Dear Representative McCorkell,
¶ 0 The Attorney General has received your request for an official opinion asking, in effect:
1. Is the authorization of the transfer of income tax credits asspelled out in 74 Ohio St. 5061.7 (1988) constitutional in lightof the terms of Article
2. Does this statute reflect an unconstitutional delegation ofauthority by the Legislature to the Oklahoma Capital InvestmentsBoard?
3. Do such provisions interfere with the constitutionalrequirement for uniformity of taxes?
4. Do such provisions constitute an unconstitutional forgivenessof debt?
5. Do such provisions constitute in any way "deficit financing"as prohibited in Article
6. Assuming the lawful purpose and implementation of the programoutlined in this statute, would the Legislature or the Governorever have the ability to repeal or modify the transfer of suchtax credits after the Oklahoma Development Finance Authority hasentered into contracts for the transfer of the tax credits, or asto option agreements providing for future, contingent transfers,or after the Authority has extended guarantees to qualifiedinvestors when such guarantees could be supported only by theproceeds derived as a result of the transfer of these taxcredits?
7. Are the tax credits that are extended by the Authoritybinding upon the Oklahoma Tax Commission?
¶ 1 The 1987 Oklahoma Legislature adopted a number of far-reaching statutory provisions aimed at stabilizing the state's economy and at attracting new or expanded business ventures in the state, by the adoption of House Bill No. 1444. Okla. Sess. Laws 1987, ch.
¶ 2 Under the Capital Investment Act's provisions, a statutory statement of need and purpose is expressed, reciting generally that fundamental changes have occurred in the financial markets of the state, nation, and world, and that Oklahoma needs to increase the availability of privately managed equity and near-equity financing for "emerging, expanding, and restructuring enterprises in the state." 74 Ohio St. 5061.2(A) (1988). A new entity of state government was established under the Act, the "Oklahoma Capital Investment Board" (hereafter "the Board"), with the express purpose of mobilizing new private sector equity and near-equity capital for investment in ways designed to promote new jobs and to diversify and stabilize the state's economy. 74O.S. 5061.2(B) (1988); 74 Ohio St. 5061.3 (1988).
¶ 3 The Board, in turn, is declared to be "a separate and distinct administrative division" of the Oklahoma Development Finance Authority, with its own segregated funds, accounting system and administration. Id. It consists of five persons appointed by the Oklahoma Futures, a state board also created by the terms of the same Bill. See, 74 Ohio St. 5002.1(C) (1988). The Board is intended to work very closely with the Oklahoma Futures in a number of ways. See generally, 74 Ohio St. 5061.4,74 Ohio St. 5061.6 (1988). The Board is statutorily obligated to prepare a long-term "five-year policy plan" and an "annual business plan" to effectuate its purposes. Id. Those plans, however, must be reviewed and approved by the Oklahoma Futures before they can be implemented. 74 Ohio St. 5061.4 (1988). The annual business plan of the Board must be consistent with the long-range five-year policy plan. Id.
¶ 4 These plans, themselves, take into account the manner in which the Board handles the issuance of some very unique and, at least in Oklahoma law, revolutionary techniques for attracting private equity and near-equity capital in the state. 74 O.S.5061.7 outlines a procedure whereby income tax credits may be extended by the Authority for ultimate transfer to investors or investment groups, who may, in turn, transfer these tax credits to any third parties of their choice.
¶ 5 Under subsection (A), the State has facially transferred Fifty Million Dollars of state income tax credits to the Authority. These tax credits are declared to be "freely transferrable to subsequent purchasers." However, the subsection also provides that no such credit shall be exercisable before July 1, 1990, nor after July 1, 2003. Hence, the utilization of these credits cannot be until that initial future date comes to pass. The Authority may not transfer tax credits except in conjunction with a legitimate call on an authority guarantee.Id. Of this Fifty Million Dollars, no more than Ten Million Dollars in credits may be transferred by the Authority which may be claimed and used to reduce the tax otherwise imposed by law for any one fiscal year. The Authority, in this regard, is required to clearly indicate on the face of whatever documentation it issues evidencing the transfer of credits both the face amount of the credits thereby transferred and the taxable year(s) for which the credit may be claimed. 74 O.S.5061.7(B) (1988). Failure to claim the tax credit for the taxable year(s) for which the credit is designated on the certificate or other documentation results in a loss of the credit for any other year. Id.
¶ 6 Travelling with this power to issue tax credits against state income tax liability is a coordinate set of directions contained in 74 Ohio St. 5061.8. That section provides that the Board shall establish criteria for the selection of persons, firms or corporations deemed qualified to generate capital for investment in the State in ways intended to diversify and stabilize the economy and which will result in financially sound decisions minimizing the need for the Authority to transfer any tax credits. Those criteria are required to include the applicant's level of experience, quality of management, investment philosophy and process, historical investment performance, probability of success in fund raising, the amount and timing of fees to be paid, and such other investment criteria as may be commonly used in professional portfolio management as the Board may deem appropriate. Id.
¶ 7 Section 5061.8 goes on to state that the Authority has the power to "extend a guarantee, in the form of a put option or such other method as selected by the Board," in an amount equalling no more than fifty percent of the principal amount of invested capital of an investor group or groups, or investment portfolio(s) invested by such entities. This guarantee may not extend to any fewer than ten identifiable and separate investments in any one portfolio of investments, and in no case may the Authority extend a guarantee in any form for investment by an investor or investment group as to any single debt, equity or other security. Id. The Board has the power to authorize the Authority to charge a reasonable fee for costs and fair compensation of risk associated with its guarantee of investor groups and portfolios in accordance with the investment criteria provided for in 74 Ohio St. 5061.8(A). 74 Ohio St. 5061.8(C) (1988).
¶ 8 These guarantees, in whatever form negotiated, may be made for any time period, but no term of a guarantee may expire before July 1, 1990, the date that any of these tax credits are first exercisable. Id. Under 74 Ohio St. 5061.8(C), the guarantees of the Authority "shall in no way be an obligation of the state" and may be restricted to specific funds or assets of the Authority. Further, under the 1988 amendments to this program, proceeds from the sale of any tax credits must be sufficient to meet the contractual guarantee obligations of the Authority. Id.
¶ 9 Subsection (D) then states that if the Authority purchases any security by contractual agreement with an investor or investment group, the Authority shall acquire such securities and may invest, manage, transfer or dispose of them in accord with policies for the management of assets so acquired that are contemplated as being drafted by the Board, itself. Any proceeds from the disposition of an asset, in this vein, if not required for the purpose of the Board, may be transferred to the State General Revenue Fund.
The credit of the State shall not be given, pledged, or loaned to any individual, company, corporation, or association, municipality, or political subdivision of the State; nor shall the State become an owner or stockholder in, nor make donation by gift, subscription to stock, by tax, or otherwise, to any company, association, or corporation.
¶ 11 With reference to the making of prohibited gifts, there is a long line of case law in this State that previously stood for the proposition that the State cannot make grants of monies to non-state entities, even for legititmate public purposes. See,Vette v. Childers,
¶ 12 In Way, the Court was asked to review the legitimacy of claims for payment rendered under the authorization of a legislative promulgation authorizing the use and expenditure of public funds to reimburse private entities for their activities in promoting tourism in the State. Without going into exhaustive detail as to the history and resolution of the case, the Court advised that the legislative authorization was valid. This rationale was primarily predicated upon a finding that the legislation served a legitimate public purpose, and contained adequate detailed conditions, safeguards and controls to assure the proper use of the funds in question. Id. at 1015.
¶ 13 In light of the Way decision, the language contained in the Capital Investment Act does provide the type of legislatively mandated controls, safeguards and conditions required for the Authority to receive and disburse the income tax credits granted to it. Minimum criteria to assure prudent investment activities designed to effectuate the public purposes behind the Act's passage have been set forth in 74 Ohio St. 5061.8(A), 74 O.S.5061.8(C). To effectuate the Legislature's intent, it has decreed that the Board take into consideration the applicant's level of experience, quality of management, investment philosophy and process, historical investment performance, probability of success in fund raising, the amount and timing of fees to be paid, and such other investment criteria as may be commonly used in professional portfolio management as the Board may deem appropriate. 74 Ohio St. 5061.8(A) (1988). The Legislature has provided that the sale of any tax credits under these statutes must return sufficient revenues to meet any contractual guarantee obligations of the Authority. 74 Ohio St. 5061.8(C) (1988). Additionally, of course, the Legislature has provided for a number of statutory guidelines that public trusts must adhere to in the carrying out of trust business. See, 60 Ohio St. 176 (1981) et seq., as amended.
Power to determine the policy of the law is primarily legislative, and cannot be delegated whereas the power to make rules of a subordinate character in order to carry out that policy and apply it to varying conditions, although partaking of a legislative character, is in its dominant aspect administrative and can be delegated.
¶ 15 The Legislature cannot delegate legislative power, but it may delegate authority or discretion to be exercised under and in pursuance of the law. It may delegate power to determine some fact or state of things upon which the law makes its own operation depend. Isaacs v. Oklahoma City,
¶ 18 It is clear under this constitutional provision that the Legislature is absolutely forbidden to release or otherwise extinguish accrued tax liabilities such as delinquent taxes owed.Thompson v. Smith,
¶ 19 However, in this instance, such prohibitions are not impacted upon by the tax program in issue. It must be observed that the issuance of these tax credits operates to forgive taxes that might be owed for future tax years only, from July 1, 1990, to July 1, 2003, and can never be used to attempt to reduce or extinguish tax debts owed for past tax years. Accordingly, the tax credit issuance operates in a manner similar to that of a prospective exemption from income taxation for the holders of the credits, and under the rationale of Ward, supra, would not constitute a forbidden extinguishment of debt.
¶ 21 The question of whether a public trust could validly loan its credit to a private corporation in the interests of providing an incentive to expand industry and provide jobs for the state was examined in depth in Attorney General Opinion No. 86-131. That Opinion noted that the funds of public trusts are separate and distinct from the general governmental funds of the State and also that public trusts are distinct legal entities from the State. Accordingly, the Attorney General advised that such contractual relationships were permissible between public trusts with the State as its beneficiary. The terms of 74 O.S.5061.8(C), in this regard, are quite clear that the guarantees extended by the Authority "shall in no way be an obligation of the state and may be restricted to specific funds or assets of the Authority." Hence, the rationale expressed in A.G. Opin. No. 86-131 is deemed dispositive of your question in this area as well.
¶ 24 It is, therefore, the official opinion of the AttorneyGeneral that:
1. The granting to the Oklahoma Development Finance Authority oftransferrable income tax credits, as called for in 74 O.S.5061.7(A) (1988), is not violative of the terms of Article
2. The delegation to the Oklahoma Capital Investment Board ofthe authority to establish criteria by which investors andinvestment groups are to be deemed suitable for eligibility toreceive the tax credits and guarantees referred to in the Act isnot an unlawful delegation of authority.
3. The extension of transferrable tax credits under the terms ofthe Act do not constitute a violation of Article
4. The extension of these transferrable tax credits does notconstitute an unlawful extinguishment or release of debt by theState, as generally prohibited by Article
5. The extension of guarantees by the Authority to investors andinvestment groups under the Act does not constitute an unlawfulextension of the credit of the State, as the Authority is apublic trust with funds and legal status separate from the statefor such purposes.
6. Once lawfully made, tax credits and guarantees extended bythe Authority are binding legal obligations that may not beinterfered with by subsequent action of the Legislature, theGovernor, or any subsequent membership on the Authority.
7. The terms of the Act, insofar as they relate to the extendingof income tax credits to third persons, are binding upon theOklahoma Tax Commission.
ROBERT H. HENRY ATTORNEY GENERAL OF OKLAHOMA
MICHAEL SCOTT FERN ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL DEPUTY CHIEF, GENERAL COUNSEL DIVISION