Judges: W.A. DREW EDMONDSON, Attorney General of Oklahoma
Filed Date: 2/21/1996
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Dear Oklahoma House of Representatives Cotner
¶ 0 This office has received your request asking for an official Opinion addressing, in effect, the following question:
Do the procedural requirements of Article
¶ 2 To encourage the proper recycling of waste tires, the Act, under specified conditions, provides for compensation of waste tire facilities that meet the Act's requirements. 27A O.S.Supp.1995, § 2-11-406[
¶ 3 House Bill 1387 of the First Session of the 45th Legislature, made various amendments to the Oklahoma Waste Tire Recycling Act. Among other things, the amendments make it unlawful to dispose of waste tires in various ways, H.B. 1387, § 1;1 and define various terms, id. § 2.2 The amendments also provide an application procedure for those seeking exemption certificate under the Act, id. § 4;3 amend the assessments imposed under the Act, id. § 3;4 establish procedures for compensation under the Act, id. § 7;5 and provide for the evaluation of each waste tire facility by the Department of Environmental Quality, every three years, id. § 8(C).6
¶ 4 To determine whether House Bill 1387 of the First Session of the 45th Legislature is a revenue raising bill under Article
All bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives. The Senate may propose amendments to revenue bills. No revenue bill shall be passed during the five last days of the session.
(Emphasis added.)
¶ 6 As amended by the passage of State Question 640, Article
A. All bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives. The Senate may propose amendments to revenue bills.
B. No revenue bill shall be passed during the five last days of the session.
C. Any revenue bill originating in the House of Representatives shall not become effective until it has been referred to the people of the state at the next general election held throughout the state and shall become effective and be in force when it has been approved by a majority of the votes cast on the measure at such election and not otherwise, except as otherwise provided in subsection D of this section.
D. Any revenue bill originating in the House of Representatives may become law without being submitted to a vote of the people of the state if such bill receives the approval of three-fourths (3/4) of the membership of the House of Representatives and three-fourths (3/4) of the membership of the Senate and is submitted to the Governor for appropriate action. Any such revenue bill shall not be subject to the emergency measure provision authorized in Section 58 of this Article and shall not become effective and be in force until ninety days after it has been approved by the Legislature, and acted on by the Governor.
Okla. Const. art.
¶ 7 The drafters of State Question No. 640 did not require that all bills affecting tax liability or all bills resulting in additional income to the State be subject to the procedural requirements of Article V, § 33. Rather, the drafters of State Question No. 640 attached new procedural requirements to "bills for raising revenue," also called "revenue bills." In choosing to have these procedural requirements apply only to "bills for raising revenue" or "revenue bills," terms which the Oklahoma Supreme Court has construed on many occasions, those proposing and approving State Question No. 640 were deemed to be knowledgeable of the construction placed on those interchangeable terms (the Oklahoma Supreme Court held the terms "bills for raising revenue" and "revenue bills" are interchangeable inAnderson v. Ritterbusch,
¶ 8 The Oklahoma Supreme Court, in Wimberly v. Deacon,
¶ 9 One of the principal rules of constitutional construction is that where the language of the constitutional provision comes from a constitutional provision that has already been construed, the framers of the provision are not only presumed to be familiar with the construction placed upon the provision by the courts, but are also presumed to have adopted the previous construction. The Oklahoma Supreme Court, in State v. Board of CountyCommissioners of Creek County,
The framers of our Constitution are presumed to have been familiar with these decisions from our neighbor states and to have them in mind in inserting Sec. 53 of Art. 5 in our Constitution.
¶ 10 Similarly, in Wimberly, the Oklahoma Supreme Court, in more specific terms, stated this principle of law and the reason for it:
[W]hen provisions have been adopted into the constitution of a state which are identical with or similar to those of other states, it will be presumed that the framers of the constitution were conversant with, and designed to adopt, the construction previously placed on such provision. . . . The reason for this rule is that, if it was intended to exclude the previous construction, the legal presumption is that the terms of the provision would be so changed as to effect that intent.
Wimberly,
¶ 11 Under these principles of law, the drafters of State Question No. 640 in amending the provisions of Section
¶ 12 The interchangeable terms "bills for raising revenue" and "revenue bills" are terms of art with a specific meaning under Oklahoma law. Under Oklahoma law, a bill does not constitute a "revenue bill" unless (1) the principal object of the bill is to raise revenues; and (2) the bill levies a tax in the strict sense of the word. It is equally clear, under Oklahoma law, that the term "revenue bill" does not cover laws under which revenue would incidentally be raised.
¶ 13 The first Oklahoma case to construe "revenue bill" wasAnderson v. Ritterbusch,
The true meaning of revenue laws in this clause is such laws as are made for the direct and avowed purpose for creating and securing revenue or public funds for the service of government. No laws, whose collateral or indirect operation might possibly conduce to the public or fiscal wealth, are within the scope of this provision.
¶ 14 Since its decision in Anderson v. Ritterbusch, the Oklahoma Supreme Court has employed a two-pronged test to determine whether a bill is a "revenue bill," subject to the procedural provisions of Section 33 of Article V. The most direct articulation of that two-pronged test was in Leveridge v.Oklahoma Tax Commission,
"Revenue Bills" are those laws whose principal object is the raising of revenue and which levy taxes in the strict sense of the word, and said phrase does not cover laws under which revenue may incidently arise.
(Emphasis added.)
¶ 15 This definition of "revenue bill" was reaffirmed by the Oklahoma Supreme Court in Board of County Commissioners v.Oklahoma Public Employees Retirement System,
An Act of the Legislature in which revenue may incidently arise, but whose principal object is not the raising of such revenue, does not come within the provisions of Article
5 , Section33 of the Oklahoma Constitution requiring all revenue measures to originate in the House of Representatives.
¶ 16 It is apparent from a reading of these cases that in order for a bill to constitute a "revenue bill," two elements must be present:
1. The bill's principal object must be the raising of revenue, and
2. The bill must, in the strict sense of the word, levy a tax.
¶ 17 The Oklahoma Supreme Court's construction of "revenue bill" has made it clear that the mere fact a bill may incidentally increase revenue does not make it a "revenue bill." For example, in a series of controversies involving Pure Oil Company and the Oklahoma Tax Commission, the Court held that a statute which extended an existing tax to a new class of taxpayers did not constitute a "revenue bill" under Article V, § 33. The controversy between Pure Oil Company and the Tax Commission involved two cases. In the first case, Pure Oil Co.v. Cornish,
¶ 18 Shortly after the Court's decision, the Legislature responded by amending the law to impose the tax on "industrial" as well as "commercial" motor carriers. This time, in attacking the statute, Pure Oil Company in Pure Oil Co. v. Oklahoma TaxCommission,
The real purpose of [the challenged law] being to regulate the use of public highways, provision therein requiring payment of tax or license fee for use of highway in furtherance of industrial pursuits, is only incidental to [its] real purpose, and the act is not a revenue raising measure such as to render it void under section33 , art.5 of the Constitution of the state of Oklahoma[.]
Id.
¶ 19 These cases, and other similar cases, make it clear that a bill which has as its primary purpose, something other than raising revenue, is not a "revenue bill" under Article
¶ 21 The Oklahoma Waste Tire Recycling Act is part 4 of Article XI of Title 27A, which deals with Waste Reduction and Recycling. A reading of the Act makes it clear that the Act's principal purpose is the protection of the environment by facilitating the reduction of waste tires through proper recycling. The assessment and collection of waste recycling fees is incidental to the Act's purpose. Accordingly, under the case law discussed above, the bill enacting the provisions of the Act was not a revenue bill. Under the same analysis neither is House Bill 1387, which has the same primary purpose.
¶ 22 It is, therefore, the official Opinion of the AttorneyGeneral that:
1. The provisions of Article
4. The provisions within the Oklahoma Waste Tire Recycling Actwhich provide for the imposition and collection of a waste tirerecycling fee, 27A O.S.Supp. 1995, § 2-11-403, do not renderthe Oklahoma Waste Tire Recycling Act a "revenue bill" becausesuch fees are merely incidental to the Act's principal purpose,the protection of the environment by facilitating the reductionof waste tires and the proper recycling of waste tires.
5. House Bill 1387, 45th Legislature, First Regular Session,1995 Okla. Sess. Laws ch.
W.A. DREW EDMONDSON ATTORNEY GENERAL OF OKLAHOMA
NEAL LEADER SENIOR ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL
While the primary object of all taxation is the raising of revenue for the support of the government, and all bills for that general purpose are ``bills for raising revenue,' in the sense of the Constitution, and therefore must originate in the House of Representatives, it does not necessarily follow that every bill for some other legitimate and well-defined general purpose becomes a revenue bill in the same sense, because, as an incident to the main object, it may contain a provision for the payment of certain dues, license fees, or special taxes.
Cornelius,
In another case, decided that same year, Ex parte Ambler,
In the case of In re Lee,
Shortly after the enactment of a 1923 act, which was passed for the purposes of regulating and controlling motor vehicles operating as common carriers for hire over the public highways, the act was challenged by an individual charged with violating its provisions in Ex parte Tindall,
The real purpose of the act being to regulate the use of public highways by transportation companies, a provision in such act requiring payment of a tax or license fee for the privilege of operating such business, such fee or tax being merely incidental to the enforcement of the real purpose of the act, does not render the act void under section 33, art. 5 of the Constitution, which requires all revenue bills to originate in the House of Representatives.
Tindall,
Anderson v. Ritterbusch , 22 Okla. 761 ( 1908 )
Cornelius v. State Ex Rel. Cruce, Gov. , 40 Okla. 733 ( 1914 )
Board of County Commissioners of Lincoln County v. Oklahoma ... , 405 P.2d 68 ( 1965 )
Leveridge v. Oklahoma Tax Commission , 1956 Okla. LEXIS 398 ( 1956 )
In Re Lee , 64 Okla. 310 ( 1917 )
Ex Parte Tindall , 102 Okla. 192 ( 1924 )
Pure Oil Co. v. Cornish , 174 Okla. 615 ( 1935 )
State Ex Rel. v. Board of County Com'rs , 188 Okla. 184 ( 1940 )