OPALA, J.
1 1 The dispositive issues tendered by this original proceeding are: (1) Is the mandatory participation by the legislative members of the Contingency Review Board (CRB) in the process of approval of expenditures from appropriations to the Oklahoma Opportunity Fund
(Opportunity Fund) an impermissible intrusion upon the executive branch's powers in violation of Art. 4, § 1, Ok. Const.?
and if so (2) Are the offending provisions of 62
0.8.8upp.2006 § 48
severable from the remainder of the Act? and (8) Is the CRB's approval of funding to the Ardmore Development Authority for two related projects void ab initio? We answer the first two questions in the affirmative and the third in the negative.
I
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
12 Petitioner Jerry R. Fent (petitioner or Fent), a resident taxpayer, invokes this court's original jurisdiction to challenge the legality of the CRB, of the status of the two legislator members who sit on that board, as well as of the CRB's approval of funding that was to flow from the Opportunity Fund to the Ardmore Development Authority (Authority) for two projects in the Ardmore area.
T3 The Opportunity Fund, created by the terms of 62 0.$S.Supp.2006 § 48,
is a revolving fund for the Department of Commerce to be used for economic development projects.
The enactment establishes explicit criteria for determining whether proposed expenditures are expected to result in a substantial economic benefit to the State. The Director of the Department of Commerce is authorized to administer the Opportunity Fund
and to propose expenditures from the fund in accordance with the legislative guidelines.
Appropriations to the fund may be budgeted and expended by the Governor for proposed projects subject to the unanimous approval of the CRB.
The CRB is composed of the Governor, Speaker of the House of Representatives, President Pro Tempore of the Senate and Director of State Finance (an ex officio nonvoting member).
The Opportunity Fund received a $45,000,000 appropriation during the second extraordinary legislative session in 2006.
The CRB approved Authority's application for two grants in the aggregate amount of $20,000,000 for a project related to a new MG automobile plant:
(1) a $5,000,000 loan to Oklahoma Global Motors, LLC to assist it in start-up operations to manufacture MG automobiles in Ardmore and (2) a $15,000,000 award for improvements to be made at the Ardmore Municipal Airport, which would enable the airport to accommodate cargo aircraft for use in transporting manufactured MG automobiles.
II
THE PARTIES' ARGUMENTS
T4 Fent claims the CRB's mandated participation in the approval process for all expenditures from appropriations to the Opportunity Fund (for economic development projects) contravenes the State's constitutional separation-of-powers provision.
This is so because two legislators, who sit as
members of the CRB, have the power to veto funding for proposed projects selected by the executive service. He challenges the legitimacy of the CRB as an "executive" board because it is composed of two legislator-members who sit ex officio.
He claims the legislators sitting on the CRB are both serving simultaneously in the executive as well as in the legislative capacities in violation of the state constitutional prohibition against holding dual state offices.
T5 Respondents counter the CRB is essentially a legislative body acting in support of a legislative function-the determination of State fiscal policy on a matter of great public importance. They claim the CRB acts in a cooperative, not coercive, manner, when it participates in the approval process. According to Respondents, even if we assume the statutory approval regime is unlawful, the offending language is severable from the remainder of the act without any harm to its essential character.
IH
FENT'S STANDING
T6 Fent claims he has standing
as an Oklahoma resident taxpayer, citizen and voter to challenge as constitutionally infirm (a) the expenditure of public tax-derived funds in the amount of $20,000,000, (b) the CRB, an executive board composed of two legislative and one executive voting members, whose mandatory participation in the approval of expenditures to be made out of appropriations to the Opportunity Fund offends the separation-of-powers doctrine, Art. 4 § 1, Okl. Const., and (c) the role of the President Pro Tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House, both of whom sit on the CRB in contravention of the dual-office-holding prohibition of Art. 5 § 28, OK. Const. Fent's claim to standing is unchallenged by the respondents. Since standing, very much like jurisdiction, must be inquired into sua sponte,
we must pass here sua sponte on Fent's standing.
{7 Standing refers to a person's legal right to seek relief in a judicial forum.
The three threshold criteria of standing are (1) a legally protected interest which must have been injured in fact ie., suffered an injury which is actual, concrete and not conjectural in nature, (2) a causal nexus between the injury and the complained-of conduct, and (8) a likelihood, as opposed to mere speculation, that the injury is capable of being redressed by a favorable court decision.
The doctrine of standing ensures a party has a personal stake in the outcome of a case and
the parties are truly adverse.
18 This court has long-recognized the right of a taxpayer to challenge illegal taxation or expenditure of public funds.
The unlawful appropriation or expenditure of public funds is deemed to be an invasion of the taxpayer's legal rights.
A taxpayer also has a vital interest in (a) the unimpeded use of appropriated funds (b) by its destined recipient (c) for the purpose for which the fund was intended (d) without unlawful legislative interference.
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OPALA, J.
1 1 The dispositive issues tendered by this original proceeding are: (1) Is the mandatory participation by the legislative members of the Contingency Review Board (CRB) in the process of approval of expenditures from appropriations to the Oklahoma Opportunity Fund
(Opportunity Fund) an impermissible intrusion upon the executive branch's powers in violation of Art. 4, § 1, Ok. Const.?
and if so (2) Are the offending provisions of 62
0.8.8upp.2006 § 48
severable from the remainder of the Act? and (8) Is the CRB's approval of funding to the Ardmore Development Authority for two related projects void ab initio? We answer the first two questions in the affirmative and the third in the negative.
I
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
12 Petitioner Jerry R. Fent (petitioner or Fent), a resident taxpayer, invokes this court's original jurisdiction to challenge the legality of the CRB, of the status of the two legislator members who sit on that board, as well as of the CRB's approval of funding that was to flow from the Opportunity Fund to the Ardmore Development Authority (Authority) for two projects in the Ardmore area.
T3 The Opportunity Fund, created by the terms of 62 0.$S.Supp.2006 § 48,
is a revolving fund for the Department of Commerce to be used for economic development projects.
The enactment establishes explicit criteria for determining whether proposed expenditures are expected to result in a substantial economic benefit to the State. The Director of the Department of Commerce is authorized to administer the Opportunity Fund
and to propose expenditures from the fund in accordance with the legislative guidelines.
Appropriations to the fund may be budgeted and expended by the Governor for proposed projects subject to the unanimous approval of the CRB.
The CRB is composed of the Governor, Speaker of the House of Representatives, President Pro Tempore of the Senate and Director of State Finance (an ex officio nonvoting member).
The Opportunity Fund received a $45,000,000 appropriation during the second extraordinary legislative session in 2006.
The CRB approved Authority's application for two grants in the aggregate amount of $20,000,000 for a project related to a new MG automobile plant:
(1) a $5,000,000 loan to Oklahoma Global Motors, LLC to assist it in start-up operations to manufacture MG automobiles in Ardmore and (2) a $15,000,000 award for improvements to be made at the Ardmore Municipal Airport, which would enable the airport to accommodate cargo aircraft for use in transporting manufactured MG automobiles.
II
THE PARTIES' ARGUMENTS
T4 Fent claims the CRB's mandated participation in the approval process for all expenditures from appropriations to the Opportunity Fund (for economic development projects) contravenes the State's constitutional separation-of-powers provision.
This is so because two legislators, who sit as
members of the CRB, have the power to veto funding for proposed projects selected by the executive service. He challenges the legitimacy of the CRB as an "executive" board because it is composed of two legislator-members who sit ex officio.
He claims the legislators sitting on the CRB are both serving simultaneously in the executive as well as in the legislative capacities in violation of the state constitutional prohibition against holding dual state offices.
T5 Respondents counter the CRB is essentially a legislative body acting in support of a legislative function-the determination of State fiscal policy on a matter of great public importance. They claim the CRB acts in a cooperative, not coercive, manner, when it participates in the approval process. According to Respondents, even if we assume the statutory approval regime is unlawful, the offending language is severable from the remainder of the act without any harm to its essential character.
IH
FENT'S STANDING
T6 Fent claims he has standing
as an Oklahoma resident taxpayer, citizen and voter to challenge as constitutionally infirm (a) the expenditure of public tax-derived funds in the amount of $20,000,000, (b) the CRB, an executive board composed of two legislative and one executive voting members, whose mandatory participation in the approval of expenditures to be made out of appropriations to the Opportunity Fund offends the separation-of-powers doctrine, Art. 4 § 1, Okl. Const., and (c) the role of the President Pro Tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House, both of whom sit on the CRB in contravention of the dual-office-holding prohibition of Art. 5 § 28, OK. Const. Fent's claim to standing is unchallenged by the respondents. Since standing, very much like jurisdiction, must be inquired into sua sponte,
we must pass here sua sponte on Fent's standing.
{7 Standing refers to a person's legal right to seek relief in a judicial forum.
The three threshold criteria of standing are (1) a legally protected interest which must have been injured in fact ie., suffered an injury which is actual, concrete and not conjectural in nature, (2) a causal nexus between the injury and the complained-of conduct, and (8) a likelihood, as opposed to mere speculation, that the injury is capable of being redressed by a favorable court decision.
The doctrine of standing ensures a party has a personal stake in the outcome of a case and
the parties are truly adverse.
18 This court has long-recognized the right of a taxpayer to challenge illegal taxation or expenditure of public funds.
The unlawful appropriation or expenditure of public funds is deemed to be an invasion of the taxpayer's legal rights.
A taxpayer also has a vital interest in (a) the unimpeded use of appropriated funds (b) by its destined recipient (c) for the purpose for which the fund was intended (d) without unlawful legislative interference. There is an injury to the public interest when the Legislature places unlawful barriers to a recipient agency's access to appropriated funds by interposing its own control over an appropriation bill beyond the point in time at which that bill passes outside the legitimate zone of legislative control.
A taxpayer's challenge to the constitutionality of legislation affecting the use of public funds is a matter of public right.
T9 The claimed public injury in this case consists of the Legislature's usurpation of the executive branch's power (to use appropriated funds) through legislative post-passage interposition of an improper veto barrier which legislative officials may use when sitting on the CRB. That injury is redressable by judicial severance of the offending provisions of 62 0.S.Supp.2006 § 48(B) from the remainder of the statute.
IV
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION
1 10 Respondent Morgan submits there is no urgency or pressing need for an early decision.
He argues this case is analogous to the scenario in Keating v. Johnson,
in which this court declined to assume original jurisdiction of the Governor and of two state representatives in a publici juris case in
which an issue of governmental power's usurpation was raised. Petitioner, on the other hand, urges this court to take original jurisdiction and decide the state constitutional issues that are pressed here.
T11 This case is appropriate for the court's assumption of original jurisdiction to grant declaratory relief. In controversies where (as here) this court and the district court both have concurrent jurisdiction, this court's decision to assume original jurisdiction constitutes an exercise of discretionary power.
Jurisdiction to grant declaratory relief may be assumed (1) in matters of public interest where there is (2) an element of urgency or a pressing need for an early decision.
Both of these prongs are met here. The funding of state programs is clearly a matter publici juris.
The Legislature has appropriated $45,000,000 to the Opportunity Fund for the development of economic activity in the State. There is a pressing need here for an early determination of the legitimacy of the CRB's role in the approval-of-expenditures process designed to expend money appropriated to the Opportunity Fund. The continued disbursement of those funds from the state treasury to the Ardmore recipient, the approval and funding of future projects as well as future legislative appropriations to the Opportunity Fund will remain under a heavy cloud of legal uncertainty until the constitutional claims pressed by Fent are resolved. We henee exercise our discretionary authority to take original jurisdiction and rule on these fundamental-law challenges.
y
THE STATE'S FUNDAMENTAL LAW PROHIBITS THE LEGISLATURE FROM INTERPOSING ITS POWER OVER AN APPROPRIATION THAT HAS ALREADY BECOME ENACTED LAW
$12 Oklahoma's fundamental law
interdicts legislative intrusion upon the functions assigned by the constitution to the executive.
Legislative power is mainly confined to making law,
while the executive department is invested primarily with the function of executing the law.
Passing an appropriation bill is clearly a legislative lawmaking function
while the administration of appropriated funds is a purely executive task.
§18 Legislative control over an appropriation bill may continue until the bill passes beyond the point at which the Legislature may recall it from the Governor's office.
The power over a bill, onee enacted, stands transferred by operation of law to the executive branch for spending the funds in accordance with the legislative direction.
The Legislature can exercise no supervision, either directly or indirectly, over the manner in which appropriated funds are to be used. The proper exercise of legislative oversight with respect to enacted appropriations is through a post-expenditure performance audit.
Any extra-constitutional method by which the Legislature extends its tentacles of control over an appropriation measure beyond the time when the measure stands transformed into enacted law offends the constitutional concept of separated powers and becomes a usurpation of power.
¶ 14When the 2006 appropriation to the Opportunity Fund became enacted law, all legislative control over the funds ceased and passed to the executive branch to expend them for economic development projects selected by that service of government based on the expressly imposed legislative criteria. By statutorily requiring the CRB's unanimous approval of all expenditures from the Opportunity Fund,
the Legislature, acting through its presiding officers sitting on that board, impermissibly extended its reach of power over enacted appropriations. This is so because the CRB's legislative members stand ultimately in control of all disbursements from the fund through their exercise of veto power over the projects proposed by the executive service. The CRB was initially created as a mechanism for dealing with unexpected personnel and expenditure needs of various agencies when the Legislature is
not in session.
That original purpose which the board was to serve is far removed from the function the Legislature assigned to it by the terms of 62 0.8.Supp.2006 § 48-the post-passage oversight of enacted legislative appropriations to the Opportunity Fund.
T15 In In re Oklahoma Department of Transportation for Approval of Not to Exceed $100 Million Oklahoma Department of Transportation Grant Anticipation Notes, Series 2002
the court considered the CRB's statutory role in approving grant anticipation notes for funding a highway improvement and expansion plan. Applying a four-factor test,
the court there held the power wielded by the President Pro Tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives as members of the CRB appeared potentially coercive and constituted a significant interference with the executive branch in the issuance of grant anticipation notes. Applying that earlier analysis to this case, we reach the same conclusion today. The challenged statutory scheme, which gives the Legislature's presiding officers absolute veto power over executive-proposed expenditures from the Opportunity Fund (derived from enacted appropriations), is an impermissible interposition of legislative power over an appropriation that has already become law and by operation of the constitution passed beyond the Legislature's reach for control.
{16 In short, the Legislature cannot participate, either directly or through administrative boards having legislators as members, in the administration of funds appropriated by enacted legislation. The CRB's participation in the approval process constitutes a legislative usurpation of the powers assigned to the executive branch.
VI
SEVERABILITY ANALYSIS
117 Respondents submit that even if the CRB's statutory role in approving expenditures from the Opportunity Fund be declared constitutionally infirm, the provisions claimed to be offending are clearly severable.
118 Severability analysis is a necessary process when some, but not all, provisions of an enactment are to be condemned as unconstitutional and henee void.
Its purpose is to determine whether non-offending statutory provisions may survive as valid after the clauses rejected as invalid are separated from the whole. The severability of a statutory enactment is not contingent on the presence of an express severability clause within the particular enactment's text.
Survival of untainted statutory provisions that remain is appropriate when the valid and voided (as unconstitutional) provisions are not so "inseparably connected with and so dependent upon" each other that the surviving provisions would not have otherwise been enacted.
Consideration must be given to whether the surviving provisions must rely on the severed portion for meaning or enforcement.
T19 Because the CRB's statutory role in the supervision of money that is to flow to the Opportunity Fund is constitutionally infirm, we must next determine whether upon severance of the offending portions the remainder of the statute can be saved. The obvious legislative purpose of the Opportunity Fund is to promote economic development by funding projects that would result in a significant benefit to the State. This is to be accomplished by utilizing the Department of Commerce to administer the appropriations for selected projects that meet the statutory criteria.
The Legislature intended for the Governor to budget and expend appropriations to the Opportunity Fund and to award monies to qualified recipients by entering with them into written agreements. In our view, the Legislature would have authorized the Governor and the Department of Commerce to participate in the selection of economic development projects with or without the CRB's approval. The invalid provisions in § 48-relating to the CRB-are presumed to be severable and Fent has failed to overcome this statutory presumption.
[ 20 We therefore hold the provisions of 62 0.S8.8upp.2006 § 48,
which require the CRB's participation in the approval of expenditures from the Opportunity Fund, are severable from the remainder of the statute.
VII
THE ART. 10 §§ 15, 20, OKL.CONST. CHALLENGES
121 Fent claims the "subject matter" of the Ardmore grants contravenes two state constitutional provisions-Art. 10 §§ 15
and 20.
First, he argues the $15,000,000 grant violates the Art. 10 § 20 prohibition against the imposition of taxes "for the purpose of any county, city, town, or other municipal corporation."
He states the airport and its runway are not state facilities. He next asserts the $5,000,000 loan to Oklahoma Global Motors, a private entity, expressly violates the terms of Art. 10 § 15, which prohibit the State from offering its eredit to a private corporation.
122 There is a strong presumption which favors the constitutionality of legislative acts.
A party challenging the constitutionality of legislation has a heavy
burden of showing its infirmity by persuasive argument and analysis cum authority.
Fent has failed to pierce that presumption. The tendered issues and analysis, presented by text that covers only one-half of a page in the summary section of his brief, stand alone without any citation to Oklahoma jurisprudence or to that of other states with like or similar constitutional prohibition.
We need not consider challenges that are not rested on convincing argument firmly supported by legal authority.
- 23 When the failure of advocacy occurs, its presence distorts the adversarial positions of the parties. There is here only a request for relief without supporting argumentation or legal authority material. This absence alters the nature of the appellate process by imposing upon the court the burden of researching and testing unsupported legal propositions sought to be pressed for victory. Appellate courts cannot be forced to become an active advocate for the party whose failure to brief or argue has produced a total intellectual vacuum for that party's asserted position.
To do so violates a basic common-law tenet that judges must always cast themselves into the role of neutral and detached decisionmakers rather than turning themselves into combatants in a forensic battle.
124 Because Fent's constitutional arguments are undeveloped and unsupported by clear argument with authority, he has failed to demonstrate any infirmity in the acts of state executive officials by which appropriated funds were awarded to a private industry and to a municipal airport. We hence decline to reach and resolve these issues today.
VIII
RELIEF GRANTED
125 We hold that the CRB's mandatory participation in the grant approval process is
tainted by a constitutional infirmity that invalidates those provisions of 62 O.S.Supp. 2006 § 48, which require the CRB's approval of all expenditures from the Opportunity Fund.
126 Because Fent did not seek any pendente lite relief in order to prevent payments due in advance of the court's pronouncement from being made, we make today's opinion prospective only. It will apply with effect to post-pronouncement payments to the designated recipients of funds to be made under the Act.
IX
THE KEY QUESTIONS MOOTNESS
127 Although the CRB's usurpation of power, interposed into the approval process, did not in this case interfere with the executive service's payout to the selected applicant, the fact of the board's tainted authority cannot be deemed to have been mooted as a legal issue to be resolved. It presents an important question of public law which is likely to reeur at some point in the future when other appropriations to the Opportunity Fund are sought to be expended for the benefit of qualified recipients.
X
SUMMARY
128 Fent has standing as a taxpayer to challenge the Legislature's usurpation of the executive branch's power over the expenditure of enacted appropriations to the Opportunity Fund.
. T 29 This case is appropriate for the court's assumption of its original jurisdiction to grant declaratory relief. The present litigation tenders a matter of public interest and there is a pressing need for an early decision.
130 The Legislature cannot participate, either directly or through administrative boards having legislators as its members, in the administration of funds appropriated by enacted legislation. The CRB's participation in the approval process for expenditures from appropriated funds, as it is mandated by the terms of 62 0.8.8upp.2006 § 48, constitutes legislative usurpation of powers belonging to the executive branch. 'Those constitutionally infirm provisions of § 48 which relate to the CRB are severable and the remainder of the statute can stand alone as untainted by today's sentence of nullity.
131 Original cognizance is taken and declaratory relief granted.
32 EDMONDSON, V.C.J., LAVENDER, HARGRAVE, OPALA, WATT, TAYLOR and COLBERT, JJ., concur.
1 33 WINCHESTER, C.J., disqualified.
T 34 KAUGER, J., recused.