This is a suit by the Jackson County Sports Complex Authority to invalidate section 64.940.3, RSMo Supp.2005, which mandated that “any expenditure made by the [county sports complex authority] ... over five thousand dollars ... must be competitively bid.” Section 64.940.3 was enacted in 2005, by the 93rd General Assembly, as part of an amendment to two bills, H.B. 58 and S.B. 210. The trial court entered judgment for plaintiff, holding that the addition of section 64.940.3 to both bills changed their original purpose and rendered the titles of both bills unclear in violation оf article III, sec. 21 and sec. 23, respectively, of the Missouri Constitution. Because this appeal involves the validity of a state statute, this Court has exclusive jurisdiction. Mo. Const, art. V, sec. 3. The judgment is reversed.
STATEMENT OF FACTS:
This case was submitted to the trial court via a joint stipulation of facts tracking the enactment of H.B. 58 and S.B. 210 through the legislative process.
On May 13, 2005, the 93rd General Assembly truly agreed and finally passed H.B. 58 and S.B. 210, the Governor signed both bills into law on July 7, 2005, and both went into effect on August 28, 2005. As introduced, H.B. 58 was а bill to repeal six provisions in chapter 50, RSMo, and one provision in chapter 250, “and to enact in lieu thereof seven new provisions relating to political subdivisions.” Five of the six proposed changes dealt with competitive bidding and purchasing requirements for counties. One dealt with county financial statements. The chapter 250 change was directed at giving water supply districts the same ability as cities, towns, villages, and sewage districts to recover for unpaid services.
As finally passed, H.B. 58 repealed and enacted in lieu thereof 165 provisions “relating to political subdivisions.” While the final version of H.B. 58 included changes to many other statutory chapters (chapters 44, 49, 54, 55, 59, 64, 65, 67, 71, 82, 94, 100, 105, 115, 135-140, 165, 190, 205, 210, 217, 231, 233, 242, 245-247, 249, 263, 278, 301, 313, 320, 321, 349, 393, 447, 473, 478, 488, 537, 559, 640, 644 and 701), only one provision is dirеctly at issue in the case before this Court: the addition of a new subsection 3 to sec. 64.940. Section 64.940.3 was added to H.B. 58 on May 3, 2005, as an amendment to the Senate Substitute for Senate Committee Substitute for House Committee Substitute for H.B. 58. It provides as follows:
*159 Any expenditure made by the [county sports complex] authority located in a county with a charter form of government and with more than six hundred thousand but fewer than seven hundred thousand inhabitants, that is over five thousand dollars, including professiоnal service contracts, must be competitively bid.
Pursuant to section 64.920 (which has not been changed since it was first enacted in 1965), a county sports complex authority is “a body corporate and politic and a political subdivisiоn of the state of Missouri.” Sec. 64.920;
Waris v. Carnes,
S.B. 210, as originally introduced, was a bill to repeal 16 provisions in chapters 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 67,137, and 473, RSMo and “to enact in lieu thereof 16 provisions relating to county government.” Most of the provisions in the original version of S.B. 210 deаlt with salaries for county officials (county commissioners, county recorders, clerks, auditors, assessors, collectors, treasurers, prosecuting attorneys, sheriffs, and coroners), but another provision dealt with duties of county assessors and their ability to enter lands and structures to perform assessments.
As S.B. 210 moved through the legislative process, amendments were added, including the March 1, 2005, addition of section 64.940.3 (which is identical to section 64.940.3 enacted as part of H.B. 58). On April 20th, S.B. 210’s title wаs changed from “a bill relating to county government” to “a bill relating to political subdivisions.”
As finally passed, S.B. 210 repealed and enacted in lieu thereof 104 provisions “relating to political subdivisions.” As with H.B. 58, the final version of S.B. 210 affected many morе statutory chapters than the original version of S.B. 210 would have affected (chapters 44, 52, 59, 64, 65, 89, 94, 100, 110, 115, 136, 139, 140, 165, 190, 205, 210, 233, 242, 245, 250, 263, 301, 321, 388, 483, 545, and 573). But also, as with H.B. 58, only one provision in the final version of S.B. 210 — section 64.940.3 — is directly in issue in the case before this Court.
With respect to the “original purpоse” issue, the trial court concluded that H.B. 58, as introduced, was a narrow bill that “affected the duties of county commissions in procuring supplies and permitted water supply districts organized pursuant to chapter 247 to recover from an occupant of real estate sums due for services provided.” In the court’s view, the many “substitutes and amendments to House Bill 58” including section 64.940.3, worked to change the bill’s “original purpose” in violation of article III, section 21. The court dеfined S.B. 210’s “original purpose” in a similarly narrow fashion, concluding that the bill as introduced “related to salaries of county officials, annual assessments by county assessors and salaries for county public administrators.” And like its analysis of the changes to H.B. 58, the court determined that the amendments to S.B. 210, including section 64.940, were in derogation of S.B. 210’s “original purpose.”
In finding a “clear title” violation, the court compared the title “relating to political subdivisions” to the titles “relating to рroperty ownership” and “relating to economic development” that were determined to be impermissibly overbroad in
Home Builders Ass’n of Greater St. Louis v. State,
STANDARD OF REVIEW:
This Court’s review must begin with the recognition that laws enacted by the legislature and approved by the governor have a strong presumption of constitutionality.
Stroh Brewery Co. v. State,
ANALYSIS:
Article III, section 21, prohibits any bill from being “so amended in its passage through either house as to change its original purpose.” This Court has long held that the original purpose prohibition does not restrict legislators from making “[alterations that bring about an extension or limitation of the scope of [a] bill,” and “even new matter is not excluded if germane.”
Stroh,
In
Missouri State Medical Ass’n,
for example, this Court held that a bill that “would have enacted a new section of law requiring that health insurers cover ... pеlvic, prostate, and colorectal examinations and other cancer screenings” had an original purpose in the larger sense of “mandate[ing] health services for serious illnesses, including cancer.”
Given this Court’s original purpose jurisprudence as illustrated by the forego *161 ing cases, the general, or overarching purpose of H.B. 58 and S.B. 210 as originally introduced can fairly be said to be the regulation of political subdivisions. The purpose was not narrowly limited, as thе trial court held, to the subject matter of the specific statutes referenced in the original text. In addition, each of those statutes were “germane” to the larger purpose of regulating political subdivisions. Furthermore, the seсtion 64.940.3 amendment also was germane to the original purpose of H.B. 58 and S.B. 210 because section 64.940.3 regulates a kind of political subdivision — sports complex authorities in counties of a particular population range. In short, thеre was no original purpose violation.
Nor was there a clear title violation. Article III, section 23 states that “[n]o bill shall contain more than one subject which shall be clearly expressed in its title.” This provision contains two distinct but rеlated procedural limitations — a single subject rule and a clear title requirement.
C.C. Dillon,
Although the trial court here determined that the title was too broad and amorphous, the only cases in which this Court has so found are those in whiсh the title could describe the better part of all the legislation passed by the General Assembly. For instance, in
St. Louis Health Care Network v. State,
As noted, the trial court’s specific concerns were that the statutes contain differing definitions of the term “political subdivision,” whiсh render the term effectively meaningless and which necessitate a title that more clearly identifies the contents of the bills. This conclusion, however, disregards the above-stated principle that a bill’s subject may be “clearly expressed by ... stating some broad umbrella category that includes all the topics within its cover.” The term, “political subdivision” in the larger sense, is a broad umbrella category that includes all of the differing definitions of “political subdivisions” under its cover. Although the title here — “relating to political subdivisions” — may well represent the outer limit permitted, this Court holds that it is not so broad and amorphous as to constitute a violation.
The judgment is reversed.
Notes
. Last year, in
Rizzo v. State,
