WEIMER, Justice.
At the outset, we note this court's limited role in this matter, which concerns educational funding and other legislative
The determination of how to best provide for the education of children is not the role of this court in this matter. We defer that determination to those more learned in the fields of education and public policy. The court's role is to evaluate the law set forth in the constitution to determine whether the matters addressed by the legislature comply with the relevant constitutional provisions and "not to legislate social policy on the basis of our own personal inclinations." State v. Smith, 99-0606, 99-2094, 99-2015, 99-2019, p. 11 (La.7/6/00), 766 So.2d 501, 510, quoting Evans v. Abney, 396 U.S. 435, 447, 90 S.Ct. 628, 24 L.Ed.2d 634 (1970). From a judicial perspective, the questions presented could have arisen as a result of the consideration of any number of issues confronted by the legislature. Nevertheless, resolution of the constitutional issues presented will impact the school voucher and related programs.
This declaratory judgment action challenges the validity of two legislative instruments enacted during the 2012 Regular Session of the Louisiana Legislature. Specifically, the topics of this litigation are Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 99 ("SCR 99") and 2012 La. Acts 2 ("Act 2" or "Act"), each of which addresses funding and a mechanism for the state to pay for the tuition costs of elementary and secondary school students physically attending, or otherwise undertaking individual course work, from nonpublic schools.
The case is before this court on direct appeal from a judgment declaring SCR 99 and Act 2 unconstitutional on grounds that those legislative instruments divert funds constitutionally reserved for public schools. Additionally, this court granted and consolidated the plaintiffs' appeal, so as to expeditiously resolve all of the issues presented.
After reviewing the record, the legislative instruments, and the constitutional provisions at issue, we agree with the district court that once funds are dedicated to the state's Minimum Foundation Program for public education, the constitution prohibits those funds from being expended on the tuition costs of nonpublic schools and nonpublic entities. Unlike the district court, we also find the procedures employed to enact SCR 99 violated the constitution inasmuch as that legislative instrument was intended to have the effect of law, but several requirements for enacting law were not observed. We find, after analytically severing the unconstitutional provisions of Act 2, that Act 2 does not violate the constitution's "one-object" rule.
In 2012, the Louisiana Legislature passed Act 2, which, among other provisions, creates a "Course Choice Program," and substantially amends the "Student Scholarships for Educational Excellence Program" ("SSEEP"), which is commonly referred to as the voucher program. As amended, the SSEEP now requires the payment of Minimum Foundation Program
In the same 2012 regular session, the legislature also passed SCR 99, the vehicle by which the legislature "approved" the 2012-2013 MFP formula adopted by the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education ("BESE") as required by La. Const. art. VIII, § 13(B), which dictates that BESE "annually develop and adopt a formula which shall be used to determine the cost of a minimum foundation program of education in all public elementary and secondary schools." MFP funds are appropriated as a separate and distinct line item in the state budget. As a result, SCR 99 in part approves the formula adopted by BESE for funding the implementation of the programs created in Act 2, including this provision:
SCR 99, XII(B)(6).
Besides the SSEEP/voucher program and the Course Choice Program, SCR 99 also describes an early high school graduation program:
SCR 99, XII(C).
The plaintiffs — the Louisiana Federation of Teachers, the East Baton Rouge Federation of Teachers, the Jefferson Federation of Teachers, as well as one parent and one teacher of public school children — filed a petition for declaratory judgment, naming as defendants the Department and BESE.
According to the plaintiffs, the legislature unconstitutionally passed Act 2, in violation of La. Const. art. III, § 15(A) and (C),
Moreover, the plaintiffs alleged SCR 99 violates La. Const. art. III, § 2(A)(3)(a),
The matter proceeded to a trial on the merits. Before issuing a judgment, the district court considered arguments on an exception of lack of subject matter jurisdiction filed by the defendants. In support of their exception, the defendants argued the plaintiffs' petition for declaratory judgment raises issues that are nonjusticiable at this time. In particular, the defendants urged SCR 99 is merely aspirational and that there is a constitutional process that must take place in the succeeding year before the state will know whether some of the programs contained in SCR 99 will be authorized. In addition, the defendants argued some of the programs contained in Act 2 are not yet funded.
In contrast, the plaintiffs asserted the testimony indicated the defendants have already issued a bulletin on the Early Choice Provider Program, have put out advertising for service providers, and put together a list of service providers in accordance with Act 2. As such, the plaintiffs maintained the state has begun to implement the programs set forth in Act 2.
The district court denied the exception of lack of subject matter jurisdiction in oral reasons, stating:
At the conclusion of trial, the district court entered a judgment declaring Act 2 and SCR 99 unconstitutional. In a lengthy opinion, the district court first determined that SCR 99 does not violate La. Const. art. III, § 2(A)(3)(a), which requires that a favorable vote of two-thirds of the elected members of each house for passage of a law when a matter is considered after the eighty-second calendar day of the session. In particular, the district court reasoned La. Const. art. III, § 2(A)(3)(a), by its own terms, applies only to matters "intended to have the effect of law," and concluded SCR 99 does not have the effect of law. In support, the district court noted the constitution vests the legislature with limited jurisdiction to approve or decline the MFP formula and that this approval is distinct from the passage of bills into law. The district court reasoned the legislature may not change the content of the MFP formula and there is no requirement that the legislature present the resolution to the governor for signing. Moreover, the district court rejected the plaintiffs' assertion that Joint Rule 20(A)(1)(a)(iii)
In addition, the district court found SCR 99 does not violate La. Const. art. III, § 15(G), which requires that no bill shall become law without the favorable vote of at least a majority of the members elected to each house. The district court relied on its previous holding that SCR 99 is not intended to have the effect of law, which precludes the application of Article III, § 15(G). The district court also found SCR 99 was properly passed in the House by a majority of the voting members present.
Next, the district court found Act 2 does not violate La. Const. art. III, § 15, which requires that a bill be confined to one object. Relying on State v. O'Dell, 253 La. 418, 218 So.2d 318 (1969), the district court noted a bill is regarded as having one
However, the district court found that Act 2 and SCR 99 unconstitutionally divert MFP funds constitutionally mandated to be allocated to public elementary and secondary schools to nonpublic entities, in violation of La. Const. art. VIII, § 13(B). In support, the district court pointed out that Article VIII, § 13(B) requires BESE to "annually develop and adopt a formula which shall be used to determine the cost of a minimum foundation program of education in all public elementary and secondary schools as well as to
In addition, the district court noted the delegates to the Louisiana Constitutional Convention of 1973 recognized that Article VIII, § 13(B) "takes care of the public schools," which establishes the legislature knew the distinctions they were making between public and private schools. Moreover, the district court pointed out the convention delegates stripped from the final version of Article VIII, § 13, a floor amendment that would have siphoned off money in the direction of private schools, for fear that such a provision "opens the door for the very thing we are talking about trying to keep out of the constitution." The district court maintained the convention delegates recognized the purpose of Article VIII, § 13(B) was "to insure that there are certain minimum standards in public education, met in all of the school systems across the state and that the [poor] parishes do not suffer a lack of adequate public education." The district court also recognized Article VIII, § 13(A), as originally drafted, included an authorization for the legislature to appropriate funds to assist students in private schools, in addition to free textbooks, bus transportation, lunch programs, and other similar types of aid available to private schools at the time, but was ultimately amended to limit private school aid. The district court also distinguished this case from Triplett v. Board of Elementary and Secondary Education, 09-0691 (La.App. 1 Cir. 7/13/09), 21 So.3d 401, noting that in Triplett, MFP funds were transferred to a
The district court also found that SCR 99 and Act 2 unconstitutionally divert local funds included in the MFP that are constitutionally mandated to be allocated to public elementary and secondary schools to nonpublic entities, in violation of La. Const. art. VIII, § 13(C) and La. Const. art. VI, § 29(A).
The defendants have now directly appealed the district court judgment to this court, which has jurisdiction over the appeal pursuant to La. Const. art. V, § 5(D).
The sole issue before this court is whether the educational funding mechanisms or other content of two legislative instruments, SCR 99 and Act 2, violate constitutional restrictions.
The Louisiana Constitution of 1974 contains a section specifically addressing educational funding. Under La. Const. art. VIII, § 13, the legislature is required to appropriate funds for two purposes. The first purpose is described under Article VIII, § 13(A): "The legislature shall appropriate funds to supply free school books and other materials of instruction prescribed by the State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education to the children of this state at the elementary and secondary levels." The second purpose is described
This second purpose, relating to the MFP of public education, is the central topic of much of the parties' arguments. Keying on the word "minimum" in Article VIII, § 13(B), the defendants essentially argue that all the state is required to do is calculate a minimum amount for public education and, once that requirement is met, the state can allocate MFP funds in any fashion, such as by diverting money to nonpublic schools and course providers. The plaintiffs urge that MFP funds cannot be diverted to nonpublic schools and other course providers because Article VIII, § 13(B) restricts MFP funds "to parish and city school systems."
Unlike provisions for general appropriations, which are solely the province of the legislature,
Once the MFP formula is approved by the legislature, the constitution requires the legislature to "fully fund the current cost to the state of such a program as determined by applying the approved formula." La. Const. art. VIII, § 13(B). The MFP is also unique in that the authority of the governor is limited. See Id. ("Neither the governor nor the legislature may reduce such appropriation, except that the governor may reduce such appropriation using means provided in the act containing the appropriation provided that any such reduction is consented to in writing by two-thirds of the elected members of each house of the legislature."); see also Joint Rules of the Louisiana Senate and House, Rule No. 20(A)(1)(b)(iii) (indicating legislative approval of the MFP is accomplished by a resolution); La. Const. art. III, § 17(B) ("No ... resolution shall require the signature or other action of the governor to become effective.").
The MFP itself is not the only constitutional contention among the parties. Other constitutional limitations upon the legislature, such as confining a bill to one object and the proper procedures for introducing, calendaring, and approving the
Therefore, in order to evaluate the parties' arguments, it is necessary to examine in greater detail both the form and substance of the legislative instruments at issue.
As noted earlier, the vehicle by which the legislature nominally approved BESE's 2012-2013 MFP formula was SCR 99. It is a 28-page document, so space constraints preclude reproducing SCR 99 in its entirety in this opinion. To the uninitiated in the budgetary process and the administration of education, SCR 99 is largely an arcane document, replete with jargon and esoteric terms not defined in the document, but which are apparently known to those few who are well-initiated in the state's budgetary processes and in the administration of education. Owing to its length and complexity, a general overview of SCR 99 (which is drawn from the document itself, trial evidence, and other commentary) must presently suffice.
The funding provisions for the MFP,
Level One (entitled "COST DETERMINATION AND EQUITABLE DISTRIBUTION OF STATE AND LOCAL FUNDS") takes the number of pupils across the state and multiplies that number by $3,855.
Level Two (entitled "INCENTIVE FOR LOCAL EFFORT") is intended to be a reward to the local districts for raising revenue. Because local revenue is a factor which decreases the state's contribution in Level One (and therefore increases the local contribution), Level Two "[r]ewards systems that contribute a greater proportion towards the cost of education by increasing local tax revenues." Minimum Foundation Program, 2011-2012 Handbook, p. 2, Louisiana Dept. of Educ. (July 2011) ("Handbook").
SCR 99 indicates that MFP funding shall be used as follows:
SCR 99, XII(A)(1).
As will be shown later in this opinion, Act 2 implemented this part of SCR 99 under what has become known as the Course Choice Program. However, as it concerns funding, for present purposes, it must be noted that while some eligible course providers are public institutions, SCR 99 directs funding to be made to approved nonpublic institutions, such as "On-line Course Providers," and "commercial industry based educational programs." SCR 99, XII(A)(1)(b) and (c).
Besides approving funding for nonpublic course providers, SCR 99 funds an expanded SSEEP/voucher-based program. As explained in SCR 99, XII(B):
The details for funding both the SSEEP/voucher program and the Course Choice Program in fiscal year 2012-2013 are complex and need not be addressed here. For the core of this case, the most essential funding effect of SCR 99 is that it provides funding for both the SSEEP/voucher program and the Course Choice Program to be paid from the MFP.
Besides funding, other aspects of SCR 99 are disputed in this case. Specifically, if SCR 99 was "intended to have the effect of law" (La. Const. art. III, § 2(A)(3)(a)), then other constitutional requirements apply, such as certain deadlines and voting requirements discussed later in this opinion. However, to set the stage for our later analysis of the dispute surrounding these essentially procedural aspects of SCR 99, other details of SCR 99 bear mention.
Under the rubric of the SSEEP, SCR 99 provides:
Under the rubric of "COST DETERMINATION AND EQUITABLE DISTRIBUTION OF STATE AND LOCAL FUNDS," SCR 99 provides that the "State and Local Base Per Pupil Amount" of the MFP is $3,855. However, SCR 99 provides for a potential departure from this amount in future years:
SCR 99, II(A)(4).
Notably, SCR 99 describes an Early High School Graduation Scholarship Program, but there is no counterpart to this program in Act 2. The full description is reproduced supra, but as it concerns funding, SCR 99 makes available various amounts, depending upon how early a student graduates and the funds are described as a percentage of "MFP state and local share per pupil allocation for the district in which the student resided at the time of graduation." SCR 99, XII(C)(1) and (2).
Like SCR 99, Act 2, which is the other challenged legislative instrument, is a document the length of which precludes full reproduction in this opinion. In shortest summary, Act 2 creates the disputed Course Choice Program and the SSEEP/voucher program, both of which were funded via SCR 99. The Course Choice Program is a new enactment; under Act 2 the SSEEP/voucher program is an amendment of the existing "Student Scholarships for Educational Excellence Act." Prior to amendment, the SSEEP allowed funding vouchers to pay for nonpublic schools for students who lived in a municipality with a population of at least 300,000 and whose school district had schools taken over by the state's Recovery School District. Act 2 expands the geographic eligibility statewide because, instead of imposing a municipal population limitation and requiring that the state's Recovery School District has taken over any of a given district's schools, Act 2 establishes as a threshold for eligibility that a student would otherwise attend a public school assigned a grade of "C," "D," or "F" under the school and district accountability system. A maximum family income threshold further restricts individual eligibility, both before and after SSEEP was amended by Act 2. See generally, La. R.S. 17:4013(2).
Under Act 2, funds are sent by the state to schools accepting the SSEEP/voucher
This court reviews judgments declaring legislative instruments unconstitutional de novo. See State v. All Property and Casualty Insurance Carriers Authorized and Licensed to do Business in the State, 06-2030, p. 6 (La.8/25/06), 937 So.2d 313, 319; Louisiana Municipal Association v. State, 04-0227, p. 45 (La.1/19/05), 893 So.2d 809, 842. In conjunction with this review, certain principles apply. As a general rule, legislative instruments are presumed to be constitutional; therefore, the party challenging the validity of a legislative instrument has the burden of proving its unconstitutionality. See State v. Citizen, 04-1841, p. 11 (La.4/1/05), 898 So.2d 325, 334; Louisiana Municipal Association, 04-0227 at 45, 893 So.2d at 842; Board of Commissioners of North Lafourche Conservation, Levee and Drainage District v. Board of Commissioners of Atchafalaya Basin Levee District, 95-1353, pp. 3-4 (La. 1/16/96), 666 So.2d 636, 639.
Because the provisions of the Louisiana Constitution are not grants of power, but instead are limitations on the otherwise plenary power of the people of the state, exercised through the legislature, the legislature may enact any legislation that the constitution does not prohibit. Louisiana Municipal Association, 04-0227 at 45, 893 So.2d at 842-43; Polk v. Edwards, 626 So.2d 1128, 1132 (La.1993); Board of Commissioners of Orleans Levee District v. Department of Natural Resources, 496 So.2d 281, 286 (La.1986). Consequently, a party challenging the constitutionality of a legislative instrument must point to a particular provision of the constitution that would prohibit the enactment of the legislative instrument and must demonstrate clearly and convincingly that it was the constitutional aim of that provision to deny the legislature the power to enact the legislative instrument in question. See World Trade Center Taxing District v. All Taxpayers, Property Owners, 05-0374, p. 12 (La.6/29/05), 908 So.2d 623, 632; Caddo-Shreveport Sales and Use Tax Commission v. Office of Motor Vehicles Department of Public Safety and Corrections of the State, 97-2233, pp. 5-6 (La.4/14/98), 710 So.2d 776, 779; Polk, 626 So.2d at 1132. A constitutional limitation on the legislative power may be either express or implied. World Trade Center Taxing District, 05-0374 at 12, 908 So.2d at 632; Caddo-Shreveport Sales and Use Tax Commission, 97-2233 at 6, 710 So.2d at 779-80.
Finally, because it is presumed that the legislature acts within its constitutional authority in promulgating a legislative instrument, this court must construe a legislative instrument so as to preserve its constitutionality when it is reasonable to do so. See State v. Fleury, 01-0871, p. 5 (La.10/16/01), 799 So.2d 468, 472; Moore v. Roemer, 567 So.2d 75, 78 (La.1990). In other words, if a legislative instrument is susceptible to two constructions, one of which would render it unconstitutional or raise grave constitutional questions, the court will adopt the interpretation of the legislative instrument which, without doing violence to its language, will maintain its constitutionality. See Hondroulis v. Schuhmacher, 553 So.2d 398, 416-17 (La. 1988). Nevertheless, the constitution is the supreme law of this state to which all legislative instruments must yield. See World Trade Center Taxing District, 05-0374 at 12, 908 So.2d at 632; Caddo-Shreveport Sales and Use Tax Commission, 97-2233 at 6, 710 So.2d at 780. When a legislative instrument conflicts with a constitutional provision, the legislative instrument must fall. See Caddo-Shreveport
Legislative instruments SCR 99 and Act 2 undeniably divert state MFP funds from public to nonpublic schools. The question at hand is whether diverting state MFP funds to nonpublic schools violates constitutional restrictions. Setting aside for a moment other programs provided for by SCR 99 and Act 2, the diversion of state MFP funds can be most clearly seen under the SSEEP/voucher program. A student who receives an SSEEP/voucher program is counted when determining the MFP funding, but the per-pupil amount of the MFP funds calculated for that student is paid by the state directly to the nonpublic
Less clear from the present record is whether local funds-as opposed to state revenues-are diverted to the SSEEP/voucher program. While the record is replete with documents generated by state agencies describing costs to local school districts for the SSEEP/voucher program, the state labored at length at trial to demonstrate that the documents' descriptions were not completely accurate and that the voucher program would either result in savings to local public schools or at the least, not take away local funds from public schools. The district court, however, found that local funds were indeed being diverted under SCR 99 and Act 2. Having found a diversion of state MFP funds to nonpublic schools, the district court determined that such a diversion violated La. Const. art. VIII, § 13(C).
With the issues on appeal thus framed as whether Act 2 and SCR 99 unconstitutionally divert state and/or local funds, we address each issue in turn. We begin, as we must, with the applicable constitutional language. See Louisiana Municipal Association v. State, 00-0374, p. 5 (La.10/6/00), 773 So.2d 663, 667. When a constitutional provision is plain and unambiguous and its application does not lead to absurd consequences, its language must be given effect. Id. 00-0374 at 5-6, 773 So.2d at 667; State ex rel. Guste v. Board of Commissioners of Orleans Levee Dist., 456 So.2d 605, 609 (La. 1984); Bank of New Orleans & Trust Co. v. Seavey, 383 So.2d 354, 356 (La. 1980). When interpreting constitutional language, the same general rules used in interpreting laws and other written instruments are followed. See Caddo-Shreveport Sales & Use Tax Commission, 97-2233 at 6, 710 So.2d at 780; Radiofone, Inc. v. City of New Orleans, 93-0962, p. 6 (La. 1/14/94), 630 So.2d 694, 698.
State MFP funds are addressed in La. Const. art. VIII, § 13(B). Though we have earlier excerpted sections when describing the process by which the MFP is developed, to evaluate what restrictions Article VIII, § 13(B) may contain, the full paragraph now bears noting:
The state defendants argue there is no language in Article VIII, § 13(B) prohibiting the state from including SCR 99 and Act 2 programs in the MFP formula. Emphasizing the first two sentences of Article VIII, § 13(B), the defendants argue the constitution only requires that the formula provide for "the cost of a minimum foundation program of education" in all public schools. Otherwise, the constitution provides no direction to or limitation on BESE and the legislature with regards to the MFP formula, as the defendants further argue in reliance on Jones v. State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education, 05-0668, 05-0669, p. 8 (La.App. 1 Cir. 11/4/05), 927 So.2d 426, 431 ("BESE is only required to annually develop and adopt a formula.... The Louisiana Constitution does not require that any particular items be included in the formula nor does it require that the formula be based on actual costs.").
These arguments miss the point. Because the Louisiana Constitution is fundamentally structured such that it contains limitations, not grants, of power, we are tasked with discerning whether the constitution contains any relevant limitation on the MFP funds. More simply stated, the constitutional question is not about what items BESE may put into the MFP formula, but whether the constitution restricts the use of MFP funds, when as here, BESE has developed and the legislature has approved the MFP formula based on the specific and unique provision outlined in Article VIII, § 13(B).
In Article VIII, § 13(B), we find clear and unambiguous restrictions upon the use of MFP funds. The sixth sentence of the paragraph states in pertinent part: "The funds appropriated
Recalling that a constitutional limitation on legislative power may either be express or implied (World Trade Center Taxing District, 05-0374 at 12, 908 So.2d at 632), we find the force of the express, plain language restriction of Article VIII, § 13(B) silences the defendants' remaining arguments.
In the defendants' view, it is constitutionally permissible to draw from MFP funds because "if a child chooses an Act 2 program, the local district will not be required to spend money to educate the child." This argument has been alternatively stated that it is constitutionally permissible that "if the student goes to a private alternative, the money follows the student to that private alternative." In support, the defendants point out that La. Const. art. VIII, § 1 states: "The legislature shall provide for the education of the people of the state and shall establish and maintain a public educational system." The defendants argue it is permissible for the state to fund private educational alternatives, because "maintain[ing] a public educational system" is a separate requirement from the broader goal of "provid[ing] for the education of the people of the state."
It is precisely because "provid[ing] for the education of the people of the state" is a broader goal that the defendants' argument fails. "[I]t is well-settled that when two statutes apply to the same situation, the specific statute prevails over the general one." Silver Dollar Liquor, Inc. v. Red River Parish Police Jury, 10-2776, p. 10 (La.9/7/11), 74 So.3d 641, 648. The same rule, of a specific provision prevailing over a general provision, holds true for constitutional provisions. See City of New Orleans v. Louisiana Assessors' Retirement and Relief Fund, 05-2548, p. 17 (La.10/1/07), 986 So.2d 1, 15 ("As a general rule, articles of the constitution are to be construed and interpreted using the same canons of interpretation applicable to statutes and written instruments."). The constitution specifically addresses the MFP in Article VIII, § 13(B), which we have earlier noted, contains a restriction on the use of MFP funds such that those funds cannot be diverted to nonpublic entities. Thus, the specific restriction of MFP funds is unaffected by the broader goal of "provid[ing] for the education of the people of the state" in Article VIII, § 1.
The rule of the specific provision prevailing over a general provision is sometimes
In Article VIII, § 1, the goal of "provid[ing] for the education of the people of the state" is implemented through another specific provision, Article VIII, § 13(A), which provides: "The legislature shall appropriate funds to supply free school books and other materials of instruction prescribed by the State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education to the children of this state at the elementary and secondary levels." As the defendants acknowledge, under the language just quoted, the state allocates funding for textbooks for students attending nonpublic schools. See generally, La. R.S. 17:351(A)(1) (providing without limitation to where students attend school, and with specific provision for home study programs, that prescribed "books and other materials of instruction... shall [be] suppl[ied] without charge to the children of this state at the elementary and secondary levels out of funds appropriated therefor by the legislature."). Thus, our present ruling about the funding restriction in Article VIII, § 13(B) allows both Article VIII, § 1 and § 13(B) to be given effect. See Perschall, 96-0322 at 22, 697 So.2d at 255 (noting that even "in the event of conflict or inconsistency, provisions should be construed, if possible, to allow each provision to stand and be given effect.").
Because we must, whenever possible, give effect to each provision of the constitution, another of the defendants' arguments fails. The defendants argue the delegates of the Constitutional Convention were generally in favor of aid to nonpublic schools. The defendants claim support from the fact that the convention delegates voted against reinstating a prohibition on aid to private schools. See Jackie Ducote, The Education Article of the Louisiana Constitution, 62 La.L.Rev. 117, 128-29 (2001) (noting that including from the 1921 Louisiana Constitution the "prohibition against the use of public funds for private
However, in drafting Article VIII, the convention delegates clearly understood they were drawing distinctions between public and nonpublic schools. For instance, during debate on proposed amendments, the purpose of Article VIII, § 13(A) was described as "simply constitutionaliz[ing] a mandate to the legislature to prescribe free school books and materials to the children of this state and all schools.... It also, by the language used, guarantees to children in nonpublic schools the right to receive these materials."
The defendants also argue that the MFP is overfunded, in that the only funding
The fundamental error in this line of argument is that there are no unrestricted MFP funds. While we agree with the defendants that BESE and the legislature have vast flexibility and discretion in fashioning educational programs, once BESE and the legislature employ the unique MFP procedures of Article VIII, § 13(B) to fund programs, the constitutional restriction is clear: "The funds appropriated
As noted earlier, the discretion of BESE and the legislature is vast. However, we hasten to reiterate, we are not deciding the merits of the challenged programs. It is only at the stage in which BESE has invoked the MFP process for funding these programs and the legislature has nominally given its approval that this court is concerned. Pursuant to Article VIII, § 13(B), whatever discretion existed prior to the funds being dedicated to the MFP is no more; the state funds approved through the unique MFP process cannot be diverted to nonpublic schools or other nonpublic course providers according to the clear, specific, and unambiguous language of the constitution.
As a fallback position, the state defendants argue that even if we find a restriction in Article VIII, § 13(B) such that MFP funds cannot be diverted to nonpublic schools — a restriction we just have found — the SSEEP/voucher program does not violate the restriction. In support, the state defendants note this court's ruling in Louisiana Assessors' Retirement & Relief Fund, 05-2548 at 23, 986 So.2d at 19 ("to successfully challenge a legislative act as unconstitutional on its face, the challenger must establish that no circumstances exist under which the act would be valid."). Citing La. R.S. 17:4016(C), the state defendants posit that a saving circumstance exists: "[e]ach scholarship recipient is a member of the local school system in which he attended or otherwise would be attending public school for that year." As a consequence of this statute, the state defendants summarize what they believe to be a saving circumstance by which any restriction in Article VIII, § 13(B) does not apply to the SSEEP/voucher program: "the scholarship recipients are all public school children within the public educational system."
Thus, we find no circumstance which would remove the SSEEP/voucher program funding approved through the MFP from the restriction in Article VIII, § 13(B), a restriction which prohibits diverting state MFP funds to nonpublic schools or other nonpublic course providers. Similarly, as the state has presented no saving circumstance for us to consider (and we envision none otherwise) that would exempt the early graduation program funding or the Course Choice Program funding from the prohibition against diverting MFP funds, we find the diversion of state funds for these programs also violates Article VIII, § 13(B).
Whether local funds are unconstitutionally diverted is a thornier question. There is no question that state MFP funds are diverted under the challenged legislative instruments and that the diversion of state MFP funds is unconstitutional. Here, there is a dispute as to whether local funds are actually diverted.
As previously indicated, the district court found that "[d]efendants are reducing the MFP allocations to public schools by equivalent amounts ... by considering the local funds when determining the MFP formula. Whether called a `diversion' or something else, the result is the same."
Regarding the question of whether local funds are diverted, some of the evidence contradicts the state defendants' position that local funds are not diverted. Indeed, a review of the trial record reveals a multitude of state sources pointing to local revenue being expended under the SSEEP/voucher program. For example, the fiscal note to House Bill No. 976 ("HB 976"), enacted as Act 2, states that the cost of the voucher program would be shared by the state and local school districts. The 2012-2013 MFP Budget Letter contains a spreadsheet (entitled Table 5F), which indicates
In an effort to explain away such evidence, the state defendants point out that under Act 2: "The department shall transfer scholarship payments to each participating [voucher] school." La. R.S. 17:4017(A). The state defendants contend the evidence characterizes the voucher program as having a cost to local school districts because that is simply a way of looking at the situation under a "formulaic treatment" of the total funding. However, according to the state defendants, the "formulaic treatment" does not actually reflect the transfer of any funds directly controlled by local school districts. According to the state defendants, the fact that no funds under direct local control are being diverted is reflected in Act 2, specifically the following provision: "No locally levied school district tax revenues shall be transferred to any participating school located outside of the school district where the tax is levied or any participating nonpublic school within the district." Id.
Nevertheless, it is unnecessary for us to resolve the thornier question of whether local funds are also diverted. It is undisputed that as structured by SCR 99, the MFP formula consists of an analysis and consideration of both state and local funds. This structure is intended, no doubt, to comport with the constitutional requirement of Article VIII, § 13(B) that the MFP "formula shall provide for a contribution by every city and parish school system." Because we have found state MFP funds are unconstitutionally diverted to nonpublic entities, it is unnecessary for us to delve into whether the local component is also diverted. We therefore pretermit a determination on the issue of whether local funds are diverted. See Ring v. State, Department of Transportation and Development, 02-1367, p. 4 (La.1/14/03), 835 So.2d 423, 426 ("We have repeatedly and consistently held that courts should refrain from reaching or determining the constitutionality of legislation unless, in the context of a particular case, the resolution of the constitutional issue is essential to the decision of the case or controversy.").
The district court found both SCR 99 and Act 2 unconstitutional because of funding diversions. The district court rejected, however, the plaintiffs' claims that SCR 99 violated the constitution's procedural requirements for adoption and that SCR 99 was consequently invalid. More specifically, the plaintiffs claimed that SCR 99 was untimely introduced in the legislative session in violation of Article III, § 2(A)(3)(a) and SCR 99 did not receive the majority vote required by Article III, § 15(G).
The common threshold for the plaintiffs' claims of untimeliness and inadequate voting is whether SCR 99 was intended to have the effect of law. In a decision which we otherwise commend for its thoroughness and reason, the district court determined that SCR 99 was not intended to have the effect of law. However, on that
We again take our instruction from the constitution. The specific threshold relating to the effect of law is contained in Article III, § 2(A)(3)(a), which in pertinent part provides:
The word "matter" is not defined in Article III, § 2(A)(3)(a), and the absence of a restrictive definition is the first clue that "matter" may mean something broader than a bill. Although legislation is typically proposed as a "bill," had the redactors of the constitution intended to limit the formalities required for legislation to apply only to an instrument designated as a "bill," the redactors could easily have used the word "bill." Indeed, in terms of legislative instruments, the constitution describes only a "bill," "joint resolution," and "concurrent, or other resolution" — only four legislative instruments in all. Because none of these four terms was used and the constitution refers to "matter," we are left then to supply an ordinary meaning to the word "matter." See La. R.S. 1:3. Reading the constitution as a whole, we note that "matter" refers to any of four legislative instruments.
In sum, the designation of a matter as a bill or joint resolution, or concurrent or other resolution, is not the determinative factor in deciding whether compliance with Article III, § 2(3)(a) is necessary. Instead, the content and substance of the matter must be considered to determine the ultimate issue — whether the matter is "intended to have the effect of law." La. Const. art. III, § 2(3)(a).
We must undertake a review of the content and substance of SCR 99. Before we do, however, we note that the state defendants argue that, of the 28 total pages comprising SCR 99, only the first three pages have any binding effect and urge us to give the remaining pages no effect. According to the state defendants, the legislature's approval of the MFP is confined within the first three pages. Because the approval of the MFP was ostensibly the task before the legislature, the state defendants claim anything done beyond that task was mere surplus. Thus, we are essentially told we are free to ignore the overwhelming majority of the legislative instrument. We find such argument counterintuitive and, as a proposal for undertaking judicial review, we find it counterproductive. To put this into admittedly more colloquial terms, the ability to "see the forest through the trees" is generally recognized as important for a court to maintain a proper perspective when interpreting a legislative instrument. See, e.g., S.D. Warren Co. v. Maine Board of Environmental Protection, 547 U.S. 370, 384, 126 S.Ct. 1843, 164 L.Ed.2d 625 (2006). Here, we cannot limit our view to only 3 of the 28 trees comprising the forest, but must contemplate all 28 trees. Ignoring the entirety of SCR 99 would be the antithesis of what is required in the Louisiana civil law system, in which "legislation is the superior source of law." La. C.C. art. 1, revision comment (a). We have previously observed that when reviewing a legislative instrument that is clearly a law, courts are bound to interpret the law according to the following principles:
Colvin v. Louisiana Patient's Compensation Fund Oversight Board, 06-1104, p. 6 (La.1/17/07), 947 So.2d 15, 19-20.
Logic dictates that if a court must review the entire text when interpreting a law, when a court is called on to determine whether a given legislative instrument is intended to have the effect of law, the court must also review the entire text. While the procedure employed to enact a legislative instrument is a factor to consider, it is ultimately through the text that a court can determine whether what the court examines "is a solemn expression of legislative will." La. C.C. art. 2. Therefore, we will not confine our review to the first three pages, but instead we will review the entirety of SCR 99.
In the substance of SCR 99, we certainly find much about the legislature's approval of the annual MFP formula developed by BESE. The first three pages, those to which the state defendants would have this court confine its review, contain recitations about the MFP development process, the goals of the MFP, and a statement that the MFP formula "is hereby approved...." As our editorial ellipsis indicates, however, the legislature did not stop there. The legislature indicated the MFP formula "is hereby approved to read as follows:" after which the legislature reproduced what purports to be the whole text of the MFP formula for the 2012-2013 school year. Just as the legislature continued to include text in SCR 99, so we continue our review of that text.
To reiterate, we are reviewing the text to determine whether it reveals an "inten[t] to have the effect of law" pursuant to Article III, § 2(A)(3)(a). To that end, we note the defendants correctly argue, at this juncture, that the approval process for the MFP formula is a unique one, with its own specific procedures contained not within Article III, but described elsewhere in the constitution, i.e., in Article VIII, § 13(B).
When looking for text that does not concern the formula and funding for the 2012-2013 school year, we find the following:
SCR 99, XII(C) (emphasis added). Then, SCR 99 continues by describing funding allocations for this future early graduation program. For example, "[f]or students that graduate at the end of the eleventh grade, an amount
Expressing a requirement, as evidenced by the inclusion of mandatory language in statutory interpretation cases such as Colvin and in La. R.S. 1:3, is certainly one indicator pointing to the effect of law. However, we are tasked with ascertaining whether SCR 99 triggered constitutional requirements, so we again turn to the constitution itself.
In La. Const. art. III, § 2(A)(3)(a), there is no definition of the phrase "effect of law." The same phrase is used elsewhere, as in La. Const. art. III, § 15(A), which indicates a public meeting requirement for "[a]ction on any matter intended to have the effect of law," but which provides no definition for the phrase at issue. The phrase is also used in La. Const. art. X, § 10, and again in La. Const. art. X, § 48, and, in both instances, the civil service rules for certain state employees are elevated to having the "effect of law." Neither instance aids our search for the meaning of the phrase, "effect of law." However, recalling the early graduation program calls for the appropriation of funds, we find a relevant meaning in the constitution for the phrase. In La. Const. art. III, § 16, we see that the power of appropriations is one of the specific powers of the legislature. In pertinent part, La. Const. art. III, § 16(A) provides: "Specific Appropriation for One Year. Except as otherwise provided by this constitution, no money shall be withdrawn from the state treasury except through specific appropriation, and no appropriation shall be made under the heading of contingencies or for
Notably, we conclude our search for the meaning of the phrase, "effect of law," on finding that SCR 99 includes an appropriation, a power constitutionally belonging to the legislature that had purportedly been exercised here. Although the phrase "effect of law" suggests broader definitions are possible, we search no further for a definition because we are ever mindful of this court's very limited role in this case. Furthermore, the consequences of our limitation bear special mention now that we find the text of SCR 99 was intended to have the "effect of law," stemming from the fact SCR 99 contained a purported appropriation.
In SCR 99, we are faced with a purported appropriation that lies outside the MFP approval process, a specific process which accords to the legislature the responsibility to "annually appropriate funds sufficient to fully fund the
In our analysis up to this point, we have found SCR 99 was a "matter," the text of which was intended to have the effect of law. In our Article III, § 2(A)(3)(a) inquiry, the last threshold does not require us to draw upon the constitution so much as draw from the record. As it concerns the threshold of being a "new" matter for purposes of Article III, § 2(A)(3)(a), SCR 99 is the only legislative instrument describing the early graduation program and the appropriations for the program. The early graduation program is not mentioned in Act 2. Thus, we conclude SCR 99 was a new matter, the text of which was intended to have the effect of law.
Although we have emphasized the substance over the form in our analysis, we also note that the record shows some formal and procedural handling of SCR 99 comparable to that of legislative instruments formally designated as bills. Specifically, once lodged in the House, SCR 99 was referred to the Legislative Bureau.
The procedural journey of SCR 99 did not go unnoticed by the district court, which noted: "Plaintiffs took great pains to show that SCR 99 followed the procedural path required of all legislative matters intended to have the effect of law." However, the district court rejected the idea that this path was "positive proof," after also noting the testimony of the Clerk of the House. As recounted by the district court, the Clerk of the House testified to the effect that "in at least eight of the last ten legislative sessions, the resolution to approve the formula to fund the MFP has failed to meet the procedural requirements for passage of a legislative matter intended to have the effect of law." While we agree with the district court that the fact a matter travels the procedural path of matters intended to have the effect of law is not dispositive proof of intent, the path is part of the legislative history and is, therefore, a factor to be considered. As demonstrated in our earlier textual analysis, the usual rules of statutory interpretation should be applied whenever possible in determining whether a particular legislative instrument was intended to have the effect of law. Further, as we have recently held in two cases, both the text of a legislative instrument and the legislative history may be relevant when a court is tasked with discerning the intent of the legislature. See Livingston Parish Council on Aging v. Graves, 12-0232, p. 4 (La.12/4/12), 105 So.3d 683, 685-86; see also Moreno v. Entergy Corp., 12-0097, p. 12 (La.12/4/12), 105 So.3d 40, 48.
More specifically, in both Graves and Moreno, we explained that we start, as we have in this case, with the language of the legislative instrument itself. Graves, 12-0232 at 4, 105 So.3d at 685; Moreno, 12-0097 at 12, 105 So.3d at 48. Furthermore, if the instrument "is clear and unambiguous, the court's inquiry into its intent and operation comes to an end." Moreno, 12-0097 at 16 n. 7, 105 So.3d at 50 n. 7. However, when the text of the legislative instrument does not settle the issue, "[t]he occasion and necessity for the law, the circumstances under which it was enacted, concepts of reasonableness, and contemporaneous legislative history may also be considered in determining legislative intent." Graves, 12-0232 at 4, 105 So.3d at 685-86.
Here, a measure of ambiguity is created by the fact that the legislative instrument, SCR 99, was not designated within its four corners as a bill (or later as an act) and the fact that such instrument nevertheless partially traveled the path of a matter intended to have the effect of law. Prudence and jurisprudence, therefore, dictate that we should consider the legislative history, as well as the text.
When we consider the text of SCR 99 contains mandatory language purporting to allocate funding to an early graduation program (a program established in SCR 99), and we consider SCR 99 travelled much the same path as a bill, we are compelled to conclude that SCR 99 was intended to have the effect of law. While we reiterate that we express no opinion on the validity of the legislature's prior MFP approvals, the fact that SCR 99 took a path akin to matters intended to have the effect of law but most other MFP approvals did not travel that path, further supports our conclusion that SCR 99 was intended to have the effect of law.
The constitutional consequences relating to the introduction in a legislative session of new matter intended to have the effect of law are significant. The most basic consequence is the calendaring requirement we noted earlier: "No new matter intended to have the effect of law shall be introduced or received by either house after six o'clock in the evening of the twenty-third calendar day." La. Const. art, III, § 2(A)(3)(a).
Here, SCR 99 was introduced in the Senate on May 7, 2012, which was the fifty-seventh calendar day of the regular session. Therefore, the introduction of SCR 99 was untimely. Because the introduction of SCR 99 was untimely, its reception on May 21 by the House, was also untimely, measured against the same "twenty-third calendar day" requirement of Article III, § 2(A)(3)(a).
Another constitutional requirement also relates to calendaring. Specifically:
La. Const. art. III, § 2(A)(3)(a).
SCR 99 was considered for final passage in the House on June 4, 2012, which was the eighty-fifth calendar day of the session. At that juncture, SCR 99 was subject to a two-thirds record vote because the eighty-second calendar day threshold of Article III, § 2(A)(3)(a) had already passed. The record reflects no two-thirds vote was taken by the House for consideration of SCR 99. Thus, SCR 99 was not properly considered.
Lastly, but importantly, the constitution imposes a requirement for a "favorable vote of at least a majority of the members elected to each house" before a matter can "become law." La. Const. art. III, § 15(G). The specific matter being referred to in Article III, § 15(G) is a "bill." Yet, although SCR 99 was not designated as a bill, as we have previously found, it was intended to have the effect of law. Thus, we see no reason why a legislative instrument intended to have the effect of law should not be held to the constitution's voting requirements for enacting law, simply because the instrument lacks the designation of being a "bill." We are persuaded of the correctness of our conclusion by the following reasoning, which draws upon the United States Constitution:
Bowsher v. Synar, 478 U.S. 714, 756, 106 S.Ct. 3181, 92 L.Ed.2d 583 (1986) (Stevens, J., concurring) (emphasis added).
Measured by the requirement of the state constitution for a "favorable vote of at least a majority of the members elected to each house," (Article III, § 15(G)), the
In their devolutive appeal, the plaintiffs assigned as error the district court's finding that HB 976, enacted as Act 2, does not violate the one-object requirement of La. Const. art. III, § 15(A). While, ordinarily, a ruling by this court that Act 2 is unconstitutional because it diverts state MFP funds to nonpublic entities might pretermit the consideration of additional constitutional challenges to the Act, Act 2 contains a severability clause. 2012 La. Acts 2, § 1; see La. R.S. 17:4025. As a result of that clause, and by virtue of La. R.S. 24:175,
The one-object rule is contained within La. Const. art. III, § 15(A), which provides in pertinent part: "Every bill, except the general appropriation bill and bills for the enactment, rearrangement, codification, or revision of a system of laws, shall be confined to one object." The provision first appeared in the Louisiana Constitution of 1845 and has been incorporated, with one exception, in every constitution enacted since that date.
The one-object requirement is a restraint on the legislature, aimed at preventing the dilution of the majority vote
The "object" of a bill has been variously defined as the aim or purpose of the enactment, its general purpose, the matter or thing forming the groundwork of the bill. See Wall v. Close, 203 La. 345, 14 So.2d 19, 26 (1943), quoting Airey v. Tugwell, 197 La. 982, 3 So.2d 99, 102 (1941). In its constitutional sense, then, the term "object" is very broadly defined. See Dooley, 259 So.2d at 333. Thus, while the constitution requires unity of object in legislation, it does not restrict the permissible breadth of a bill. In effect, a bill may be as broad as the legislature chooses so long as all of its provisions "have a natural connection and reasonably relate, directly or indirectly, to one general and legitimate subject of legislation." Bazley v. Tortorich, 397 So.2d 475, 485 (La.1981). As this court has explained:
Wall, 14 So.2d at 26.
In examining a bill to determine whether it comports with the one-object requirement of La. Const. art. III, § 15(A), we begin with the presumption that a legislative instrument is constitutional and will only be stricken when clearly repugnant to the constitution.
The task of this, or any, court in considering whether a bill comports with the one-object requirement of La. Const. art. III, § 15(A) is to first identify the main purpose or object of the bill, and then to examine each provision thereof to determine whether its parts have a natural connection and reasonably relate, directly or indirectly, to that purpose. See Forum for Equality PAC, 04-2477 at 24, 893 So.2d at 732; see also Bazley, 397 So.2d at 485.
In connection therewith, we note that in addition to requiring that every bill
An examination of the title of HB 976 suggests that the object or purpose of the bill is to provide expanded choice in schools to the citizens of this state. To this end, the title provides:
In this introductory clause, in which all of the statutory provisions encompassed by the bill are collected and listed numerically, the legislature identifies the general subject matter of the enumerated provisions — school choice. In other words, in this first clause all of the affected statutes are described by the legislature as falling under one general subject — "relative to" providing expanded "school choice." Thereafter, the title continues, setting forth and providing fair notice of the means through which this object of providing expanded school choice is to be accomplished. The subsequent clauses describe the content of the numerically enumerated provisions:
Thus, the title of the bill is structured so as to suggest, in the first clause, a unifying object of the bill (that being to provide "relative to school choice"), and in the subsequent clauses, the details through which that object is to be accomplished.
However, we have recognized that the object of a bill is not identified by examining its title alone, but also by examining its body. See O'Dell, 218 So.2d at 319, quoting Peck v. City of New Orleans, 199 La. 76,
Nevertheless, the plaintiffs argue that HB 976, in fact, contains plural objects. To answer this argument, we must examine each of those alleged objects and determine whether the identified provision is neither naturally connected nor reasonably related, directly or indirectly, to the stated purpose of HB 976 — expanding school choice.
One of the alleged separate objects of the legislation the plaintiffs identify is found at the beginning of HB 976. HB 976 starts by enacting a new subsection of law, La. R.S. 17:10.5(F). The existing subsections of this statute (Subsections A through E) define what constitutes a failing school and provide the basis and procedure for transferring these schools from local school boards to the Recovery School District. HB 976 adds an additional mechanism — parent petition — for transfer of a failing school to the Recovery School District. The plaintiffs' contention that this provision is unrelated to any other provision of the bill or to the matter that forms its object is without merit. The provision is reasonably related and incidental to the objective of providing expanded educational options and greater school choice. It provides an additional means for effectuating that choice.
Next, the plaintiffs point out that HB 976 amends La. R.S. 17:22, which pertains to the functions and duties of a superintendent of schools. HB 976 adds a requirement that a superintendent report annually on the implementation of a total system of choice. See La. R.S. 17:22(7)(a). While the plaintiffs maintain that this is a separate object of the legislation, in fact, the reporting requirement is naturally connected and necessary to the implementation of the objective of providing greater school choice.
The plaintiffs contend that a third separate object of the bill is found in the provision which amends La. R.S. 17:158, entitled "School buses for transportation of students; employment of bus operators; alternate means of transportation; improvement of school bus turnarounds." This amendment exempts public schools from providing free transportation to students enrolled in nonpublic schools. See La. R.S. 17:158(A)(1). Although the plaintiffs maintain this provision evidences a completely separate and distinct object, the district court, in reviewing same, found that it is reasonably related and has a natural connection to the object of providing school choice since "amendment of the school transportation statute was necessary to exempt local districts from having to fund transportation for students enrolled in the Act 2 scholarship program. Without this amendment, the local school systems may have been required to bus students to non-public schools, potentially rendering the passage of Act 2 unconstitutional." In other words, the stated objective of providing school choice could not have been adequately accomplished without the inclusion of this provision. It is clearly a matter incidental and germane to the object of HB 976.
The plaintiffs' attack on these sections of HB 976 is two-fold. First, they maintain that charter school law is a separate object in and of itself and, thus, any changes thereto should be confined to a single bill. Second, they argue that provisions such as those allowing charter schools to employ noncertified teachers and prohibiting BESE from certifying a local charter authorizer if certain persons connected with that authorizer have been convicted of a felony are not reasonably related to the objective of providing expanded school choice. Indeed, the plaintiffs argue that removing a certification requirement for instructional staff at charter schools undercuts rather than promotes the goal of improving education by providing greater choice.
Certainly, the relative merits of any statute removing certification requirements for instructional staff at charter schools is a debatable issue. However, the wisdom of such a provision is a concern more properly brought to the legislature. The issue that concerns this court is not whether the provision is advisable, but whether the inclusion of such a provision in HB 976 is naturally connected and reasonably related, directly or indirectly, to the goal of expanding school choice.
As the state defendants point out, charter schools are an established vehicle of school choice in this state. As such, charter schools and their operations have a logical and commonsense connection to any legislation seeking to address expanding school choice. Statutes designed to improve the charter school option by reforming the approval process, admission standards, teacher evaluations and certification are a logical corollary of and incidental to a
In the final analysis, the plaintiffs' insistence that the charter school provisions of HB 976 constitute a separate object is based on the unstated premise that because the legislation deals with different types of schools, each type of school must necessarily represent a different object. However, as we have noted, HB 976 is concerned with, and has the objective of, providing greater school options; the provision of education through different kinds of schools is a rationally related and necessary incident of this object. As this court has explained:
Wall, 14 So.2d at 25, quoting State ex rel. Supervisor of Public Accounts v. Terrell, 181 La. 974, 160 So. 781, 782 (1935). The objective underlying HB 976 provides a reasonable basis for including different types of schools within its ambit.
Next, the plaintiffs contend that a separate object of HB 976 lies in the provisions creating the Course Choice Program. HB 976 enacts La. R.S. 17:4002.1 through 4002.6. These statutes authorize postsecondary educational institutions, online or virtual course providers, and business and industry to provide courses for students enrolled in public schools, certain nonpublic schools, and approved home study programs. They define the duties of BESE relative to the entities authorized to offer courses and provide for funding through the MFP.
While the plaintiffs maintain the Course Choice Program should have appeared in a stand-alone bill, and should not have been included in a bill which provides for the transfer of schools to the Recovery School District and amendments to the charter school law, this argument fails for the reasons stated above. The one-object requirement of the constitution "does not prohibit the legislature from dealing with several branches of one subject or from providing in one act the necessary means for carrying out its object." Cooper, 382 So.2d at 965. In this case, the creation of the Course Choice Program and the enactment of provisions supplying the means to institute same are naturally connected and reasonably relate to the objective of providing expanded choice to students in Louisiana's schools.
Finally, the plaintiffs maintain that HB 976's expansion of the SSEEP constitutes a separate object. HB 976 amends Part I of Chapter 43 of Title 17 of the Revised Statutes, entitled "School Choice Scholarships." The amended provisions, La. R.S. 17:4011 through 4025, allow scholarships for students enrolled in nonpublic schools. Provisions which allocate money from the MFP for funding are included in the amendments.
While the plaintiffs argue the SSEEP represents a separate object, in fact they do not seriously dispute that the provisions thereof are directly related to and further the legislative objective of HB 976 — providing greater school choice. Rather, the plaintiffs focus their objections on the length and breadth of the bill, alleging the objective of expanding school choice is simply too broad and amorphous to constitute a meaningful objective and that the sheer number of statutes involved in the bill is indicative of multiple objects. In this respect, the plaintiffs confuse the complexity and length of the bill with its object, an approach this court rejected years ago when it cautioned: "If all the parts of a
The purpose of the constitution's one-object requirement is, as we have said, to restrict a legislative act so that legislators will not have to consider the validity of two unrelated objects in deciding how to vote on a bill. Bazley, 397 So.2d at 485. Clearly, then, a bill cannot contain incongruous and unrelated matters. Cooper, 382 So.2d at 965. Our review of the provisions of HB 976 convinces us, consistent with the conclusion of the district court, that the bill does not contain incongruous and unrelated matters, but rather that its provisions are naturally connected with, and incidental or germane to the main objective of, expanding educational choice.
In reaching this conclusion, we remain mindful of the United States Supreme Court's caution, cited approvingly a century ago by this court in St. Anna's Asylum v. Parker, 109 La. 592, 33 So. 613, 616 (1903), that given the state constitution's failure to specify the degree of particularity necessary to comply with the one-object rule:
Inhabitants of Montclair Tp. v. Ramsdell, 107 U.S. 147, 155, 2 S.Ct. 391, 27 L.Ed. 431 (1883). In this case, the plaintiffs have simply failed to establish that such a grave and palpable conflict exists between HB 976 and the one-object requirement of La. Const. art. III, § 15(A).
We conclude as we began, by recognizing the limited judicial role in this matter, which is to resolve constitutional questions. We do not evaluate the merits of the SSEEP/voucher program and other similar programs per se. We hold that by their express terms, SCR 99 and Act 2 unconstitutionally divert MFP funds to nonpublic entities in violation of La. Const. art. VIII, § 13(B), which requires state MFP funds to be allocated equitably to "parish and city school systems." We also hold that, although SCR 99 was a new matter intended to have the effect of law, SCR 99 did not satisfy all that the constitution requires of a matter intended to have the effect of law. SCR 99 was not timely introduced or considered in the legislative session and the final vote on SCR 99 was insufficient to enact a matter intended to have the effect of law. Because our holding differs from that of the district court regarding the effect of law intended by SCR 99, we reverse the contrary holding of the district court. Accordingly, we render judgment declaring SCR 99 was void from the outset. On a related topic, we note that because we have found SCR 99 was intended to have the effect of law, SCR 99 was not validly enacted.
Finally, once the unconstitutional provisions of Act 2 are analytically severed, we hold that the legislature did not violate the constitution's one-object rule. That portion of the district court's judgment is affirmed.
VICTORY, J., concurs.
GUIDRY, J., dissents and assigns reasons.
GUIDRY, J., dissents and assigns reasons.
I respectfully dissent from the majority's decision today. As I understand the funding mechanism for public school districts as set up in the Minimum Foundation Program ("MFP"), Level 1 of the MFP formula, entitled "Cost Determination and Equitable Distribution of State and Local Funds," is the amount that the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education ("BESE") has determined to be the "Base Per Pupil Amount" to fund public education in Louisiana. Level 2 and Level 3 of the MFP formula are essentially incentives or emoluments to be given to some eligible school districts, but not guaranteed to each and every district, and are thus above and beyond the Base Per Pupil Amount in Level 1. The total amount under Level 1 to be appropriated and then allocated to the local school districts, consequently, turns on the number of students in their systems on certain dates of the year. These numbers obviously will change as students move into the district, move out of state, or matriculate to non-public schools.
The majority overlooks the fact that, once a student leaves a district, the district is no longer entitled to the state's share of the MFP for that student, and thus the district's state share of the MFP is removed from the MFP allocation to that district. Furthermore, there is no indication the state's share for that student, who is no longer in a public school system, is reallocated within the MFP to other school districts, because Level 1 of the MFP has already been set by BESE and the Base Per Pupil Amount does not appear to rise or fall simply because there may be fewer students in a particular district.
In short then, the state's share of Level 1 of the MFP for a student no longer within the state public school system presumably reverts back to the control of the state. I see no constitutional limitation in Art. VIII, Sect. 13(B), that would preclude the state from then using those funds no longer dedicated to funding its share of Level 1 of the MFP to fund scholarships for eligible public school students who have been accepted to eligible non-public schools elsewhere within the MFP. There has been no showing that the district's allocation of MFP funds from the state is unconstitutionally diverted to a non-public school when the district is not entitled to that share for a student not attending a public school within its district. Finally, that the MFP can contain so called line items within it, which would necessarily be how the Course Choice Program and the Student Scholarships for Educational Excellence Program appear within the MFP, is evidenced by the fact that there are schools, such as the New Orleans Center for the Creative Arts, which are allocated money directly from the MFP because they do not fall within a district. In sum, there is no showing by clear and convincing evidence that the parish and city school systems do not receive equitable allocations of the MFP, as required by the constitution, under ACT 2 and SCR 99.
I also dissent from the majority's conclusion that SCR 99 was a matter intended to have the effect of law. I agree with the district court's reasoning in this regard, and would find that SCR 99 did not violate the constitution's procedural requirements for adoption.
Notwithstanding my dissent from the majority's decision today, I do not read that decision as proposing to foreclose the State of Louisiana and the Louisiana Legislature
All three petitions expressly invoked La. Const. art. VIII, § 13(C); only the petition filed by the Louisiana Federation of Teachers and its related plaintiffs expressly invoked La. Const. art. VIII, § 13(D).
Records of the Louisiana Constitutional Convention of 1973: Convention Transcripts, Volume II, Journal and Calendar, 87th day, Nov. 16, 1973, p. 839.
Louisiana Public Facilities Authority, 01-0009 at 15, 795 So.2d at 299, quoting 1999 La. Acts 1238, title (emphasis omitted).
In rejecting a "one object" challenge to the constitutionality of the act, this court found that the purpose of the act was to regulate public trusts by the means suggested in its title: by increasing the number of trustees of some public trusts, changing the trustees' method of appointment and the length of their terms, and authorizing some trusts to utilize the legislatively authorized sole source purchasing provisions. Louisiana Public Facilities Authority, 01-0009 at 17, 795 So.2d at 300. We concluded that "all parts of the Act are reasonably related to the general subject matter of the legislation: the regulation of public trusts," Id., identifying the object of the act as the regulation of public trusts, and the language following "relative to public trusts" as the enumerated means of accomplishing that object.