Senator Fred RISSER, Senator Brian Burke, Representative David Travis and Sheila R. Mooney, Petitioners, v. James R. KLAUSER and Governor Tommy G. Thompson, Respondents.
No. 96-0042-OA
Supreme Court of Wisconsin
January 31, 1997
Oral argument October 29, 1996. (Also reported in 558 N.W.2d 108.)
STEINMETZ and WILCOX, J.J., join.
For the petitioners there were briefs by Lynn Adelman, Jon Deitrich and Adelman, Adelman & Murray, S.C., Milwaukee and oral argument by Lynn Adelman.
For the respondents there was a brief by Bruce L. Harms, Michael J. Modl and Axley Brynelson, Madison and oral argument by Michael J. Modl.
¶ 1. SHIRLEY S. ABRAHAMSON, Chief Justice. This is an original action by several Wisconsin state legislators and a taxpayer (petitioners)1 seeking a declaration that the Governor‘s write-in veto of a monetary figure in the second sentence of section 57 of 1995 Assembly Bill 557 exceeded his authority under
¶ 2. The “write-in” veto in issue in the present case was first recognized as within a governor‘s
¶ 3. The petitioners contend that the constitution limits the write-in veto to reductions of appropriation amounts and that the revenue bonding limit in the second sentence of section 57 is not an appropriation amount.
¶ 4. The Governor advances two arguments in support of his exercise of the write-in veto in this case. First, the Governor contends that the write-in veto is not limited to reducing appropriation amounts and that the write-in veto may be exercised on any monetary figure in an appropriation bill. Second, the Governor argues that even if a governor‘s write-in veto is limited to appropriation amounts, the monetary figure in issue in the present case is an appropriation amount subject to the write-in veto.
¶ 5. We conclude that the Governor‘s write-in veto may be exercised only on a monetary figure which is an appropriation amount and that the monetary figure in the second sentence of section 57 of 1995 A.B. 557 is not an appropriation amount. Accordingly, we hold that the Governor‘s write-in veto challenged in the present case is not authorized by the constitution and is therefore invalid.
I.
¶ 6. This case comes to us on stipulated facts. As background for our legal analysis we shall summarize the facts, the constitutional law relating to the partial veto and the statutory context of the second sentence of section 57 of 1995 A.B. 557.
¶ 7. On November 16, 1995, the Wisconsin legislature enrolled 1995 A.B. 557, an omnibus bill setting forth the transportation budget. In addition to appro-
¶ 8. On December 6, 1995, the Governor vetoed numerous parts of 1995 A.B. 557 and approved the remainder. The part approved was enacted as 1995 Wis. Act 113.
¶ 9. This case is ruled by the 1930 amendment to the Wisconsin constitution authorizing a governor to approve appropriation bills “in whole or in part.”
(1)(a) Every bill which shall have passed the legislature shall, before it becomes a law, be presented to the governor.
(b) If the governor approves and signs the bill, the bill shall become law. Appropriation bills may be approved in whole or in part by the governor, and the part approved shall become law.
(c) In approving an appropriation bill in part, the governor may not create a new word by rejecting individual letters in the words of the enrolled bill.
¶ 10. Certain principles emerge from the court‘s interpretations of this language. First, a governor may exercise the partial veto only on parts of bills that contain appropriations within their four corners. State ex rel. Finnegan v. Dammann, 220 Wis. 143, 147-48, 264 N.W. 622 (1936). Second, the partial veto must be exer-
¶ 11. A governor‘s authority to alter legislation, granted in
Section 57.
84.59(6) of the statutes is amended to read:84.59(6) Revenue obligations may be contracted by the building commission when it reasonably appears to the building commission that all obligations incurred under this section can be fully paid from moneys received or anticipated and pledged to be received on a timely basis. Revenue obligations issued under this section shall not exceed
$950,834,0002 $1,123,638,1003 [$1,083,638,100]4 in principal amount, excluding obligations issued to refund outstanding revenue obligations. Not more than $841,634,000 $1,081,341,000 [$1,041,341,000] of the$950,834,000$1,123,638,100 [$1,083,638,100] may be used for transportation facilities unders. 84.01(28) and major highway projects underss. 84.06 and84.09 .
¶ 13. Section 57 amended
¶ 14. In the second sentence of section 57 the legislature raised the cumulative limit on revenue obligations that may be contracted under
¶ 15. The write-in vetoes in the third sentence, as well as numerous other write-in vetoes, were not challenged or discussed in the briefs by either party. At oral argument, in response to the court‘s questions, counsel for the Governor urged the court to consider the third sentence as part of the overall revenue/appropriation scheme informing the meaning of the second sentence and its monetary figure. At oral argument the petitioners described the third sentence and the figures therein as setting forth a use limitation, in contrast with appropriation amounts subject to the partial veto. We shall examine the third sentence in our discussion of the challenged write-in veto.
¶ 16. The Governor makes two alternative arguments to support his write-in veto of the monetary figure in the second sentence of section 57. The first argument is that a governor‘s write-in veto power is not limited to reducing appropriation amounts; rather it is limited to reducing any monetary figures in an appropriation bill. The second argument is that even if a
II.
¶ 17. The Governor‘s contention that the write-in veto applies to any monetary figure in an appropriation bill and is not limited to appropriation amounts rests on the Governor‘s interpretation of C.U.B., 194 Wis. 2d 484. In C.U.B. the Governor had exercised his veto by striking the figure $350,000 and writing in $250,000 in an entry within
¶ 18. In this part of his argument the Governor does not ask that we rule narrowly on the facts at hand, but rather that we state a generally applicable rule: that the write-in veto applies to all monetary figures in appropriation bills. This rule would preclude a governor‘s writing in “Eau Claire city” in place of “Eau Claire county,” “37 counties” in place of “72 counties” and “Route 69” in place of “Route 151.”8
¶ 20. At oral argument in the C.U.B. case, counsel for the Governor was pressed for a standard by which the court might sanction the write-in veto. Counsel for the Governor replied that “the standard is if it appears in an appropriation bill first of all and it is a number of an appropriation, the Governor may reduce it by striking it and writing in a smaller number.” The following colloquy demonstrates the rule proposed by counsel for the Governor and some of the justices’ concerns:
Justice Bablitch: You‘re saying that only an appropriation can be approved in whole or in part?
Counsel for the Governor: Yes. And an appropriation bill also, as the court has said before.
Justice Abrahamson: But you can‘t write in on the appropriation bill, but you can write in on the appropriation?
Counsel for the Governor: Correct.
bill: ”Ten Twelve [three] dollars for issuing a copy of a birth certificate.” See 1995 A.B. 150, § 3343d (executive budget bill) (amending
Justice Geske: Is there any other basis upon which you can distinguish between reducing numbers and reducing conceptually other concepts?
Counsel for the Governor: If you allow striking outside of an appropriation number you‘re going to run into problems very quickly with the 1990 amendment. For example, if the legislature passes a bill that says “something shall happen in 15 days” and the governor can cross that out and write in the number “10,” we have created a problem because if the legislature had written out in script “fifteen” under the new constitutional amendment he could not cross out the letters to get to “ten.”
Justice Geske: So you agree with Mr. Adelman [petitioner‘s counsel] on the numbers outside of appropriation numbers?
Counsel for the Governor: Yes. But at the core of the partial veto authority are dollars. That is the core; that is what the people were speaking to in 1930, the first amendment, and in 1990 when it was amended again. If the governor can approve parts of appropriation bills, and this court has certainly held that the governor can, and included within that concept is part of appropriations. That is, I thought, the easier concept to grasp.
¶ 21. Addressing the concerns of these justices and adopting the limited rule proposed by counsel for the Governor, C.U.B. expressly draws a distinction between appropriation amounts and other parts of appropriation bills, allowing a write-in veto of the former but not the latter. C.U.B., 194 Wis. 2d at 499, 506 n.13, 508-10.
¶ 22. The second indication that C.U.B. limited the write-in veto to appropriation amounts is that it rested its holding on precedent, namely Wisconsin Sen-
¶ 23. Third, the text of the C.U.B. opinion limits the write-in veto to appropriation amounts. To quote the C.U.B. opinion, the issue presented was whether the partial veto power “permits the governor to strike a numerical sum appropriated in the bill and to insert a different, smaller number as the appropriated sum.” Id. at 488. The court responded unequivocally in the affirmative to this issue: “We now make explicit the fact that a governor may only reduce an appropriation by a number contained within the original appropriation allotment.” C.U.B., 194 Wis. 2d at 508-09.
¶ 24. And further, in response to the specter raised by the dissent of an unlimited write-in veto
¶ 25. The C.U.B. majority emphasized the limited nature of its holding, as follows: “[F]or the powers of the governor to be extended in the fashion suggested by the dissent, this court would have to overrule the present decision‘s limitation to reduce only monetary appropriations.” C.U.B., 194 Wis. 2d at 510-11 n.18. The reference to the need for overruling makes abundantly clear that this limitation was intended as an element of the holding.
¶ 26. In numerous parts of the opinion, the C.U.B. court sanctioned the write-in veto but limited its applicability to lowering appropriation amounts and only appropriation amounts.10 The court summed up as follows:
Accepting the common sense rationale of this opinion in no way expands the governor‘s power; rather,
the approach espoused today simply makes the prescribed power of
sec. 10(1)(b) more logical. Succinctly stated, the governor has the power to approve part of an appropriation bill by reducing the amount of money appropriated so long as the number is part of the original appropriation. This power stems from the right to reduce appropriations recognized in Wisconsin Senate and extends only to monetary figures and is not applicable in the context of any other part of an appropriation.
Id. at 510 (emphasis added). Only monetary figures which are appropriation amounts are subject to the write-in veto power under C.U.B.
¶ 27. In sum, the Governor‘s interpretation of C.U.B. contravenes the basis upon which C.U.B. was argued by the parties and written by the court. The C.U.B. decision adjudicated the constitutional scope of the governor‘s write-in veto power and is precedential.11 Accordingly, following precedent we conclude that the constitution prohibits a write-in veto of monetary figures which are not appropriation amounts.
III.
¶ 28. The Governor‘s second argument is that even if C.U.B. limits the write-in veto to appropriation amounts, the vetoed figure in the second sentence of section 57 is an appropriation amount. The Governor advances several overlapping and related rationales for characterizing the monetary figure in the second sentence as an appropriation amount.
¶ 29. First, the Governor asserts that the revenue bonding limit at issue in the case at bar lies within the definitions of appropriation set out in Finnegan, 220 Wis. 143. To determine that the bill in question in that case did not contain an appropriation, the Finnegan court was called upon to define the word appropriation. The court set forth three similar definitions as follows:
In Webster‘s New International Dictionary the following definition is made:
“Appropriation bill. Govt. A measure before a legislative body authorizing the expenditure of public moneys and stipulating the amount, manner, and purpose of the various items of expenditure.”
In State v. LaGrave, 23 Nev. 25, 41 Pac. 1075, 1076 (1895), the court said:
“An appropriation in the sense of the constitution means the setting apart a portion of the public funds for a public purpose.”
In Hunt v. Callaghan, 32 Ariz. 235, 257 Pac. 648, 649 (1927), the court said:
“An appropriation is ‘the setting aside from the public revenue of a certain sum of money for a specified object, in such manner that the executive officers of the government are authorized to use that money, and no more, for that object, and no other.”
¶ 30. We can find nothing in section 57 that authorizes an expenditure or the setting aside of public funds for a particular purpose. Section 57 deals with raising revenue and limiting the use to which the revenue may be put. Sentences one and two provide that revenue obligations may be contracted for under certain conditions and not in excess of a certain amount. The third sentence provides that no more than a stated amount may be used for two specified transportation purposes. Section 57 thus establishes a level of funds that the state is authorized to generate by the sale of bonds and limits the purposes for which the revenue raised may be expended.
¶ 31. Section 57 does not appropriate the funds. The sale of bonds is the commitment of the state to a debtor relation to those who purchase the bonds and is therefore distinguishable from an appropriation.12 The sale of bonds is revenue raising; revenue raising and appropriation are more nearly antonyms than synonyms. Finnegan, 220 Wis. at 148. Whether the three sentences of section 57 are looked at individually or collectively, increasing a bond authorization and limiting the purposes for which a certain amount of the moneys raised might be used do not constitute an expenditure or setting aside of public funds for a particular purpose.
¶ 32. We are unpersuaded by the Governor‘s position that section 57 is an appropriation because this view contravenes legislative procedures relating to appropriations. In Wisconsin all appropriations are
All appropriations made by the legislature shall be listed in this chapter. The revisor of statutes shall assign numbers in this chapter to any appropriation not so numbered and if appropriation laws are enacted which are not so numbered to correspond with the numbering system of this chapter as outlined in sub. (3), the revisor of statutes shall renumber such laws accordingly.
¶ 33. The legislative attorneys at the Legislative Reference Bureau, upon whom the task of drafting legislation falls,
¶ 34. The requirement that appropriations be listed in
¶ 35. Finnegan, 220 Wis. at 147-48, and legislative practice thus make clear that a change in a revenue generation provision is not an appropriation.
¶ 36. A second and overlapping rationale urged by the Governor is that the monetary figure in the second sentence of section 57 is an appropriation amount because the figure affects and is closely interrelated with appropriations found elsewhere in the bill and in the statutes.
¶ 37. The Governor reasons as follows: Various sections of
¶ 38. The Governor reads Finnegan as stating that if a bill contains provisions which set in motion a chain of events such that funds are disbursed without further legislative action, the bill contains an appropriation. This is not what Finnegan says. Indeed the Governor‘s argument was explicitly rejected by the court in Finnegan.
¶ 39. Finnegan construed the constitution as barring exercise of the partial veto on parts of any bill which “does not within its four corners contain an
appropriation.” Finnegan, 220 Wis. at 147.14 The bill at issue in Finnegan increased a revenue raising provision; it increased the permit fees to be paid by motor carriers. The increase in permit fees changed the amount appropriated because the funds generated by the fees were appropriated by a previously enacted appropriation. When the governor struck the sentences increasing the fees, the partial veto was challenged on the ground that the bill was not an appropriation bill. The Secretary of State argued that the fee increase in concert with other statutes constituted an appropriation.15¶ 40. The Finnegan court applied its four corners rule by inquiring whether “the fact that [the bill] indirectly affects continuing revolving fund appropriations theretofore enacted by raising the permit fees of various types of carriers, constitute it an appropriation bill.” Finnegan, 220 Wis. at 147-48. The Finnegan court concluded: “We are convinced that this question must be answered in the negative.” Id. at 148. In sum, the fact that a provision generates revenue and affects an appropriation because the amount appropriated is determined by the amount of revenue generated does not convert the bill into an appropriation bill nor the provision into an appropriation.
¶ 41. Finnegan‘s result was based on the court‘s construction of the 1930 amendment, the same consti
¶ 42. In Wisconsin Senate, 144 Wis. 2d at 454-55, 457, 461, and C.U.B., 194 Wis. 2d at 509, the court emphasized a different rationale for the partial veto: the governor‘s significant constitutional role in the budget process. With this emphasis, those decisions read the governor‘s authority as at its broadest when vetoing appropriation amounts.
¶ 43. The budgetary control rationale is consistent with limiting the write-in power of the governor to the reduction of appropriation amounts. At the core of our tripartite system of government is the principle that the power of each branch must know limits. Wisconsin governors have perhaps more extensive power to alter legislation than do any other state governors. But a governor‘s power to craft legislation necessarily must have constitutional limits. A write-in veto power which extends beyond the reduction of appropriation amounts intrudes too far into the constitutional grant of legislative power vested in the Senate and the Assembly.
¶ 45. The Governor advances no argument to explain or distinguish the reasoning or holding of Finnegan. Applying the teachings of Finnegan to this case we must conclude that the monetary figure in the second sentence in issue here is not an appropriation amount. Nor does the interrelationship of that provision with the statutory scheme transform the provision into an appropriation amount.
¶ 46. We reject the Governor‘s expansive view of what constitutes an appropriation for purposes of his write-in veto authority. A governor can strike parts of a bill if that bill contains an appropriation. Only when a governor seeks to exercise the write-in veto is this partial veto power limited further. The constitution, as interpreted by C.U.B. and Finnegan, cabins the write-in veto power to monetary figures which are themselves appropriation amounts.
IV.
¶ 47. Aside from the teachings of Finnegan, we are unpersuaded by the Governor‘s proposed expansive and flexible definition of appropriation because (1) it is in conflict with the court‘s interpretation of the word
¶ 48. First, the Governor‘s position contravenes other case law. The word “appropriation” appears in several other provisions in the Wisconsin constitution.17 Although the interpretation of a word used in a constitutional provision is not determinative of the word‘s meaning in all constitutional provisions, it may prove helpful. McDonald v. State, 80 Wis. 407, 50 N.W. 185 (1891), raised the issue of the meaning of the word appropriation as used in
¶ 49. In McDonald a criminal defendant challenged his conviction on the ground that the bill creating the fifteenth judicial circuit, in which he was prosecuted, was not enacted pursuant to the mandates of
¶ 50. McDonald argued that because the bill created a judgeship which necessarily would be funded from existing appropriations without further legislative action, the bill made an appropriation for purposes of
¶ 51. The McDonald rule is consistent with Finnegan. A necessary relation between the provision in issue and another provision which is an appropriation does not transform the provision in issue into an appropriation.
¶ 52. Second, the Governor‘s position in the case at bar, that the figure in the second sentence is an appropriation amount, conflicts with the position the Governor took in his veto message explaining the write-in veto of section 57.18 The Governor‘s veto message to the legislature clearly distinguished the two
¶ 53. Aside from these two considerations and considerations of stare decisis, we adhere to Finnegan because it is a sound interpretation of the Wisconsin constitution. The Governor asks us to find an appropriation by analyzing the complex interrelation of various statutes so that what appears to be an amount authorizing bonding is actually an appropriation amount. The dangers of the Governor‘s approach are obvious.
¶ 54. Were we to agree with the Governor‘s expansive reading that a monetary sum “interrelated” with an appropriation is an appropriation we would expand the definition of the constitutional term “appropriation bill” and the governor‘s partial veto power beyond the limits recognized in Finnegan and the court‘s subsequent holdings. This we are not free to do.
¶ 55. If a provision authorizing the raising of revenue can be considered an appropriation amount, there would be no discernible distinction, certainly no clearly applicable one, with which to differentiate appropria
¶ 56. By adopting the Governor‘s position we would be abandoning Finnegan‘s bright line rule for determining what is an appropriation and what is an appropriation bill. A bright line rule is especially suitable when the court is called upon, as we are in veto cases, to referee disputes between our co-equal branches of government. In such disputes the constitution must have intended that whenever possible a court provide clear guidance to the other two branches to preclude continuing judicial involvement in and the need for frequent judicial resolution of inter-branch disputes.
¶ 57. The Finnegan bright line rule affords the legislature and the Governor the ability to predict the consequences of their actions and to guide their conduct accordingly without the intercession of the judicial branch. The separation of powers principle operates best when the judiciary is not continually called upon to resolve conflicts between the other two branches. The large volume of veto litigation is not a sign of a healthy discourse on state constitutional law. It indicates that the branches have been unable to resolve the issues with clarity.
¶ 58. We disagree with the Governor‘s suggestion that the constitution intended a flexible rule defining an appropriation amount subject to the write-in veto and therefore defining an appropriation bill subject to the partial veto. Far from giving us reason to revisit the Finnegan “four corners” approach, 60 years
¶ 59. We conclude that the Wisconsin constitution does not authorize the Governor to disapprove parts of legislation by writing in new numbers except when the part disapproved is a monetary figure which expresses an appropriation amount in an appropriation bill and the inserted number is a lesser appropriation amount.19 Figures in appropriation bills which are not themselves appropriation amounts but which affect and are closely interrelated with an appropriation are not subject to the write-in veto.
By the Court.—Rights declared.
¶ 60. N. PATRICK CROOKS, J. (dissenting). The majority holds that “the Wisconsin constitution does not authorize the Governor to disapprove parts of legislation by writing in new numbers except when the part disapproved is a monetary figure which expresses an appropriation amount in an appropriation bill and the inserted number is a lesser appropriation amount.” Majority op. at 204. In determining the limitations to the governor‘s partial veto power, the majority distinguishes between monetary figures in appropriation bills that are appropriation amounts, which are subject to the partial veto power, and monetary figures in appropriation bills that “affect and are closely interre
¶ 61. I also do not join the majority opinion because I do not agree that in State ex rel. Finnegan v. Dammann, 220 Wis. 143, 264 N.W. 622 (1936), the court “construed the constitution as barring exercise of the partial veto power on parts of any bill which ‘does not within its four corners contain an appropriation.‘” Majority op. at 197 (emphasis added). The Finnegan court held that the exercise of the partial veto power does not extend to any bill that does not contain an appropriation within its four corners, not that such power does not extend to any part of an appropriation bill that does not contain an appropriation within the four corners of that part. 220 Wis. at 147-49.
I.
¶ 62. The power of the governor to approve appropriation bills in part, as provided by the 1930 amendment to
¶ 63. The grant of partial veto power was partially “aimed at achieving joint exercise of legislative authority by the governor and the legislature over appropriation bills. It gave the governor a constitutionally recognized role in the legislative budgetary function.” Id. at 454. Accordingly, the underlying purpose of the 1930 constitutional amendment was to give the governor strong authority to control spending. As this court has stated: “[A]n important rationale of the partial veto is clearly linked to expenditure reduction and fiscal balance.” C.U.B., 194 Wis. 2d at 509.
¶ 64. Along these lines, this court has held that the governor has the power to veto any part of an appropriation bill, regardless of whether such part is an appropriation amount. Sundby, 71 Wis. 2d at 130; Henry, 218 Wis. at 314-15. We have also held that the governor can strike words, phrases, and digits from an appropriation bill. Wisconsin Senate, 144 Wis. 2d at 457. Furthermore, this court has determined that “the governor has the power to approve part of an appropriation bill by reducing the amount of money appropriated so long as the number is part of the original appropriation.” C.U.B., 194 Wis. 2d at 510. Regardless of the manner in which the governor exercises the partial veto power, the result must be that the remaining part of the bill is a complete, workable law. State ex rel. Martin v. Zimmerman, 233 Wis. 442, 450, 289 N.W. 662 (1940).
¶ 65. In the present case, Petitioners concede that Section 57 was an appropriation bill, and that
¶ 66. In C.U.B., this court considered whether the partial veto power authorizes the governor to strike an appropriated sum contained within an appropriation bill and insert a different, smaller number as the appropriated sum. 194 Wis. at 488. The court held that the governor “may strike a numerical sum set forth in an appropriation and insert a different, smaller number as the appropriated sum.” Id. at 504. The C.U.B. court did not determine that this write-in veto power does not similarly extend to a monetary figure that is inseparably connected to an appropriation amount, or to such figures “which affect and are closely related with an appropriation.” Majority op. at 204. The C.U.B. decision reflects the fact that the write-in veto at issue there involved only an appropriation amount.
¶ 67. Although the C.U.B. court did not determine that the write-in veto power does not extend to a monetary figure that is inseparably connected to an appropriation amount, the majority concludes that this is a proper reading of C.U.B. However, this interpretation, in its application here, is contrary to common sense. Consider the effect of the majority‘s conclusion that the write-in veto is not valid. The majority concludes that the Governor may strike the monetary sum in the second sentence of section 57, but may not write in a different, smaller amount. In the third sentence, the Governor struck the same figure and wrote in the same new figure as he did in the second sentence of
Section 57. 84.59(6) of the statutes is amended to read:
84.59(6) Revenue obligations may be contracted by the building commission when it reasonably appears to the building commission that all obligations incurred under this section can be fully paid from moneys received or anticipated and pledged to be received on a timely bases. Revenue obligations issued under this section shall not exceed _______________ in principal amount, excluding obligations issued to refund outstanding revenue obligations. Not more than $1,041,341,000 of the $1,083,638,100 may be used for transportation facilities under
s. 84.01(28) and major highway projects underss. 84.06 and84.09 .
¶ 68. Therefore, in accord with the reasoning of the majority, the building commission has no authority to raise the revenue through bonding, because the Governor has struck this amount. Yet, the provisions in the third sentence that allocate the money remain intact.2
¶ 70. In addition, I do not agree that, if the write-in veto power extends to sentence two, this will intrude too far into the constitutional grant of legislative power vested in the Senate and Assembly. See majority op. at 198. The Governor undisputedly can strike the entire figure of “$1,123,638,100” from sentence two, or can change it to a variety of smaller amounts, such as $123,638,100, $638,100, or $100. Since the Governor possesses such authority, then why does the majority find it to be an intrusion upon the legislative power when he reduces such an amount by writing in a smaller figure? As the C.U.B. court determined: “Simply put, to accept the conclusion that the governor has the authority to strike digits from an appropriation bill, but not the authority to write in smaller digits, elevates form over substance in contravention of common sense and case law.” C.U.B., 194 Wis. 2d at 507. Likewise, as the petitioners in Wisconsin Senate recognized: “It is difficult to imagine what public purpose or policy might be served by permitting a governor to reduce appropriations but restricting the reductions to the limited subset of figures derivable from the digits in a particular appropriation.” Petitioner‘s brief in Wisconsin Senate at 43, quoted in C.U.B., 194 Wis. 2d at 507 n.15.
¶ 72. Accordingly, I am convinced that, after reading the C.U.B. decision, the C.U.B. court did not intend to draw a sharp distinction between “non-appropriation” and “appropriation” amounts in determining a limitation on the exercise of the partial veto power, especially when the amount at issue is inseparably connected to an appropriation amount. Instead, I am persuaded that, pursuant to C.U.B., the governor‘s write-in veto power extends to: (1) any monetary sum; (2) in an appropriation bill; (3) if the monetary sum is an appropriation or is inseparably connected to an appropriation.3 Support for this conclusion is found in the following language from C.U.B.: “We conclude that the governor, acting within the scope of his power
¶ 73. Furthermore, this interpretation is in accord with the concerns the C.U.B. court indicated it considered in recognizing a limitation to the write-in veto. Specifically, the C.U.B. court determined that the write-in veto power does not extend to parts of an appropriation bill that are conceptually different than monetary figures, such as dates, times, counties, cities, groups, and so forth. 194 Wis. at 509. This is demonstrated by the court‘s clear instruction that the governor cannot use such power to change “year” to “ten days,” or “State of Wisconsin” to “City of Milwaukee.” C.U.B., 194 Wis. 2d at 504, 508-09. This is further illustrated by the colloquy cited in the majority opinion. As counsel for the Governor explained, the write-in veto cannot be exercised to change “15 days” to “10 days.” Yet, counsel also emphasized that “at the core of the partial veto power are dollars.” Majority op. at 189 (emphasis added).
¶ 74. Under the three-part test set forth above, the write-in veto in the present case is valid. The
II.
¶ 75. Upholding the write-in veto power under the circumstances outlined herein is not beyond the limits recognized in Finnegan. See majority op. at 193-199, 202. First, the majority asserts that the Finnegan court rejected the argument that the veto power extends to parts of an appropriation bill that are inseparably connected to an appropriation. Majority op. at 196-197. It did not. In Finnegan, the court rejected the argument that a bill is an appropriation bill if it is inseparably connected to appropriations in other bills. Second, the majority contends that the Finnegan court “construed the constitution as barring
¶ 76. Furthermore, Finnegan is distinguishable from the present case. In Finnegan, the court considered whether the bill at issue was an appropriation bill. In so doing, the court indicated that Henry was not determinative, because the bill at issue in Henry was concededly an appropriation bill. Likewise, because the bill at issue in the present case is concededly an appropriation bill, Finnegan is not determinative here.
¶ 77. Finally, contrary to the majority‘s assertions, recognizing that the governor‘s write-in veto power extends to circumstances set forth herein will not expand the definition of an appropriation bill. Majority op. at 202. In order for the write-in veto authority to apply, the bill at issue must be an appropriation bill. In other words, the bill must set aside public revenue for a public purpose or specified object, under Finnegan and its progeny. Therefore, the established definition of “appropriation bill” would not be at risk of being expanded.
¶ 78. Thus, for all of these reasons, I conclude that the write-in veto power properly extends to monetary amounts in an appropriation bill that are an appropriation, or are inseparably connected with an appropriation, as are the monetary figures in the second sentence of section 57. Such a conclusion is consistent with a logical, rational, and common sense
¶ 79. I am authorized to state that Justice DONALD W. STEINMETZ and Justice JON P. WILCOX join this dissent.
Notes
Citizens Utility Board v. Klauser, 194 Wis. 2d 484, 508-509 (1995) (quoting Wisconsin Senate v. Thompson, 144 Wis. 2d 429, 457, 424 N.W.2d 385 (1988)).[T]his court has already implicitly limited the governor‘s power in this area in Wisconsin Senate to reductions of amounts of appropriations. [citation omitted] “[C]onsistent with the broad constitutional power we have recognized the governor possesses with respect to vetoing single letters, words and parts of words in an appropriation bill, that the governor has similar broad powers to reduce or eliminate numbers and amounts of appropriations“.... We now make explicit the fact that a governor may only reduce an appropriation by a number contained within the original appropriation allotment.
The revenue obligation limit and appropriation level in the bill reflect actions by the Legislature to provide $40,000,000 in additional revenue bonding authority over the 1995-97 biennium to replace anticipated decreases in federal highway aid. I object to this increase in bonding authority because it does not reflect sound fiscal management of the transportation fund. This additional bonding authority contributes to increasing the share of the major highway program funded from revenue bond proceeds from the historical 55% to almost 75%. Furthermore, this additional amount of borrowing for infrastructure projects presents problems for future transportation budgets. Prudent financial management demands that debt be balanced with sufficient revenues. Replacing declining federal aid primarily with bond proceeds will divert limited future transportation fund revenues for debt service. By vetoing the revenue obligation limit established under
s. 84.59(6) and writing in a smaller amount that deletes the $40,000,000 increase in bonding authority, I am vetoing the increase of the revenue obligation limit. By vetoing the Department of Transportation‘s appropriation unders. 20.395(3)(br) and writing in a smaller amount that deletes the $20,000,000 SEG-S [segregated service funds, seeWis. Stat. § 20.001(2)(da) ] in each fiscal year of the 1995-97 biennium, I am vetoing the authorization to expend proceeds of revenue obligations issued under this increase in the revenue obligation limit. I am also requesting the Department of Administration Secretary not to allot these funds.
Veto message at 1 (emphasis added). The parties, by stipulation, attached a portion of the Governor‘s veto message as an appendix to the petitioners’ brief. The appendix did not include the language quoted above. The entire veto message is on file at the Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau, Madison, WI.
