NCAA v. Governor of New Jersey ( 2016 )


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  •                                         PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    Nos. 14-4546, 14-4568, and 14-4569
    _____________
    NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION,
    an unincorporated association; NATIONAL BASKETBALL
    ASSOCIATION, a joint venture; NATIONAL FOOTBALL
    LEAGUE, an unincorporated association; NATIONAL
    HOCKEY LEAGUE, an unincorporated association; OFFICE
    OF THE COMMISSIONER OF BASEBALL, an
    unincorporated association doing business as MAJOR
    LEAGUE BASEBALL
    v.
    GOVERNOR OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY; DAVID
    L. REBUCK, Director of the New Jersey Division of Gaming
    Enforcement and Assistant Attorney General of the State of
    New Jersey; FRANK ZANZUCCKI, Executive Director of
    the New Jersey Racing Commission; NEW JERSEY
    THOROUGHBRED HORSEMEN’S ASSOCIATION, INC;
    NEW JERSEY SPORTS & EXPOSITION AUTHORITY
    STEPHEN M. SWEENEY, President of the New Jersey
    Senate; VINCENT PRIETO, Speaker of the New Jersey
    General Assembly (Intervenors in District Court)
    Appellants in 14-4568
    Governor of New Jersey; David L. Rebuck; Frank Zanzuccki,
    Appellants in 14-4546
    New Jersey Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association, Inc.,
    Appellant in 14-4569
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    (District Court No.: 3-14-cv-06450)
    District Judge: Honorable Michael A. Shipp
    Argued on March 17, 2015 before Merits Panel
    Court Ordered Rehearing En Banc on October 14, 2015
    Argued En Banc on February 17, 2016
    Before: AMBRO, FUENTES, SMITH, FISHER, JORDAN,
    HARDIMAN, GREENAWAY JR., VANASKIE, KRAUSE,
    RESTREPO, RENDELL, and BARRY, Circuit Judges
    2
    (Opinion filed: August 9, 2016)
    John J. Hoffman, Esquire
    Acting Attorney General of the State of New Jersey
    Jeffrey S. Jacobson, Esquire
    Stuart M. Feinblatt, Esquire
    Peter M. Slocum, Esquire
    Office of Attorney General of New Jersey
    25 Market Street
    Trenton, NJ 08625
    Matthew M. Hoffman, Esquire
    Gibson Dunn
    333 South Grand Avenue
    Los Angeles, CA 90071
    Ashley E. Johnson, Esquire
    Gibson Dunn
    2100 McKinney Avenue
    Suite 1100
    Dallas, TX 75201
    Theodore B. Olson, Esquire (ARGUED)
    Matthew D. McGill, Esquire
    Gibson Dunn
    1050 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.
    9th Floor
    Washington, DC 20036
    Counsel for Appellants Governor of the State of
    New Jersey, David L. Rebuck, and Frank
    Zanzuccki
    3
    Elliott M. Berman, Esquire
    McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpenter
    100 Mulberry Street
    Three Gateway Center
    Newark, NJ 07102
    Ronald J. Riccio, Esquire (ARGUED)
    Edward A. Hartnett, Esquire
    McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpenter
    1300 Mount Kemble Avenue
    P.O. Box 2075
    Morristown, NJ 07962
    Counsel for Appellant New Jersey
    Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association
    Michael R. Griffinger, Esquire
    Thomas R. Valen, Esquire
    Jennifer A. Hradil, Esquire
    Gibbons P.C.
    One Gateway Center
    Newark, New Jersey 07102
    Counsel for Appellants Stephen M. Sweeney
    and Vincent Prieto
    4
    Paul D. Clement, Esquire (ARGUED)
    Erin Murphy, Esquire
    Bancroft PLLC
    1919 M Street, N.W.
    Suite 470
    Washington, DC 20036
    Jeffrey A. Mishkin, Esquire
    Anthony J. Dreyer, Esquire
    Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher, & Flom
    4 Times Square
    New York, NY 10036
    William J. O’Shaughnessy, Esquire
    Richard Hernandez, Esquire
    McCarter & English
    100 Mulberry Street
    Four Gateway Center, 14th Floor
    Newark, NJ 07102
    Counsel for Appellees National Collegiate
    Athletic Association; National Basketball
    Association; National Football League;
    National Hockey League; Office of the
    Commissioner of Baseball
    Joyce R. Branda, Esquire
    5
    Acting Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division
    Paul J. Fishman, Esquire (ARGUED)
    United States Attorney of the District of New Jersey
    Scott R. McIntosh, Esquire
    Peter J. Phipps, Esquire
    Attorneys, Civil Division
    U.S. Department of Justice
    P.O. Box 883
    Washington, DC 20044
    Counsel for Amicus United States of America
    OPINION
    RENDELL, Circuit Judge:
    The issue presented before the en banc court is
    whether SB 2460, which the New Jersey Legislature enacted
    in 2014 to partially repeal certain prohibitions on sports
    gambling (the “2014 Law”), violates federal law. 2014 N.J.
    Sess. Law Serv. Ch. 62, codified at N.J. Stat. Ann. §§ 5:12A-
    7 to -9. The District Court held that the 2014 Law violates
    the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act
    (“PASPA”), 28 U.S.C. §§ 3701-3704. A panel of this Court
    affirmed this ruling in a divided opinion which was
    subsequently vacated upon the grant of the Petition for
    Rehearing en banc. We now hold that the District Court
    correctly ruled that because PASPA, by its terms, prohibits
    states from authorizing by law sports gambling, and because
    the 2014 Law does exactly that, the 2014 Law violates federal
    6
    law. We also hold that we correctly ruled in Christie I that
    PASPA does not commandeer the states in a way that runs
    afoul of the Constitution.
    I.   Background
    Congress passed PASPA in 1992 to prohibit state-
    sanctioned sports gambling. PASPA provides:
    It shall be unlawful for—
    (1) a governmental entity to
    sponsor,       operate,        advertise,
    promote, license, or authorize by
    law or compact, or
    (2) a person to sponsor, operate,
    advertise, or promote,      pursuant to
    the law or compact of a governmental
    entity,a lottery, sweepstakes, or other
    betting, gambling, or wagering scheme
    based . . . on one or more competitive
    games in which amateur or professional
    athletes participate, or are intended to
    participate, or on one or more
    performances of such athletes in such
    games.
    28 U.S.C. § 3702 (emphasis added).           PASPA defines
    “governmental entity” to include states and their political
    subdivisions. 
    Id. § 3701(2).
    It includes a remedial provision
    that permits any sports league whose games are or will be the
    subject of sports gambling to bring an action to enjoin the
    gambling. 
    Id. § 3703.
    7
    Congress included in PASPA exceptions for state-
    sponsored sports wagering in Nevada and sports lotteries in
    Oregon and Delaware, and also an exception for New Jersey
    but only if New Jersey were to enact a sports gambling
    scheme within one year of PASPA’s enactment.               
    Id. § 3704(a).
    New Jersey did not do so, and thus the PASPA
    exception expired. Notably, sports gambling was prohibited
    in New Jersey for many years by statute and by the New
    Jersey Constitution. See, e.g., N.J. Const. Art. IV § VII ¶ 2;
    N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:37-2; N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2A:40-1. In
    2010, however, the New Jersey Legislature held public
    hearings on the advisability of allowing sports gambling.
    These hearings included testimony that sports gambling
    would generate revenues for New Jersey’s struggling casinos
    and racetracks. In 2011, the Legislature held a referendum
    asking New Jersey voters whether sports gambling should be
    permitted, and sixty-four percent voted in favor of amending
    the New Jersey Constitution to permit sports gambling. The
    constitutional amendment provided:
    It shall also be lawful for the Legislature
    to authorize by law wagering at casinos
    or gambling houses in Atlantic City on
    the results of any professional, college,
    or amateur sport or athletic event, except
    that wagering shall not be permitted on a
    college sport or athletic event that takes
    place in New Jersey or on a sport or
    athletic event in which any New Jersey
    college team participates regardless of
    where the event takes place . . . .
    8
    N.J. Const. Art. IV, § VII, ¶ 2(D). The amendment thus
    permitted the New Jersey Legislature to “authorize by law”
    sports “wagering at casinos or gambling houses in Atlantic
    City,” except that wagering was not permitted on New Jersey
    college teams or on any collegiate event occurring in New
    Jersey. An additional section of the amendment permitted the
    Legislature to “authorize by law” sports “wagering at current
    or former running and harness horse racetracks,” subject to
    the same restrictions regarding New Jersey college teams and
    collegiate events occurring in New Jersey. 
    Id. ¶ 2(F).
    After    voters     approved   the    sports-wagering
    constitutional amendment, the New Jersey Legislature
    enacted the Sports Wagering Act in 2012 (“2012 Law”),
    which provided for regulated sports wagering at New Jersey’s
    casinos and racetracks. N.J. Stat. Ann. §§ 5:12A-1 et seq.
    (2012).     The 2012 Law established a comprehensive
    regulatory scheme, requiring licenses for operators and
    individual employees, extensive documentation, minimum
    cash reserves, and Division of Gaming Enforcement access to
    security and surveillance systems.
    Five sports leagues1 sued to enjoin the 2012 Law as
    violative of PASPA.2 The New Jersey Parties did not dispute
    1
    The sports leagues were the National Collegiate
    Athletic Association, National Football League, National
    Basketball Association, National Hockey League, and the
    Office of the Commissioner of Baseball, doing business as
    Major League Baseball (collectively, the “Leagues”).
    2
    The Leagues named as defendants Christopher J.
    Christie, the Governor of the State of New Jersey; David L.
    9
    that the 2012 Law violated PASPA, but urged instead that
    PASPA was unconstitutional under the anti-commandeering
    doctrine.    The District Court held that PASPA was
    constitutional and enjoined implementation of the 2012 Law.
    The New Jersey Parties appealed, and we affirmed in
    National Collegiate Athletic Ass’n v. Governor of New
    Jersey, 
    730 F.3d 208
    (3d Cir. 2013) (Christie I).
    In Christie I, we rejected the New Jersey Parties’
    argument      that    PASPA      was    unconstitutional     by
    commandeering New Jersey’s legislative process. In doing
    so, we stated that “[n]othing in [PASPA’s] words requires
    that the states keep any law in place. All that is prohibited is
    the issuance of gambling ‘license[s]’ or the affirmative
    ‘authoriz[ation] by law’ of gambling schemes.” 
    Id. at 232
    Rebuck, the Director of the New Jersey Division of Gaming
    Enforcement and Assistant Attorney General of the State of
    New Jersey; and Frank Zanzuccki, Executive Director of the
    New Jersey Racing Commission.               The New Jersey
    Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association, Inc. (“NJTHA”)
    intervened as a defendant, as did Stephen M. Sweeney,
    President of the New Jersey Senate, and Sheila Y. Oliver,
    Speaker of the New Jersey General Assembly (“State
    Legislators”). We collectively refer to these parties as the
    “New Jersey Parties.” In the present case, the New Jersey
    Parties are the same, with some exceptions. NJTHA was
    named as a defendant (i.e., it did not intervene), as was the
    New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority; the latter is not
    participating in this appeal. Additionally, Vincent Prieto, not
    Sheila Y. Oliver, is now the Speaker of the General
    Assembly.
    10
    (alterations in original). The New Jersey Parties had urged
    that PASPA commandeered the state because it prohibited the
    repeal of New Jersey’s prohibitions on sports gambling; they
    reasoned that repealing a statute barring an activity would be
    equivalent to authorizing the activity, and “authorizing” was
    not allowed by PASPA.           We rejected that argument,
    observing that “PASPA speaks only of ‘authorizing by law’ a
    sports gambling scheme,” and “[w]e [did] not see how having
    no law in place governing sports wagering is the same as
    authorizing it by law.” 
    Id. (emphasis in
    original). We further
    emphasized that “the lack of an affirmative prohibition of an
    activity does not mean it is affirmatively authorized by law.
    The right to do that which is not prohibited derives not from
    the authority of the state but from the inherent rights of the
    people.” 
    Id. (emphasis in
    original). In short, we concluded
    that the New Jersey Parties’ argument rested on a “false
    equivalence between repeal and authorization.” 
    Id. at 233.
    The New Jersey Parties appealed to the Supreme Court of the
    United States, which denied certiorari.
    Undeterred, in 2014, the Legislature passed the 2014
    Law, SB 2460, which provided in part:
    [A]ny rules and regulations that may
    require or authorize any State agency to
    license, authorize, permit or otherwise
    take action to allow any person to engage
    in the placement or acceptance of any
    wager on any professional, collegiate, or
    amateur sport contest or athletic event, or
    that prohibit participation in or operation
    of a pool that accepts such wagers, are
    repealed to the extent they apply or may
    11
    be construed to apply at a casino or
    gambling house operating in this State in
    Atlantic City or a running or harness
    horse racetrack in this State, to the
    placement and acceptance of wagers on
    professional, collegiate, or amateur sport
    contests or athletic events . . . .
    N.J. Stat. Ann. § 5:12A-7. The 2014 Law specifically
    prohibited wagering on New Jersey college teams’
    competitions and on any collegiate competition occurring in
    New Jersey, and it limited sports wagering to “persons 21
    years of age or older situated at such location[s],” namely
    casinos and racetracks. 
    Id. II. Procedural
    History and Parties’ Arguments
    The Leagues filed suit to enjoin the New Jersey Parties
    from giving effect to the 2014 Law. The District Court held
    that the 2014 Law violates PASPA, granted summary
    judgment in favor of the Leagues, and issued a permanent
    injunction against the Governor of New Jersey, the Director
    of the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement, and the
    Executive Director of the New Jersey Racing Commission
    (collectively, the “New Jersey Enjoined Parties”).3 The
    3
    In the District Court, the New Jersey Enjoined Parties
    urged that the Eleventh Amendment gave them immunity
    such that they could not be sued in an action challenging the
    2014 Law. The District Court rejected this argument, as do
    we, and we note that, while the issue was briefed, the New
    Jersey Enjoined Parties did not press—or even mention—this
    issue at oral argument before either the merits panel or the en
    banc court. They contend that, because the 2014 Law is a
    12
    self-executing repeal that requires no action from them or any
    other state official, they are immune from suit. This
    argument fails. The New Jersey Enjoined Parties are subject
    to suit under the Ex parte Young exception to Eleventh
    Amendment immunity, which “permit[s] the federal courts to
    vindicate federal rights and hold state officials responsible to
    ‘the supreme authority of the United States.’” Pennhurst
    State Sch. & Hosp. v. Halderman, 
    465 U.S. 89
    , 105 (1984)
    (quoting Ex parte Young, 
    209 U.S. 123
    , 160 (1908)). The
    contrary argument of the New Jersey Enjoined Parties relies
    on a false premise that execution of the 2014 Law involves no
    affirmative ultra vires act by state officials. But the 2014
    Law is far from passive. As we conclude at length, the 2014
    Law establishes a regulatory regime that authorizes wagering
    on sports in limited locations for particular persons, so it is an
    affirmative act by New Jersey state officials to authorize by
    law sports betting, in violation of PASPA. As such,
    implementation of the law falls squarely within the Ex parte
    Young exception to sovereign immunity because it is “simply
    an illegal act upon the part of a state official in attempting, by
    the use of the name of the state, to enforce a legislative
    enactment which is void because” it is contrary to federal 
    law. 209 U.S. at 159
    . “In determining whether the doctrine of Ex
    parte Young avoids an Eleventh Amendment bar to suit, a
    court need only conduct a straightforward inquiry into
    whether the complaint alleges an ongoing violation of federal
    law and seeks relief properly characterized as prospective.”
    Verizon Maryland, Inc. v. Pub. Serv. Comm’n of Maryland,
    
    535 U.S. 635
    , 645 (2002) (internal quotation marks and
    alterations omitted). That is precisely the situation we face in
    this case. We therefore need not address the unsettled
    question of whether an Ex parte Young exception must exist
    13
    District Court interpreted Christie I as holding that PASPA
    offers two choices to states: maintaining prohibitions on
    sports gambling or completely repealing them. It reasoned
    that the 2014 Law runs afoul of PASPA because the 2014
    Law is a partial repeal that necessarily results in sports
    wagering with the State’s imprimatur. The New Jersey
    Parties appealed.
    On appeal, the New Jersey Parties argue that the 2014
    Law does not constitute an authorization in violation of
    PASPA and it is consistent with Christie I because the New
    Jersey Legislature effected a repealer as Christie I specifically
    permitted.
    The Leagues urge that the 2014 Law violates PASPA
    because it “authorizes by law” sports wagering and also
    impermissibly “licenses” the activity by confining the repeal
    of gambling prohibitions to licensed gambling facilities and
    thus, in effect, enlarging the terms of existing gaming
    licenses. The United States submitted an amicus brief in
    support of the Leagues.
    A panel of this Court affirmed in a divided opinion,
    which was subsequently vacated. Because we, sitting en
    banc, essentially agree with the reasoning of the panel
    majority’s opinion, we incorporate much of it verbatim in this
    opinion.
    in the case of a truly self-executing law because the 2014 Law
    is not one.
    14
    III.     Analysis4
    A. The 2014 Law Violates PASPA
    As a preliminary matter, we acknowledge the 2014
    Law’s salutary purpose in attempting to legalize sports
    gambling to revive its troubled casino and racetrack
    industries. The New Jersey Assembly Gaming and Tourism
    Committee chairman stated, in regard to the 2014 Law, that
    “[w]e want to give the racetracks a shot in the arm. We want
    to help Atlantic City. We want to do something for the
    gaming business in the state of New Jersey, which has been
    under tremendous duress . . . .” (App. 91.) New Jersey State
    Senator Ray Lesniak, a sponsor of the law, has likewise stated
    that “[s]ports betting will be a lifeline to the casinos, putting
    people to work and generating economic activity in a growth
    industry.” (App. 94.) And New Jersey State Senator Joseph
    Kyrillos stated that “New Jersey’s continued prohibition on
    sports betting at our casinos and racetracks is contrary to our
    interest of supporting employers that provide tens of
    thousands of jobs and add billions to our state’s economy”
    and that “[s]ports betting will help set New Jersey’s wagering
    facilities apart from the competition and strengthen
    Monmouth Park and our struggling casino industry.” (App.
    138.) PASPA has clearly stymied New Jersey’s attempts to
    “We review a district court’s grant of summary
    4
    judgment de novo . . . .” Viera v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., 
    642 F.3d 407
    , 413 (3d Cir. 2011). “We review a district court’s
    grant of a permanent injunction for abuse of discretion.”
    Meyer v. CUNA Mut. Ins. Soc’y, 
    648 F.3d 154
    , 162 (3d Cir.
    2011).
    15
    revive its casinos and racetracks and provide jobs for its
    workforce.
    Moreover, PASPA is not without its critics, even aside
    from its economic impact. It has been criticized for
    prohibiting an activity, i.e., sports gambling, that its critics
    view as neither immoral nor dangerous. It has also been
    criticized for encouraging the spread of illegal sports
    gambling and for making it easier to fix games, since it
    precludes the transparency that accompanies legal activities.
    Simply put, “[w]e are cognizant that certain questions related
    to this case—whether gambling on sporting events is harmful
    to the games’ integrity and whether states should be permitted
    to license and profit from the activity—engender strong
    views.” Christie 
    I, 730 F.3d at 215
    . While PASPA’s
    provisions and its reach are controversial (and, some might
    say, unwise), “we are not asked to judge the wisdom of
    PASPA” and “[i]t is not our place to usurp Congress’ role
    simply because PASPA may have become an unpopular law.”
    
    Id. at 215,
    241. We echo Christie I in noting that “New
    Jersey and any other state that may wish to legalize gambling
    on sports . . . are not left without redress. Just as PASPA
    once gave New Jersey preferential treatment in the context of
    gambling on sports, Congress may again choose to do so
    or . . . may choose to undo PASPA altogether.” 
    Id. at 240-41.
    Unless that happens, however, we are duty-bound to interpret
    the text of the law as Congress wrote it.
    We now turn to the primary question before us:
    whether the 2014 Law violates PASPA. We hold that it does.
    Under PASPA, it shall be unlawful for “a governmental entity
    to sponsor, operate, advertise, promote, license, or authorize
    by law or compact” sports gambling. 28 U.S.C. § 3702(1).
    16
    We conclude that the 2014 Law violates PASPA because it
    authorizes by law sports gambling.
    First, the 2014 Law authorizes casinos and racetracks
    to operate sports gambling while other laws prohibit sports
    gambling by all other entities. Without the 2014 Law, the
    sports gambling prohibitions would apply to casinos and
    racetracks. Appellants urge that the 2014 Law does not
    provide authority for sports gambling because we previously
    held that “[t]he right to do that which is not prohibited derives
    not from the authority of the state but from the inherent rights
    of the people” and that “[w]e do not see how having no law in
    place governing sports wagering is the same as authorizing it
    by law.” Christie 
    I, 730 F.3d at 232
    . But this is not a
    situation where there are no laws governing sports gambling
    in New Jersey. Absent the 2014 Law, New Jersey’s myriad
    laws prohibiting sports gambling would apply to the casinos
    and racetracks.        Thus, the 2014 Law provides the
    authorization for conduct that is otherwise clearly and
    completely legally prohibited.
    Second, the 2014 Law authorizes sports gambling by
    selectively dictating where sports gambling may occur, who
    may place bets in such gambling, and which athletic contests
    are permissible subjects for such gambling. Under the 2014
    Law, New Jersey’s sports gambling prohibitions are
    specifically removed from casinos, gambling houses, and
    horse racetracks as long as the bettors are people age 21 or
    over, and as long as there are no bets on either New Jersey
    college teams or collegiate competitions occurring in New
    Jersey. The word “authorize” means, inter alia, “[t]o
    empower; to give a right or authority to act,” or “[t]o permit a
    thing to be done in the future.” Black’s Law Dictionary 133
    17
    (6th ed. 1990).5 The 2014 Law allows casinos and racetracks
    and their patrons to engage, under enumerated circumstances,
    in conduct that other businesses and their patrons cannot do.
    That selectiveness constitutes specific permission and
    empowerment.
    Appellants urge that because the 2014 Law is only a
    “repeal” removing prohibitions against sports gambling, it is
    not an “affirmative authorization” under Christie I. To the
    extent that in Christie I we took the position that a repeal
    cannot constitute an authorization, we now reject that
    reasoning. Moreover, we do not adopt the District Court’s
    view that the options available to a state are limited to two.
    Neither of these propositions were necessary to their
    respective rulings and were, in essence, dicta. Furthermore,
    our discussion of partial versus total repeals is similarly
    unnecessary to determining the 2014 Law’s legality because
    the question presented here is straightforward—i.e., what
    does the law do—and does not turn on the way in which the
    state has enacted its directive.
    The presence of the word “repeal” does not prevent us
    from examining what the provision actually does, and the
    Legislature’s use of the term does not change that the 2014
    Law selectively grants permission to certain entities to engage
    in sports gambling.         New Jersey’s sports gambling
    prohibitions remain, and no one may engage in such conduct
    except those singled out in the 2014 Law. While artfully
    couched in terms of a repealer, the 2014 Law essentially
    5
    We cite the version of Black’s Law Dictionary that
    was current in 1992, the year PASPA was passed.
    18
    provides that, notwithstanding any other prohibition by law,
    casinos and racetracks shall hereafter be permitted to have
    sports gambling. This is an authorization.
    Third, the exception in PASPA for New Jersey, which
    the State did not take advantage of before the one-year time
    limit expired, is remarkably similar to the 2014 Law. The
    exception states that PASPA does not apply to “a betting,
    gambling, or wagering scheme . . . conducted exclusively in
    casinos . . . , but only to the extent that . . . any commercial
    casino gaming scheme was in operation . . . throughout the
    10-year period” before PASPA was enacted. 28 U.S.C.
    § 3704(a)(3)(B). The exception would have permitted sports
    gambling at New Jersey’s casinos, which is just what the
    2014 Law does. We can easily infer that, by explicitly
    excepting a scheme of sports gambling in New Jersey’s
    casinos from PASPA’s prohibitions, Congress intended that
    such a scheme would violate PASPA. If Congress had not
    perceived that sports gambling in New Jersey’s casinos would
    violate PASPA, then it would not have needed to insert the
    New Jersey exception. In other words, if sports gambling in
    New Jersey’s casinos does not violate PASPA, then PASPA’s
    one-year exception for New Jersey would have been
    superfluous. We will not read statutory provisions to be
    surplusage. See Marx v. Gen. Revenue Corp., 
    133 S. Ct. 1166
    , 1178 (2013) (“[T]he canon against surplusage is
    strongest when an interpretation would render superfluous
    another part of the same statutory scheme.”). In order to
    avoid rendering the New Jersey exception surplusage, we
    19
    must read the 2014 Law as authorizing a scheme that clearly
    violates PASPA.6
    As support for their argument that the 2014 Law does
    not violate PASPA, Appellants cite the 2014 Law’s
    construction provision, which provides that “[t]he provisions
    of this act . . . are not intended and shall not be construed as
    causing the State to sponsor, operate, advertise, promote,
    license, or authorize by law or compact” sports wagering.
    N.J. Stat. Ann. § 5:12A-8.          This conveniently mirrors
    PASPA’s language providing that states may not “sponsor,
    operate, advertise, promote, license, or authorize by law or
    compact” sports wagering. 28 U.S.C. § 3702(1).
    The construction provision does not save the 2014
    Law. States may not use clever drafting or mandatory
    construction provisions to escape the supremacy of federal
    law. Cf. Haywood v. Drown, 
    556 U.S. 729
    , 742 (2009)
    (“[T]he Supremacy Clause cannot be evaded by formalism.”);
    Howlett ex rel. Howlett v. Rose, 
    496 U.S. 356
    , 382-83 (1990)
    (“[t]he force of the Supremacy Clause is not so weak that it
    can be evaded by mere mention of” a particular word). In the
    same vein, the New Jersey Legislature cannot use a targeted
    construction provision to limit the reach of PASPA or to
    dictate to a court a construction that would limit that reach.
    6
    Granted, the 2014 Law applies to horse racetracks as
    well as casinos, while the PASPA exception for New Jersey
    refers only to casinos, but that does not change the
    significance of the New Jersey exception because it refers to
    gambling in places that already allow gambling, and the
    racetracks fall within that rubric.
    20
    The 2014 Law violates PASPA, and the construction
    provision cannot alter that fact.
    Appellants also draw a comparison between the 2014
    Law and the 2012 Law, which involved a broad regulatory
    scheme, as evidence that the 2014 Law does not violate
    PASPA. It is true that the 2014 Law does not set forth a
    comprehensive scheme or provide for a state regulatory role,
    as the 2012 Law did. However, PASPA does not limit its
    reach to active state involvement or extensive regulation of
    sports gambling. It prohibits a range of state activity, the
    least intrusive of which is “authorization” by law of sports
    gambling.
    We conclude that the 2014 Law violates PASPA
    because it authorizes by law sports gambling.7
    7
    Because we conclude that the 2014 Law authorizes
    by law sports gambling, we need not address the argument
    made by Appellees and Amicus that the 2014 Law also
    licenses sports gambling by permitting only those entities that
    already have gambling licenses or recently had such licenses
    to conduct sports gambling operations. We also reject the
    argument of the State Legislators and the NJTHA that, to the
    extent that any aspect of the 2014 Law violates PASPA, we
    should apply the 2014 Law’s severability clause. Citing the
    broadly-worded severability provision of N.J. Stat. Ann. §
    5:12A-9, they argue that the District Court should have saved
    the 2014 Law by severing the most objectionable parts. For
    example, the NJTHA urges that, “if the Court . . . concludes
    that a state decision to prohibit persons under 21 from making
    sports bets is [an] authorization by law for that activity by
    persons over 21, the age limitation could be severed, leaving
    21
    it to the sports gambling operators . . . to impose a reasonable
    age limit.” NJTHA’s Reply Br. at 23. It also argues that, “if
    the Court concludes that a state decision to prohibit . . . sports
    betting on some games is [an] authorization by law as to
    betting on all other games, this limitation could be severed,”
    and that “the Court can sever the Law’s provision dealing
    with casinos from its provision dealing with racetracks.” 
    Id. at 24.
    Lifting the age limitation, permitting betting on New
    Jersey schools’ games, or limiting the authorization to an
    even narrower category of venues, however, would not alter
    our conclusion that the 2014 Law authorizes by law sports
    betting. “The standard for determining the severability of an
    unconstitutional provision is well established: Unless it is
    evident that the Legislature would not have enacted those
    provisions which are within its power, independently of that
    which is not, the invalid part may be dropped if what is left is
    fully operative as a law.” Alaska Airlines, Inc. v. Brock, 
    480 U.S. 678
    , 684 (1987) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Because New Jersey’s legislature, in both the 2012 Law and
    the 2014 Law, was loath to permit sports betting outside of
    gambling establishments, we cannot reasonably say that it
    would have enacted a repeal of its gambling laws without the
    age restriction, without the restriction on gambling on New
    Jersey-based college sports, and without the geographic
    restriction to casinos and racetracks. We thus need not
    speculate about other possible forms that severance might
    take.
    22
    B. PASPA Does Not Impermissibly Commandeer the
    States
    Appellants expend significant effort in this appeal
    revisiting our conclusion in Christie I that PASPA does not
    unconstitutionally commandeer the states. They root this
    effort in the District Court’s erroneous conclusion that
    PASPA presents states with a binary choice—either maintain
    a complete prohibition on sports wagering or wholly repeal
    state prohibitions. In Christie I, we engaged in a lengthy
    discussion to rebut Appellants’ assertion that if we conclude
    that New Jersey’s repeal of its prohibition is not permitted by
    PASPA, then it has unconstitutionally commandeered New
    Jersey. In so doing, we discussed the Supreme Court’s clear
    case law on commandeering. Our prior conclusion that
    PASPA does not run afoul of anti-commandeering principles
    remains sound despite Appellants’ attempt to call it into
    question using the 2014 Law as an exemplar.
    1. Anti-Commandeering Jurisprudence
    As we noted in Christie I, the Supreme Court’s anti-
    commandeering principle rests on the conclusion that
    “Congress ‘lacks the power directly to compel the States to
    require or prohibit’ acts which Congress itself may require or
    prohibit.” Christie 
    I, 730 F.3d at 227
    (quoting New York v.
    United States, 
    505 U.S. 144
    , 166 (1992)). In our prior survey
    of the anti-commandeering case law in Christie I, we grouped
    four commandeering cases upholding the federal laws at issue
    into two categories: (1) permissible regulation in a pre-
    emptible field, Hodel v. Virginia Surface Min. & Reclamation
    Ass’n, Inc., 
    452 U.S. 264
    (1981), and F.E.R.C. v. Mississippi,
    
    456 U.S. 742
    (1982); and (2) prohibitions on state action,
    23
    South Carolina v. Baker, 
    485 U.S. 505
    (1988) and Reno v.
    Condon, 
    528 U.S. 141
    (2000). The Supreme Court has struck
    down federal laws on anti-commandeering grounds in only
    two cases, New York v. United States and Printz v. United
    States, 
    521 U.S. 898
    (1997). We summarize our prior review
    below.
    First, congressional action in passing laws in
    otherwise pre-emptible fields has withstood attack in cases
    where the states were not compelled to enact laws or
    implement federal statutes or regulatory programs
    themselves. In Hodel, the Supreme Court upheld the
    constitutionality of a law that imposed federal standards for
    coal mining. The law left states a choice. A state could
    “assume permanent regulatory authority over . . . surface coal
    mining operations” and “submit a proposed permanent
    program” that “demonstrate[s] that the state legislature has
    enacted laws implementing the environmental protection
    standards . . . and that the State has the administrative and
    technical ability to enforce the[] standards.” 
    Hodel, 452 U.S. at 271
    . However, if a state chose not to assume regulatory
    authority, the federal government would “administer[] the Act
    within that State and continue[] as such unless and until a
    ‘state program’ [wa]s approved.” 
    Id. at 272.
    As we
    described in Christie I:
    The Supreme Court upheld the provisions,
    noting that they neither compelled the states to
    adopt the federal standards, nor required them
    “to expend any state funds,” nor coerced them
    into “participat[ing] in the federal regulatory
    program in any manner whatsoever.” [Hodel,
    452 U.S.] at 288. The Court further concluded
    24
    that Congress could have chosen to completely
    preempt the field by simply assuming oversight
    of the regulations itself. 
    Id. It thus
    held that the
    Tenth Amendment posed no obstacle to a
    system by which Congress “chose to allow the
    States a regulatory role.” 
    Id. at 290.
    As the
    Court later characterized Hodel, the scheme
    there did not violate the anti-commandeering
    principle because it “merely made compliance
    with federal standards a precondition to
    continued state regulation in an otherwise pre-
    empted field.” Printz v. United States, 
    521 U.S. 898
    , 926 (1997).
    Christie 
    I, 730 F.3d at 227
    –28. The Supreme Court’s opinion
    in F.E.R.C. v. Mississippi the following year confirmed its
    view that a law does not unconstitutionally commandeer the
    states when the law does not impose federal requirements on
    the states, but leaves states the choice to decline to implement
    federal standards. 
    456 U.S. 742
    , 767–68 (upholding a
    provision that required state utility companies to expend state
    resources to “consider” enacting federal standards, but did not
    require states to enact those standards).
    Second, the Supreme Court has found Congress’s
    prohibition of certain state actions to not constitute
    unconstitutional commandeering. In South Carolina v.
    Baker, the Court upheld federal laws that prohibited the
    issuance of bearer bonds, which required states to amend
    legislation to be in 
    compliance. 485 U.S. at 511
    , 514 (1988).
    As we characterized this case in Christie I:
    25
    The Court concluded this result did not run
    afoul [of] the Tenth Amendment because it did
    not seek to control or influence the manner in
    which States regulate private parties but was
    simply an inevitable consequence of regulating
    a state activity. In subsequent cases, the Court
    explained that the regulation in Baker was
    permissible because it simply subjected a State
    to the same legislation applicable to private
    parties.
    Christie 
    I, 730 F.3d at 228
    (internal quotation marks and
    citations omitted). Later, in Reno v. Condon, the Court
    upheld the constitutionality of a law that prohibited states
    from releasing information gathered by state departments of
    motor vehicles. The Court ultimately concluded that the law
    at issue “d[id] not require the States in their sovereign
    capacity to regulate their own citizens[,] . . . d[id] not require
    the [State] Legislature[s] to enact any laws or regulations, and
    it d[id] not require state officials to assist in the enforcement
    of federal statutes regulating private individuals.” 
    Reno, 528 U.S. at 151
    (as altered in Christie 
    I, 730 F.3d at 228
    ).
    As noted above, the Supreme Court has invalidated
    laws on anti-commandeering grounds on only two occasions.
    In New York, the Supreme Court struck down a “take-title”
    provision whereby states were required to take title to
    radioactive waste by a specific date, at the waste generator’s
    request, if they did not adopt a federal program. As we stated
    in Christie I, the provision “compel[led] the states to either
    enact a regulatory program, or expend resources in taking title
    to the waste.” Christie 
    I, 730 F.3d at 229
    . The Supreme
    Court ultimately concluded in New York that the take-title
    26
    provision “crossed the line distinguishing encouragement
    from 
    coercion.” 505 U.S. at 175
    . Similarly in Printz v.
    United States, the Supreme Court concluded that Congress
    “may neither issue directives requiring the States to address
    particular problems, nor command the States’ officers . . . to
    administer or enforce a federal regulatory 
    program.” 521 U.S. at 935
    (finding a federal law requiring state officers to
    conduct background checks on prospective gun owners to
    commandeer the states in violation of the Tenth Amendment).
    2. PASPA Does Not Violate Anti-Commandeering
    Principles
    We continue to view PASPA’s prohibition as more
    akin to those laws upheld in Hodel, F.E.R.C., Baker, and
    Reno, and distinguishable from those struck down by the
    Supreme Court in New York and Printz. Our articulation of
    the way in which PASPA does not violate anti-
    commandeering principles warrants refinement, however,
    given the way in which the 2014 Law attempted to skirt
    PASPA and the thrust of Appellants’ arguments in this
    appeal.
    In an attempt to reopen the anti-commandeering
    question we previously decided, Appellants creatively rely on
    certain language that was used in Christie I. In pressing for a
    declaration that PASPA unconstitutionally commandeered the
    states in Christie I, Appellants characterized PASPA as
    requiring the states to affirmatively keep a prohibition against
    sports wagering on their books, lest they be found to have
    authorized sports gambling by law by repealing the
    prohibition. In response, we opined that Appellants’ position
    “rest[ed] on a false equivalence between repeal and
    27
    authorization,” implying that a repeal is not an 
    authorization. 730 F.3d at 233
    . Before us now Appellants urge that “[t]his
    Court held [in Christie I] that PASPA is constitutional
    precisely because it permits States to elect not to prohibit
    sports wagering, even if affirmatively authorizing it would be
    unlawful.” Appellants’ Br. 22 (emphasis in original).
    Appellants are saying, in effect, “We told you so”—if the
    legislature cannot repeal New Jersey’s prohibition as it
    attempted to do in the 2014 Law, then it is required to
    affirmatively keep the prohibition on the books, and PASPA
    unconstitutionally commandeers the states. We reject this
    argument.
    That said, we view our discussion in Christie I
    regarding the relationship between a “repeal” and an
    “authorization” to have been too facile. While we considered
    whether repeal and authorization are interchangeable, our
    decision did not rest on that discussion. Today, we choose to
    excise that discussion from our prior opinion as unnecessary
    dicta. To be clear, a state’s decision to selectively remove a
    prohibition on sports wagering in a manner that permissively
    channels wagering activity to particular locations or operators
    is, in essence, “authorization” under PASPA. However, our
    determination that such a selective repeal of certain
    prohibitions amounts to authorization under PASPA does not
    mean that states are not afforded sufficient room under
    PASPA to craft their own policies.
    Appellants urge that our conclusion in Christie I that
    PASPA does not unconstitutionally commandeer the states
    rested on our view that PASPA allows states to “choos[e]
    among many different potential policies on sports wagering
    that do not include licensing or affirmative authorization by
    28
    the State.” Appellants’ Br. 29. This is correct. PASPA does
    not command states to take affirmative actions, and it does
    not present a coercive binary choice. Our reasoning in
    Christie I that PASPA does not commandeer the states
    remains unshaken.
    Appellants characterize the 2014 Law as a lawful
    exercise in the space PASPA affords states to create their own
    policy. They argue that without options beyond a complete
    repeal or a complete ban on sports wagering, such as the
    partial repeal New Jersey pursued, PASPA runs afoul of anti-
    commandeering principles.         This argument sweeps too
    broadly. That a specific partial repeal which New Jersey
    chose to pursue in its 2014 Law is not valid under PASPA
    does not preclude the possibility that other options may pass
    muster. The issue of the extent to which a given repeal would
    constitute an authorization, in a vacuum, is not before us, as it
    was not specifically before us in Christie I. However, as the
    Leagues noted at oral argument before the en banc court, not
    all partial repeals are created equal. For instance, a state’s
    partial repeal of a sports wagering ban to allow de minimis
    wagers between friends and family would not have nearly the
    type of authorizing effect that we find in the 2014 Law. We
    need not, however, articulate a line whereby a partial repeal
    of a sports wagering ban amounts to an authorization under
    PASPA, if indeed such a line could be drawn. It is sufficient
    to conclude that the 2014 Law overstepped it.
    Appellants seize on the District Court’s erroneous
    interpretation of Christie I’s anti-commandeering analysis—
    namely, that PASPA presents states with a strict binary
    choice between total repeal and keeping a complete ban on
    their books—to once again urge that if PASPA commands
    29
    such a choice, then it is comparable to the challenged law in
    New York. First, unlike the take-title provision included in
    the statute at issue in New York, PASPA’s text does not
    present states with a coercive choice to adopt a federal
    program. To interpret PASPA to require such a coercive
    choice is to read something into the statute that simply is not
    there.
    Second, PASPA is further distinguishable from the law
    at issue in New York because it does not require states to take
    any action. In New York, the Supreme Court held that a
    federal law that required states to enact a federal regulatory
    program or take title to radioactive waste at the behest of
    generators “crossed the line distinguishing encouragement
    from 
    coercion.” 505 U.S. at 175
    . Unlike the law at issue in
    New York, PASPA includes no coercive direction by the
    federal government. As we previously concluded in Christie
    I, PASPA does not command states to take any affirmative
    steps:
    PASPA does not require or coerce the states to
    lift a finger—they are not required to pass laws,
    to take title to anything, to conduct background
    checks, to expend any funds, or to in any way
    enforce federal law.        They are not even
    required, like the states were in F.E.R.C., to
    expend resources considering federal regulatory
    regimes, let alone to adopt them. Simply put,
    we discern in PASPA no directives requiring
    the States to address particular problems and no
    commands to the States’ officers to administer
    or enforce a federal regulatory program.
    
    30 730 F.3d at 231
    (internal quotation marks and alterations
    omitted) (emphasis in original). Put simply, PASPA does not
    impose a coercive either-or requirement or affirmative
    command.
    We will not allow Appellants to bootstrap already
    decided questions of PASPA’s constitutionality onto our
    determination that the 2014 Law violates PASPA. We reject
    the notion that PASPA presents states with a coercive binary
    choice or affirmative command and conclude, as we did in
    Christie I, that it does not unconstitutionally commandeer the
    states.
    IV. Conclusion
    The 2014 Law violates PASPA because it authorizes
    by law sports gambling. We continue to find PASPA
    constitutional. We will affirm.
    31
    FUENTES, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    In November 2011, the question of whether to allow
    sports betting in New Jersey went before the electorate. By a
    2-1 margin, New Jersey voters passed a referendum to amend
    the New Jersey Constitution to allow the New Jersey
    Legislature to “authorize by law” sports betting.1
    Accordingly, the Legislature enacted the 2012 Sports
    Wagering Act (“2012 Law”). The Sports Leagues challenged
    this Law, claiming that it violated the Professional and
    Amateur Sports Protection Act’s (“PASPA”) prohibition on
    states “authoriz[ing] by law” sports betting.2 In Christie I, we
    agreed with the Sports Leagues and held that the 2012 Law
    violated and thus was preempted by PASPA. We explained,
    however, that New Jersey was free to repeal the sports betting
    prohibitions it already had in place. We rejected the
    argument that a repeal of prohibitions on sports betting was
    equivalent to authorizing by law sports betting. When the
    matter was brought to the Supreme Court, the Solicitor
    General echoed that same sentiment, stating that, “PASPA
    does not even obligate New Jersey to leave in place the state-
    law prohibitions against sports gambling that it had chosen to
    adopt prior to PASPA’s enactment. To the contrary, New
    Jersey is free to repeal those prohibitions in whole or in
    part.”3
    1
    N.J. Const. art. IV, § 7, ¶ 2(D).
    2
    See 28 U.S.C. § 3702(1).
    3
    Br. for the United States in Opp’n at 11, Christie v. Nat’l
    Collegiate Athletic Ass’n, Nos. 13-967, 13-979, and 13-980
    (U.S. May 14, 2014).
    1
    So New Jersey did just that. In 2014, the New Jersey
    Legislature repealed certain sports betting prohibitions at
    casinos and gambling houses in Atlantic City and at horse
    racetracks in the State (“2014 Repeal”). In addition to
    repealing the 2012 Law in full, the 2014 Repeal stripped New
    Jersey of any involvement in sports betting, regulatory or
    otherwise. In essence, the 2014 Repeal rendered previous
    prohibitions on sports betting non-existent.
    But the majority today concludes that the New Jersey
    Legislature’s efforts to satisfy its constituents while adhering
    to our decision in Christie I are still in violation of PASPA.
    According to the majority, the “selective” nature of the 2014
    Repeal amounts to “authorizing by law” a sports wagering
    scheme.      That is, because the State retained certain
    restrictions on sports betting, the majority infers the
    authorization by law. I cannot agree with this interpretation
    of PASPA.
    PASPA restricts the states in six ways – a state cannot
    “sponsor, operate, advertise, promote, license, or authorize by
    law or compact” sports betting.4 The only one of these six
    restrictions that includes “by law” is “authorize.” None of the
    other restrictions say anything about how the states are
    restricted. Thus, I believe that Congress gave this restriction
    a special meaning—that a state’s “authoriz[ation] by law” of
    sports betting cannot merely be inferred, but rather requires a
    specific legislative enactment that affirmatively allows the
    people of the state to bet on sports. Any other interpretation
    would be reading the phrase “by law” out of the statute.
    4
    28 U.S.C. § 3702(1) (emphasis added).
    2
    Indeed, we stated exactly this in Christie I—that all
    PASPA prohibits is “the affirmative ‘authoriz[ation] by law’
    of gambling schemes.”5        Thus, we explained, nothing
    prevented New Jersey from repealing its sports betting
    prohibitions, since, “in reality, the lack of an affirmative
    prohibition of an activity does not mean it is affirmatively
    authorized by law.”6 As we noted, “that the Legislature
    needed to enact the [2012 Law] itself belies any contention
    that the mere repeal of New Jersey’s ban on sports gambling
    was sufficient to ‘authorize [it] by law.’”7 The Legislature
    itself “saw a meaningful distinction between repealing the
    ban on sports wagering and authorizing it by law,
    undermining any contention that the amendment alone was
    sufficient to affirmatively authorize sports wagering—the
    [2012 Law] was required.”8 In short, we explained that there
    was a false equivalence between repeal and authorization.
    With the 2014 Repeal, the New Jersey Legislature did
    what it thought it was permitted to do under our reading of
    PASPA in Christie I. The majority, however, maintains that
    the 2014 Repeal “authorizes” sports wagering at casinos,
    gambling houses, and horse racetracks simply because other
    sports betting prohibitions remain in place.9 According to the
    5
    Christie 
    I, 730 F.3d at 232
    (alteration in original).
    6
    
    Id. 7 Id.
    (alteration in original).
    8
    
    Id. 9 I
    refer to the repeal of prohibitions as applying to casinos,
    gambling houses, and horse racetracks, with the
    understanding that the repeal applies to casinos and gambling
    houses in Atlantic City and horse racetracks in New Jersey
    3
    majority, “[a]bsent the 2014 Law, New Jersey’s myriad laws
    prohibiting sports gambling would apply to the casinos and
    racetracks,” and thus “the 2014 Law provides the
    authorization for conduct that is otherwise clearly and
    completely legally prohibited.”10 But I believe the majority is
    mistaken as to the impact of a partial repeal.
    A repeal is defined as an “abrogation of an existing
    law by legislative act.”11 When a statute is repealed, “the
    repealed statute, in regard to its operative effect, is considered
    as if it had never existed.”12 If a repealed statute is treated as
    if it never existed, a partially repealed statute is treated as if
    the repealed sections never existed.13 The 2014 Repeal, then,
    simply returns New Jersey to the state it was in before it first
    for those over 21 not betting on New Jersey collegiate teams
    or any collegiate competition occurring in New Jersey.
    10
    Maj. Op. 17.
    11
    Black’s Law Dictionary 1325 (8th ed. 2007).
    12
    73 Am. Jur. 2d Statutes § 264.
    13
    See, e.g., Ex parte McCardle, 
    74 U.S. 506
    , 514 (1868)
    (“[W]hen an act of the legislature is repealed, it must be
    considered . . . as if it never existed.”); Anderson v. USAir,
    Inc., 
    818 F.2d 49
    , 55 (D.C. Cir. 1987) (“Common sense
    dictates that repeal means a deletion. This court would
    engage in pure speculation were it to hold otherwise.”); Kemp
    by Wright v. State, Cty. of Burlington, 
    687 A.2d 715
    , 723
    (N.J. 1997) (“In this State it is the general rule that where a
    statute is repealed and there is no saving[s] clause or a general
    statute limiting the effect of the repeal, the repealed statute, in
    regard to its operative effect, is considered as though it had
    never existed, except as to matters and transactions passed
    and closed.”).
    4
    enacted those prohibitions on sports gambling. In other
    words, after the repeal, it is as if New Jersey never prohibited
    sports wagering at casinos, gambling houses, and horse
    racetracks. Therefore, with respect to those locations, there
    are no laws governing sports wagering. Contrary to the
    majority’s position, the permission to engage in such an
    activity is not affirmatively granted by virtue of it being
    prohibited elsewhere.
    To bolster its position, the majority rejects our
    reasoning in Christie I, stating that “[t]o the extent that in
    Christie I we took the position that a repeal cannot constitute
    an authorization, we now reject that reasoning.”14 I continue
    to maintain, however, that the 2014 Repeal is not an
    affirmative authorization by law. It is merely a repeal – it
    does not, and cannot, authorize by law anything.
    In my view, the majority’s position that the 2014
    Repeal “selectively grants permission to certain entities to
    engage in sports gambling”15 is simply incorrect. There is no
    explicit grant of permission in the 2014 Repeal for any person
    or entity to engage in sports gambling. Rather, the 2014
    Repeal is a self-executing deregulatory measure that repeals
    existing prohibitions and regulations for sports betting and
    requires the State to abdicate any control or involvement in
    sports betting.16 The majority fails to explain why a partial
    14
    Maj. Op. 18.
    15
    
    Id. 16 For
    example, under the 2014 Repeal, “[the Division of
    Gaming Enforcement (“DGE”)] now considers sports
    wagering to be ‘non-gambling activity’ . . . that is beyond
    5
    repeal is equivalent to a grant of permission (by law) to
    engage in sports betting.
    Suppose the State did exactly what the majority
    suggests it could have done: repeal completely its sports
    betting prohibitions. In that circumstance, sports betting
    could occur anywhere in the State and there would be no
    restrictions as to age, location, or whether a bettor could
    wager on games involving local teams. Would the State
    violate PASPA if it later enacted limited restrictions
    regarding age requirements and places where wagering could
    occur? Surely no conceivable reading of PASPA would
    preclude a state from restricting sports wagering in this
    scenario. Yet the 2014 Repeal comes to the same result.
    The majority also fails to illustrate how the 2014
    Repeal results in sports wagering pursuant to state law when
    there is effectively no law in place as to several locations, no
    scheme created, and no state involvement. A careful
    comparison with the 2012 Law is instructive. The 2012 Law
    lifted New Jersey’s ban on sports wagering and created a
    licensing scheme for sports wagering pools at casinos and
    racetracks in the State. This comprehensive regime required
    close State supervision and regulation of those sports
    wagering pools. For instance, the 2012 Law required any
    entity that wished to operate a “sports pool lounge” to acquire
    a “sports pool license.” To do so, a prospective operator was
    required to pay a $50,000 application fee, secure Division of
    Gaming Enforcement (“DGE”) approval of all internal
    controls, and ensure that any of its employees who were to be
    DGE’s control and outside of DGE’s regulatory authority.”
    App. 416.
    6
    directly involved in sports wagering obtained individual
    licenses from the DGE and the Casino Control Commission
    (“CCC”). In addition, the betting regime required entities to,
    among other things, submit extensive documentation to the
    DGE, adopt new “house” rules subject to DGE approval, and
    conform to DGE standards. This, of course, violated PASPA
    in the most basic way: New Jersey developed an intricate
    scheme that both “authorize[d] by law” and “license[d]”
    sports gambling. The 2014 Repeal eliminated this entire
    scheme. Moreover, all state agencies with jurisdiction over
    state casinos and racetracks, such as the DGE and the CCC,
    were stripped of any sports betting oversight.
    The majority likewise falters when it analogizes the
    2014 Repeal to the exception Congress originally offered to
    New Jersey in 1992. The exception stated that PASPA did
    not apply to “a betting, gambling, or wagering scheme . . .
    conducted exclusively in casinos[,] . . . but only to the extent
    that . . . any commercial casino gaming scheme was in
    operation . . . throughout the 10-year period” before PASPA
    was enacted.17 Setting aside the most obvious distinction
    between the 2014 Repeal and the 1992 exception—that it
    contemplated a scheme that the 2014 Repeal does not
    authorize—the majority misses the mark when it states: “If
    Congress had not perceived that sports gambling in New
    Jersey’s casinos would violate PASPA, then it would not
    have needed to insert the New Jersey exception.”18 Congress
    did not, however, perceive, or intend for, private sports
    wagering in casinos to violate PASPA. Instead, Congress
    prohibited sports wagering undertaken pursuant to state law.
    17
    28 U.S.C. § 3704(a)(3)(B).
    18
    Maj. Op. 19.
    7
    That the 2014 Repeal might bring about an increase in the
    amount of private, legal sports wagering in New Jersey is of
    no moment, and the majority’s reliance on such a possibility
    is misplaced. The majority is also wrong in a more
    fundamental way. The exception Congress offered to New
    Jersey was exactly that: an exception to the ordinary
    prohibitions of PASPA. That is to say, with this exception,
    New Jersey could have “sponsor[ed], operate[d], advertise[d],
    promote[d], license[d], or authorize[d] by law or compact”
    sports wagering. Under the 2014 Repeal, of course, New
    Jersey cannot and does not aim to do any of these things.
    Because I do not see how a partial repeal of
    prohibitions is tantamount to authorizing by law a sports
    wagering scheme in violation of PASPA, I respectfully
    dissent.
    8
    NCAA v. Governor of the State of New Jersey, et al., Nos.
    14-4546, 14-4568, 14-4659
    VANASKIE, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    While Congress “has the authority under the
    Constitution to pass laws requiring or prohibiting certain acts,
    it lacks the power directly to compel the States to require or
    prohibit those acts.” New York v. United States, 
    505 U.S. 144
    , 166 (1992) (emphasis added). Concluding that the
    Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (“PASPA”),
    28 U.S.C. § 3701 et seq., was a congressional command that
    States must prohibit wagering on sporting events because it
    forbids the States from “authoriz[ing] by law” such activity, I
    dissented from the holding in Christie I that PASPA was a
    valid exercise of congressional authority. National Collegiate
    Athletic Ass’n v. Governor of New Jersey (Christie I), 
    730 F.3d 208
    , 241–51 (3d Cir. 2013) (Vanaskie, J., dissenting).
    My colleagues in the majority in Christie I disagreed with my
    conclusion because they believed that States had the option of
    repealing existing bans on sports betting. 
    Id. at 232
    . In
    upholding PASPA, Christie I rejected New Jersey’s argument
    that a repeal of its ban on sports betting would be viewed as
    effectively “authoriz[ing] by law” this activity. Christie I
    declared that New Jersey’s “attempt to read into PASPA a
    requirement that the states must affirmatively keep a ban on
    sports gambling in their books rests on a false equivalence
    between repeal and authorization.” 
    Id. at 233.
    I viewed that
    “false equivalence” assertion with considerable skepticism.
    
    Id. at 247
    n. 5 (“[I]t certainly is open to debate whether a
    state’s repeal of a ban on sports gambling would be akin to
    that state’s ‘authorizing’ gambling on sporting events . . . .”).
    My skepticism is validated by today’s majority opinion. The
    majority dodges the inevitable conclusion that PASPA
    1
    conscripts the States to prohibit wagering on sports by
    suggesting that some partial repeal of the ban on sports
    gambling would not be tantamount to authorization of
    gambling.
    Implicit in today’s majority opinion and Christie I is
    the premise that Congress lacks the authority to decree that
    States must prohibit sports wagering, and so both majorities
    find some undefined room for States to enact partial repeals
    of existing bans on sports gambling. While the author of
    Christie I finds that New Jersey’s partial repeal at issue here
    is not the equivalent of authorizing by law wagering on
    sporting events, today’s majority concludes otherwise. This
    shifting line approach to a State’s exercise of its sovereign
    authority is untenable. The bedrock principle of federalism
    that Congress may not compel the States to require or prohibit
    certain activities cannot be evaded by the false assertion that
    PASPA affords the States some undefined options when it
    comes to sports wagering. Because I believe that PASPA was
    intended to compel the States to prohibit wagering on
    sporting events, it cannot survive constitutional scrutiny.
    Accordingly, as I did in Christie I, I dissent.
    I.
    According to the majority, “a state’s decision to
    selectively remove a prohibition on sports wagering in a
    manner that permissively channels wagering activity to
    particular locations or operators is, in essence, ‘authorization’
    under PASPA.” Maj. Op., at 28. The majority also claims “a
    state’s partial repeal of a sports wagering ban to allow de
    minimis wagers between friends and family would not have
    nearly the type of authorizing effect that we find in the 2014
    Law.” 
    Id. at 29.
    Thus, according to the majority, the 2014
    2
    Law is a partial repeal that is foreclosed by PASPA, but
    “other options may pass muster” because “not all partial
    repeals are created equal.” 
    Id. Noticeably, the
    majority does not explain why all
    partial repeals are not created equal or explain what
    distinguishes the 2014 Law from those partial repeals that
    pass muster. To further complicate matters, the majority
    continues to rely on Christie I, which did “not read PASPA to
    prohibit New Jersey from repealing its ban on sports
    wagering” and informed New Jersey that “[n]othing in
    [PASPA’s] words requires that the states keep any law in
    
    place.” 730 F.3d at 232
    .
    A.
    Christie I “[r]ecogniz[ed] the importance of the
    affirmative/negative command distinction,” and “agree[d]
    with [New Jersey] that the affirmative act requirement, if not
    properly applied, may permit Congress to ‘accomplish
    exactly what the commandeering doctrine prohibits’ by
    stopping the states from ‘repealing an existing 
    law.’” 730 F.3d at 232
    (quoting Conant v. Walters, 
    309 F.3d 629
    , 646
    (9th Cir. 2002) (Kozinski, J., concurring)). Christie I,
    however, discounted concerns regarding PASPA’s
    affirmative act requirement because Christie I “d[id] not read
    PASPA to prohibit New Jersey from repealing its ban on
    sports wagering.” 
    Id. According to
    Christie I, PASPA is
    constitutional because “[n]othing in [PASPA’s] words
    requires that the states keep any law in place.” 
    Id. This conclusion
    formed the premise for the conclusion in Christie I
    that PASPA passed constitutional muster.
    3
    Remarkably, the majority chooses to “excise that
    discussion from our prior opinion as unnecessary dicta.” Maj.
    Op., at 28. This cannot be the case, however, because that
    discussion was the cornerstone of the holding in Christie I.
    See In re McDonald, 
    205 F.3d 606
    , 612 (3d Cir. 2000)
    (“Chief Judge Posner has aptly defined dictum as ‘a statement
    in a judicial opinion that could have been deleted without
    seriously impairing the analytical foundations of the
    holding—that, being peripheral, may not have received the
    full and careful consideration of the court that uttered it.’”
    (quoting Sarnoff v. Am. Home Prods. Corp., 
    798 F.2d 1075
    ,
    1084 (7th Cir. 1986))).
    Indeed, to rationalize its conclusion in Christie I, the
    Christie I majority had to expressly reject the notion that
    when a state “choose[s] to repeal an affirmative prohibition of
    sports gambling, that is the same as ‘authorizing’ that activity,
    and therefore PASPA precludes repealing prohibitions on
    gambling just as it bars affirmatively licensing 
    it.” 730 F.3d at 232
    . This aspect of Christie I was not peripheral to the
    ultimate holding because Christie I specifically “agree[d]
    with [New Jersey] that the affirmative act requirement, if not
    properly applied, may permit Congress to ‘accomplish
    exactly what the commandeering doctrine prohibits’ by
    stopping the states from ‘repealing an existing law.’” 
    Id. (quoting Conant,
    309 F.3d at 646 (Kozinski, J., concurring)).
    Thus, to resolve the issue before it, Christie I necessarily had
    to give this issue the “full and careful consideration of the
    court.” In re 
    McDonald, 205 F.3d at 612
    (quoting 
    Sarnoff, 798 F.2d at 1084
    ).
    In giving the issue its full and careful consideration,
    Christie I explained that the notion that a “repeal” could be
    the same as an “authorization” was “problematic in numerous
    4
    
    respects.” 730 F.3d at 232
    ; see also 
    id. (“Most basically,
    it
    ignores that PASPA speaks only of ‘authorizing by law’ a
    sports gambling scheme.”). Christie I did “not see how
    having no law in place governing sports wagering is the same
    as authorizing it by law.” 
    Id. Christie I
    recognized a
    distinction between affirmative commands for actions and
    prohibitions, and explained that there was “a false
    equivalence between repeal and authorization.” 
    Id. at 233.
    Thus, as a matter of statutory construction, and to avoid “a
    series of constitutional problems,” Christie I specifically held
    that if the Court did not distinguish between “repeals”
    (affirmative commands) and “authorizations” (affirmative
    prohibitions), the Court would “read[] the term ‘by law’ out
    of [PASPA].” 
    Id. at 233.
    I dissented from that opinion because “any distinction
    between a federal directive that commands states to take
    affirmative action and one that prohibits states from
    exercising their sovereignty is 
    illusory.” 730 F.3d at 245
    (Vanaskie, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). The
    decision to base Christie I on a distinction between
    affirmative commands for action and affirmative prohibitions
    was “untenable,” because “affirmative commands to engage
    in certain conduct can be rephrased as a prohibition against
    not engaging in that conduct.” 
    Id. As I
    explained, basing
    Christie I on such an illusory distinction raises constitutional
    concerns because “[a]n interpretation of federalism principles
    that permits congressional negative commands to state
    governments will eviscerate the constitutional lines drawn”
    by the Supreme Court. 
    Id. 5 B.
    After Christie I, a state like New Jersey at least had
    the choice to either “repeal its sports wagering ban,” or, “[o]n
    the other hand . . . keep a complete ban on sports gambling.”
    
    Id. at 233
    (majority opinion). The Christie I majority found
    that this choice was not too coercive because it left “much
    room for the states to make their own policy” and left it to a
    State “to decide how much of a law enforcement priority it
    wants to make of sports gambling, or what the exact contours
    of the prohibition will be.” 
    Id. Today’s majority
    makes it clear that PASPA does not
    leave a State “much room” at all. Indeed, it is evident that
    States must leave gambling prohibitions on the books to
    regulate their citizens. A review of the four Supreme Court
    anti-commandeering cases referenced by the majority is
    illuminating.
    1.
    The first two anti-commandeering cases that the
    majority reviews are Hodel v. Virginia Surface Mining &
    Reclamation Ass’n, Inc., 
    452 U.S. 264
    (1981), and F.E.R.C. v.
    Mississippi, 
    456 U.S. 742
    (1982). As the majority points out,
    these cases address “permissible regulation in a pre-emptible
    field.” Maj. Op., at 23. In analyzing these cases, however,
    the majority overlooks the main rule announced by the
    Supreme Court in situations where there is an exercise of
    legislative authority under the Commerce Clause or where
    Congress preempts an area with federal legislation within its
    legislative power. In such situations, States have a choice:
    they may either comply with the federal legislation or the
    Federal Government will carry the legislation into effect.
    6
    This rule was announced in Hodel, where the Supreme
    Court explained that “[i]f a State does not wish to . . .
    compl[y] with the Act and implementing regulations, the full
    regulatory burden will be borne by the Federal 
    Government.” 452 U.S. at 288
    (emphasis added). The same theme repeated
    itself in F.E.R.C., as the Supreme Court focused on “the
    choice put to the States—that of either abandoning regulation
    of the field altogether or considering the federal 
    standards.” 456 U.S. at 766
    (emphasis added). In both cases, the
    Supreme Court was clear that there must be some choice for
    the states to make because without it “the accountability of
    both state and federal officials is diminished.” New York v.
    United States, 
    505 U.S. 144
    , 168 (1992).
    Indeed, in New York v. United States, the Court
    explained that a State’s view on legislation “can always be
    pre-empted under the Supremacy Clause if it is contrary to
    the national view, but in such a case . . . it will be federal
    officials that suffer the consequences if the decision turns out
    to be detrimental or unpopular.” 
    Id. at 168.
    The Supreme
    Court reiterated this point Printz v. United States, explaining
    that, “[b]y forcing state governments to absorb the financial
    burden of implementing a federal regulatory program,
    Members of Congress can take credit for ‘solving’ problems
    without having to ask their constituents to pay for the
    solutions with higher federal taxes.” 
    521 U.S. 898
    , 930
    (1997). Thus, States must be given a choice because the
    Supreme Court is concerned that “it may be state officials
    who will bear the brunt of public disapproval, while the
    federal officials who devised the regulatory program may
    remain insulated from the electoral ramifications of their
    decision.” New 
    York, 505 U.S. at 169
    .
    7
    As the majority explains, while “PASPA’s provisions
    and its reach are controversial (and, some might say, unwise)
    . . . . we are duty-bound to interpret the text of the law as
    Congress wrote it.” Maj. Op., at 16. Because the majority
    has excised the distinction between a repeal and an
    authorization, the majority makes it clear that under PASPA
    as written, no repeal of any kind will evade the command that
    no State “shall . . . authorize by law” sports gambling. 28
    U.S.C. § 3702. In the face of such a congressional directive,
    “no case-by-case weighing of the burdens or benefits is
    necessary; such commands are fundamentally incompatible
    with our constitutional system of dual sovereignty.” 
    Printz, 521 U.S. at 935
    .
    2.
    This leads to the other two anti-commandeering cases
    reviewed by the majority: South Carolina v. Baker, 
    485 U.S. 505
    (1988), and Reno v. Condon, 
    528 U.S. 141
    (2000). The
    majority explains that these cases address permissible
    “prohibitions on state action.” Maj. Op., at 23. Again,
    however, the majority seems to overlook the animating factor
    for each of these opinions. In both Baker and Reno the
    Supreme Court explained that permissible prohibitions
    regulated State activities. The Supreme Court has never
    sanctioned statutes or regulations that sought to control or
    influence the manner in which States regulate private parties.
    For example, in Baker, the Supreme Court reviewed a
    challenge to the Internal Revenue Code’s enactment of §
    310(b)(1) of the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of
    1982, which prohibited States from issuing unregistered
    bearer bonds. Notably, when reviewing the case, the Court
    specifically found that it did not need to address “the
    8
    possibility that the Tenth Amendment might set some limits
    on Congress’ power to compel States to regulate on behalf of
    federal interests” because the Court found that the
    commandeering concerns “in FERC [were] inapplicable to §
    310.” 
    Baker, 485 U.S. at 513
    . Importantly, the Court
    distinguished § 310 from the statute in F.E.R.C. because the
    Court found that “Section 310 regulates state activities; it
    does not, as did the statute in FERC, seek to control or
    influence the manner in which States regulate private parties.”
    
    Id. at 514.
    Similarly, in Reno, the Court addressed a statute
    that did not require (1) “the States in their sovereign capacity
    to regulate their own citizens,” (2) “the . . . Legislature to
    enact any laws or regulations,” or (3) “state officials to assist
    in the enforcement of federal statutes regulating private
    
    individuals.” 528 U.S. at 151
    . It was only on these bases that
    the Supreme Court found the statute at issue in Reno was
    “consistent with the constitutional principles enunciated in
    New York and Printz.” 
    Id. Unlike the
    statutes at issue in Baker and Reno,
    however, PASPA seeks to control and influence the manner
    in which States regulate private parties. Through PASPA,
    Congress unambiguously commands that “[i]t shall be
    unlawful for . . . a governmental entity to . . . authorize by
    law” sports gambling. 28 U.S.C. § 3702. By issuing this
    command, Congress has set an impermissible “mandatory
    agenda to be considered in all events by state legislative or
    administrative decisionmakers.” 
    F.E.R.C., 456 U.S. at 769
    .
    3.
    The logical extension of the majority is that PASPA
    prevents States from passing any laws to repeal existing
    gambling laws. As the majority correctly notes, “[t]he word
    9
    ‘authorize’ means, inter alia, ‘[t]o empower; to give a right or
    authority to act,’ or ‘[t]o permit a thing to be done in the
    future.’” Maj. Op., at 17 (quoting Black’s Law Dictionary
    133 (6th Ed. 1990)) (footnote omitted).                 Because
    authorization includes permitting a thing to be done, it
    follows that PASPA also prevents state officials from
    stopping enforcement of existing gambling laws. States must
    regulate conduct prioritized by Congress. Cf. 
    Conant, 309 F.3d at 646
    (Kozinski, J., concurring) (“[P]reventing the state
    from repealing an existing law is no different from forcing it
    to pass a new one; in either case, the state is being forced to
    regulate conduct that it prefers to leave unregulated.”).
    It is true that civil actions to enjoin a violation of
    PASPA “may be commenced in an appropriate district court
    of the United States by the Attorney General of the United
    States.” 28 U.S.C. § 3703. But it can hardly be said that the
    United States Attorney General bears the full regulatory
    burden because, through PASPA, Congress effectively
    commands the States to maintain and enforce existing
    gambling prohibitions.1
    PASPA is a statute that directs States to maintain
    gambling laws by dictating the manner in which States must
    enforce a federal law. The Supreme Court has never
    considered Congress’ legislative power to be so expansive.
    See Prigg v. Com. of Pennsylvania, 
    41 U.S. 539
    , 541 (1842)
    (“It might well be deemed an unconstitutional exercise of the
    power of interpretation, to insist that the states are bound to
    1
    A refusal to enforce existing laws would be the same
    as a repeal of existing laws: the States would be authorizing
    sports wagering.
    10
    provide means to carry into effect the duties of the national
    government, nowhere delegated or intrusted to them by the
    constitution”); 
    F.E.R.C., 456 U.S. at 761
    –62 (“[T]his Court
    never has sanctioned explicitly a federal command to the
    States to promulgate and enforce laws and regulations ”)
    (citing E.P.A. v. Brown, 
    431 U.S. 99
    (1977)); New 
    York, 505 U.S. at 178
    (“Where a federal interest is sufficiently strong to
    cause Congress to legislate, it must do so directly; it may not
    conscript state governments as its agents.”); Nat’l Fed’n of
    Indep. Bus. v. Sebelius, 
    132 S. Ct. 2566
    , 2602 (2012)
    (plurality opinion) (“[T]he Constitution has never been
    understood to confer upon Congress the ability to require the
    States to govern according to Congress’ instructions.”
    (quoting New 
    York, 505 U.S. at 162
    )).
    II.
    It is now apparent that Christie I was incorrect in
    finding that “nothing in [PASPA’s] words requires that the
    states keep any law in 
    place.” 730 F.3d at 232
    (first and third
    emphasis added). With respect to the doctrinal anchors of
    Christie I, the cornerstone of its holding has been eroded by
    the majority, which has excised Christie I’s discussion
    regarding “a false equivalence between repeal and an
    authorization.” 
    Id. at 233.
    Notably, that discussion was
    included in Christie I to avoid “a series of constitutional
    problems.” 
    Id. Today’s majority
    makes it clear that passing a
    law so that there is no law in place governing sports wagering
    is the same as authorizing it by law. See Maj. Op., at 17
    (“The word ‘authorize’ means, inter alia, ‘[t]o empower; to
    give a right or authority to act,’ or ‘[t]o permit a thing to be
    done in the future.’”) (citation and footnote omitted).
    11
    I dissented in Christie I because the distinction
    between repeal and authorization is unworkable. Today’s
    majority opinion validates my position: PASPA leaves the
    States with no choice. While Christie I at least gave the
    States the option of repealing, in whole or in part, existing
    bans on gambling on sporting events, today’s decision tells
    the States that they must maintain an anti-sports wagering
    scheme. The anti-commandeering doctrine, essential to
    protect State sovereignty, prohibits Congress from compelling
    States to prohibit such private activity. Accordingly, I
    dissent.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14-4546

Filed Date: 8/9/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/10/2016

Authorities (23)

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