Judges: ROBERT H. HENRY, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF OKLAHOMA
Filed Date: 5/14/1990
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Dear Senate Haney,
¶ 0 The Attorney General has received your letter asking for an official opinion addressing, in effect, the following questions:
1. Has the Oklahoma Center for the Advancement of Science andTechnology (OCAST) been authorized by the requisite 2/3 votemandated by Okla. Const. Article
2. Assuming that OCAST may use the Seed-Capital Revolving Fund,may it contract with a private investment fund manager to make"seed-capital" investments?
¶ 2 The amended Article X, Section 15 of the Constitution has two conditions before public monies can be used by OCAST in such a manner. The first condition is that OCAST may only use public funds "not exceeding 1% of total State appropriations for the current fiscal year." The second condition requires a statute to be enacted by a 2/3 vote of the Legislature specifically authorizing such a use of public funds. The precise wording of the Constitution is as follows:
The Oklahoma Center for the Advancement of Science and Technology or its successor may only use public funds for the purposes authorized in this subsection if a statute specifically authorizing such use is approved by an affirmative vote of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the members elected to the Senate and to the House of Representatives upon final passage of such measure in each of the respective houses and with the approval of the Governor.
¶ 3 It is important to point out that it is the authorizingstatute which must be passed by a two-thirds vote of the Legislature. This does not necessarily mean that a two-thirds vote is required for each appropriation bill funding these activities of OCAST. A statute is ". . . an act of the legislature as an organized body . . ." Commissioners' Court ofEl Paso County v. El Paso County Sheriff's Deputies Association,
¶ 4 From the holdings of Oklahoma cases dealing with the effect of Legislative Resolutions, it would seem that Oklahoma would follow this same reasoning. In Ward v. State,
¶ 5 The critical requirement of Article X, Section 15 is not whether the authorization comes in the form of a resolution, appropriations bill or other law. The most important requirement is that the statute must "specifically authorize" the use of public funds for private purposes. Title 74 Ohio St. 5060.21 (1989) creates the "Seed-Capital Revolving Fund." This statute is quite lengthy and authorizes the Fund to be loaned or invested in a variety of private enterprises. OCAST may use the Fund to make "authorized investments" including loans, loans convertible to equity, equity, limited partnership agreements and other securities. 74 Ohio St. 5060.21(C)(1) (1989). The Fund may be used to "purchase qualified securities" which are issued by private "enterprises engaged in new product or process innovations." 74O.S. 5060.21(D) (1989). Because most, if not all, of the objects for funding listed in the statute involve funding private enterprise, we believe that this statute contains the "specific authorization" required by the Constitution.
¶ 6 The original version of 74 Ohio St. 5060.21 creating the Seed-Capital Revolving Fund was part of the omnibus "Economic Recovery Act of 1987." H.B. 1444, 1987 Okla. Sess. Laws, Ch.
¶ 7 The Oklahoma Constitution provides that when statutes are amended, the amended statute must be published "at length" and re-enacted in its entirety. Okla. Const. Article
¶ 8 The statutory amendment authorizing use of the Seed-Capital Fund, was approved on June 27, 1988, which was before the constitutional amendment was adopted by the people of Oklahoma. While the amended bill passed before the Constitution was officially amended, the statute that was passed in 1987 and amended in 1988, was passed in anticipation of the passage of the constitutional amendment. This is not unlike what occurred several years ago when the Oklahoma Industrial Finance Authority was authorized by Oklahoma Constitution Article
We therefore hold that there is no constitutional inhibition forbidding the enactment of an enabling act to become effective at a future date when and if a proposed constitutional amendment is adopted.
Application of Oklahoma Industrial Finance Authority,
¶ 9 While 74 Ohio St. 5060.21 was not expressly passed contingent on the passage of the amendment to Okla. Const. Article
"Seed-capital" means financing that is provided for the development, refinement and commercialization of a product, process or innovation, whether for the start-up of a new firm or the expansion or the restructuring of a small firm;
74 Ohio St. 5060.4(15) (1989).
¶ 11 To carry out the purposes of the Seed-Capital Revolving Fund, OCAST is expressly instructed to use the fund to make "authorized investments." In making these investments, OCAST has been given the authority to enter into "management or consultant service agreements." 74 Ohio St. 5060.21(C)(1)(c) (1989). OCAST is also specifically authorized to carry out its duty by ". . . participation as a general or limited partner in other seed-capital funds or participation as a limited partner in individual cases as authorized by the board of directors." 74O.S. 5060.21(C)(1)(g).
¶ 12 It is quite clear that the Legislature has given OCAST broad discretion to carry out its authorized activities and to put the Seed-Capital Revolving Fund to work in the State of Oklahoma. It may opt to make these investments directly with certain business enterprises, it may hire private investment managers to guide the use of the fund, and it has express authority to pool its monies with other "Seed-Capital Funds" (public or private) to carry out its mission of fostering economic development.
¶ 13 It is, therefore, the official opinion of the AttorneyGeneral that:
1. The Oklahoma Center for the Advancement of Science andTechnology (OCAST) has been authorized by the requisite 2/3 votemandated by Okla. Const. Article
2. In order to implement the Seed-Capital Revolving Fund OCASTmay retain private investment fund managers to make investmentswhen OCAST chooses to make such investments including investmentsmade as a limited partner pursuant to 74 Ohio St. 5060.21(1989).
ROBERT H. HENRY ATTORNEY GENERAL OF OKLAHOMA
THOMAS L. SPENCER ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL
UHLER Et Al. v. AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR-CONGRESS OF ... , 105 S. Ct. 5 ( 1984 )
Wright v. State , 192 Okla. 493 ( 1943 )
American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial ... , 36 Cal. 3d 687 ( 1984 )
Application of Oklahoma Industrial Finance Auth. , 1961 Okla. LEXIS 341 ( 1961 )
Commissioners' Court of El Paso County v. El Paso County ... , 1981 Tex. App. LEXIS 4038 ( 1981 )
Ward v. State , 176 Okla. 368 ( 1936 )