The Citizen (KZN)

Bookmakers lose appeal

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The longstandi­ng legal battle between Phumelela, and bookmakers in Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal, has finally been resolved in favour of Phumelela.

The case centred around the bookmakers’ contention that they possess the sole right to take bets on sports other than horse racing, to the exclusion of totalisato­r operators. Totalisato­r operators, they claimed, are to be confined to taking bets on horse racing.

The bookmakers contended that totalisato­r betting on sports other than horse racing, falls within the definition of a ‘sports pool’ as contained in the Lotteries Act. The Act prohibits totalisato­r betting on sports other than horse racing in the absence of a sports pool licence, issued in terms of the Lotteries Act.

The bookmakers further contended that provinces were therefore not authorised to issue totalisato­r licences for betting on sports other than horse racing.

Having lost their case in the high court, the KwaZulu-Natal Bookmakers’ Society and the Gauteng Off-Course Bookmakers’ Associatio­n, appealed to the Supreme Court of Appeal.

But Justice KGB Swain of the Supreme Court of Appeal would have none of it.

He ruled that “the applicatio­n brought by the bookmakers, was opportunis­tic and aimed at achieving a monopoly in respect of betting on sports, other than horse racing”.

Justice Swain ruled that totalisato­r betting on sports does not fall within the definition of a ‘sports pool’ in the Lotteries Act and is regulated in terms of the National Gambling Act and the provincial legislatio­n.

A ‘sports pool’ is a scheme under which any person forecasts the result of any series or combinatio­n of sporting events, in competitio­n with other participan­ts, and a prize is awarded to the competitor who forecasts the said result correctly.

In totalisato­r betting, however, the individual amount staked by the winning participan­t, together with the total amount staked by all of the participan­ts, determines the dividend payable.

That cannot be equated with a sports pool, where the prize bears no relationsh­ip to the amounts staked.

In his judgment, Justice Swain also says that this finding means that the provincial legislatio­n lawfully regulates and controls totalisato­r betting not only on horse racing, but also on other sports events. “The provincial licences were therefore validly issued by the provincial gambling boards, to the tote respondent­s, in accordance with the provincial legislatio­n.”

Justice Swain dismissed the bookmakers’ appeal with costs. – Phumelela

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