Judges: ROBERT H. HENRY, Attorney General of Oklahoma
Filed Date: 1/6/1989
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Dear Representatives Henshaw,
¶ 0 The Attorney General has received your request for an official opinion asking, in effect:
Is 18 O.S. 552.3(B) (1988), which regulates the amount of money that a professional fundraiser may receive from proceeds of a charitable solicitation, constitutional in view of Riley v. National Federation of the Blind of North Carolina, 487 U.S. ___,
108 S.Ct. 2667 ,101 L.Ed.2d 669 (1988)?
¶ 1 You have asked for an analysis of 18 O.S. 552.3(B) of the Oklahoma Solicitation of Charitable Contributions Act, 18 O.S.552.1 (1988) et seq. 18 O.S. 552.3(B), which places a limitation on fundraising fees, reads as follows:
No charitable organization, professional solicitator or professional fund raiser shall be registered by the Oklahoma Tax Commission where the professional fund raiser or professional solicitator would receive more than ten percent (10%) of the net receipts from the solicitation of contributions, nor where the charitable organization whose name is used would receive less than ninety percent (90%) of said receipts, nor when the board of directors of the charitable organization would not have full control of all funds collected.
¶ 2 You question the validity of this limitation because a similar statute in North Carolina was found unconstitutional on June 29, 1988, by the United States Supreme Court, in Riley v.National Federation of the Blind of North Carolina,
487 U.S. ___,
¶ 3 In Riley, the North Carolina statute prohibited an "unreasonable" fundraising fee, which was defined by a three-tiered and percentage-based measurement. Charitable solicitation, the Court reasserted, is speech entitled to full protection under the free expression guarantees of the
¶ 4 Justice Blackmun, writing for the Court in the Munson
case, reiterated that: "charitable solicitations are so intertwined with speech that they are entitled to the protections of the
Where, as here, a statute imposes a direct restriction on protected
First Amendment activity, and where the defect in the statute is that the means chosen to accomplish the State's objectives are too imprecise, so that in all its applications the statute creates an unnecessary risk of chilling free speech, the statute is properly subject to facial attack.
¶ 5 Considering the Court's pronouncements in Riley, Munson, and Schaumburg, it is clear that 18 O.S. 552.3(B) of the Oklahoma Solicitation of Charitable Contributions Act is unconstitutional. The ten percent fee limitation in 18 O.S.552.3(B) cannot be distinguished so as to save it from constitutional attack.
¶ 6 It is, therefore, the official opinion of the AttorneyGeneral that 552.3(B) of the Oklahoma Solicitation of CharitableContributions Act, 18 O.S. 552.2 (1988) et seq., isunconstitutional in view of Riley v. National Federation of theBlind of North Carolina, 487 U.S. ___,
ROBERT H. HENRY ATTORNEY GENERAL OF OKLAHOMA
JANE WHEELER ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL