Bayh v. INDIANA STATE BLDG. AND CONSTR.
This text of 674 N.E.2d 176 (Bayh v. INDIANA STATE BLDG. AND CONSTR.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The Honorable Evan BAYH, Governor; et al. Appellants (Defendants Below),
v.
INDIANA STATE BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTION TRADES COUNCIL, Northwest Indiana Building & Construction Trades Council, Debbie Sills, Rich Asciniega, Walt Biser, and Bruce Thomas, Appellees (Plaintiffs Below).
Supreme Court of Indiana.
Pamela Carter, Attorney General, Arend J. Abel, Special Counsel for Legal Policy, Indianapolis, for Appellants.
Karl L. Mulvaney, Nana Quay-Smith, Andrea M. Roberts, Indianapolis, for Amicus Curiae, The Indiana Legal Foundation, Inc.
Stephen R. Snyder, Edward J. Ormsby, Syracuse, for Amicus Curiae, City of Warsaw.
Richard J. Darko, Mary Jane Lapointe, Indianapolis, for Amicus Curiae, Indiana State Teachers Assoc.
William R. Groth, Neil E. Gath, Indianapolis, for Appellees.
Keith E. White, George T. Patton, Jr., Indianapolis, for Amicus Curiae, Assoc. Builders & Contractors of Indiana, Inc.
Gary P. Price, Todd A. Richardson, Indianapolis, for Amicus Curiae, Nat'l Elec. Contractors Assoc., Central Indiana Chapter; Assoc. Gen. Contractors of Indiana, Inc.; Mechanical Contractors Assoc. of Indiana, Inc.; Sheet Metal & Air Cond. Contractors Nat'l Assoc., Central Indiana Chapter.
SHEPARD, Chief Justice.
Governor Evan Bayh and other named defendants appeal the Lake Superior Court's judgment enjoining enforcement of Indiana Code ch. 5-16-7, the Prevailing Wage Act, as amended by 1995 House Enrolled Acts 1598 and 1435. The trial court found that the 1995 amendments had been enacted in violation of Article IV, § 19 of the Indiana Constitution, which confines all acts, except those codifying, revising or rearranging the laws, "to one [1] subject and matters properly connected therewith." It ordered the defendants to comply with the Prevailing Wage *177 Act as it existed before the 1995 amendments.
The Governor appealed directly to this Court under Ind. Appellate Rule 4(A)(8). After hearing oral argument, we reversed the trial court's judgment and rescinded the injunction by order. This opinion explains the basis for that decision.
I. Facts
In February 1995 the Indiana House Ways and Means Committee attached a rider to Engrossed House Bill 1008, a bill entitled "A Bill for an Act to Amend the Indiana Code Concerning Taxation." This rider made substantive changes to Indiana's Prevailing Wage Act, a law passed sixty years ago "to protect public works employees from substandard wages"[1] by requiring their employers to pay wages at or above "the prevailing scale of wages being paid in the immediate locality," Ind.Code Ann. § 5-16-7-1 (Burns 1994). This rider to House Bill 1008 amended the Prevailing Wage Act in several ways, the most significant of which was changing the "prevailing scale of wages" language to "average wage being paid in the county." (R. at 195.)
This amended version of House Bill 1008 containing the prevailing wage rider passed the House, but it failed to pass the Senate. Having passed one house, the language was eligible for inclusion in a conference committee report. Subsequently, House Bill 1598, which had been an environmental bill, was amended to include House Bill 1008,[2] as well as Senate Bill 455 (dealing with resource recovery tax abatement), and House Bill 1007 (dealing with, among other things, the allocation of lottery revenues and reduction of vehicle excise taxes). Also, the title of House Bill 1598 was changed to read: "AN ACT to amend the Indiana Code concerning state and local administration." The conference committee report on this bill passed the House on April 21 and the Senate on April 24. The bill went to Governor Bayh. While the Governor was contemplating whether to sign the bill or veto it, legislative negotiations continued concerning the prevailing wage.
On April 28, the contending forces reached a compromise. The product of that compromise appeared in H.E.A. 1435, "AN ACT to amend the Indiana Code concerning labor." Unlike its predecessor H.E.A. 1598, H.E.A. 1435 dealt exclusively with revisions to the Prevailing Wage Act. This act differed from H.E.A. 1598 by amending the prevailing wage standard to "common construction wage" instead of "average construction wage." It passed both houses of the General Assembly and went to the Governor. On May 1, 1995, Governor Bayh signed both H.E.A. 1598 and H.E.A. 1435 into law.
Acts to revise existing portions of the Indiana Code are reported with revision marks included. For example, the language of the code section being deleted appears in strike-out, and new language is set in bold-face. Language unchanged appears in normal type. "Printing Code," Preface to 1995 Acts, 1995 Ind. Acts at iv (1995). H.E.A. 1598's revision marks show that this act directly revises Indiana Code §§ 5-16-7-1 & -4, showing the deletions to those code sections in strike-out and 1598's additions to them in bold-face. Also, Section 8 of H.E.A. 1598 begins with the heading "IC 5-16-7-1 IS AMENDED TO READ AS FOLLOWS [EFFECTIVE JULY 1, 1995]: . . . ." and Section 9 repeats this statement as it corresponds to its revision of § 5-16-7-4. (R. at 116-17.) H.E.A. 1435's revision marks, on the other hand, show that this act amended H.E.A. 1598's version of §§ 5-16-7-1 & -4, showing the deletions of H.E.A. 1598's revisions in strike-out and 1435's additions in bold-face. Also, Section 1 of H.E.A. 1435 begins with the heading "IC 5-16-7-1, AS AMENDED BY HEA 1598-1995, IS AMENDED TO READ AS FOLLOWS [EFFECTIVE JULY 1, 1995]: . . . ." (emphasis added) and Section 2's heading repeats this statement in announcing the revision of § 5-16-7-4. (R. at 109-10.)
*178 The appellees filed for a pre-enforcement injunction against the statute, alleging that the Prevailing Wage Act amendments violated Art. 4, § 19 of the Indiana Constitution. The trial court agreed. First, the trial court found that although H.E.A. 1598's title addressed "state and local administration," its "true subject or unifying concept" was taxation, "which was the original and dominant subject of the bills whose provisions were subsequently inserted into HEA 1598 during the final two weeks of the session, and which was the dominant subject of HB 1008 to which the prevailing [wage] rider was originally attached." (R. at 842.) Inasmuch as the object of the Prevailing Wage Act is labor, the Prevailing Wage Act could not, under Art. 4, § 19 of the Indiana Constitution, be amended by an act dealing predominantly with taxation. (R. at 844-46.) Second, after reviewing the legislative maneuvering that occurred in the promulgation of H.E.A. 1598, the trial court found that impermissible "logrolling" had occurred, something Art. 4, § 19 was designed to proscribe. (R. at 850.)
The trial court then preceded to find H.E.A. 1435 also unconstitutional. It concluded that H.E.A. 1435 was a "trailer" bill of H.E.A. 1598 whose only purpose was to amend the earlier bill. On the principle that "[a]mendments to an unconstitutional statute cannot make valid a law which was enacted in violation of the Constitution," (R. at 849), the court held that H.E.A. 1435 could not cure the unconstitutionality of H.E.A. 1598.
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674 N.E.2d 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bayh-v-indiana-state-bldg-and-constr-ind-1996.