REQUESTED BY: Senator Carroll Burling Nebraska State Legislature
You have requested our opinion regarding whether the "Office of the Nebraska Capitol Commission" proposed to be established under LB 755, as amended by AM470, would create a new "executive state office" under Neb. Const. art.
On several occasions, the Nebraska Supreme Court has construed the phrase "executive state office" in art. IV, § 27. In Mekota v. State Bd. of Equal.,
Shortly after its decision in Mekota, the Court, in State ex rel. Howard v. Marsh,146 Neb. 750, 21 N.W.2d 503 (1946), considered whether the Department of Agriculture and Inspection was an executive department of the state within the meaning of Neb. Const. art.
A few months after deciding Marsh, the Court, in State ex rel. Johnson v. Chase,
The phrase `heads of executive departments' could mean nothing more than the heads of the code departments of 1919, or as provided for in section 1, article IV, of the Constitution of 1920, `* * * such other executive departments as may be established by law.' It is therefore clear that the language used in the code law, and the language used in the present Constitution refers to executive departments created, or to be created, within the limitations of the Constitution. It is obvious that this language does not foreclose the right or power of the Legislature to create boards or bureaus or departments that deal singly with independent legislation such as, in the instant case, the Nebraska Liquor Control Commission. . . .
Id. at 768, 21 N.W.2d at 7.
The Court further noted that "[t]he Legislature, over a long period of years, interpreted the Constitution as permitting the creation of boards, commissions, and agencies that are not executive departments within the constitutional definition . . .", citing as examples the Nebraska Aeronautics Commission, the Game, Forestation and Parks Commission, the Board of Examiners and Professional Engineers and Architects, the State Real Estate Commission, "and other boards and bureaus too numerous to mention." Id. at 776,
Every commission that exercises executive duties in some capacity cannot be narrowed to the definition of being an executive department under the governor. The full purport of the act under consideration, the duties involved with the subject matter as distinguished from executive officers enumerated in the Constitution and under the statutes, make it perfectly plain that the Legislature was not creating an executive department when it created the Nebraska Liquor Control Commission.
Id. at 777,
Stating "[t]he distinction between executive departments of government and many other executive or independent agencies, though difficult of definition, is and has been recognized from the beginning by the federal government . . .", the Court in Chase cited with approval from Burnap v. United States,
Finally, in Sommerville v. Johnson,
What did the Constitutional Convention intend when they used the words `executive officers,' `heads of such other executive departments,' and `executive state office' in the amendments which the people adopted? . . . [I]t appears that the Constitutional Convention, when using the terms above quoted, did so with the meaning that they were referring to officers and departments and offices that had the comparable scope, functions, and purposes of the officers, departments, and offices specifically named in the amendment . . . Again, as we said in the Chase opinion, . . ., it does not indicate an intent to restrict the `power of the Legislature to create boards or bureaus or departments that deal singly with independent legislation.'
Based on this standard, the Sommerville Court phrased the question before it as follows:
Does the act here under attack and the offices it creates reasonably compare with the scope, powers, and functions of the established executive officers and departments, within the executive department of government named in the Constitution, or do they properly classify in the group of administrative officers and activities that have always been recognized as within the power of the Legislature to create?
Id. at 174,
After reviewing the purpose, structure, and duties provided under the Merit System Act, the Court concluded it did not create an "executive state office":
It is evident that the Legislature here established an agency in the nature of a civil service commission. It created a council to guide and direct the administration of the act . . . It is intended to promote efficiency, economy, and equality as to salaries for comparable work in the participating agencies. It depends in part upon cooperative effort between the council, the director, and the participating agencies. It administers no law save the law by which it was created. It deals with state officials and those who are or desire to be employees of the state in the limited classifications. It executes none of the laws of the state so far as they relate to the people generally. We think it quite clear that it does not create an executive department nor an executive state office within the meaning of the constitution. . . .
Id. at 177,
The Nebraska Supreme Court's decisions interpreting the term "executive state office" in art. IV, § 27, indicate that the phrase is understood to apply only to departments and offices of State government which are comparable in scope, function, and purpose to the executive officers established in art. IV, § 1, and the "heads of executive departments" established by law pursuant this constitutional provision. These executive departments are those identified in Neb. Rev. Stat. §
An analysis of the purposes, powers, and duties of the proposed "Office of the Nebraska Capitol Commission" [the "Office"] under LB 755, as amended, demonstrates that the Office would not be an "executive state office" within the meaning of art. IV, § 27. The Office would be part of the Nebraska Capitol Commission [the "Commission"], and headed by a State Capitol Administrator [the "Administrator"]. The primary functions of the Office would be facilities planning, facilities construction, and facilities administration of the State Capitol and capitol grounds. The Administrator would be appointed by the Governor upon recommendation by the Commission. The Administrator would be required to take the constitutional oath of office before serving, and be bonded, but is not subject to approval by the Legislature. The Commission would replace the Director of the Department of Administrative Services as the designated custodian of the State Capitol and capitol grounds, and the Administrator, under the direction and oversight of the Governor, would be granted control and power to maintain the State Capitol and capitol grounds. The Administrator would essentially assume the powers and duties currently performed by the State Building Administrator appointed by the Director of the Department of Administrative Services pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. §
The purposes, powers, and duties of the Office under LB 755, as amended, are limited in scope, and pertain specifically to the maintenance, preservation, and utilization of the State Capitol and capitol grounds. The Office would not be charged with enforcing and executing laws of the state generally. The Office is properly viewed as a commission dealing "singly with independent legislation", and thus not an "executive state office" within the intent and meaning of art. IV, § 27. Accordingly, it is our opinion that LB 755, as amended, may be validly enacted without receiving the two-thirds majority vote required by art. IV, § 27, and that a simple majority vote of the Legislature would be sufficient to create the Office.
Very truly yours,
JON BRUNING Attorney General
L. Jay Bartel Assistant Attorney General
Approved:
_________________________________ Attorney General
pc: Patrick J. O'Donnell Clerk of the Legislature
