Dear Representative Stites,
¶ 0 This office has received your request for an official Attorney General Opinion in which you ask the following question:
Under the provisions of the Oklahoma Horse Racing Act ("theAct"), 3A O.S. 1991 Supp. 2000, §§ 200-209, is theOklahoma Horse Racing Commission empowered to authorize alicensed racetrack (which the Act refers to as an "organizationlicensee") to accept pari-mutuel wagers on previously run horseraces — races which are neither live races nor races beingtransmitted to the organization licensee at the time the liverace is being run at the host track?
¶ 3 Also prohibited is the placing of a bet or the playing ofany game "whatsoever, for money, property, checks, credits or other representatives of value with cards, dice or any other device which may be adapted to or used in playing any game ofchance or in which chance is a material element." 21 Ohio St. 1991,§ 942[
¶ 4 Further, the ownership of anything suitable to or used for gambling purposes or furniture or equipment used in a place conducted in violation of the gambling laws requires forfeiture of the equipment. Id. §§ 943, 960, 973(A).
¶ 5 Persons who permit gambling in their building or on their grounds, or knowingly lease their property for such purposes are also guilty of a crime. Id. §§ 956, 957. Leases of property for such purposes are also declared void under Oklahoma law. Id. § 958.
¶ 6 The criminal statutes of Oklahoma also provide that operating any house, room or place where any of the prohibited games are conducted or carried on is a felony. 21 O.S. Supp.2000, § 946[
¶ 7 Further, the installation of communication devices for gambling, 21 O.S. Supp. 2000, § 986[
A. Commercial gambling is:
1. Operating or receiving all or part of the earnings of a gambling place;
2. Receiving, recording or forwarding bets or offers to bet or, with intent to receive, record or forward bets or offers to bet, possessing facilities to do so;
3. For gain, becoming a custodian of anything of value bet or offered to be bet;
4. Conducting a lottery or with intent to conduct a lottery possessing facilities to do so;
5. Setting up for use or collecting the proceeds of any gambling device; or
6. Alone or with others, owning, controlling, managing or financing a gambling business.
B. Any person found guilty of commercial gambling shall be guilty of a felony and punished by imprisonment for not more than ten (10) years or a fine of not more than Twenty-five Thousand Dollars ($25,000.00), or by both such fine and imprisonment.
Id. § 982 (emphasis added).
¶ 9 Like Oklahoma's other anti-gambling laws, its anti-commercial gambling laws outlaw the use of property and premises for commercial gambling purposes. 21 Ohio St. 1991, §983[
¶ 10 A "lottery" which encompasses "any scheme for the disposal or distribution of property by chance among persons who have paid, or promised, or agreed to pay any valuable consideration," is also prohibited. 21 Ohio St. 1991, § 1051[
1. Chance;
2. prize, and
3. consideration (money or something of value).
Id. at 953.
¶ 11 Wagering on the outcome of a horse race constitutes a lottery under this definition, because such wagering includes consideration — the money bet; chance — the outcome of the race; and prize — the winnings paid successful betters. As with other anti-gambling statutes, use of a premises for a lottery is prohibited, 21 Ohio St. 1991, § 1063[
¶ 13 The second exception is pari-mutuel horse racingwagering. Both on track wagering, 3A O.S. Supp. 2000, §205.6[
¶ 15 At 3A O.S. Supp. 2000, § 205.6[
Any organization licensee conducting a race meeting may provide places on the race meeting grounds at which it may conduct and supervise the pari-mutuel system of wagering on the horse races conducted by the organization licensee at the race meeting. No other place or method of betting, pool making, wagering, or gambling shall be used or permitted by the organization licensee. The pari-mutuel system of wagering shall be permitted only on horse races conducted at a racetrack where such pari-mutuel system of wagering is authorized pursuant to the provisions of the Oklahoma Horse Racing Act.
Id. (emphasis added).
¶ 16 Such wagers are also permitted at the off-track wagering parlors of licensed racetracks under Section 205.6a(A). Additionally, the Act permits pari-mutuel wagering on simulcasthorse races. Id. §§ 205.6a(A), 205.7(A), 205.7a(A).
¶ 17 First, at Section 205.7, the Act authorizes pari-mutuelwagering on out-of-state simulcast races:
A. The Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission may authorize an organization licensee to accept wagers on the results of out-of-state full racing programs for simulcast races. . . .
Id. (emphasis added).
¶ 18 The original enactment of the Act did not permit acceptance of wagers of simulcast races on such a broad basis. Rather, the original law only authorized such wagers onout-of-state feature races having a gross purse of more thanOne Hundred Thousand Dollars ($100,000). 1983 Okla. Sess. Laws ch.
¶ 19 Secondly, the Act, at 3A O.S. Supp. 2000, § 205.7a[
A. Any organization licensee that accepts full-card out-of-state simulcast wagering at any time during a calendar year shall be required to televise to all other racetracks licensed by the Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission all of its live races, or the number of days of its live racing which is equivalent to the number of days of live racing conducted at the receiving track, whichever is less. Pari-mutuel wagering may be conducted on such races at all other racetracks licensed by the Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission and may be allowed at their in-state offtrack pari-mutuel wagering facilities or at any other racetrack or entity in another state or country. Money wagered on such races may be placed in separate or common pools as determined by rules of the Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission.
Id. (emphasis added).
¶ 20 In the horse racing industry, the term "simulcast" is generally understood to mean the telecasting of live audio and visual signals. Cf. New York Racing Ass'n v. Hoblock,
¶ 21 The Act does not elsewhere authorize wagering on horse races; it only authorizes pari-mutuel wagering on live races and simulcast races. The horse race wagering you inquire about fits into neither category, as you inquire about "pari-mutuel wagers on previously run horse races — races which are neither live races nor races being transmitted to the organization licensee at the time the live race is being run at the host track." Clearly, a previously run horse race is not a live horse race and thus the Act's authorization of acceptance of pari-mutuel wagering on live races would not authorize wagers on previously run races. Nor does the Act's authorization ofsimulcast wagering permit pari-mutuel wagers on previously run horse races. As noted above, simulcast wagering is wagering on the results of a live race which is televised to another licensed track, or that track's off-track betting facility. In those wagers, bets are placed prior to the start of the live race.
¶ 22 The gambling you inquire about is not simulcast wagering, as the wagering would not take place on a live horse race being run at a sister track with wagers accepted until the start of that live race. Rather, you inquire about wagering on races which have been run in the past. Such wagering is not permitted under current Oklahoma law. Accordingly, the Horse Racing Commission is not authorized to permit licensed racetracks to accept wagers on the results of previously run horse races.
¶ 23 It is, therefore, the official Opinion of the AttorneyGeneral that:
Because the Oklahoma Horse Racing Act, 3A O.S. 1991 Supp.2000, §§ 200-209, only empowers the Oklahoma Horse RacingCommission to authorize licensed racetracks — which the Actrefers to as "organization licensees" — to accept pari-mutuelwagers on live or simulcast horse races, the Act does not empowerthe Commission to authorize the acceptance of pari-mutuel wagerson previously run horse races.
W.A. DREW EDMONDSON Oklahoma Attorney General
NEAL LEADER Senior Assistant Attorney General