Louis HEIMBACH, as County Executive of Orange County on
behalf of himself and all those similarly situated
in the Metropolitan Transportation
District of the State of New
York, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Roderick CHU, as Commissioner of New York State Department
of Taxation and Finance, and Warren Anderson, as
Temporary President of the New York
State Senate, Defendants-Appellees.
Cal. No. 1193, Docket 84-7067.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued May 11, 1984.
Decided Sept. 17, 1984.
James G. Sweeney, County Atty., Goshen, N.Y., for plaintiff-appellant.
Aven Rennie, Asst. Atty. Gen., New York City (Robert Abrams, Atty. Gen. of the State of N.Y., Melvyn Leventhal, Deputy First Asst. Atty. Gen., and Richard G. Liskov, Asst. Atty. Gen., New York City, of counsel), for defendants-appellees.
Before OAKES, VAN GRAAFEILAND, Circuit Judges, and BONSAL, District Judge.*
VAN GRAAFEILAND, Circuit Judge:
This is an appeаl from an order and judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Sweet, J.) dismissing appellant's complaint on motion. The complaint asked for declaratory and injunctive relief based on allegations that the New York Senate's procedurе for a "fast roll call" vote violated the Guarantee Clause of article IV, section 4, of the United States Constitution, and, as used in enacting a sales and use tax in the twelve counties served by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, denied appellant equal protection and due process of law. We affirm.
Rule VIII, section 6 of the New York Senate's Rules of Procedure provides for the passage of bills by "a roll call ... of five Senators, two of whom shall be the Temporary President and the Minority Leader, provided however, that each Senator's name shall be called if requested by five Senators." According to Senate custom, each Senator who is not called in the fast roll call is deemed to have voted in favor of the bill unless he voices oppositiоn to the bill or is considered absent at the time of the vote. Physical absence from the Senate chambers, however, will not prevent a Senator from being considered "present" for purposes of the fast roll call if he was in attendance prior to thе call and had not asked the Secretary of the Senate to be excused. Of all the bills passed in 1981, 97.9% were passed by fast roll call. Heimbach v. State of New York,
On July 8, 1981, Senator Howard Nolan participated in Senate proceedings until late in the afternoоn. Senator Manfred Ohrenstein, the Minority Leader, telephoned Senator Nolan after he left to tell him that the Senate was going to consider a financing package for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Senator Nolan told Senator Ohrenstein that he opposed the package but that he would not be returning to the Senate chambers because he was scheduled to undergo surgery the following morning. There is a dispute as to whether Senator Nolan asked Senator Ohrenstein to arrange to have him excused from the proceedings. In any event, this was not done. Senator Nolan was in the hospital when the Senate, by fast roll call, passed the bill now being challenged, Assembly No. 9059, 1981 N.Y.Laws ch. 485, codified at N.Y.Tax Law Sec. 1109. The bill received 31 affirmative votes, the minimum needed fоr passage, and Senator Nolan was counted as favoring the bill.
On September 17, 1981, appellant brought a class action in New York Supreme Court, Orange County, alleging that section 1109 violated the equal protection rights of taxpayers in Orange and Suffolk counties and that it had not been duly enacted because Senator Nolan opposed the bill and his vote should not have been counted in favor of it. The court, without considering the equal protection claim, declared the statute invalid because it had not received the "assent of a majority of the members elected to each branch of the legislature" as required by article III, section 14, of the New York State Constitution. Heimbach v. State of New York,
Appellant then sought a district court judgment declaring that rule VIII, subdivision 6, when combined with the Senate custom which presumes affirmative votes by all "present" Senators, violates the Guarantee Clause of the United States Constitution. Appellant also asked the district court to invalidate section 1109 on the ground that the manner in which it was passed violated the equal protection and due procеss clauses of the Constitution. The district court dismissed appellant's equal protection and due process claims as improper attempts to challenge a State tax in the federal courts. See 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1341. It dismissed the Guarantee Clause claim on the grоunds that it was not justiciable and appellant's injury was too abstract to create the standing necessary for bringing suit.
The district court's opinion was handed down prior to Migra v. Warren City School District Board of Education, --- U.S. ----,
New York has adopted the transactional identity approach to res judicata, under which a claim that could have been asserted under a given set of facts in a concluded action is barred from being asserted under the same set of facts in a subsequent action. See Reilly v. Reid,
Our own review of the State record reveals, however, that the federal constitutional claims relating to the fast roll call never were presented to the New York Court of Appeals. Indeed, appellant did not challenge the fast roll call per se, but only its use in Sеnator Nolan's "unexcused" absence. Moreover, that challenge was based on article III, section 14 of the New York Constitution, which prohibits the passage of a bill "except by the assent of a majority of the members elected to each branch of the legislature." The Court of Appeals did not, as appellant contends, declare that it did "not have jurisdiction to entertain claims aimed at the number of votes cast or the number of Senators present", nor did it say that it "could not and would not have entertainеd ... [a] Federal Constitutional claim aimed at the number of votes cast or the number of senators present ...." It simply refused to intrude into the wholly internal affairs of the Legislature.
Legislative proceedings which violate the United States Constitution are not "wholly internal" legislative affairs. See Powell v. McCormack,
Appellant's reliance upon thе preclusive effect of New York Legislative Law Sec. 40 is misplaced. Section 40 requires the presiding officer of the New York Senate to certify the date of each bill's passage "and whether [it was] passed by the votes of a majority of all [Senators] оr of two-thirds thereof, or of a majority of [the Senators], three-fifths thereof being present." It then provides that "[n]o bills shall be deemed to have so passed unless certified in the manner provided by this section, which certificate to such effect shall be conclusivе evidence thereof."
Although section 40 limits judicial review of some alleged deficiencies in legislative proceedings, as it did on appellant's appeal to the New York Court of Appeals,
Assuming for the argument only that New York courts would be precluded by New York Legislative Law Sec. 40 from passing upon appellant's challenge to section 1109, there is nothing in section 40 that would prevent the courts from banning the use of fast roll calls in future legislative enactments where no section 40 certification as yet has been made.
Whether the New York Court of Appeals would have found merit in appellant's constitutional arguments is a question we need not decide. For res judicata purposes, we are interested only in whether argument on the merits would have been heard. Despitе the provisions of section 40, we are satisfied that it would have been. See Board of Education v. City of New York, supra,
Because of the availability of a State court remedy, the district court correctly held that appellant was precluded by the terms оf the Tax Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1341, from challenging section 1109 of the New York Tax Law. Section 1341 reads:
The district courts shall not enjoin, suspend or restrain the assessment, levy or collection of any tax under State law where a plain, speedy and efficient remedy may be had in the courts of such State.
Appellant contends that his claim is not within the Act because its primary challenge is to the legislative procedure rather than the resultant tax. See Parker v. Merlino,
The Tax Injunction Act, with "its roots in equity praсtice, in principles of federalism, and in recognition of the imperative need of a State to administer its own fiscal operations," Tully v. Griffin, Inc.,
We need spend little time on appellant's argument that the district court should have considered his challenge to thе fast roll call procedure, separate and apart from its use in enacting section 1109. The district court held this claim to be nonjusticiable and appellant without standing to pursue it. See Schlesinger v. Reservists Committee to Stop the War,
For all the reasons above-expressed, we conclude that the district court's judgment was correct. It therefore is affirmed.
Notes
Of the United States District Court for Southern District of New York, sitting by designation
