The Honorable Ben Vidricksen State Senator, Twenty-Fourth District Room 143-N, Capitol Building Topeka, Kansas 66612
Dear Senator Vidricksen:
As senator for the twenty-fourth district, you request our opinion regarding whether the state legislature has the authority to validate a question submitted election the results of which authorized the levying of a countywide retailers' sales tax, the proceeds to be used to fund construction of a county jail.
Quoting earlier case law, the Kansas Supreme Court noted in Leekv. Theis,
"Under our form of government all governmental power is inherent in the people. Some governmental powers are delegated to congress, or to the federal government, by our federal constitution; those not so delegated are retained by the people. Hence, congress has no legislative power not granted to it by the federal constitution. This is not true of a state constitution. Since the people have all governmental power, and exercise it through the legislative branch of the government, the legislature is free to act except as it is restricted by the state constitution, and except, of course, the grant of authority to the federal government by the federal constitution." Leek, 217 Kan. at 802.
The constitution of the state of Kansas limits rather than confers power, and where a legislative act is attacked as unconstitutional the question to be determined is not whether the act is authorized by the constitution, but whether the act is prohibited by it.Leek,
In The State v. Pauley,
"A curative act of the legislature may validate any action of the voters of a county or of its authorities which the legislature had power under the constitution to authorize in the first instance. (Shepherd v. Kansas City,
81 Kan. 369 .) If the conditions are such as to warrant legislative action, and the statute is made to apply wherever the conditions exist, the constitution interposes no barrier to the passage of a curative act, provided the action validated thereby might have been previously authorized by the legislature." Pauley, 83 Kan. at 463.
Curative legislation, to be valid and constitutional, must meet two tests: (1) the legislature originally had the power to authorize the acts done or to confer the powers exercised; and (2) contracts are not impaired nor vested rights disturbed. State exrel. Tomasic v. Kansas City, Kansas Port Authority,
The curative provisions addressed in Pauley were applicable uniformly to all counties, and therefore did not violate section
Very truly yours,
CARLA J. STOVALL Attorney General of Kansas
Richard D. Smith Assistant Attorney General
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