Lead Opinion
¶ 1 Pursuant to 20 0.8.2011 § 14.1, original jurisdiction is assumed to address the protestants' challenge to several projects concerning the "Master Lease Program" of the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education authorized by 70 0.8.2011 §§ 8206.6-8206.6b.
¶ 2 This Act enables the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education to provide lease financing for colleges and universities which are part of the Oklahoma State System for Higher Education. The Oklahoma Development Finance Authority (ODFA) seeks the approval of the bonds which would be used to build various projects. However, the primary focus of protestаnts' concerns seems to be on the construction of the Medical Examiner's Building on a college campus in Oklahoma.
L.
OUR PRECEDENTS MANDATE THE APPROVAL OF THESE BONDS.
[1] 13 We recognized In the Matter of the Application of the Oklahoma Capitol Improvement Authority,
T 4 The same rationale is applicable to this cause. If these types of bonds are not debts of the state as a matter of law because the Legislature cannot be forced to appropriate funds to repay them, it follows that the same is true when the payment is coming from the colleges and universities whose allocаtions fall under the umbrella of the Regents.
15 Furthermore, much like the Trust Fund in Oklahoma Capitol Improvement Authority, supra, entities such as the Medical Examiner and the Board of Medicolegal Investigations have a statutory revolving fund that may receive money from various sources, including grants, gifts and feеs.
THE CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS OF SEPARATION OF POWERS AND LOGROLLING ARE NOT VIOLAT.-ED.
A.
[2] T6 The protestants also raise additional challenges beyond those which were presented in In the Matter of the Application of the Oklahoma Capitol Improvement Authority,
T7 This is not a separation of powers issue. The Legislature enacted 68 O.S8. Supp.2010 $ 985.1, directing thе State Medical Examiner to evaluate a move to the University of Central Oklahoma campus and to consider funding the building by a lease purchase agreement. Moreover, the Legislature has full veto power over the enterprise.
18 Title 70 0.8. Supp.2010 § 3206.62 requires the legislature to aрprove any bonds that the State Regents for Higher Education want to use to finance the acquisition of or improvements to real property under the master lease program. The Regents must submit to the President Pro Tem of the Senate and the Speaker of the House, as well as thе Governor, an itemized list of proposed projects and the method of financing each project. The legislature has forty-five (45) days to pass a concurrent resolution disapproving all or part of the proposed issuance. If the legislature remains silent for forty-five dаys, then the bonds are deemed to have been approved.
B.
[3] 19 The protestants' assert that the statute authorizing the Master Lease Program was unconstitutional at its inception because initially it was an appropriation bill containing more than one subject. The Legislature сured any logrolling error in the statute's original enactment when, on June 5, 2002 the Governor signed the single subject SB 1858, amending the statute without logrolling it with any other subject. Oklahoma Natural Gas Co. v. State ex rel. Vassar,
APPLICATION FOR APPROVAL OF THE OKLAHOMA STATE SYSTEM OF HIGHER EDUCATION MASTER REAL PROPERTY LEASE REVENUE REFUNDING BONDS, SERIES 2013A AND 2018F; AND MASTER REAL PROPERTY LEASE REVENUE BONDS, SERIES 2018B, C, D, E, G, AND H; AND MASTER EQUIPMENT LEASE REVENUE BONDS, SERIES 2013A, AND MASTER EQUIPMENT LEASE REVENUE RE
DONE BY ORDER OF THE SUPREME COURT IN CONFERENCE THIS 24th DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 2013.
Notes
. In the Matter of the Application of the Oklahoma Capitol Improvemеnt Authority,
18 We first recognized the special nature of . such bonds in 1945. In re Bd. of Regents of Univ. of Okla.,
. In the Matter of the Application of the Oklahoma Capitol Improvement Authority, see note 1, supra; In re Bd. of Rеgents of Univ. of Okla.,
. In the Matter of the Application of the Oklahoma Capitol Improvement Authority,
. Title 63 O.S. Supp.2012 § 954 provides:
A. - The Board of Medicolegal Investigations is authorized to accept grants, gifts, fees or funds from , persons, associations, corрorations, or foundations for any purpose authorized by the Board.
B. There is hereby created in the State Treasury a revolving fund for the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner to be designated the "Chief Medical Examiner Revolving Fund". The fund shall be a continuing fund, not subject to fiscal year limitations, and shall consist of all moneys received from:
1. Laboratory analysis fees pursuant to the provisions of Section 1313.2 of Title 20 of the Oklahoma Statutes;
2. Grants, gifts, fees or funds from persons, associations, corporations or foundations pursuant to this section;
3. Document fees pursuant to the Oklahoma Open Records Act, Section 244.1 et seq. of Title 51 of the Oklahoma Statutes; and
4. Cremation, burial at sea or other recognized means of dissolution permit fees pursuant to Section 1-329.1 of this title.
All monies accruing to the credit of said fund are hereby appropriated and may be budgeted and expended by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner for the duties imposed upon the Board of Medicolegal Investigations by law. Expenditures from said fund shall be made upon warrants issued by the State Treasurer against claims filed as prescribed by law with the Director of the Office of Management and Enterprise Services for approval and payment.
. The Okla. Const. art. 4, § 1 provides:
The powers of the government of the State of Oklahoma shall be divided into three separate departments: The Legislative, Executive, and Judicial; and except as provided in this Constitution, thе Legislative, Executive, and Judicial departments of government shall be separate and distinct, and neither shall exercise the powers properly belonging to either of the others.
See also, Okla. Const., art. 5, § 55 relating to specificity of appropriated funds and Okla. Const. art. 10 § 16 relating to the purposes of borrowing. Protestants offer a blanket assertion that § 16 is violated and also contend that § 55 is violated, citing Wells v. Childers, 1945 Ok 365,
. The "Motion to Dismiss Due to Expiration of Bond Authorization" filed by - Respondent Anderson on September 23, 2013, is denied. Additionally, the "Supplemental Motion to Dismiss" filed by Respondent Elliot on September 23, 2013, is denied.
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part, dissenting in part.
{ 1 I agree with the majority's holding the Legislature cannot be forced to appropriate funds to repay the bonds in question. I give deference as a matter of stare decisis to this Court's previous decisions and their use by the majority in its analysis. However, I reserve doubt concerning the wisdom of sustaining the legal fiction that the State is not ultimately obligated to pay such bond indebtеdness.
T2 Respondent, C.L. Elliott (hereinafter "Elliott"), quotes from previous annual reports of the State Bond Advisor, Jim Joseph, stating all agency lease purchase agreements contain non-appropriation language. This language would allow the State to terminate the leasе at the end of any fiscal year if sufficient funds were not appropriated to make the lease payments. The Applicant also quotes similar disclosures from the bonds' official statements. It appears to be the belief of Mr. Joseph that all credit markets still view these leases as ongoing commitments backed by the State's general resources. If the State chose not to appropriate sufficient funds to make such lease payments the State's credit rating would be seriously affected. For all intents and purposes, once a bond has been issued which requires appropriations as a source of payment, the State finds itself on a one-way street with no exit. This is so regardless of who is obligated to pay. I understand the financial expediency of using such vehicles for state improvements; however, the elephant in the roоm is being ignored.
1 3 This leads to my other concern. Would the elephant in the room be ignored if the Legislature provided more notice to its members? The Respondent, Senator Anderson, raises the issue concerning the statutory review mechanism for the Master Lease Program; specifically, the review process may not provide sufficient notice to legislators. Title 70 0.98.2011, $ 3206.6a(B), provides the list of proposed projects and their financing shall be submitted by the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education to the Governor, the Speaker of the House and the President Pro Tеmpore of the State Senate. This statute further requires the Legislature to affirmatively disapprove a project or otherwise it will be deemed approved. Senator Anderson contends the remaining 147 members of the 149 member Legislature are never notified of the existencе of the projects.
{4 The mechanism found in § 8206.6a(B) is found in other statutory schemes. For example, the approval by the Legislature of proposed agency administrative rules may occur if the rule is not affirmatively disapproved. 75 0.8.2011, § 308(E). However, the Administrative Procedures Act,
15 My final concern is ripeness. I disagree with the majority's decision to forego oral argument. I believe oral argument wоuld be beneficial in answering the question of what exactly the Council of Bond Oversight (hereinafter "COB") approved on March 28, 2018. The Applicant claims the bonds and the projects have been approved by the COB. Respondent Elliott asserts the COB has not reviewed or approved specific projects. The March 28, 2013, COB minutes
ORDER
¶ 1 Two petitions for rehearing are before the Court, one filed by Jerry R. Fent on October 9, 2013, and one filed by Patrick Anderson on October 14, 2013.
¶ 2 The petition for rehearing filed by respondent, Jerry R. Fent, is hereby DENIED.
¶ 3 The petition for rehearing filed by respondent, Patrick Anderson, is hereby DENIED.
¶ 4 DONE BY ORDER OF THE SUPREME COURT IN CONFERENCE THIS 28th DAY OF OCTOBER 2013.
