George R. Slama and eleven other qualified voters (first signers) signed an initiative petition entitled “An Act providing for the participation of the municipalities in State taxes generated in those municipalities” (Initiative 11/81). Citing art. 48 of the Amendments to the Massachusetts Constitution, the Attorney General refused to certify Initiative 11/81, because it “makes a specific appropriation of money from the treasury.”
*621 The first signers and the city of Boston sought an injunction from a single justice compelling the Attorney General to certify and prepare a fair and concise summary of Initiative 11/81. In addition, the plaintiffs asked the single justice to order the State Secretary to prepare blank signature forms for Initiative 11/81. The single justice reserved and reported the following two questions for the court’s consideration: “1. Whether the initiative petition . . . makes a specific appropriation of money from the treasury of the Commonwealth within the meaning of Mass. Const. Art. Amend. 48, Init., Pt. 2, § 2. 2. Whether the City of Boston has standing to join this suit as a plaintiff.”
On October 19, 1981, we issued an order that “[t]he case is remanded to the county court where judgment is to be entered declaring that the initiative petition 11/81 is a specific appropriation measure and thus prohibited by Mass. Const. Art. Amend. 48, Init. Pt. 2, § 2.” The motion to dismiss the city of Boston as a party plaintiff was also allowed.
We summarize the statement of agreed facts and the provisions of Initiative 11/81. Initiative 11/81 requires the Commonwealth to share its sales, use, storage, consumption and income tax revenues with the cities and towns that generate these revenues. It is the initiative’s stated purpose “ (a) to encourage and facilitate reductions in local property taxes without causing serious disruptions in the level or quality of essential municipal services; (b) to diversify the sources of municipal tax revenue; and (c) to allow each city and town to share with state government the increases in tax revenue generated by the local economy of that city or town.”
To achieve these goals, Initiative 11/81 calls for the creation of two separate funds, the local sales and use tax fund and the local personal income tax fund. Within each fund, Initiative 11/81 sets up separate accounts for each city and town. The local sales and use tax fund would consist of not less than one-fifth of all net receipts from the sales and use tax. G. L. c. 64H, c. 641. If the vendor collects the excise in Massachusetts, the net receipt would be credited to the *622 city or town in which the vendor maintains the place of business where the sale or other transaction occurred. But if the vendor collects the excise outside the State or if the excise is paid directly to the Commonwealth, the receipt would be directed to the account of the municipality where the sale or transaction occurred.
The local personal income tax fund would be funded as follows. No less than ten per cent of the net tax on interest, dividends, and capital gains would be credited to the account of the city or town where the taxpayer resides. At least five per cent of the net tax on income other than interest, dividends, and capital gains derived from real or tangible personal property located in Massachusetts would be credited to the city or town that is the situs of the property. No less than five per cent of the net tax on employment income would be credited to the municipality in which the employer’s principal place of business is located. At least five per cent of the net tax on income other than interest, dividends, and capital gains would be credited to the city or town where the taxpayer resides. Initiative 11/81 would distribute both funds to each city and town. All funds so allocated would be transferred automatically without appropriation by the Legislature.
Motion to dismiss. The plaintiffs in this action are twelve qualified voters who signed Initiative 11/81, and the city of Boston. The Attorney General moved to dismiss the city from the action, claiming that Boston was not a proper plaintiff in this case.
“Traditionally we have considered the first ten signers of an initiative or referendum petition to be proper parties in moving through the courts to protect their petition. See
Cohen
v.
Attorney
Gen.,
*623 The purpose of art. 48 is to give a greater voice in the government to the people. “The object and purpose [of the initiative] . . . is to give to the people of the Commonwealth a larger control and domination over legislation, to enable the people to have some say which now they do not have with regard to constitutional amendments and also with regard to the laws which shall be enacted.” Sherman L. Whipple of Brookline, 2 Debates in the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention of 1917-1918, at 39 (1918).
Thus, in art. 48, the people “reserve to themselves the popular initiative.” The people referred to in art. 48 are qualified voters.
1
“The ‘people’ in the Constitution in a practical sense means those who under the existing Constitution possess the right to the elective franchise and who . . . will be the sole organs through which the will of the body politic can be expressed. ‘People for political purposes must be considered synonymous with qualified voters.’
Blair
v.
Ridgely,
Boston, like any corporation, “has no right to vote and no right to submit initiative petitions for enactment by the people. It has asserted no rights guaranteed it under the Constitution of the United States . . . .”
Massachusetts Pub. Interest Research Group
v.
Secretary of the Commonwealth,
*624
Although its own constitutional rights have not been infringed, the city argues that it has standing in a representative capacity. In making this argument, the city relies on
Wilmington
v.
Department of Pub. Utils.,
Even if the twelve qualified voters were not parties, the city would not have standing. To have standing in any capacity, a litigant must show that the challenged action has caused the litigant injury. See
Schlesinger
v.
Reservists Comm. to Stop the War,
Specific appropriation.
Article 48 of the Amendments to the Massachusetts Constitution provides that no law “that makes a specific appropriation of money from the treasury of the commonwealth shall be proposed by an initiative petition.” “To appropriate has been defined as ‘to set apart from the public revenue 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 for no other.’
State
v.
Moore,
*626 The plaintiffs assert that Initiative 11/81 is not a specific appropriation, because a specific appropriation must devote a specific amount of money to a particular purpose. Since Initiative 11/81 does not set aside a definite sum for any one use, the plaintiffs argue that it is not a specific appropriation. We disagree.
A specific appropriation need not be a definite sum of money. See Opinion of the Justices, <2STl Mass. 577, 580 (1937). In that opinion, the Justices concluded that proposed legislation restricting the use of certain revenues from motor vehicle registration fees, licenses and gasoline excise fees to highway purposes was a specific appropriation, although it did not provide a fixed sum. “Its direct purpose is to seize upon all the revenue received from the designated sources and to appropriate it permanently to a specified public use.” Id.
Moreover, “the word ‘specific’ [in art. 48] was not intended to be interpreted in any narrow or constricted sense.”
Id.
If “the funds are separated from the treasury of the state and from the control of the legislature, and paid over to executive or quasi-executive bodies at the local level,” that is “the essence of an appropriation.” Stewart, The Law of Initiative Referendum in Massachusetts, 12 New England L. Rev. 455, 465 (1977). See
County Rd. Comm’rs
v.
Canvassers,
The plaintiffs also argue that because local governments must approve each spending decision before the money can be disbursed, it is not a specific appropriation. 5 Although further appropriation by the municipalities is required, the funds are still removed from the control of the Legislature. Hence, Initiative 11/81 embodies the “essence of an appropriation.” 6 Stewart, supra at 465.
Our conclusion is consistent with the principal reason for excluding appropriations from the initiative. 7 “[ A]n appropriation by the people of specific sums of money would knock spots, if I may use a slang expression, out of any State budget, and prevent any real regulation and careful administration of the finances of the State.” 2 Debates in the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention of 1917-1918, at 828-829 (1918).
Notes
Similarly in
Litton Business Sys., Inc.
v.
Commissioner of Revenue,
In
Lamson
v.
Secretary of the Commonwealth,
Two other factors have prompted the United States Supreme Court to allow representational standing: (1) “the presence of some substantial relationship between the claimant and the third parties,” and (2) “the need to avoid a dilution of third parties’ constitutional rights that would result were the assertion of jus tertii not permitted.” Note, Standing to Assert Constitutional Jus Tertii, 88 Harv. L. Rev. 423, 425 (1974).
Bills setting up insurance funds are not specific appropriations excluded from the initiative by art. 48. In
Horton
v.
Attorney Gen.,
The plaintiffs claim that Initiative 11/81 is not a specific appropriation, because it distributes funds to cities and towns which then appropriate the money. In making this argument, they rely on
Opinion of the Justices,
This 1938 opinion is not authority for the proposition that a distribution of funds for cities and towns is not an appropriation. In that opinion, the Justices reserved decision on that issue. “To what extent and in what circumstances this principle may render art. 63 of the Amendments [governing the appropriation process] inapplicable to a statute providing for a payment of money from the treasury of the Commonwealth need not be considered at large.” Id. at 638.
If Initiative 11/81 were not viewed as a specific appropriation, further initiatives might ultimately remove the allocation of all tax money from the control of the Legislature.
There is another reason for the appropriation exclusion of art. 48. At the Constitutional Convention of 1917-1918, Mr. Luce of Waltham termed this appropriation exclusion “the amendment against demagogues . . . aimed at the men who would hoist themselves into public office by pledging their influence in order that this or that species of property may be transferred from one man’s pocket to another’s.” 2 Debates in the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention of 1917-1918, at 816 (1918).
