“ Owney ’*’ Madden was named by one Frank Costello in 1943 as a bookmaker with whom he placed bets. “ Coley ” Madden, plaintiff herein, a self-styled “ patron of the races ”, was barred by defendant from its Aqueduct Race Track in 1945, under the mistaken belief that he was Costello’s bookmaker. Plaintiff thereupon sought a declaratory judgment declaring that he has a right, as citizen and taxpayer — upon paying the required admission price — to enter the race course and patronize the pari-mutuel betting there conducted. Defendant, on the other hand, asserted an unlimited power of exclusion. "Special Term, finding that plaintiff was a citizen of good repute and standing, decided that the complaint stated a cause of action and entered an order enjoining defendant from keeping plaintiff off the race track. The Appellate Division, reversing, dismissed the complaint.
The question posed — which this court explicitly declined to consider in 1897, in
Grannan
v.
Westchester Racing Assn.
(
At common law, a person engaged in a public calling, such as innkeeper or common carrier, was held to be under a duty to the general public and was obliged to serve, without discrimination, all who sought service. (See e.g.,
People
v.
King,
*254 The common-law power of exclusion, noted above, continues until changed by legislative enactment. In this State, a statute — explicitly covering “race courses” — limits the power by prohibiting discrimination on account of race, creed, color, or national origin. (Civil Bights Law, § 40; see, also, Penal Law, §§ 514, 700.) That, then, is the measure of the restriction.
Plaintiff, however, asserts a right founded upon the constitutional guaranty of equal protection of the laws. The argument is based on two assumptions, first, that the license to conduct pari-mutuel betting constitutes the licensee an administrative agent of the State in the execution of the law, and, second, that the license to conduct horse racing is a franchise to perform a public purpose.
The first assumption is quickly disposed of. Section 9 of the Pari-Mutuel Bevenue Law (L. 1940, ch. 254, § 9, as amd. by L. 1946, ch. 339, § 1) provides in substance that the licensee shall retain 10% of the total deposits and pay therefrom “ to the state tax commission as a reasonable tax by the state for the privilege of conducting pari-mutuel betting ”, an amount equal to a certain percentage of the total pool. It should be noted that the tax is thus imposed not on the bettor for the privilege of betting — analogous to the imposition of a sales tax upon the purchaser from a retail store — but upon the licensee for the privilege of conducting pari-mutuel betting. Adopting plaintiff’s position, it would be equally valid to argue that every licensee, theatre manager, cab driver, barber, liquor dealer, dog owner — to mention a few — must be regarded as “an administrative agency of the state ” in the conduct of his everyday business simply because he pays a tax or fee for his license.
Plaintiff’s second assumption — that the license is a franchise — requires more lengthy treatment. There is little need to cite authority for the proposition that a race track is normally considered a place of amusement and that — with the possible exception of ancient Borne — amusement of the populace has never been regarded as a function or purpose of government. Horse racing does not become a function of government merely because, in sanctioning it, the Legislature anticipated a consequent, though incidental, advantage to the public in “ improving the breed of horses ”. (L. 1926, ch. 440, § 1; cf.
People m rel. Empire City Trotting Club
v.
State Racing Comm.,
*255
Plaintiff’s argument results from confusion between a “ license ”, imposed for the purpose of regulation or revenue, and a “ franchise ”. A franchise is a special privilege, conferred by the State on an individual, which does not belong to the. individual as a matter of common right. (See
Smith
v.
The Mayor,
A license, on the other hand, is no more than a permission to exercise a pre-existing right or privilege which has been subjected to regulation in the interest of the public welfare. The grant of a license to promote the public good, in and of itself, however, makes neither the purpose a public one nor the license a franchise, neither renders the enterprise public nor places the licensee under obligation to the public.
(Woollcott
v.
Shubert, supra; Collister
v.
Hayman, supra.)
In the
Woollcott
case
{supra)
for instance, where the power of a theatre owner to bar a critic from his theatre was upheld, this court wrote (
Observing, however, that the conduct of races for stakes had long been decláred illegal “ except as specially authorized ”, plaintiff argues from that that the license was in effect a franchise, since it granted a privilege not previously enjoyed by common right. That,' though, overlooks the fact that the privilege of conducting horse races for stakes does exist at the common law, that it is taken away only by statute, and that the statute’s prohibition is removed only under certain circumstances and upon compliance with specified conditions. (See
Corrigan
v.
Coney Island Jockey Club, supra;
cf.
Marrone
v.
Washington Jockey Club, supra; Western Turf Association
v.
Greenberg,
In short, plaintiff’s asserted right to admittance must rest either upon common law or upon statutory provision. No such right existed at common law and the Legislature has not chosen to create one. (Civil Eights Law, §§ 40, 40-b.)
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Loughean, Ch. J., Lewis, Conway, Desmond, Thacheb and Dye, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.
