REQUESTED BY: John A. Gale, Nebraska Secretary of State
You have requested our opinion as to whether four initiative petitions related to gambling that have been presented to your office for filing are facially unconstitutional. Your questions relate to compliance of the initiatives with two portions of Neb. Const. art.
I. THE 2006 AND 2004 GAMBLING INITIATIVES.
Prior to addressing the constitutional issues presented in your request, we believe it will be helpful to briefly summarize the 2006 gambling initiative proposals filed with your office, as well as the 2004 measures.
A. 2006 Initiatives
1. Video Keno Initiative.
This initiative petition proposes the enactment of amendments to the Nebraska County and City Lottery Act, Neb. Rev. Stat. §§
2. "Three Casinos" Initiatives.
The Committee for Better Schools and More Jobs in Nebraska, Inc., is the sponsor of the other three initiative proposals. The first initiative proposes to amend Neb. Const. art.
B. 2004 Initiatives.
In 2004, three initiative petitions related to gambling were presented to the voters. Initiative Measure 417 proposed to amend Neb. Const. art.
Initiative Measure 417 was defeated by a vote of 363,478 in favor to 380,424 against. Initiative Measure 420 was also defeated, with 394,865 voting against and 353,248 in favor of adoption of the initiative. Initiative Measure 419 was adopted by a vote of 380,161 for and 362,673 against.
II. ANALYSIS OF THE SINGLE SUBJECT REQUIREMENT IN NEB. CONST. ART.
While the Nebraska Supreme Court has not definitively determined the scope and meaning of the "single subject" requirement for initiative petition measures in art. III, § 2, guidance on the Court's likely interpretation of this provision can be gleaned from the concurring opinions in Loontjer v. Robinson,
While the majority opinion in Loontjer did not address the single subject issue, two concurring opinions (one by Chief Justice Hendry, the other by Justice Wright, joined by Justice Gerrard), addressed the single subject requirement. These three Justices expressed the view that the "natural and necessary connection" test set out in Munch v. Tusa,
In his concurring opinion in Loontjer, Chief Justice Hendry, noting that art. III, § 2, provides that "[t]he constitutional limitations as to the scope and subject matter of statutes enacted by the Legislature shall apply to those enacted by the initiative . . .", concluded "[t]his sentence clearly applies to statutes enacted by initiative and `incorporates' the `one subject' requirement for legislative bills and resolutions found in Neb. Const. art.
Finally, Justice Wright's concurrence noted that "[t]he primary purpose of the single subject rule is to prevent `log-rolling', the practice of combining dissimilar propositions into one proposed amendment `so that voters must vote for or against the whole package even though they would have voted differently had the propositions been submitted separately.'"
Based on the foregoing, we believe that the Nebraska Supreme Court, if called upon to adopt the standard for review of initiative measures to amend the Constitution for compliance with the "single subject" requirement in art. III, § 2, will likely apply the "natural and necessary connection" test articulated in Munch v. Tusa and discussed in the concurring opinions in Loontjer. Also, the Court will apply a narrower standard to single subject questions involving initiatives proposing to amend the Constitution than will be applied to statutory initiatives. Initiatives proposing the enactment of statutes will be governed by the more liberal standard of review to judge whether statutes contain more than one subject under Neb. Const. art.
III. ANALYSIS OF THE THREE YEAR "RESUBMISSION" PROHIBITION IN NEB. CONST. ART.
The Nebraska Supreme Court has not construed the meaning of the prohibition in art. III, § 2, against submission of the "same measure, either in form or in essential substance, either affirmatively or negatively, more often than once in three years." As interpretation of this clause is a matter of first impression in Nebraska, resort to basic rules of constitutional construction is required to attempt to ascertain its meaning.
"Courts must apply and enforce the constitution as it is written." State ex rel. Spire v. Public Employees Retirement Bd.,
The purpose of the prohibition against resubmission of measures which are the same "in form or in essential substance" more than once in three years was discussed by Judge Merritt in a 2004 District Court decision. Duggan v. Beermann, Docket 518, Page 114 (Order dated November 7, 2004). Judge Merritt explained the purpose of this provision as follows:
The reason for such a provision is obvious. It is intended to prevent the resubmission of proposed legislation or constitutional amendments which have been rejected, so that the people are not continually asked to approve a measure which they have previously declined to adopt. The three-year period between submission of similar measures serves as a check against continued resubmission of proposals which have failed to garner popular support.
Duggan v. Beermann, Order at 16 (Emphasis added).
The "resubmission clause" prohibits submission of "the same measure, either in form or in essential substance, more often than once in every three years." As such, the prohibition applies not only to measures which are "the same," but also to those that are of the same "essential substance." "Essential" means "of or constituting the intrinsic, fundamental nature of something; basic, inherent;" Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary 624 (2d ed. 1983). "Substance" is defined as "the real or essential part or element of anything; essence, reality; matter." Id. at 1817. Thus, the plain language of Nebraska's resubmission clause precludes the submission of measures which share the same fundamental nature or essence more than once every three years.
Courts in other jurisdictions have construed constitutional provisions precluding resubmission of measures based on language which varies from the prohibition in art. III, § 2. The Oklahoma Constitution provides that "[a]ny measure rejected by the people, through the powers of the initiative and referendum, cannot be again proposed by the initiative within three years thereafter by less than twenty-five per centum of the legal voters." Okla. Const. art. 5, § 6. The Oklahoma Supreme Court has interpreted this clause to bar the resubmission of measures which do not "differ substantially as to form and purpose. . . ." In re Initiative Petition No. 271,
The answer is obviously no. Proponents' arguments that under Initiative Petition 271 we must be confined in our analysis of the issue to comparing the entire `measure' of S.Q. 550 to the measure of S.Q. 530 and therefore find a multitude of `significant differences' are not well taken. Initiative Petition 271 did not concern a situation such as we have before us and the Court there certainly did not envision a situation where a resubmitted measure would be buried in an initiative containing numerous additional proposals.
Under proponents' theory the same measure could be resubmitted . . . so long as it was subsequently presented in a package containing changes in other areas. We emphatically reject such a holding, for it takes no imagination at all to realize that it would nullify Art. 5, § 6.
The New Jersey Constitution contains a resubmission prohibition applicable to constitutional amendments proposed by its legislative branch which provides: "If at the election a proposed amendment shall not be approved, neither such proposed amendment nor one to effect the same or substantially the same change in the Constitution shall be submitted to the people before the third general election." N.J. Const. art. IX, 7. In Young v. Byrne,
What is meant by the `same or substantially the same' under Art. IX, paragraph 7 has not yet been interpreted in New Jersey. In the New Webster Dictionary of the English Language, 743 (1971), `same' is defined as `identical, not different or other.' `Substantially the same' has been interpreted to mean that it is the same in all important particulars.
Id. at 17,
Applying this standard, the New Jersey Court concluded the two proposals were not "substantially the same" because "they differ[ed] in three significant respects." Id. at 18,
These and other court decisions from jurisdictions outside Nebraska are not particularly helpful in determining the meaning of Nebraska's resubmission clause, as the language in our Constitution, barring submission of the same measure "in form or in essential substance", differs from resubmission provisions in other States' Constitutions. The prohibition against measures having the same "essential substance" means Nebraska's Constitution precludes the submission of measures which share the same fundamental nature or essence more than once every three years. We believe our Court will interpret this language in its natural and obvious sense, in a manner which fulfills its purpose to prevent submission of initiative measures where the essence or gist of such measures has been submitted to the voters within three years of the proposed submission.
IV. APPLICATION OF THE SINGLE SUBJECT RULE TO THE 2006 INITIATIVES.
"The constitutional limitations as to the scope and subject matter of statutes enacted by the Legislature shall apply to those enacted by the initiative." Neb. Const. art.
Applying this standard, the Video Keno Initiative petition to amend the Nebraska County and City Lottery Act appears to satisfy the single subject rule for statutory enactments. The subject of the petition is amendment of the Nebraska County and City Lottery Act to allow the conduct of a new form of keno, "video keno," including provisions relating to the taxation and use of proceeds from video keno. The object of the initiative is to authorize video keno, and the provisions regarding taxation and use of proceeds from such gaming are germane to and naturally connected with this purpose.
The same is also true of the two statutory initiatives included in the Three Casinos Initiatives. The sole object of the first statutory initiative is to authorize the exclusive use of tax receipts from authorized casino gambling. Identification of the recipients of such tax funds, and the amounts to be received, are matters which are germane to and naturally connected with the initiative's single object and purpose. The sole object of the second statutory initiative is to create a Nebraska Gaming Control Board ["Board"] to license and regulate casino gambling. The provisions of the initiative regarding the Board's licensing and regulatory authority, as well as the composition of its membership, are germane to and naturally connected with the initiative's overall object.
The remaining initiative involves a proposed constitutional amendment. As noted previously, we believe that, based on the concurring opinions in Loontjer, the Nebraska Supreme Court will likely adopt the "natural and necessary connection" test in Munch v. Tusa in assessing if an initiative to amend the Constitution satisfies the single subject requirement in the last sentence in art. III, § 2. This is a narrower standard than the single subject test applied to determine the validity of statutory initiatives. Loontjer,
V. APPLICATION OF THE "RESUBMISSION" PROHIBITION TO THE 2006 INITIATIVES.
Article III, § 2, prohibits submission of the "same measure, either in form or in essential substance, either affirmatively or negatively, more often than once in three years." The plain meaning of this language, barring submission of measures having the same "essential substance," precludes the submission of measures which share the same fundamental nature or essence more than once every three years.
Applying this standard to the 2006 Initiatives, we believe submission of any of the proposed measures at the next general election would violate the resubmission clause. The essence or fundamental nature of each of the proposed Initiatives is the expansion of gambling in Nebraska. This identity of substance is particularly true of the Three Casinos Initiatives. The essence or fundamental nature of each of these measures is to alter the Nebraska Constitution's ban on "games of chance" to authorize "casino gambling." While there are certainly differences in the details between the 2004 Initiatives and the 2006 Initiatives, the relevant inquiry in determining compliance with the resubmission prohibition is whether the current measures share the same "essential substance" as the prior measures. This requires assessing what is essential or fundamental to making each measure effective. The legalization of new gambling not currently authorized by the Constitution, i.e., "games or chance" or "casino gambling", is essential to both the 2004 and 2006 Initiatives. As the 2006 measures share the same "essential" or "fundamental" substance as the 2004 measures, submission of the proposals to the electorate in 2006 would contravene the resubmission prohibition in art. III, § 2.
VI. FACIAL UNCONSTITUTIONALITY OF VIDEO KENO INITIATIVE AS CONTRARY TO NEB. CONST. ART.
While not specifically raised as an issue in your request, we are compelled to note that the Video Keno Initiative cannot be placed on the ballot because it impermissibly proposes enactment of a statute to allow a form of gambling not permitted by the Nebraska Constitution. This office has determined that legislative proposals to authorize "electronic" or "video" keno are unconstitutional because such gambling is not a permissible form of "lottery" for community betterment purposes which can be authorized under Neb. Const. art.
The concept of individual players activating gambling devices utilizing random-generation of numbers to determine winners at each device is, in our view, inconsistent with what we believe is the narrow manner in which the people, through their Constitution, intended to grant the Legislature power to permit `lotteries' for community betterment purposes. We therefore conclude that the Legislature may not, consistent with art. III, § 24, enact legislation permitting the use of `electronic' keno devices. . . .
Op. Att'y Gen. No. 97013 at 12-13.
The Video Keno Initiative proposes enactment of an amendment to the Nebraska County and City Lottery Act to allow, in addition to the "paper" ticket keno game currently allowed which prohibits the use of player-activated gaming devices, a new form of gaming called "video keno." "Video keno" is defined as a game "in which each player selects or quick picks numbers from a total of eighty numbers displayed on a video player station and a computer or other electronic selection device randomly selects numbers from the same pool of eighty numbers and the winning plays are determined by the correct matching of the numbers selected by the player with the numbers randomly selected by the computer or other electronic selection device and displayed on the video keno player station;. . . ." "Video" keno, as defined in the initiative, is not a permissible "lottery" which can be authorized under art. III, § 24. As such, the initiative is facially unconstitutional, as it attempts to authorize by statute a form of gambling not permitted by art.
VII. CONCLUSION
In sum, we conclude that the Video Keno Initiative and Three Casinos Initiatives do not facially violate the single subject requirement in art. III, § 2. We further conclude that submission of these Initiatives at the 2006 general election would violate the resubmission clause in art. III, § 2, as these measures propose to expand gambling and thus are the same in "essential substance" as the 2004 gambling initiatives. Finally, we conclude that the Video Keno Initiative is also facially unconstitutional because it proposes enactment of a statute to authorize a form of gambling which conflicts with the forms of gambling which may be authorized under art. III, § 24.
Sincerely yours, JON BRUNING Attorney General
L. Jay Bartel Assistant Attorney General
APPROVED: ___________________________ Attorney General
