OPALA, V.C.J.
T1 The dispositive issue on certiorari is whether the terms of § 155(14)
of the Governmental Tort Claims Act [GTCAJ-which exclude from state tort liability claims for death (or bodily injury) from an on-the-job injury covered by workers' compensation but extend government's tort accountability to claims by persons with access to collateral sources of indemnity other than workers' compensation (and employer's liability)-violate (1) the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution and the equal treatment notions protected by the state constitution and (2) the Due Process Clauses in both the Oklahoma and the U.S. Constitutions? We answer in the negative.
I
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
12 Martin John Gladstone [decedent] was killed when struck by a school bus driven by an employee of the Bartlesville Independent School District No. 30 [District]. Decedent's widow, Elaine Desousa Gladstone [Gladstone or widow], received the statutory workers' compensation death benefits
from the decedent's employer, Phillips Petroleum Company. Gladstone then brought a wrongful death action against District. The trial court gave summary judgment to District. The latter's quest for summary relief stood rested on § 155(14) of the GTCA [subdiv. 14],
whose terms shield the state or political subdivision from liability for "any loss to any person covered by any workers' compensation act."
Finding the facts to be undisputed (and inferentially not supportive of oppo-gite inferences), the trial court concluded (a) the case is governed by Childs v. State of Oklahoma
and Smith v. State Dept. of Transportation
as well as by Art. 28 § 7, Ok. Const.,
(b) there is a rational basis for the governing legislation, (c) no fundamental right of the plaintiff is violated and (d) the GTCA immunizes District from Hability because the plaintiffs loss is protected by workers' compensation coverage.
13 The Court of Civil Appeals [COCA] affirmed, noting that Hladstone's equal protection challenge stands rejected by extant jurisprudence.
While it viewed Gladstone's arguments as both rational and persuasive, the appellate court declined her invitation to
follow Minnesota
authority and to strike down subdiv. 14 as constitutionally infirm.
T4 Although we reach today the same conclusion as COCA, we vacate that court's opinion to settle the point of law by a prece-dential pronouncement.
II
STANDARD OF REVIEW
15 The material facts in this cause are undisputed and support but a single inference in favor of the movant.
The issues tendered on certiorari call solely for this court's resolution of legal questions. Review of contested issues of law is governed by a de movo standard.
In its re-examination of a trial court's legal rulings an appellate court exercises plenary, independent and nondefer-ential authority.
IHI
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE SUBDIV. 14 EXEMPTION
16 Gladstone asserts that the subdiv. 14 contravenes the (a) Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amend., U.S. Const.,
as well as the equal treatment notions protected by the state constitution
and (b) the Due Process Clauses of both the Oklahoma and the U.S. Constitutions.
A.
Equal Protection Challenge
17 Gladstone argues that subdiv. 14 violates the equal protection guarantee because there is no rational basis for a classification that impermissibly exeludes from state tort liability all claims for on-the-job bodily injuries (or death) which are covered by compensation but not the claims in which the plaintiff may have access to a collateral indemnity source much more generous than that afforded by the workers' compensation regime. She urges that subdiv. 14 has not been tested by extant jurisprudence for constitutional conformity on the ground she presses. According to Gladstone, Childs
is factually distinguishable. There subdiv. 14 was attacked as offensive to equal treatment either for (a) Texas and Oklahoma citizens or for (c) governmental and nongovernmental employees. She claims Smith
provides no support for District's position because there the court relied solely on Childs without providing an independent equal protection analysis. She
directs us to Bernthal v. City of St. Paul
where a similar exemption was condemned as constitutionally infirm. Gladstone urges the court to adopt the Minnesota solution.
T8 District asserts that CHadstone has identified no reason for this court to depart from precedent established in Childs and Smith.
According to District, West Virginia jurisprudence upheld an exemption similar to subdiv. 14
and expressly rejected the argument Gladstone presses here. We are urged to adopt the rationale of West Virginia and uphold the validity of the legislation in contest.
Y%9 The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment mandates that no state "deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."
An "equal protection analysis requires strict scrutiny of a legislative classification only when the classification impermissibly interferes with the exercise of a fundamental right [such as the right to vote, the right of interstate travel, rights guaranteed by the First Amendment, or the right to procreate] or operates to the peculiar disadvantage of a suspect class [such as a class based on race, alienage or ancestry]."
Although not an absolute guarantee of equality of operation or application of state legislation, the Equal Protection Clause is intended to safeguard the quality of governmental treatment against arbitrary discrimination. Economic legislation-like that tendered for testing here-which is not drawn upon inherently suspect classifications or impinges upon anyone's fundamental rights must generally be upheld against an equal protection attack
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OPALA, V.C.J.
T1 The dispositive issue on certiorari is whether the terms of § 155(14)
of the Governmental Tort Claims Act [GTCAJ-which exclude from state tort liability claims for death (or bodily injury) from an on-the-job injury covered by workers' compensation but extend government's tort accountability to claims by persons with access to collateral sources of indemnity other than workers' compensation (and employer's liability)-violate (1) the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution and the equal treatment notions protected by the state constitution and (2) the Due Process Clauses in both the Oklahoma and the U.S. Constitutions? We answer in the negative.
I
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
12 Martin John Gladstone [decedent] was killed when struck by a school bus driven by an employee of the Bartlesville Independent School District No. 30 [District]. Decedent's widow, Elaine Desousa Gladstone [Gladstone or widow], received the statutory workers' compensation death benefits
from the decedent's employer, Phillips Petroleum Company. Gladstone then brought a wrongful death action against District. The trial court gave summary judgment to District. The latter's quest for summary relief stood rested on § 155(14) of the GTCA [subdiv. 14],
whose terms shield the state or political subdivision from liability for "any loss to any person covered by any workers' compensation act."
Finding the facts to be undisputed (and inferentially not supportive of oppo-gite inferences), the trial court concluded (a) the case is governed by Childs v. State of Oklahoma
and Smith v. State Dept. of Transportation
as well as by Art. 28 § 7, Ok. Const.,
(b) there is a rational basis for the governing legislation, (c) no fundamental right of the plaintiff is violated and (d) the GTCA immunizes District from Hability because the plaintiffs loss is protected by workers' compensation coverage.
13 The Court of Civil Appeals [COCA] affirmed, noting that Hladstone's equal protection challenge stands rejected by extant jurisprudence.
While it viewed Gladstone's arguments as both rational and persuasive, the appellate court declined her invitation to
follow Minnesota
authority and to strike down subdiv. 14 as constitutionally infirm.
T4 Although we reach today the same conclusion as COCA, we vacate that court's opinion to settle the point of law by a prece-dential pronouncement.
II
STANDARD OF REVIEW
15 The material facts in this cause are undisputed and support but a single inference in favor of the movant.
The issues tendered on certiorari call solely for this court's resolution of legal questions. Review of contested issues of law is governed by a de movo standard.
In its re-examination of a trial court's legal rulings an appellate court exercises plenary, independent and nondefer-ential authority.
IHI
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE SUBDIV. 14 EXEMPTION
16 Gladstone asserts that the subdiv. 14 contravenes the (a) Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amend., U.S. Const.,
as well as the equal treatment notions protected by the state constitution
and (b) the Due Process Clauses of both the Oklahoma and the U.S. Constitutions.
A.
Equal Protection Challenge
17 Gladstone argues that subdiv. 14 violates the equal protection guarantee because there is no rational basis for a classification that impermissibly exeludes from state tort liability all claims for on-the-job bodily injuries (or death) which are covered by compensation but not the claims in which the plaintiff may have access to a collateral indemnity source much more generous than that afforded by the workers' compensation regime. She urges that subdiv. 14 has not been tested by extant jurisprudence for constitutional conformity on the ground she presses. According to Gladstone, Childs
is factually distinguishable. There subdiv. 14 was attacked as offensive to equal treatment either for (a) Texas and Oklahoma citizens or for (c) governmental and nongovernmental employees. She claims Smith
provides no support for District's position because there the court relied solely on Childs without providing an independent equal protection analysis. She
directs us to Bernthal v. City of St. Paul
where a similar exemption was condemned as constitutionally infirm. Gladstone urges the court to adopt the Minnesota solution.
T8 District asserts that CHadstone has identified no reason for this court to depart from precedent established in Childs and Smith.
According to District, West Virginia jurisprudence upheld an exemption similar to subdiv. 14
and expressly rejected the argument Gladstone presses here. We are urged to adopt the rationale of West Virginia and uphold the validity of the legislation in contest.
Y%9 The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment mandates that no state "deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."
An "equal protection analysis requires strict scrutiny of a legislative classification only when the classification impermissibly interferes with the exercise of a fundamental right [such as the right to vote, the right of interstate travel, rights guaranteed by the First Amendment, or the right to procreate] or operates to the peculiar disadvantage of a suspect class [such as a class based on race, alienage or ancestry]."
Although not an absolute guarantee of equality of operation or application of state legislation, the Equal Protection Clause is intended to safeguard the quality of governmental treatment against arbitrary discrimination. Economic legislation-like that tendered for testing here-which is not drawn upon inherently suspect classifications or impinges upon anyone's fundamental rights must generally be upheld against an equal protection attack
when the legislative means are rationally related to a legitimate governmental purpose.
110 It is not urged here that the challenged scheme is drawn upon some inherently suspect classification. Nor does our research find that governmental tort claimants have ever been held to form a protected class entitled to a heightened standard of review. Gladstone claims that subdiv. 14 arbitrarily and unfairly burdens a fundamental right-the right to life
as well as stifles the exercise of a fundamental personal liberty-that of obtaining redress from a governmental tortfeasor.
111 While the U.S. Supreme Court has examined "right-to-life" issues in other contexts,
Gladstone has presented nothing to show that bringing a wrongful death action against a governmental tortfeasor is a fundamental right for federal equal protection purposes. Because there is no federal supreme court jurisprudence which imposes upon the states some canonical regime of constitutionally acceptable public tort liability,
we must decline today either (a) to craft a mandate in advance of the highest court's authoritative pronouncement or (b) to hold that the legislature's exclusion from state tort liability of persons similarly situated to the decedent arbitrarily impinges upon a fundamental value.
Rational-Basis Review
"12 Because we are dealing here neither with a suspect classification nor with an infringement upon a fundamental right, the rational-basis standard of review governs this dispute.
Rational-basis scrutiny is a highly deferential standard that proscribes only that which clearly lies beyond the outer limit of a legislature's power.
A statutory classification is constitutional under rational-basis scrutiny so long as "there is any reasonably conceivable state of facts that could provide a rational basis for the classification."
The rational-basis review in equal protection analysis "is not a license for courts to judge the wisdom, fairness, or logic of legislative choices."
For these reasons, legislative bodies are generally "presumed to have acted within their constitutional power despite the fact that, in practice, their laws result in some inequality.
The Legislative Objective Of § 155(14) Immunity
118 The common-law doctrine of governmental tort immunity protects public
funds from claims by private persons. Vanderpool v. State
abrogated Oklahoma's judge-made source of that doctrine and left unaffected the legislature's power to regulate the entire field of governmental tort lability. The legislature then enacted a modified form of sovereign immunity into the body of statutory law and waived its shield against liability (of the state and its political subdivisions) "only to the extent and in the manner provided in" the Act. Subject only to the Act's specific limitations and exceptions, the GTCA extends governmental accountability to all torts for which a private person or entity would be liable. The legislature kept in force certain forms of irmmunity from liability by providing in § 155 thirty-two
carefully cireumseribed exemptions. Section 155(14) of the GTCA affords immunity to a governmental subdivision for claims of bodily injury or death from an on-the-job injury which are "covered by any workers' compensation act or any employer's liability act." In short, while the state and political subdivisions are not liable for injuries to tort claimants who stand covered by the workers' compensation regime, they are legally accountable for the injuries to tort claimants not otherwise protected.
{14 The hardship Gladstone complains of is the arguable unfairness in treating governmental tort claimants who are covered by workers' compensation differently from persons without that coverage. The latter class not only may sue in tort to recover damages for the negligent acts of governmental tort-feasors but is also accorded access to collateral indemnity sources without losing the right to press a public tort claim. The critical question here is whether the classification in question rests upon a difference which bears a reasonable relationship to the goals of the GTCA.
115 The Equal Protection Clause does not, for purposes of rational-basis review, demand that a legislature actually articulate the purpose or rationale that supports its classification.
A court will hypothesize reasons for the law's enact, ment if the legislature fails to do so.
While there is nothing in the statutory language to indicate the Legislature's purpose in excluding from government tort liability all claims covered by workers' compensation liability, the obvious objective is to protect the public fise by limiting recov-erability for public wrongs. We must next consider whether the subdiv. 14 exemption is rationally related to this legitimate state objective.
[16 Gladstone argues that the existence of a collateral source of benefits-workers' compensation-is not a reasonable basis for the classification. She claims subdiv. 14 cannot withstand a rationality test because it creates an impermissible classification based upon criteria-source of collateral benefits-wholly unrelated to the legislative objective. She urges there is an absence of reason for this
arbitrary distinction.
117 The parties inform us that a similar exclusion from governmental tort liability has withstood an equal protection challenge in West Virginia (O'Dell v. Town of Gauley Bridge )
but was struck down in Minnesota (Bernthal v. City of St. Paul).
The West Virginia court observed that in Oregon (Edwards v. State Military Dept.)
a like exemption had passed constitutional muster. In Edwards, the court reasoned that the legislature need not include all persons who were otherwise covered by insurance within the excepted class because that body is not required to enact laws which operate to solve every aspect of the problem in a perfect manner.
The Oregon court also opined that the legislature may have concluded it was best to confine the exception to a compensation system with which it was familiar (i.e., one that it had created).
Citing Edwards with approval, the West Virginia court reached a similar result in O'Dell. There the line drawn between the two classes of tort claimants was declared not to be without logic. This is so because persons covered by workers' compensation must also forego their common-law tort remedies against the employers, while those who have no access to compensation benefits retain the right to sue their employers for a full range of damages.
The court explicitly rejected the Minnesota solution in Bernthal.
Bernthal, on the other hand, focused on the lack of any legislative history shedding light on the purpose of the statute.
It perceived the want of legislative facts to be critical to its constitutional analysis, holding that even if the statute furthered the legislative purpose of protecting the political subdivision's financial integrity, the classification was nonetheless based upon impermissible criteria wholly unrelated to that objective-the source of indemnity benefits.
118 Although Oklahoma, like Minnesota, lacks legislative history materials that identify the basis for the exception in contest, that
fact alone affords no basis for judging the legislative wisdom in excluding the disputed category of claims from public tort liability. Making classifications is at the heart of the legislative function. In the economic sphere, it is only the invidious discrimination-the purely arbitrary act that cannot stand in harmony with the federal and state equal rights guarantee-which will doom legislation.
Because the legislature could have eliminated from the benefit of public tort liability all classes of persons who have access to collateral sources of indemnity, it is not constitutionally impermissible for the legislature to have drawn lines between groups of insured persons for the purpose of protecting the public fise by reducing the number of potential tort claimants or of phasing out those benefits.
Legislative reform may take "one step at a time, addressing itself to the phase of the problem which seems most acute to the legislative mind."
The task of classifying persons for exclusion from public tort liability inevitably requires that some persons who have an almost equally strong claim to favored treatment be placed on different sides of the line, and the fact that the line might have been drawn differently at some points is a matter for legislative, rather than judicial, judgment.
We cannot say that the challenged classification so lacks rationality as to amount to a denial of equal protection.
B.
Due Process Challenge
T 19 Gladstone argues that subdiv. 14 is an arbitrary act because it requires that an Oklahoma citizen be restricted to workers compensation benefits as her sole redress for the deprivation of her husband's life (or health) while the real wrongdoer (the public entity) escapes without any accountability to the tort victim. She asserts that state and federal fundamental law requires that government action affecting "life, liberty or property" must conform to that measure of fairness which accords with the minimum standards of due process.
€20 Gladstone's due process challenge requires little discussion. Like the Equal Protection Clause, "the Due Process Clause does not empower the judiciary to sit as a superlegislature to weigh the wisdom of legislation."
In the area of economic legislation, due process challenges on substantive-law grounds, similar to equal protection contests, are also assessed against a rational-basis standard of review.
Given our rational-basis analysis in Part III(A), supra, we have no difficulty in concluding that subdiv. 14 does not contravene the mandate for testing due process application on substantive-law grounds.
21 In sum, while the legislatively crafted incidence of public tort liability (insofar as it excludes only those protected by workers' compensation) does at first blush appear unfair and inequitable, we cannot find it constitutionally infirm.
IV
NONCONSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGES
122 Gladstone argues that subdiv. 14 violates the "rule of reason" and "public policy of fairness" because it places the burden of indemnity on the wrong person-the employer's compensation carrier rather than on the negligent party, the public tortfeasor. According to ladstone, subdiv. 14 is contrary to the collateral source rule
in that it immunizes the public tortfeasor simply because the injured party has a collateral source of indemnity, namely workers' compensation. She claims that subdiv. 14 would encourage reckless disregard for public safety because the governmental entity would suffer no consequences for its wrongdoing whenever the injured party is covered by workers' compensation. Lastly, she urges that the exemption radically departs from the principles announced in Vanderpool and creates disharmony with existing Oklahoma law.
128 Gladstone's arguments target the fairness and wisdom of the challenged legislative enactment. When called upon to examine a statute, this court is confined to entertaining attacks on its construction or on its constitutional validity. A legislative act is presumed to be constitutional and will be upheld until the contrary is shown.
We cannot be concerned with arguments addressing themselves to desirability, wisdom or logic of legislation unless it offends the constitution.
By placing responsibility on a workers' compensation carrier for the tort of a governmental employee, the legislature has violated no constitutional norm. We are hence powerless to invalidate its act. This court is not a roving commission to scrutinize legislative fairness or to invalidate enactments that, though unfair or inequitable, are nonetheless free from constitutional warp. If we were to strike down all statutes that appear unwise or unsound, our course of conduct would severely undermine the tripartite division of powers among the three branches of state government.
V
SUMMARY
124 Because the subdiv 14 exclusion of claims from state tort liability is neither drawn upon inherently suspect classifications nor impinges upon fundamental rights, the rational-basis standard of review governs the equal protection challenge mounted in this cause. A legislative classification must be upheld against an equal protection attack if there is any reasonably conceivable state of facts that could provide a rational basis for the classification. In the area of economic legislation the judiciary extends great deference to the lawmakers' judgment. Deferential review is grounded in part on the philosophy that line-drawing is an inevitable aspect of the legislative function. Acknowledging, as we must, the presumptive validity of legislative enactments, coupled with the well-settled rule that courts do not sit as superlegislatures, we cannot say that the disputed classification scheme is so irrational as to fail constitutional serutiny.
$25 Although we are not unmindful that the exelusion of only those persons who are protected by workers' compensation might appear unfair and inequitable, we find absolutely no basis in the equal protection or due
process analyses for its condemnation as invidious discrimination or as otherwise offensive to some principle of fundamental federal or state law.
126 On certiorari granted upon the widow's petition, the Court of Civil Appeals' opinion is vacated and the trial court's summary judgment is affirmed.
127 ALL JUSTICES CONCUR.