Thе principal issue on this appeal is the constitutionality of General Statutes § 4-85 (b)
I
The defendants, in accordance with Practice Book § 3012, have presented two alternate grounds for affirming the judgment, the defenses of sovereign immunity and lack of standing. Both defenses were raised below, considered and rejected by the trial court.
It is well settled in Connecticut that the state cannot be sued without its consent and that since the state acts only through its officers and agents, a suit against an officer concerning a matter in which he represents the state is, in effect, a suit against the state. Sentner v. Board of Trustees,
The defendants next claim that the plaintiffs lacked standing to bring this action because the plaintiff unions
As we recently stated in Connecticut Assn. of Health Care Facilities, Inc. v. Worrell,
II
The plaintiffs first claim that General Statutes § 4-85 (b) is unconstitutional because it allows the governor to veto a part of an appropriation. “It is well settled that a party who challenges a statute on constitutional grounds has no easy burden, for every intendment will be made in favor of constitutionality, and invalidity must be established beyond a reasonable doubt State v. Darden,
General Statutes § 4-85 (a) requires each budgeted agency to submit to the governor, through the secretary of the office of policy and management, a requisition for the allotment of the amount necessary to carry on the work of the agency during each quarter of the fiscal year. General Statutes § 4-85 (b), the challenged statute, provides: “The governor shall approve . . . requisitions for allotments unless . . . [he] determines that (1) due to a change in circumstances since the budget was adopted certain reductions should be made in various allotments . . . or (2) the estimated budget resources during such fiscal year will be insufficient to pay all appropriations in full, in which event the governor may modify such allotments to the extent. . . necessary, provided no reduction in the budget adopted by the general assembly, by any requisition for an allotment made pursuant to subsection (a) or modification by the governor or both, shall result in any reduction
In the fiscal years 1979-1980, 1980-1981, and 1981-1982, the governor reduced quarterly allotments to the University of Connecticut and to the Connecticut state universities, resulting in their receiving less than the full amounts appropriated to them in each of those fiscal years. The governor reduced the allotments due to anticipated decreases in state revenues and increases in state expenses, which were likely to cause a budgetary deficit. The plaintiffs argue that althоugh the governor’s authority under the statute is not, in form, a veto under article fourth, § 15, of the Connecticut constitution, the substance and effect of the governor’s action is a veto. They contend that § 4-85 (b) authorizes the governor to do indirectly that which the constitution directly prohibits. We disagree.
“Article fourth, § 15, of the constitution of Connecticut confers on the governor the power to veto any bill passed by both houses of the General Assеmbly but confers no power to veto any bill except as an entirety.” Caldwell v. Meskill,
The plaintiffs argue that General Statutes § 4-85 (b) permits the governor to reduce appropriations which in effect constitutes a veto of part of an appropriations bill, rather than a distinct item of appropriation. This court has held that the terms “item or items” and “part or parts” as used in § 16 of the constitution do not have the same meaning. Patterson v. Dempsey, supra, 440. Under § 16, the governor may only veto distinct “items” of an appropriation, which are indivisible sums of money dedicated to a stated purpose. The governor may not veto any other “parts” of an appropriations bill. Id., 448. The authority given the governor under § 4-85 (b), however, does not allow the governor to reduce either an “item” or a “part” of an appropriation. Rather, it permits the reduction of an allotment. This distinction is one which is not made in the Oklahoma decisions cited and relied on by the plaintiffs. See State ex rel. Crable v. Carter,
An appropriation is a statute passed by the legislature to authorize expenditures, while an allotment is the action by which the executive branch sets aside funds sufficient to cover a portion of the expenditure authorized by the appropriations act. See General Statutes § 4-69 (3) and (4). We conclude that a reduction of expenditures does not constitute a vetо, or even have the effect of a veto. As the trial court indicated, the term “veto” is commonly understood as the refusal of assent by the executive officer whose assent is necessary to perfect a law which has been passed by the legis
Under § 4-85 (b), the governor’s authority does not fall within either of these definitions of the veto power. A reduction of an allotment is not a refusal to assent to an appropriations bill. Neither does the reduction delete or destroy the validity, legality, or effectiveness of the underlying appropriations act which authorized the expenditure, or indicate a disapproval of the appropriations act. In fact, the entire appropriations act remains effective and the expenditure can later be restored, as it was in this case. A partial veto is unconstitutional because it distorts or frustrates the intent of the legislature or enables the executive to legislate affirmatively. Bengzon v. Secretary of Justice, supra, 414; Washington Assn. of Apartment Assns.,
Ill
The plaintiffs next argue that General Statutes § 4-85 (b) is invalid because it confers upon the governor a strictly legislative power in violation of the separation of powers doctrine expressed in article second of the Connecticut constitution. We disagree.
We have held, however, that the Repаration of powers doctrine cannot always be rigidly applied. State v. Darden, supra, 679; Adams v. Rubinow,
As the trial court indicated, the relevant standard for testing the constitutionality of such a statute is stated in State v. Darden, supra, 679. A statute will be declared unconstitutional if it (1) confers on one branch of government the duties which belong exclusively to another branch; see State v. Clemente, supra; or (2) if it confers the duties of one branch of government on another branch which duties significantly inter
The legislative power necessarily encompasses the “power to appropriate funds to finance the operation of the state and its programs.” Eielson v. Parker, supra, 560, citing Bridgeport v. Agostinelli,
The budgetary process in Connecticut as set forth in General Statutes, c. 50, part II, involves both the legislative and executive branches. See General Statutes §§ 4-69 through 4-100. The trial court in its memorandum of decision tracked the process of preparing a budget. In summary form, the trial court stated that this process is set in motion when heads of budgeted agencies, pursuant to General Statutes § 4-77, “submit estimates of expenditures required for the next fiscal year, and estimates of revenues for the current and next fiscal year, tо the secretary of the office of policy and management and, through the legislative office of fiscal analysis, to the legislative appropriation and finance committees ... having cognizance of matters related to state agencies.” Pursuant to § 4-79, the secretary of the office of policy and management prepares a tentative budget for the governor. The governor then submits a budget document pursuant to § 4-71 setting forth his financial programs for the ensuing fiscal year. See also General Statutes §§ 4-72, 4-73, 4-74, 4-76. The legislature then adopts an act making appropriations for state
In Bridgeport v. Agostinelli, supra, 537, we stated that chapter 50 and General Statutes § 4-85 (b) were enacted to give the governor the power to supervise the execution of the budget. See Report of the Connecticut Commission Concerning the Reorganization of the State Departments (1935) p. 154. “Prior to 1937 a state agency’s ability to spend was limited only by the amount and purpose of the appropriations made. The full amount of the appropriation was reserved for the use of the agency in blanket fashion.” Bridgeport v. Agostinelli, supra, 548. The commission, in its report, stressed the need for a systematic procedure for controlling the rates or the timeliness of expenditures. It proposed “a plan through which appropriations would be made available to the state agencies under a system of quarterly allotments to be administered by the governor. Hе was to control the timeliness and the amounts of the allotments depending on the state of the revenues received. The allotments so made would establish the maximum amount to which an appropriation could be encumbered. These recommendations provided the basis for what is now part of chapter 50 of the General Statutes.” Id., 548-49.
An examination of this statutory scheme reveals that General Statutes § 4-85 (b) does not delegаte a strictly legislative function. In particular, it does not delegate the legislative authority to appropriate, as the plaintiffs argue. Rather, it delegates to the governor the power over making expenditures by allowing him to reduce quarterly allotments under certain well defined circumstances. See Opinion of the Justices, 375 Mass.
V
The plaintiff next argues that, if we assume the General Assembly had the power to enact General Statutes § 4-85 (b), the statute does not set forth sufficient standards to circumscribe the governor’s execution of delegable powers appropriately. We disagree.
In passing on the constitutionality of the standards as set forth in General Statutes § 4-85 (b), we will make every presumption and intendment in favor of their validity, and sustain the enactment unless its unconstitutionality is established beyond a reasonable doubt. See New Milford v. SCA Services of Connecticut, Inc.,
Under General Statutes § 4-85 (b), the governor may exercise his delegated power if (1) due to a change in circumstances since the budget was adopted certain reductions should be made in various allotments of appropriations, or (2) the estimated budget resources during such fiscal year will be insufficient to pay all appropriations in full, “in which event the governor may modify such allotments to the extent the governor deems necessary . . . . ” The provision limits the reduction to no more than 3 percent in any fund or 5 percent in any appropriated account.
The plaintiffs argue that the standards of “deems necessary” and “a change of circumstances” in subdivision (1) permit the governor to make a reduction in an appropriation in his unrestrained discretion. We disagree. The governor’s authority under subdivision (1) is limited to a change of circumstances since the budget was adopted, as well as the 3 percent reduction limit on any fund and the 5 percent reduction limit on any appropriated account. We agree with the trial court that these standards are constitutionally sufficient under our law in that they are “as defínit[e] as is reasonably practicable under the circumstances.” Wilson v. Connecticut Product Development Corporation, supra. As we stated in Aunt Hack Ridge Estates, Inc. v. Planning Commission,
The plaintiffs argue that the defect in subdivision (2) is that a shortfall in “estimated budget resources” only triggers the governor’s ability to exercise a reduction power; it does not provide him with a standard for applying that power. Again they argue that the language “deems necessary” does not specifically clarify the limits of the power delegated. We find the standards in subdivision (2) constitutionally sufficient for the same reasons we found subdivision (1) to be “as definit[e] as is reasonably practicable under the circumstances.” Wilson v. Connecticut Product Development Corporation, supra; see Forest Construction Co. v. Planning & Zoning Commission,
Further, it is claimed that the trial court improperly inserted language from General Statutes § 4-85 (с) into General Statutes § 4-85 (b) when it described General Statutes § 4-85 (b) as limiting the governor’s reduction power to that of “avoiding a deficit” or to “prevent a deficit.” We do not find that the trial court erred in looking to General Statutes § 4-85 (c) in interpreting § 4-85 (b). “A court must interpret a statute as written; Muha v. United Oil Co.,
We find no error.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
Notes
General Statutes § 4-85 (b) provides: “The governor shall approve such requisitions for allotments unless the governor determines that (1) due to a change in circumstances since the budgеt was adopted certain reductions should be made in various allotments of appropriations or (2) the estimated budget resources during such fiscal year will be insufficient to pay all appropriations in full, in which event the governor may modify such allotments to the extent the governor deems necessary, provided no reduction in the budget adopted by the general assembly, by any requisition for an allotment made pursuant to subsectiоn (a) or modification by the governor or both, shall result in any reduction in any fund of more than three per cent or in any appropriated account of more than five percent of the amount appropriated for such fiscal year except such restriction shall not apply in time of war, invasion or emergency caused by natural disaster.”
We note that Patterson v. Dempsey,
