Justice McCAFFERY.
In this appeal, we consider whether Appellee, the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board (the "Board"), properly approved a Category 3 slot machine license application submitted by Intervenor, Valley Forge Convention Center Partners, L.P. ("Valley Forge Partners"), pursuant to the Race Horse Development and Gaming Act (the "Gaming Act"), 4 Pa.C.S. §§ 1101-1904. Upon careful review of the record, the briefs of the parties, and the relevant law, we determine that the Board properly approved the Category 3 slot machine license, and we affirm.
On June 29, 2007, Valley Forge Partners submitted an application to the Board for a Category 3 slot machine license to operate no more than 500 slot machines at the Valley Forge Convention Center in King of Prussia, Montgomery County. Appellant, Greenwood Gaming and Entertainment, Inc. ("Greenwood"), which owns and operates Parx Racing and Casino, a thoroughbred racetrack and casino with 3,300 slot machines in Bensalem, Bucks County, challenged Valley Forge Partners' eligibility to obtain the license under the Gaming Act. A number of hearings were conducted and a voluminous documentary and testimonial evidentiary record was created, including evidence that access to the gaming area would be limited to those individuals who were overnight guests at or patrons of the Convention Center's amenities. There was also evidence submitted to support a showing that Valley Forge Partners had adequate financing for the project, and that the Convention Center is more than fifteen miles from any other licensed slots facility in Pennsylvania.
On May 8, 2009, the Board approved the application and issued a written adjudication that, among many other things, determined that Valley Forge Partners is the owner of the Valley Forge Convention Center, and that the Valley Forge Convention Center is a well-established resort hotel under the Gaming Act. On June 5, 2009, Greenwood filed a petition for review in the nature of an appeal from a final adjudication, requesting that this Court reverse the Board's order approving the application, citing this Court's exclusive jurisdiction over the appeal pursuant to Section 1204 of the Gaming Act.
The Gaming Act gives the Board extensive powers over gaming in Pennsylvania, including the specific power and duty, "[a]t its discretion, to issue, approve, renew, revoke, suspend, condition or deny issuance or renewal of slot machine licenses." 4 Pa.C.S. § 1202(b)(12). The Gaming Act further provides that, notwithstanding statutory provisions relating to judicial review of Commonwealth agency actions and direct appeals from government agencies, this Court's review of Board decisions is limited to determining whether the Board: (1) erred as a matter of law; or (2) acted arbitrarily and in capricious disregard of
On appeal, Greenwood raises the following issues, which we reproduce verbatim, but have re-ordered for ease of discussion:
Appellant's Brief at 5.
The Gaming Act provides, in relevant part, as follows:
4 Pa.C.S. § 1305(a)(1).
In support of its first issue on appeal, Greenwood argues that the Board ignored the fact that the Valley Forge Convention Center does not hold itself out as a resort, and ignored the allegedly consensus opinion of multiple experts that the Convention Center is not a resort hotel, but is instead, a convention hotel.
The Board responds that the Valley Forge Convention Center provides numerous amenities that would typically be found at a resort hotel, and that expert testimony at the hearings established that there is significant overlap, according to industry standards, between a resort hotel and a convention hotel. The Board points out that Greenwood did not present any expert testimony on the Convention Center's status as a resort hotel, and that the testimony of the only expert who did testify on the subject, Peter Tyson, Vice President of PKF Consulting, established that the Convention Center meets the "substantial year-round amenities test" under the Gaming Act. Appellee's Brief at 31-32.
The Gaming Act does not define "well-established resort hotel." In concluding that the Valley Forge Convention Center is a well-established resort hotel that offers substantial year-round recreational guest amenities, the Board considered the criteria it had adopted by regulation, as follows:
58 Pa.Code § 441a.23(a) (emphasis supplied).
We cannot conclude that the Board committed legal error or acted arbitrarily in capricious disregard of the evidence simply because the applicant has historically marketed itself more as a "convention center" than as a "resort hotel." That the Valley Forge Convention Center focused its self-promotion on its convention center attributes and did not market its resort amenities as heavily does not mean that the two aspects are mutually exclusive. They are not. Further, the long-standing existence of the Valley Forge Convention Center is not subject to question, and it cannot be gainsaid that Valley Forge Partners presented competent evidence that the Convention Center provides a complement of amenities characteristic of a resort hotel. Thus, the Board's conclusion that the Valley Forge Convention Center is a well-established resort hotel is not arbitrary. Moreover, the record demonstrates that the Board did not capriciously disregard Greenwood's evidence. Instead, the record shows that the Board appropriately weighed competing evidence and found in favor of the applicant. That the applicant's marketplace branding strategy does not employ the word "resort" is not determinative of the legality or reasonableness of the Board's decision to award it a Category 3 slot machine license, and we thus determine that Greenwood's first issue does not merit relief.
Greenwood's second and third issues challenge the Board's determination that Valley Forge Partners is the owner of the Convention Center. At the time of application, the owner of the Convention Center was Valley Forge Colonial, L.P. ("Colonial"). Valley Forge Partners subsequently arranged a merger of Colonial into Valley Forge Partners, and signed an agreement of sale to purchase the Convention Center from Colonial. These transactions occurred because some of the limited partners in Colonial did not want to be part of the slot machine venture. The principal partner in control of both entities (Valley Forge Partners and Colonial) was the same person, Ira Lubert.
The agreement of sale had contained a condition precedent that the sale would not be consummated if Valley Forge Partners did not receive license approval. At the insistence of the Board, however, the parties to the agreement of sale waived this condition. The Board concluded that even though title to the Convention Center had
Pennsylvania jurisprudence has long recognized that during the interval between the execution of a real estate sales agreement and the conveyance of title, the purchaser of the real estate is considered the equitable owner of the real estate. Allardice v. McCain, 375 Pa. 528, 101 A.2d 385, 389 (1953). Greenwood takes no serious issue with the law of equitable ownership. Instead, it argues that where satisfaction of a condition precedent to performance under an agreement of sale is under the control of a third party, equitable ownership cannot vest. Appellant's Brief at 18. Specifically, it contends that Valley Forge Partners is not the owner of the Convention Center because, despite its waiver of the license condition, the record shows that, in fact, the agreement of sale and the merger agreement are contingent upon license approval by the Board. The gravamen of Greenwood's argument is that even though Valley Forge Partners expressly waived license approval as a condition precedent to closing under Article 6 of the agreement (Conditions) and under Article 10.22 of the agreement (Purchaser's Approvals Contingency), no express waiver was included in Article 7 of the agreement (Closing). Thus, Greenwood argues the condition precedent remains in place, and that the Board committed an error of law in concluding Valley Forge Partners is the owner of the Valley Forge Convention Center.
Article 7 of the sales agreement chiefly addresses the timing of closing. Article 7.1(a) states that "[t]he closing shall occur on a date agreed to by Seller and Purchaser which date shall be promptly after Purchaser's receipt of the Approvals." Agreement, Article 7.1(a). Article 7.1(b) requires that closing was to occur by December 31, 2010, and if it did not, the Seller has the right to terminate the agreement whether or not the Purchaser has obtained all of the approvals.
We agree with the Board's determination that license approval was not a condition precedent here. Rather, license approval was expressly waived by the parties to the sales agreement, and the provision that Greenwood characterizes as a condition precedent is actually an expression that the transaction must close by a date certain, with or without a Category 3 slot machine license. The Board committed no error of law in determining that equitable ownership of the Convention Center was in Valley Forge Partners as purchasers under an unconditional agreement of sale, and that Valley Forge Partners' equitable
In its fourth issue on appeal, Greenwood asserts that Section 1305(a)(1) of the Gaming Act permits the Board to grant a license upon the express condition that only registered guests and patrons of amenities be allowed in the gaming area. Greenwood posits that the Board's order itself must contain this condition, and here it does not. In addition, Greenwood contends that the Board failed to approve Valley Forge Partners' amenities plan before granting it a license. Thus, it contends that the Board committed an error of law. In the alternative, Greenwood contends that the Board capriciously disregarded evidence that Valley Forge Partners is allegedly skirting the Gaming Act's access limitations by simply requiring any person to pay a $10 fee to enter the gaming area.
The Board responds that the Gaming Act does not require pre-license approval of a particular plan for assuring that the gaming area restriction is met. Rather, an access plan is part of an applicant's internal controls, which must be submitted to the Board for approval 90 days before the commencement of gaming operations. 58 Pa.Code §§ 441a.23 and 465a.2(a). Moreover, the Board points out a distinction between approval of a license and issuance of a license. Issuance occurs only after all conditions have been satisfied and all plans finalized and approved.
During the numerous hearings that were conducted during the application process, both the principal partner of Valley Forge Partners, Ira Lubert, and a high-level employee of the partnership, C. Patrick McCoy, testified that the proposed gaming areas would be available only to Convention Center guests and patrons of the Convention Center's amenities. Specifically, at the hearing on October 16, 2007, McCoy testified that Valley Forge Partners planned to develop a computerized system to provide guests and patrons of the Convention Center with access passes allowing them entry into the gaming area, and Lubert specifically denied that there would be any entrance fees, admission kiosks, or entrance gates with flat-fee admission charges. Rather, a guest or patron must spend $10 or more on some specific Convention Center amenity in order to satisfy the "non-de minimis" consideration requirement set forth by the Gaming Act. 4 Pa.C.S. § 1305(a)(1), (e).
Given this testimony and the fact that the Board still has ultimate authority to issue or deny a gaming license upon final review of the amenities plan, we cannot say that the Board committed an error of law or capriciously disregarded evidence relating to the access plan in approving Valley Forge Partners' application, and we reject Greenwood's fourth issue as unavailing.
In its final issue, Greenwood alleges that the Board's determination that Valley Forge Partners is financially suitable for licensure was arbitrary and in capricious disregard of the evidence. Specifically, Greenwood asserts that there was incontrovertible evidence presented that financing of the project was not secure, and that the operation of the slot machines at the Convention Center would reduce gaming revenue at other area licensed slot machine facilities and racetracks.
With respect to the financing of the project, Section 1313(a) of the Gaming Act provides that "[t]he Board shall require each applicant ... to produce the information, documentation and assurances concerning financial background and resources as the board deems necessary to establish by clear and convincing evidence
The Board specifically set forth in its adjudication that an assessment of financial suitability was conducted by the Financial Suitability Task Force of the Board's Bureau of Investigation and Enforcement, and that the process for determining the financial suitability of Valley Forge Partners "entailed extensive document review." Board's Adjudication at 13. Based on its review of a financial fitness report submitted by the Task Force, the Board determined that there was "nothing... that would indicate that the applicant or its principles are not financially suitable[.]" Id. at 15.
With respect to direct competition for gaming revenue and the potential negative financial impact new gaming licenses may place on other nearby gaming facilities and racetracks, the Act requires only that a new gaming facility not be located within 15 miles of another gaming facility. There is no question that the location of the Convention Center satisfies this distance requirement. Nevertheless, Greenwood presented the testimony of its representative, Thomas C. Bonner, that its "fundamental concern is that the Philadelphia area market for slots gaming is already saturated and that granting Valley Forge a Category Three license will merely redistribute existing slot revenues[.]" Hearing, 10/22/08, at 88. Valley Forge Partners, on the other hand, presented expert testimony that any potential negative impact that the Convention Center slot machines might place upon nearby gaming facility revenues would be de minimis in nature.
Based on the foregoing, we cannot conclude that the Board acted arbitrarily or capriciously disregarded Greenwood's evidence in determining that Valley Forge Partners is financially suitable for licensure, and we reject Greenwood's claim to the contrary.
Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, we affirm the order of the Board that approved the application of Valley Forge Partners for a Category 3 slot machine license.
Chief Justice CASTILLE and Justice GREENSPAN did not participate in the decision of this case.
Justices BAER and TODD join the opinion.
Justice SAYLOR files a dissenting opinion.
Justice EAKIN files a dissenting opinion.
Justice SAYLOR, dissenting.
I respectfully differ with the majority's reasoning and holding on the threshold legal question of what the Legislature meant when it employed the term "well-established resort hotel" as the litmus for Category 3 license eligibility. 4 Pa.C.S. § 1305(a)(1).
In the first instance, the majority recognizes that this term is undefined in the statute. See Majority Opinion, at 888-89. Nevertheless, in spite of the apparent ambiguity, the majority offers little or no
The Board's regulations define a well-established resort hotel, somewhat tautologically, as "[a] resort hotel ... having substantial year-round recreational guest amenities." 58 Pa.Code § 441a.1. This, however, is plainly insufficient to capture the legislative intent, since it affords no meaning to the qualifier that the resort hotel must be "well-established" to support a Category 3 license. 4 Pa.C.S. § 1305(a)(1). Indeed, contrary to the presumption that the General Assembly does not intend to include superfluous language, see 1 Pa.C.S. § 1922(2), neither the Board's definition, nor its adjudication, gives any attention to this qualifying term.
Furthermore, the Board appears to read the statutory proviso that the established resort hotel offer "substantial year-round recreational guest amenities," 4 Pa. C.S. § 1305(a)(1), as if this criterion defines a well-established resort. In the statute, however, the year-round proviso is positioned remotely from the "well-established" qualifier and an independent purpose is readily discernable. In this regard, core amenities offered at many resorts (such as skiing and golfing) are seasonal in nature. Thus, for example, a hotel might enjoy the status of a well-established resort but not meet the independent requirement to provide substantial year round amenities.
In considering the purpose of the "well-established" qualifier, I recognize that it is possible that the Legislature intended it to relate only to status as a hotel (which appears to be the majority's understanding, see Majority Opinion, at 889), as opposed to encompassing the resort term as well. The legislative history related by one of Applicant's attorneys, however— namely, that the definition was crafted with two of Pennsylvania's long-standing, landmark resort hotels as the models— strongly favors the latter understanding. Specifically, the attorney explained:
N.T., Oct. 22, 2008, at 80. While the attorney also indicated that the General Assembly had subsequently modified the Gaming Act in 2006 and expanded the range of qualifying hotels, see id., in point of fact, the language of Section 1305(a)(1) was unaltered by the 2006 amendments. Compare Act of July 5, 2004, P.L. 572, No. 71, § 1305(a), with Act of Nov. 1, 2006, P.L. 1243, No. 135, § 1305(a)(1). Moreover, the stronger variant of the "well-established" qualifier—i.e., that attaching to both "resort" and "hotel"—is consistent with the apparent legislative intent to closely limit the availability and scope of Category 3 licenses.
Taking into account that a degree of deference is due the Board's construction of Section 1305, see Schneider, 599 Pa. at 145 n. 8, 960 A.2d at 450 n. 8, I am simply unable to accept it, because the Board's regulation and adjudication afford no role to the "well-established" qualifier. Thus, I find that the Board committed an error of law, and its adjudication cannot be sustained for that reason. See 4 Pa.C.S. § 1204. Moreover, as Appellant develops at length, there is little or no record evidence that Applicant so much as markets itself as a resort hotel—certainly, there is no dispute that the convention center is the predominate marketing focus.
I have no doubt that industry definitions may overlap or of the desire among hotel establishments to serve as many things to many people. However, I am unable to accept that a convention center complex which does not broadly portray itself to the public as a resort qualifies as a "well-established resort hotel," along the lines of the Nemacolin or Seven Springs resort properties. Accord Brief for Appellant at 30 ("Lacking from [the] litany of the ordinary [amenities associated with the property] are those `special' or `substantial' amenities that are the hallmarks of a true well-established resort hotel and that were plainly envisioned by Section 1305 of the Gaming Act. The Valley Forge Convention Center fails to offer its guests such on-site amenities as golf courses, lakes, boating, winter sports activities, tennis, hiking, biking, horseback riding, art galleries, museums and more.").
Finally, I am sympathetic to the Board's efforts to advance the aims underlying the Gaming Act through the prompt issuance of the finite number of licenses subject to its charge.
Justice EAKIN, dissenting.
Our question is whether the Valley Forge Convention Center is a "well-established resort hotel." That term, though modified by further requirements of room and recreational amenities, is entirely undefined in the statute, but much like pornography, we need not define it to know it when we see it
For all the expert testimony of pools and "theme rooms," let me suggest the matter can be settled by a simple common sense test. Let each member of the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board say to his or her significant other, "Honey, I'm taking you for a romantic weekend at a `well-established resort hotel.'" Then put the suitcases in the car, get on the turnpike or the Schuylkill Expressway and drive to the front of the Valley Forge Convention Center. Get out, smile, say "Honey, we're here!", and see what your loved one says.
The Convention Center is a fine place, and I do not suggest otherwise. It is more than suitable for many things and with many features justifying its obvious success—indeed, until very recently, our Court's Bar Examiners held the bar exam at the Convention Center. It is many things, but it simply is not a resort. It is enclosed by the turnpike and major arteries, surrounded by apartment complexes, office parks, and sprawling shopping malls. The area is overrun with traffic, and the center is populated by conventioneers with nametags meeting in the commodious rooms built for the purpose of conventioneering. It is a wonderful and centrally located convention center and attracts visitors by the busload. I do not know why the statute created a license issuable only to a well-established resort instead of a convention center, but it did, and we should not perpetuate the deceit of calling this facility something it is not.
Respectfully, I dissent.
4 Pa.C.S. § 1204.