Orlando Sentinel

Greyhound kennel owner sues over racing ban

Wants judge to order Florida to pay damages for property value loss

- By News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E — Alleging an unconstitu­tional “taking” of property, a greyhound-kennel owner has filed a lawsuit against the state because of a dog racing ban approved by voters in November.

Christophe­r D’Arcy, owner of D’Arcy Kennel LLC in St. Petersburg, wants a judge to order the state to pay damages for the loss of value of his property, including racing dogs that the lawsuit said could previously be sold for up to $50,000.

Voters in November approved a constituti­onal amendment, known as Amendment 13, that will shut down Florida’s decades-old greyhound racing industry by a Dec. 31, 2020, deadline.

“The state of Florida, through Amendment 13, imposed such a severe burden on the private property rights of plaintiffs (D’Arcy and the kennel) that it amounts to a per se taking that completely deprives plaintiffs of all economical­ly beneficial use of the property,” said the lawsuit, filed in Leon County circuit court. “The adoption of Amendment 13 is the functional equivalent to a physical taking in which the state of Florida has ousted the plaintiffs from their domain and from any benefit from their property.”

The lawsuit was announced Monday by the Florida Greyhound Associatio­n, an industry group that fought the constituti­onal amendment, which came after years of calls by animalrigh­ts groups to ban dog racing in the state. The measure easily passed, with support of 69 percent of the voters.

The Florida Greyhound Associatio­n went to court last year in an unsuccessf­ul attempt to keep the constituti­onal amendment off the ballot. The new lawsuit does not try to overturn the amendment but seeks damages under the Florida Constituti­on and the U.S. Constituti­on. It makes a claim for what is known as “inverse condemnati­on” and contends that the amendment was a “taking” of property without compensati­on.

“People are probably more familiar with building a road and eminent domain, but this is the same thing. It’s just called inverse condemnati­on,” said former appeals-court Judge Paul Hawkes, who along with former Lt. Gov. Jeff Kottkamp, is representi­ng D’Arcy. “They don’t actually take the property, but they take away

the value of the property because they take away the effective use of the property.”

While greyhound tracks face a Dec. 31, 2020, deadline for ending racing, they were able to stop racing at the beginning of this year. In the past, tracks had been required to run races to offer morelucrat­ive types of gambling, such as card rooms.

Carey Theil, executive director of the group GREY2K USA, which helped lead efforts to pass the constituti­onal amendment, said 11 tracks had racing when the amendment passed. He said seven continue to run races, while four have stopped.

The D’Arcy lawsuit comes about six years after a state appeals court sided with a Northwest Florida farmer in an inverse-condemnati­on case that stemmed from a 2002 constituti­onal amendment that banned gestation crates for pigs, a measure that became widely known as the “pregnant pig” amendment.

A panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal upheld a Jackson County circuit judge’s ruling that awarded more than $500,000 to farmer Stephen Basford, who reportedly was one of only two Florida farmers who used the controvers­ial pig-farming technique that was banned by the constituti­onal amendment. The appeals-court majority noted that its decision was narrowly tailored to the issues in the Basford case, such as barns, wells and a feed mill not being able to be used for other purposes.

Christine Dorchak, president and general counsel of GREY2K USA, disputed the arguments raised in the D’Arcy lawsuit and said the kennel owner is not owed compensati­on.

“No property is taken under Amendment 13, and this humane law simply phases out an industry that is cruel and inhumane,” Dorchak said in an emailed statement. “Unlike the pig farmer who could no longer use his gestation crates at all, the track land and the dogs themselves retain value.”

In announcing the lawsuit, however, the Florida Greyhound Associatio­n said issues raised by D’Arcy also could apply to other members of the associatio­n.

“Our goal would be to sit down with the state and work out some kind of system that would fairly compensate these people,” Hawkes said. “They were lawfully engaged in a business that Florida used to depend on critically to fund their budget.”

News Service senior writer Dara Kam contribute­d to this story.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON/AP ?? Florida greyhound racing will soon hit the finish line as the sport suffered a rout at the ballot box. The state voted 69 to 31 percent Nov. 6, 2018 to pass Amendment 13, which bans the sport beginning on Jan. 1, 2021.
BRYNN ANDERSON/AP Florida greyhound racing will soon hit the finish line as the sport suffered a rout at the ballot box. The state voted 69 to 31 percent Nov. 6, 2018 to pass Amendment 13, which bans the sport beginning on Jan. 1, 2021.

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