SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
1. "Section 4 of Article X of the West Virginia
Constitution is not designed to prohibit the State or the state's
agencies from issuing revenue bonds that are to be liquidated
from contracts requiring rental payments from another state
agency or from contracts for necessary services such as
utilities; nor does this constitutional provision preclude the
issuance of revenue bonds which are to be redeemed from a special
fund." Syllabus Point 6, Winkler v. State of West Virginia
School Bldg. Authority, ___ W. Va. ___, 434 S.E.2d 420 (1993).
2. The Legislature may not designate funds that will
be used to liquidate a revenue bond issue out of a current tax
source that flows into the general revenue fund. If this
practice were permitted, then a debt would be created that would
burden the existing general revenue fund in violation of Section
4 of Article X of the West Virginia Constitution.
3. If the Legislature creates a new tax source or
increases the amount to be paid on an existing tax account, this
new or increased amount may be used to liquidate revenue bonds.
The Legislature may also utilize an existing special revenue
source to liquidate revenue bonds so long as that source of funds
has not gone into the general revenue fund. In these situations,
the financial integrity of the State's existing tax structure has
not been impaired because there is a new revenue source to
liquidate the bonds. Thus, the bonds do not represent an
increased burden on the State's existing indebtedness in
violation of Section 4 of Article X of the West Virginia
Constitution.
4. The School Building Authority bonds that are to be
liquidated by dedicating a portion of the existing consumer sales
tax, which is a general revenue fund tax, create new debt and,
therefore, violate Section 4 of Article X of the West Virginia
Constitution.
5. Section 6a of Article X of the West Virginia
Constitution applies to counties, municipalities, or other
political subdivisions. It does not apply to the State or its
agencies.
Miller, Justice:
In this original proceeding in mandamus, we are asked
to determine the validity of certain revenue bonds that were
authorized at the 1993 Second Extraordinary Session of the
Legislature. The relator is Henry R. Marockie, the State
Superintendent of Schools and President of the School Building
Authority of the State of West Virginia (SBA). The respondent is
Charles H. Wagoner, who is the secretary of the SBA and whose signature is required in order to begin the process of issuing
the bonds. The intervenors are William S.E. Winkler and Diane Hickle, who are citizens and taxpayers of Kanawha County.
These bonds are an outgrowth of our recent opinion in
Winkler v. State of West Virginia School Building Authority, ___
W. Va. ___, 434 S.E.2d 420 (1993), where we declared
unconstitutional certain bonds that were to be issued by the SBA.
In Syllabus Point 7, we stated:
"Revenue bonds authorized under the
School Building Authority Act, W. Va. Code,
18-9D-1, et seq., constitute an indebtedness
of the State in violation of Section 4 of
Article X of the West Virginia Constitution.
To the extent that Syllabus Point 3 of State
ex rel. Resource Recovery-Solid Waste
Disposal Authority v. Gill, 174 W. Va. 109,
323 S.E.2d 590 (1984), holds to the contrary,
it is overruled."
The Legislature has devised a new method to finance the
SBA bonds by amending that portion of our consumer sales tax
statute found in W. Va. Code, 11-15-30 (1993), to dedicate a
portion of its proceeds to retire the principal and interest of
the bonds. There is an annual cap of $12 million on the amount
dedicated.
In Winkler, the SBA bonds were found to violate Section
4 of Article X of our Constitution, which limits the State's
ability to incur debt. This violation occurred because there was
no separate source of payment for liquidating the bonds except
the general revenue fund.
In order to save the bonds, two related points were
urged in Winkler. First, reference was made to W. Va. Code, 18-9D-14, which contains language that prevents the SBA from "in any
manner . . . [pledging] the credit or taxing power of the state"
and also language that obligations of the SBA should not "be
deemed to be obligations of the state."
Next, it was pointed out that the bond language itself
indicated that the Legislature could appropriate money to retire
the bonds, but it was not legally obligated to do so.
Consequently, we were asked to hold that because the bonds were
not State obligations and the Legislature was not required to
fund their retirement, no State debt was created and no violation
of Section 4 of Article X would occur. However, we concluded
that these disclaimers could not be construed to mean that theLegislature would not fund the bonds:
"Finally, unless we are to abandon
our logic and common sense, we cannot help
but conclude that the statutory scheme
surrounding these bonds bespeaks a
legislative requirement that they be
funded. . . . To accept the premise that the
Legislature is not bound to fund the bonds
and would allow a default, thereby impairing
the credit rating of the State, assumes a
naivete on our part that we simply do not
possess." ___ W. Va. at ___, 434 S.E.2d at
435. (Citations omitted; footnote omitted).
In Winkler, we discussed at some length our prior bond
cases. We recognized that there is a class of bonds that is
exempt from the debt restrictions contained in Section 4 of
Article X of our Constitution. These are bonds issued pursuant
to Section 2 of Article XIV of our Constitution that requires voter approval before they can be issued. We summarized this
class of bonds in Syllabus Point 3 of Winkler:
"A category of bonds that override
the specific limitations contained in
Sections 4 and 6 of Article X of the West
Virginia Constitution are bonds that the
Legislature issues after following the
procedures contained in Section 2 of Article
XIV of the Constitution relating to
constitutional amendments. Under the
amendment procedure, a majority of qualified
voters voting on the issue must approve the
issuance of the bonds."
Another category of bonds that our cases have
recognized as not offending the debt limitation contained in
Section 4 of Article X is summarized in Syllabus Point 6 of
Winkler:
"Section 4 of Article X of the West
Virginia Constitution is not designed to
prohibit the State or the state's agencies
from issuing revenue bonds that are to be
liquidated from contracts requiring rental
payments from another state agency or from
contracts for necessary services such as
utilities; nor does this constitutional
provision preclude the issuance of revenue
bonds which are to be redeemed from a special
fund."
Winkler did not embark upon a detailed analysis of these types of
bonds simply because the SBA's bond funding mechanism did not fit
into either category.
In the present case, the Legislature has apparently
sought to come within the "special fund category" by designating
a portion of the consumer sales tax to liquidate the bonds.
There is no doubt that, from a historical standpoint, the
proceeds of the consumer sales tax have been deposited in the
general revenue fund. Indeed, W. Va. Code, 11-15-30 (1992),
relating to the consumer sales tax prior to its 1993 amendment,
contained this initial statement: "The proceeds of the tax
imposed by this article shall be deposited in the general revenue
fund of the state[.]"
We dealt with the question of whether the consumer
sales tax and the use tax were parts of the general revenue fund
or the general school fund in Board of Education v. Board of Public Works, 144 W. Va. 593, 109 S.E.2d 552 (1959). In each of
these tax statutes, there was a section which stated that the
proceeds of the tax shall be devoted to the support of free
schools and expended in the manner as provided by law. Initially, we pointed out that the consumer sales and use taxes
were not sources of revenue that are constitutionally dedicated
to the school system under Section 4 of Article XII of our
Constitution. We then explained that the involved statutory
provisions
"are mere legislative directions concerning
the use to be made of the proceeds of the
tax. Those provisions do not require such
proceeds to be paid into the general school
fund . . . or make such proceeds a part of
the general school fund, or constitute an
appropriation of such proceeds to the general
school fund." 144 W. Va. at 610, 109 S.E.2d
at 561-62.
Moreover, we observed from public budget documents that
even after the enactment of the subject sections, the revenues
from the consumer sales and use taxes had been placed in the
general revenue fund. We, therefore, concluded in Syllabus Point
6 of Board of Education, supra:
"The revenue derived from the
consumers sales tax and the use tax is a part
of the general revenue fund and as such is
subject to the provisions of Section 35,
Article 5, Chapter 5, Code, 1931, as
amended."
The question in this case then becomes whether the
Legislature can dedicate taxes that historically have gone into
the general revenue fund to create a separate fund to retire SBA
revenue bonds. We believe that it cannot without violating the
debt strictures of Section 4 of Article X.
Our cases have emphasized that a special fund to retire
bonds cannot come from existing taxes that are deposited in the
general revenue fund. For instance, in State ex rel. State
Building Commission v. Moore, 155 W. Va. 212, 184 S.E.2d 94
(1971), we approved legislation that directed the liquor
commissioner to increase the profits from the sale of
intoxicating liquors "to pay $3,600,000 annually into the special
fund created for the purpose of paying the principal of and the
interest on the 'State Building Revenue Bonds.'" 155 W. Va. at
234, 184 S.E.2d at 106. Our rationale was that this money was
not a part of the current tax stream that flowed into the general revenue fund:
"Unlike other statutes which heretofore have been
held by this Court to create state debts in violation of the constitutional provision in question, the 1971 Act does not deal
with funds arising from general revenue appropriations or from
any tax, excise or otherwise, imposed by law upon taxpayers."
155 W. Va. at 234, 184 S.E.2d at 106.
In Moore, we also quoted at some length from State ex rel. Board of Governors of West Virginia University v. O'Brien,
142 W. Va. 88, 96-97, 94 S.E.2d 446, 451 (1956), where this
language is found: "'No taxes or properties of the State are
pledged or in any way made liable for the payment of the bonds.
As already made clear, a debt to be paid in such manner does not
constitute a debt within the meaning of that constitutional
provision.'" 155 W. Va. at 232, 184 S.E.2d at 106. (Italics
omitted). The teaching of these two cases makes it clear that
the Legislature may not designate funds that will be used to
liquidate a revenue bond issue out of a current tax source that
flows into the general revenue fund. If this practice were
permitted, then a debt would be created that would burden the
existing general revenue fund in violation of Section 4 of
Article X of our Constitution.
However, if the Legislature creates a new tax source or
increases the amount to be paid on an existing tax account, this
new or increased amount may be used to liquidate revenue bonds.
The Legislature may also utilize an existing special revenue
source to liquidate revenue bonds so long as that source of funds
has not gone into the general revenue fund. In these
situations, the financial integrity of the State's existing tax
structure has not been impaired because there is a new revenue
source to liquidate the bonds. Thus, the bonds do not represent
an increased burden on the State's existing indebtedness in
violation of Section 4 of Article X of the West Virginia
Constitution. See Justice Neely's policy statements in his
concurring opinion in Winkler v. Sate of West Virginia School
Building Authority, ___ W. Va. at ___, 434 S.E.2d at 438.
The foregoing law was the rationale behind our approval
of revenue bonds whose refunding relied on additional revenue
generated by increasing the rate of unemployment taxes to be paid
by both employers and employees in State ex rel. Department of
Employment Security v. Manchin, 178 W. Va. 509, 361 S.E.2d 474
(1987). There, we concluded in Syllabus Point 4:
"The authority vested in the
Commissioner of the Department of Employment
Security under W. Va. Code, 21A-8A-8 [1987]
to impose an assessment up to a maximum
amount set forth in that Code section upon
employers and employees for the purpose of
retiring bonds issued under 'The Debt Fund
Act' of 1987 is not an unconstitutional
delegation of power by the Legislature to an
executive officer."
Other states have reached much the same conclusion when
construing their constitutional debt limitation provision. For
example, the Ohio Supreme Court in State ex rel. Shkurti v. Withrow, 32 Ohio St. 3d 424, 513 N.E.2d 1332 (1987), reiterated
this principle, quoting from its earlier decision in State ex rel. Public Institutional Building Authority v. Neffner, 137 Ohio
St. 390, 399, 19 O.O. 112, 115, 30 N.E.2d 705, 709 (1940):
"'Where substantial funds which
have heretofore gone into the general funds
of the state treasury are pledged to
liquidate such bonds, thereby requiring the
state to seek and secure revenues otherwise
in order to meet its obligations to care for
and support its wards, then the obligation of
those bonds does become the ultimate
obligation of the state. To hold otherwise
would result in an evasion of the
constitutional limitations.'" 32 Ohio St. 3d
at ___, 513 N.E.2d at 1336.
In Shkurti, the court found the bonds unconstitutional because
there was no new or additional revenue source for their
repayment.
Much the same result was reached by the Oregon Supreme
Court in In the Matter of the Constitutionality of Chapter 280,
Oregon Laws 1975, 276 Or. 135, ___, 554 P.2d 126, 130 (1976),
when it invalidated a revenue bond proposal:
"However, where, as here, the revenue for
bond payment comes from the general fund of
the state and is not generated from charges
by the state to third parties for facilities
or services, the rationale exempting revenue
bonds from the constitutional restriction is
obviously inapplicable. The state no longer
acts as a conduit, but rather it has directly
obligated general tax revenues to sustain the
fund for bond payment."
The Supreme Court of Michigan in In re Advisory
Opinion, Constitutionality of P. A. 1 & 2, 390 Mich. 166, 211
N.W.2d 28 (1973), faced an analogous situation where the State's
bond funding proposal ultimately required the State to pay any
deficiency in retiring the bonds by utilizing funds from the
State's sales tax revenues. The court began by noting that sales
tax revenues were part of the general revenue fund. It then
framed the issue as follows:
"[W]e are now asked to hold that
henceforth the State can incur indebtedness as long as it
withholds its full faith and credit and has limited repayment to
a carved-out portion of general tax revenues set aside and called
a special fund." 390 Mich. at ___, 211 N.W.2d at 32.
Without any extended discussion, the court concluded that the bond
funding plan violated Michigan's constitutional indebtedness
restriction.
The New Mexico Supreme Court in State Office Building
Commission v. Trujillo, 46 N.M. 29, 120 P.2d 434 (1941), upheld
the validity of a lease rental arrangement in a state office
building for state agencies. The rental payments were used to
refund bonds issued by its Office Building Commission, whose
proceeds were used to construct the building. The court gave
this summary of the special fund doctrine:
"[I]t means that thereby and thereunder any
financial obligation of the state, not
otherwise constitutionally objectionable, is
valid without approval of the electorate if
it is to be paid for and discharged in full
from moneys derived from sources other than
from general taxation . . . ; and to show
that for such an obligation to come under the
special fund doctrine, the creation of the
obligation and the law authorizing it must specify and set out the sources for payment
thereof and thereby disclose that no part of
the payment is to be obtained from general
taxation." 46 N.M. at __, 120 P.2d at 444.
Here, as we have earlier observed, no special fund is
created except that which already exists in the general revenue
fund. Consequently, we conclude that the SBA bonds that are to
be liquidated by dedicating a portion of the existing consumer
sales tax, which is a general revenue fund tax, create new debt
and, therefore, violate Section 4 of Article X of our
Constitution.
II.
A second argument advanced by the SBA to uphold the
bonds is that the dedicated payments from the consumer sales tax
come within the purview of Section 6a of Article X of our
Constitution. This section allows the Legislature to "impose a
state tax or taxes or dedicate a state tax or taxes or any
portion thereof for the benefit of and use by counties,
municipalities or other political subdivisions of the
State[.]" The obvious answer to this assertion is that the
SBA is not a political subdivision, but is a State agency.
Therefore, it does not fall within the plain language of Section
6a of Article X of the West Virginia Constitution.
We have not had occasion to explicitly state that
Section 6a of Article X does not apply to the State or State
agencies. In Boggs v. Board of Education, 161 W. Va. 471, 475,
244 S.E.2d 799, 802 (1978), overruled on other grounds, Ohio
Valley Contractors v. Board of Educ., 170 W. Va. 240, 293 S.E.2d
437 (1982), we mentioned that "W. Va. Const. art. 10, 6a, is a
practical way to give West Virginia citizens the benefit of
numerous federal programs[.]" Furthermore, in State ex rel.
Kanawha County Building Commission v. Paterno, 160 W. Va. 195,
233 S.E.2d 332 (1977), we used Section 6a of Article X to
validate the Legislature's enactment of the coal severance tax,
W. Va. Code, 11-13-1, et seq., whose proceeds were distributed to
the various counties and municipalities. In Paterno, we said
that Section 6a "modifies the state debt, state credit and county
debt provisions[.]" 160 W. Va. at 203, 233 S.E.2d at 337.
We did recognize in Winkler, supra, the different
applicability between Section 4 and Section 6 of Article X of our Constitution. We said the "restrictions contained in Section 4
of Article X deal with the creation of long-term debt by the
State or its agencies through revenue bonds[.]" ___ W. Va. at
___, 434 S.E.2d at 427. On the other hand, Section 6 of Article
X was found to be a restriction on the State's aid to counties,
municipalities, corporations, or persons. As we held in
Syllabus Point 5 of Winkler, supra:
"The plain language of Section 6 of
Article X of the West Virginia Constitution
is designed to restrict the State from
granting credit to subordinate political
subdivisions such as municipalities and
counties, as well to forbid the State from
granting credit or assuming liabilities for
debts of private persons or other entities."
Obviously, Section 6a of Article X was designed to
allow exemptions to the limitations imposed in Section 6 of
Article X. Its introductory language clearly compels this
conclusion as it states "[n]otwithstanding the provisions of
section six of this article[.]" Section 6a of Article X of our
Constitution has no language that would make it applicable to a
State agency's funding of revenue bonds. Consequently, we
conclude that Section 6a of Article X of our Constitution applies
to counties, municipalities, or other political subdivisions. It
does not apply to the State or its agencies. There can be no
dispute that the SBA is a State agency.
Because we conclude that the SBA bonds at issue in this
case violate Section 4 of Article X of our Constitution, we
decline to issue the writ of mandamus.
Writ
denied.