    from the operation of such pari-mutuel pools for the 2
    consecutive years next prior to filing an application under
    this section has had the smallest play or total pool within
    the county may apply to the division to convert its
    permit to a permit to conduct a summer jai alai
    fronton in such county during the summer season
    commencing on May 1 and ending on November 30 of
    each year on such dates as may be selected by such
    permittee for the same number of days and performances
    11
    as are allowed and granted to winter jai alai frontons
    within such county. If a permittee who is eligible under
    this section to convert a permit declines to convert, a
    new permit is hereby made available in that permittee's
    county to conduct summer jai alai games as provided by
    this section, notwithstanding mileage and permit
    ratification requirements.
    (Emphasis added.)
    A plain reading of this language establishes that: (1) a new permit is only
    made available when a permit holder who is “eligible under this section to convert
    a permit declines to convert;” and (2) an eligible permit holder is one who “may
    apply to the division to convert its permit to a permit to conduct a summer jai alai
    fronton;” and (3) the eligible permit holder may convert from a permit “to conduct
    pari-mutuel pools on exhibition sports” into a “permit to conduct a summer jai alai
    fronton.”
    If the permit holder is already a summer jai alai permit holder, and only a
    summer jai alai permit holder, then clearly it cannot “convert” its summer jai alai
    permit to a summer jai alai permit, as there is nothing to “convert.” If the permit
    holder cannot convert its permit (because it is ineligible to do so), then under the
    statute, no new permit is available for which other permit holders (here, West
    Flagler) may apply.
    We reject West Flagler’s argument that, because a new summer jai alai
    permit would have allowed SJAP to relocate from its present fixed location, such a
    12
    change in the nature or character of the permit constitutes a “conversion” of its
    present summer jai alai permit to a “new” summer jai alai permit. We find nothing
    in the plain language of the statute that would support this construction urged by
    West Flagler.
    Even if we were to conclude that this statutory language is subject to
    differing constructions, we are duty-bound to afford deference to the Division’s
    construction:
    Administrative construction of a statute by an agency responsible for
    its administration is entitled to great weight and should not be
    overturned unless clearly erroneous. All Seasons Resorts, Inc. v.
    Division of Land Sales, Condominiums and Mobile Homes, 
    455 So.2d 544
    , 547 (Fla. 1st DCA 1984).
    Shell Harbor Grp., Inc. v. Dep’t of Bus. Reg., Div. of Alcoholic Beverages
    & Tobacco, 
    487 So. 2d 1141
    , 1142 (Fla. 1st DCA 1986). See also West Flagler,
    
    139 So. 3d at 421
     (holding that “an administrative construction of a statute given
    by those charged with its enforcement and interpretation is entitled to great weight,
    and the courts will not depart from such a construction unless it is clearly
    erroneous or unreasonable.”) The Division’s construction of the statute is neither
    unreasonable nor clearly erroneous.
    CONCLUSION
    13
    We hold that the Division properly construed and applied section
    550.0745(1), Florida Statutes, and therefore affirm the Division’s order denying
    both of West Flagler’s applications for summer jai alai permits.
    Affirmed.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 3D16-2311

Citation Numbers: 219 So. 3d 149, 2017 WL 1713304, 2017 Fla. App. LEXIS 6170

Judges: Rothenberg, Emas, Fernandez

Filed Date: 5/3/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024