FRED A. RISSER, Chairperson Senate Organization Committee
You ask whether 1987 Senate Bill 366, which directs the superintendent of public instruction to loan textbooks to elementary and secondary school students, would be constitutional if enacted into law. Under the bill, the superintendent would, at the request of the student or the student's parent or guardian, loan items on an approved list of textbooks which could not promote the interest of any religion. The bill also requires that public and private school students participate equally in the program.
Although my opinion is necessarily limited to facial constitutionality since no such textbook loan program has ever existed in Wisconsin, it is my opinion that the proposed legislation would not violate the religion clauses contained in the federal and state constitutions.
In analyzing the constitutionality of the proposed legislation, it cannot be overemphasized that "[a]ll statutes are presumed constitutional and will be held to be so unless proven otherwise beyond a reasonable doubt . . . ." St. ex rel. Ft. How. Paper v.Jake Dist. Bd.,
The
1987 Senate Bill 366 is obviously modeled after 1979 Assembly Bill 227, which in turn "bears a striking resemblance to the statutory language approved by the Court in Wolman." 68 OP. Att'y Gen. 287, 289 (1979). In Wolman,
In Wolman,
I have not discovered any case involving a legal challenge to the constitutionality of a textbook loan program which holds that any such program lacks a secular legislative purpose. The statement of legislative purpose contained in the bill coupled with the Supreme Court's statement in Wolman, are more than sufficient to indicate that 1987 Senate Bill 366 has a secular legislative purpose.
Turning to the primary effect test, in Allen,
Wolman, Allen and Mueller indicate that the federal courts would hold that the primary effect of 1987 Senate Bill 366 is to enhance educational opportunities for students by making secular textbooks equally and readily available to public and private *Page 69 elementary and secondary school students. Any advancement of religion which would occur in the form of cost savings by parochial schools would be found to constitute merely a secondary or incidental effect of operating such a program.
As to excessive entanglement, the following language by which the Court specifically upheld deductions for the cost of nonreligious textbooks is instructive because it is equally applicable to the compilation of an approved list of nonreligious textbooks by the superintendent:
Turning to the third part of the Lemon inquiry, we have no difficulty in concluding that the Minnesota statute does not "excessively entangle" the State in religion. The only plausible source of the "comprehensive, discriminating, and continuing state surveillance, " . . . necessary to run afoul of this standard would lie in the fact that state officials must determine whether particular textbooks qualify for a deduction. In making this decision, state officials must disallow deductions taken for "instructional books and materials used in the teaching of religious tenets, doctrines or worship, the purpose of which is to inculcate such tenets, doctrines or worship." . . Making decisions such as this does not differ substantially from making the types of decisions approved in earlier opinions of this Court.
Mueller,
Given the Court's holding in Mueller, it is abundantly clear that 1987 Senate Bill 366 also does not foster excessive entanglement with religion and therefore may permissibly be enacted under the Establishment Clause.
For the purpose of federal constitutional analysis, it remains largely true that "the constitutionality of the textbook loan programs is one issue to which the Supreme Court's answer has remained constant." 68 Op. Att'y Gen. at 291. Thus, in applying the Supreme Court's decisions concerning the constitutionality of textbook loan programs, lower federal courts have not hesitated to uphold the facial constitutionality of statutes that establish such programs. See, e.g., Elbe v. Yankton Independent SchoolDist. No. 1,
A state constitutional analysis yields a similar result. Wisconsin Constitution article
However, of the difference in wording, this court has recently held: ". . . While words used may differ, both the federal and state constitutional provisions relating to freedom of religion are intended and operate to serve the same dual purpose of prohibiting the `establishment' of religion and protecting the `free exercise' of religion. . . ."
State ex rel. Holt v. Thompson,
In construing these decisions of the Wisconsin Supreme Court concerning Wisconsin Constitution article
*Page 71The Wisconsin Supreme Court has recently noted that despite the different wording of the federal and state constitutional provisions respecting religion, both are intended to effect the same objects of preventing the government from "establishing" religion and preserving to individual citizens the right to exercise their religious beliefs freely. . . . Consequently, it has employed the tests enunciated by the United States Supreme Court in construing the requirements of the establishment clause to determine whether specific state laws or actions are violative of either constitutional provision.
American Motors Corp. v. ILHR Dept.,
I am aware that a number of state courts have held textbook loan programs to be impermissible under various state constitutional provisions. Fannin v. Williams,
First, even though these courts were construing state constitutional provisions, it is likely that many of them would have been influenced to construe their constitutional counterparts to the Establishment Clause differently if they had had the benefit of all four of the Supreme Court's decisions inMueller, Wolman, Meek and Allen. Second, even where more stringent analyses than that *Page 72
employed by the Supreme Court were utilized by these courts, insofar as might be applicable to Wisconsin Constitution article
With respect to the Establishment Clause, I have already indicated that the proposed legislation has a secular legislative purpose, has a primary effect that would neither inhibit nor advance religion and would not foster excessive governmental entanglement with religion. That same analysis indicates that the proposed legislation is also a permissible enactment under Wisconsin Constitution article
I therefore conclude that 1987 Senate Bill 366 would be constitutional on its face if enacted into law.
DJH:FTC
