Jeana M. Horner v. Terry R. Curry
This text of 125 N.E.3d 584 (Jeana M. Horner v. Terry R. Curry) 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.
Opinions
Massa, Justice.
The Indiana Constitution imposes on the General Assembly a duty "to provide, by law, for a general and uniform system of Common Schools, wherein tuition shall be without charge, and equally open to all." Ind. Const. art. 8, § 1. To help finance this lofty goal, our constitutional framers established a "Common School fund," the principal of which "may be increased, but shall never be diminished." Id. §§ 2, 3. Among other sources of revenue, this Fund "shall consist" of "all forfeitures which may accrue." Id. § 2.
In implementing this constitutional command, Indiana's Civil Forfeiture Statute directs the transfer of proceeds from seized property "to the treasurer of state for deposit in the common school fund."
Facts and Procedural History
In 2013, law-enforcement personnel seized two vehicles from Jeana and Jack Horner. The Marion County Prosecutor's Office filed a forfeiture action against the vehicles, claiming they had been used to transport marijuana. The Horners eventually recovered their vehicles after the underlying criminal charges were dismissed. Two and a half years later, the Horners and others sued, as "Indiana citizens and taxpayers," to "redress Marion County's profit-driven forfeiture program and to vindicate the public rights secured by Article 8 of the Indiana Constitution and the Civil Forfeiture Statute." Appellees' Supp. App. Vol. II, p. 6. In their claim against the Consolidated
City
of Indianapolis and Marion County and the Marion County
Prosecutors Office,
The Statute in force when Taxpayers sued authorized the prosecutor to file a complaint requesting the court to offset forfeiture revenue for reimbursement of case-specific "law enforcement costs." I.C. § 34-24-1-3(a) (2011). If the prosecutor succeeded in showing by a preponderance of the evidence that the property was subject to forfeiture, the court would "determine the amount of law enforcement costs" and then order any remaining proceeds which exceeded those costs to "be forfeited and transferred to the treasurer of state for deposit in the common school fund." I.C. §§ 34-24-1-4(a), (d) (2002).
In 2018, however, the Indiana General Assembly amended the Statute.
See
Pub. L. No. 47-2018, § 3,
After the Governor signed the new Statute into law, but before it went into effect, Taxpayers moved to "amend or supplement their complaint" with a challenge to the new Statute. Appellant's App. Vol. II, p. 159. Both versions of the law, they argued, violated article 8, section 2 by offsetting
any
forfeiture proceeds intended for the Fund. The trial court denied this request and later granted summary judgment for the City, concluding that the Statute was constitutional because civil forfeitures "were unknown in 1851 when Article 8, Section 2, was added to the Indiana Constitution." Appellant's App. Vol. II, p. 172.
Taxpayers appealed, requesting direct transfer to this Court under Appellate Rule 56(A).
Standard of Review
The constitutionality of an Indiana statute is a pure question of law we review de novo.
City of Hammond v. Herman & Kittle Properties, Inc.
,
Discussion and Decision
Taxpayers argue that "[b]oth versions of the Civil Forfeiture Statute violate the Indiana Constitution based on a straightforward application of Article 8." Appellants' Br. at 16. They insist that " 'all forfeitures' " belong to the Common School Fund, not just a percentage of those forfeitures.
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Massa, Justice.
The Indiana Constitution imposes on the General Assembly a duty "to provide, by law, for a general and uniform system of Common Schools, wherein tuition shall be without charge, and equally open to all." Ind. Const. art. 8, § 1. To help finance this lofty goal, our constitutional framers established a "Common School fund," the principal of which "may be increased, but shall never be diminished." Id. §§ 2, 3. Among other sources of revenue, this Fund "shall consist" of "all forfeitures which may accrue." Id. § 2.
In implementing this constitutional command, Indiana's Civil Forfeiture Statute directs the transfer of proceeds from seized property "to the treasurer of state for deposit in the common school fund."
Facts and Procedural History
In 2013, law-enforcement personnel seized two vehicles from Jeana and Jack Horner. The Marion County Prosecutor's Office filed a forfeiture action against the vehicles, claiming they had been used to transport marijuana. The Horners eventually recovered their vehicles after the underlying criminal charges were dismissed. Two and a half years later, the Horners and others sued, as "Indiana citizens and taxpayers," to "redress Marion County's profit-driven forfeiture program and to vindicate the public rights secured by Article 8 of the Indiana Constitution and the Civil Forfeiture Statute." Appellees' Supp. App. Vol. II, p. 6. In their claim against the Consolidated
City
of Indianapolis and Marion County and the Marion County
Prosecutors Office,
The Statute in force when Taxpayers sued authorized the prosecutor to file a complaint requesting the court to offset forfeiture revenue for reimbursement of case-specific "law enforcement costs." I.C. § 34-24-1-3(a) (2011). If the prosecutor succeeded in showing by a preponderance of the evidence that the property was subject to forfeiture, the court would "determine the amount of law enforcement costs" and then order any remaining proceeds which exceeded those costs to "be forfeited and transferred to the treasurer of state for deposit in the common school fund." I.C. §§ 34-24-1-4(a), (d) (2002).
In 2018, however, the Indiana General Assembly amended the Statute.
See
Pub. L. No. 47-2018, § 3,
After the Governor signed the new Statute into law, but before it went into effect, Taxpayers moved to "amend or supplement their complaint" with a challenge to the new Statute. Appellant's App. Vol. II, p. 159. Both versions of the law, they argued, violated article 8, section 2 by offsetting
any
forfeiture proceeds intended for the Fund. The trial court denied this request and later granted summary judgment for the City, concluding that the Statute was constitutional because civil forfeitures "were unknown in 1851 when Article 8, Section 2, was added to the Indiana Constitution." Appellant's App. Vol. II, p. 172.
Taxpayers appealed, requesting direct transfer to this Court under Appellate Rule 56(A).
Standard of Review
The constitutionality of an Indiana statute is a pure question of law we review de novo.
City of Hammond v. Herman & Kittle Properties, Inc.
,
Discussion and Decision
Taxpayers argue that "[b]oth versions of the Civil Forfeiture Statute violate the Indiana Constitution based on a straightforward application of Article 8." Appellants' Br. at 16. They insist that " 'all forfeitures' " belong to the Common School Fund, not just a percentage of those forfeitures.
The City counters that the legislature may define the circumstances under which forfeiture proceeds vest in the Fund and that "awards of law-enforcement costs are not forfeitures" that accrue to the state. City's Br. at 16. The Prosecutor's Office adds that the scope of article 8, section 2 does not include civil forfeitures and that, even if it did, it confers no private right of enforcement. Instead, the Prosecutor's Office asserts, the General Assembly can authoritatively define article 8, section 2's scope. Prosecutor's Br. at 21.
I. Do Taxpayers have standing?
A threshold question for this Court is whether Taxpayers have standing to litigate their claim.
The doctrine of standing asks whether the plaintiff is the proper person to invoke a court's authority.
City of Indianapolis v. Indiana State Bd. of Tax Comm'rs
,
At a more fundamental level, standing implicates the constitutional foundations on which our system of government lies. By requiring a party to show a specific injury, the doctrine limits the judiciary to resolving concrete disputes between private litigants while leaving questions of public policy to the legislature and the executive. Indeed, standing "precludes courts from becoming involved ... too far into the provinces of the other branches." Jon Laramore,
Indiana Constitutional Developments
,
Unlike its federal counterpart, the Indiana Constitution imposes no "case or controversy" restriction on the "judicial power of the State."
Compare
U.S. Const. art. III,
with
Ind. Const. art. 7. But the express distribution-of-powers clause in our fundamental law performs a similar function, serving as a principal justification for judicial restraint.
See
Ind. Const. art. 3, § 1 (dividing the "powers of the Government ... into three separate departments; the Legislative, the Executive including the Administrative, and the Judicial"). And so, as with the other branches of government, our responsibility lies in preserving these boundaries.
At its core, then, the doctrine of standing asks: Where should the remedy lie? With the courts, or through the franchise? With judges, or with our politically-accountable elected officials? Not every case discusses these broad questions, but they're always present in the pondering.
Here, the Prosecutor's Office and the City both argue that our constitutional framers intended no private right to enforce article 8. Because the Common School Fund is " 'held by the State,' " they insist, Prosecutor's Br. at 14 (quoting Ind. Const. art. 8, § 7 ), the State alone may enforce article 8's constitutional obligations, id. at 14-21. Nineteenth-century precedent from this Court, they suggest, "confirmed" the framers' intent. Id. at 17.
Taxpayers reject this proposition, arguing instead that "[t]his Court has long held that Hoosiers may enforce public rights." Appellants' Reply Br. at 26 (emphasis added). When "public rather than private rights are at issue," they maintain, "it is enough that the plaintiff be a citizen, and as such interested in the execution of the laws." Id. (internal quotations omitted). And this right to public standing, they contend, encompasses the right to "vindicate Article 8." Id.
A. From the mid-nineteenth century through today, our standing jurisprudence reveals a gradual shift toward judicial restraint.
On first impression, the early precedent on which the City and the Prosecutor's Office rely would seem to bolster their argument that the state alone may enforce article 8.
See
State ex rel. Smith v. McLellan
,
Consistent with this legislation, a long line of precedent from this Court recognizes taxpayer standing to ensure the proper administration of public funds,
including
revenues either vested in or intended for the Common School Fund.
See, e.g.
,
Harney v. Indianapolis, Crawfordsville, & Danville R.R. Co.
,
This legislation also codified the long-established principle that, when a private party seeks to vindicate a public right, "it is not necessary ... that the relator should have a special interest in the matter."
Hamilton v. State ex rel. Bates
,
Historically, then, our courts have been sympathetic toward standing, permitting private plaintiffs to vindicate a variety of claims, whether to enforce a public duty or to challenge the expenditure of public funds. Indeed, our historical precedent is replete with suits in which private parties, as relators, sought to compel the "levy [of] a railroad tax," the "repair [of] a bridge," "due diligence in keeping the highways ... in good repair," and the meeting of public officials for "the purpose of electing a county superintendent of schools."
State ex rel. Sigler v. Bd. of Comm'rs of Madison Cty.
,
But is there a point at which judicial accommodation of these claims threatens to upset the delicate balance of government powers that our constitution embodies? Aren't questions of tax policy, infrastructure repair, and local elections better suited for the legislative and executive branches of government?
By the mid-twentieth century, this Court-tracking jurisprudential developments at the federal level-had signaled a more cautious approach to standing, finding it insufficient for a plaintiff to possess "merely a general interest common to all members of the public."
Terre Haute Gas Corp. v. Johnson
,
Emblematic of this paradigm shift is
Pence v. State
,
The opinion drew the dissent of Justice Dickson, who would have conferred standing on the plaintiff on two grounds: first, "as an Indiana taxpayer to challenge the constitutionality of the expenditure of public funds," and second, "under Indiana's public standing doctrine."
Justice Dickson's view in
Pence
gained further traction eight years later in
State ex rel. Cittadine v. Indiana Department of Transportation
,
Despite the plaintiff's complete lack of a "specific injury," the
Cittadine
opinion recites the general rule that standing requires a showing of harm and "a personal stake in the outcome of the litigation."
Just four months after the decision in
Cittadine
, this Court again confronted the question of standing, this time in a constitutional claim under the Indiana Bill of Rights. In
Embry v. O'Bannon
, taxpayer-plaintiffs challenged the constitutionality of the state's "dual enrollment" statute, a measure allocating additional funds to parochial-school students enrolled in public-school courses.
Justice Sullivan, joined by Chief Justice Shepard, wrote a separate concurring opinion to "give more detailed attention" to standing.
So where does this leave us? How do we reconcile these ostensibly competing theories of standing?
B. Taxpayer standing and public standing are distinct doctrines.
In his dissent in
Pence
, Justice Dickson would have conferred standing on the plaintiff both "as an Indiana taxpayer to challenge the constitutionality of the expenditure of public funds" and "under Indiana's public standing doctrine."
While both doctrines overlap to some extent, unique rationales distinguish them. Taxpayer standing generally implicates a challenge to some government action that involves the expenditure or appropriation of public funds.
See
Joshua G. Urquhart,
Disfavored Constitution, Passive Virtues? Linking State Constitutional Fiscal Limitations and Permissive Taxpayer Standing Doctrines
,
Public standing, then, as the
Cittadine
Court articulated, risks pushing the judiciary's role beyond the boundaries contemplated by our distribution-of-powers doctrine.
See
Harmanis,
States' Stances on Public Interest Standing
, 76 Ohio St. L.J. at 750 n.134 (concluding that "public interest standing functionally equates to the judiciary unilaterally expanding its own authority"). By permitting
any
person,
without
a showing of harm, to enforce a public right or duty, what limits are there? If all government action is subject to judicial review, what purpose does the political process serve?
We need not answer these questions today because Taxpayers' claim involves an express constitutional limitation on the appropriation of public funds. And in resolving their claim, we give no precedential weight to
Cittadine
on the question of standing.
By adopting the standard articulated in Justice Sullivan's
Embry
concurrence, we hold that, to establish taxpayer standing, a plaintiff must (1) raise a challenge seeking to vindicate an express constitutional limitation on the expenditure of public funds,
C. Taxpayers have standing to litigate their claim under our taxpayer-standing doctrine.
In applying our standard here, we conclude that Taxpayers have standing to litigate their claim. First, their claim clearly implicates an express constitutional limitation on the expenditure or appropriation of public funds.
See
Ind. Const. art. 8, § 3 (prohibiting the principal of the Common School Fund from being "diminished"). And because this Fund is a "public fund of the state" in which all taxpayers have an interest in preventing its "unlawful waste" or misappropriation, Taxpayers meet the second prong of our standard.
See
Mitsch
,
We also emphasize that, had Taxpayers brought their claim as a private party-whether in defending against civil or criminal liability or in seeking damages-this Court would have properly denied them standing.
See
Hoagland v. Franklin Twp. Cmty. Sch. Corp.
,
$100 and a Black Cadillac v. State
,
II. Article 8, section 2 applies to civil forfeitures.
Turning to the merits, we must first determine whether article 8, section 2 applies to civil forfeitures. Civil forfeiture "is a device, a legal fiction, authorizing legal action against inanimate objects for participation in alleged criminal activity, regardless of whether the property owner is proven guilty of a crime-or even charged with a crime."
Serrano v. State
,
"Since the earliest years of this Nation, Congress has authorized the Government to seek parallel
in rem
civil forfeiture actions and criminal prosecutions based upon the same underlying events."
United States v. Ursery
,
In 1844, just seven years before the ratification of our 1851 Constitution, the U.S. Supreme Court reaffirmed federal authority to seize a vessel despite no underlying crime by its owner.
The Malek Adhel
, 43 U.S. (2 How.) 210, 233,
Dictionaries and legal treatises contemporary to the 1850-51 debates offer a similar characterization of civil forfeitures. According to one dictionary available to the framers, a forfeiture involved any property "alienated by a crime, offense, neglect of duty, or breach of contract." Noah Webster,
An American Dictionary of the English Language
354 (1841),
available at
https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.hnezz9.
State ex rel. Baldwin v. Bd. of Comm'rs of Marion Cty.
,
From this brief historical inquiry, we have little doubt that our constitutional framers understood that "a conviction on the underlying criminal activity is not a prerequisite for forfeiture."
Katner v. State
,
III. Article 8, section 2 permits the legislature to determine how and when forfeiture proceeds accrue to the Common School Fund.
Indiana's Civil Forfeiture Statute directs the transfer of proceeds from seized property "to the treasurer of state for deposit in the common school fund." I.C. § 34-24-1-4(d). But before these proceeds accrue to the Fund, the Statute permits the allocation of forfeiture revenue to reimburse law enforcement costs.
To determine the constitutionality of the Civil Forfeiture Statute, we must examine "the language of the
text
in the context of the
history
surrounding its drafting and ratification" as well as "the
purpose and structure
of our constitution."
City of Hammond
,
A. Text of article 8.
First, we turn to article 8's text. Article 8, section 2 dictates that, among other things, the Common School Fund "shall consist of ... [t]he fund to be derived from ... all forfeitures which may accrue."
Appellants' Br. at 17. "The framers' intent could not be clearer," Taxpayers insist: "All forfeitures-not some forfeitures or ten percent of forfeitures-belong to the school fund." Id. at 27 (internal quotation marks omitted). And, according to Taxpayers, the Civil Forfeiture Statute violates article 8 because section 3 commands that the principal of this Fund "shall never be diminished" and must only be "appropriated to the support of Common Schools, and to no other purpose whatever." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
As this Court observed nearly a century and a half ago, article 8 is "certainly not self-acting in [its] operation."
State ex rel. Att'y Gen. v. Meyer
,
Nearly a century later, our Court of Appeals reaffirmed the legislature's prerogative to determine when and how money accrues to the Common School Fund. In
State v. Elliott
, the state treasurer challenged a statute requiring a county auditor to keep "a record of all fines, forfeitures and other revenue which accrues to the Common School fund," with the auditor only paying to the state treasurer those amounts biannually.
As further proof that the framers contemplated this legislative power, statutes permitting cost offset for forfeiture were in place as they assembled to craft our new constitution. For example, from 1836 to 1847, as the General Assembly incorporated various cities and towns across the state, legislation consistently permitted the payment of "[a]ll
expenses incurred
in prosecuting for the recovery of any penalty or forfeiture." Act of Feb. 8, 1836, ch. 3, § 34,
So, under article 8's text, the General Assembly can determine how and when a forfeiture accrues to the Common School Fund.
B. History surrounding article 8.
The history surrounding article 8 bolsters our plain reading of the text. In constitutional historical inquiries, we "examine the state of things existing when the constitution or any part thereof was framed and adopted, to ascertain the old law, the mischief, and the remedy."
Bayh v. Sonnenburg
,
Here, we agree with Taxpayers that our constitutional framers, in drafting article 8, sought to deter the dual mischiefs of malfeasance and financial incompetence that had become so pervasive among state and local officials administering school funds. Indeed, as Taxpayers maintain, the history of article 8 confirms that our constitutional framers "created a dedicated school fund to stop government actors from siphoning money from educational objectives." Appellants' Br. at 32. But Taxpayers' view of the history surrounding article 8 omits important context.
Following the passage of Indiana's first comprehensive school law in 1824, "school revenue was inconsiderable" due to the "mismanagement of funds." History of Education at 26. Compounded by "local indifference and sometimes legislative evasion," the school law "was doomed to failure for lack of funds." Id. at 27. And despite "very elaborate" reform in 1833, "progress was discouragingly slow." Id. at 32, 34. Even as Hoosiers approached mid-century, further attempts to safeguard school funding proved "far from satisfactory." Id. at 38-39. In his address to the House of Representatives at the Twenty-Eighth Indiana General Assembly, Governor Samuel Bigger lamented that "our school funds were not producing the fruits which we had a right to expect, but were in danger in many cases of being irretrievably lost." Indiana House Journal at 18 (Dec. 5, 1843). According to the governor, accountability measures were necessary to ensure "the various education funds will be rendered much more secure and productive." Id.
And this concern carried over into the debates over our 1851 constitution. Delegate John I. Morrison, chairman of the committee on education, reported to the convention that, "[i]n the present state of affairs, we have no means of ascertaining accurately, the true conditions" of the state's school fund. 2 Report of the Debates and Proceedings of the Convention for the Revision of the Constitution of the State of Indiana 1860 (1851). According to Delegate Morrison, "abundant evidence" showed "the danger to which the several educational funds are exposed," with thousands of dollars "lost beyond recovery." Id.
Still, despite the frustration shown by leaders during this period, we find no evidence of any steadfast commitment by the framers against the offsetting of proceeds collected from forfeitures or other contingent sources of revenue under section 2. To the contrary, the pre-accrual allocation of proceeds from these sources acted as a financial incentive to stimulate the Fund's growth.
Just two years after the framers completed their work, William C. Larrabee, Indiana's first State Superintendent of Public Instruction, cited allegations in his second annual report to the General Assembly that public officers responsible for imposing "fines for breaches of the penal laws of the State" had "fail[ed] to issue process for the collection of such fines," thus depriving the Fund of significant resources.
Little had changed in the years that followed. In his 1865 report to the General Assembly, Superintendent Samuel L. Rugg speculated that, of the fines and forfeitures collected, there had "probably been but little added" to the Fund. Ind. Dep't of Public Instruction, Thirteenth (Second Biennial) Report of the Superintendent of Public Instruction for the State of Indiana 17 (1865). The reason for this, he suggests, was the lack of a "statute in force requiring officers to pay over or add to the school fund, the money collected upon forfeited recognizances, or upon any other kind of forfeitures." Id. at 17-18. Additional forfeiture proceeds, he concluded, would be unlikely, "unless there is some provision of law giving it that direction." Id. at 18.
By 1872, the pressing need to incentivize the collection of fines, forfeitures, and other contingent revenue sources had become a priority. That year, Superintendent Milton Hopkins pled with the General Assembly for some "means of increasing" the Common School Fund. Ind. Dep't of Public Instruction, Twentieth (Sixth Biennial) Report of the Superintendent of Public Instruction for the State of Indiana 33 (1872). "There is a wide spread belief ... among school officers and many others," he wrote, "that the fines, forfeitures and unclaimed witness fees, that are the parts of both fund and revenue are not faithfully reported." Id. To Hopkins, the dismal revenue stream at the time suggested that "justice [was] not so faithfully administered." Id.
In a circular issued that same year, Attorney General Bayless Hanna reminded the county commissioners "that all fines assessed for breeches of the penal laws of the State, together with all forfeiture which may accrue, and all unclaimed fees, constitute a part of the Common School fund." Id. at 34. Income from these sources, he concluded, should "have resulted in vast revenues for the use of the State and the counties." Id. But an accounting by the state auditor revealed that "a vast sum of money" had either "not been ... collected according to law" or had "been appropriated to personal gain." Id. To correct this "malfeasance," he urged the county commissioners to "employ a competent Attorney, at reasonable compensation," to determine the extent to which "fines, forfeitures and unclaimed fees ... belonging to the School Fund" had "not been accounted for." Id. at 34-35.
The General Assembly responded to these pleas at its following legislative session in 1873. At the behest of Governor Conrad Baker, lawmakers adopted a measure requiring "the Clerks of the several Circuit Courts" to, among other things, "forward to the Attorney General," at the close of each term, "a statement of all fines assessed and forfeitures entered during such term." Act of Mar. 10, 1873, ch. 7, § 4,
As an incentive to prosecute these actions, the Act allocated to the attorney general, for "all collections made or property recovered," a "commission of twenty per cent. on the first thousand dollars, ten per cent. on sums not exceeding two thousand dollars, and on all sums exceeding two thousand dollars five per cent."
In 1879, this Court upheld the Act's compensation scheme. In
State v. Denny
, Attorney General Thomas Woolen sued the state's former attorney general, James Denny, "for the recovery of certain moneys belonging to the State."
With no discussion of
Denny
in their briefings, Taxpayers rely instead on this Court's decision in
Bartholomew County v. State ex rel. Baldwin
,
On first impression,
Baldwin
stands in clear tension with
Denny
. But a closer look at
Baldwin
reveals an important distinction. Unlike the contingent sources of revenue at issue in
Denny
(unclaimed property, fines and forfeitures, escheated estates),
Baldwin
involved the Congressional Township Fund, "one of the trust funds referred to in section 7 of article 8 of the constitution of 1851."
Id.
at 340-41,
State v. Springfield Twp., in Franklin Cty.
,
Because the state holds these proceeds in trust for a particular beneficiary (the township inhabitants) and for a specific purpose (the support of township schools), the General Assembly has "no power to divert the congressional township fund, or the income thereof."
Baldwin
,
Finally, Taxpayers cite
Howard County v. State ex rel. Michener
in arguing that "this Court has 'always' held" that the Fund " 'must be devoted to the support of the common schools, without the diversion from it of a penny for any other purpose whatever.' " Appellants' Br. at 28 (quoting
The holding in
Michener
-that article 8 requires a full and transparent accounting of all revenue owing to the Common School Fund, and that no "legislative contrivance" can prevent the courts from assessing this information-is entirely consistent with the legislative intent of the 1873 Attorney General Act. And nothing in that decision precludes pre-accrual offsetting. While today the "county auditor shall keep a record of all fines and forfeitures and all other revenue that, by law, accrues to the fund," I.C. § 20-49-3-16(a) (2006), the Statute doesn't establish these records
as "conclusive evidence" of the money owed the Fund.
See
Michener
,
Altogether, the history of education funding in Indiana belies the Taxpayers claim that, by permitting law enforcement personnel to reimburse themselves for forfeiture-execution costs, "the Civil Forfeiture Statute enables precisely what Article 8 was meant to curtail." See Appellants' Br. at 32.
C. Structure and Purpose of the Indiana Constitution.
Finally, the structure and purpose of our Constitution unerringly point toward article 8, section 2 permitting cost offset for forfeiture execution. We examine our Constitution's provisions "within the structure and purpose of the Constitution as a whole."
State v. Monfort
,
Taxpayers contend that " Article 8, Section 2 shows that the framers knew how to authorize cost-recovery when they intended to do so." Appellants' Br. at 30. In support of this argument, they direct us to another source of revenue under section 2 : proceeds from the "sales of Swamp Lands," which expressly permits expense deductions for "selecting and draining" those lands. See Ind. Const. art. 8, § 2.
But this language is yet another product of federal land-grant legislation.
See
Act of Sept. 28, 1850, ch. 84, § 2,
Free of similar offsetting restrictions, forfeitures and other contingent revenue sources under section 2 permitted the pre-accrual distribution of funds. This practice included the distribution of proceeds "derived from the sale of County Seminaries."
See
Ind. Const. art. 8, § 2. "It is a sufficient compliance with the constitutional requirement," this Court held, just four years after our constitutional framers adjourned, "if the seminary fund,
after payment of its debts
, is appropriated to common schools."
Auditor & Treasurer of Grant Cty. v. Bd. of Comm'rs of Grant Cty.
,
Still, Taxpayers characterize Grant County as an anomaly, "an episode unique to Indiana's transition from the 1816 Constitution to the 1851 Constitution." Appellants' Reply Br. at 17. But a closer look at the constitutional debates suggests otherwise.
On January 27, 1851, Delegate Nathaniel Hawkins expressed support for directing
the proceeds from county seminary sales to the Common School Fund. 2
Debates
at 1851, 1867-68. But he questioned the prudence of omitting from section 2 "some provision by which the honest debts and proper liabilities of county seminaries shall be paid."
Grant County
, then, unmistakably dispelled Delegate Hawkins' doubts over whether, without an express provision, "the debts will necessarily have to be paid out of the proceeds of the sale." To be sure, the debts at issue in that case amassed prior to constitutional ratification.
See
To resolve any doubt, we find further support for this conclusion in legislation enacted in the years immediately following constitutional ratification permitting cost offset for various article 8, section 2 revenue sources. Under the 1852 Free School Law, the General Assembly mandated that "proceeds of the [seminary] sales,
after deducting the necessary expenses thereof and the amount due to individuals for advances as aforesaid
, shall be placed by the county treasurer to the credit of the common school fund, to be disposed of in such manner as shall be directed by law." Act of June 12, 1852, ch. 97, § 15, 1
In addition to permitting pre-accrual debt offset for heirless estates, the Act of June 17 also directed the executors of those estates to hold the property "until the expiration of five years."
For the reasons set forth above, our Constitution's structure and purpose refute Taxpayers' claim that, "if the framers had intended that the forfeitures clause authorize cost-reimbursement, they would have said so." Appellants' Br. at 31.
Conclusion
We acknowledge the critical role public schools play in nurturing our children to become productive and law-abiding citizens. There is, after all, "a legitimate, and often a close, connection between ignorance and crime." Ind. Dep't of Public Instruction
Fourteenth (Third Biennial) Report of the Superintendent of Public Instruction for the State of Indiana
52 (1866). But should the legislature decide to repeal the Civil Forfeiture Statute entirely, leaving neither the Common School Fund nor law enforcement with an important source of revenue, would that present Taxpayers with a constitutional claim? Would that violate article 8, section 2's mandate that the Fund "shall consist of ... all forfeitures which may accrue"? We think the answer to these rhetorical questions is a resounding "no." "[W]hether it is good policy to do [so]," however, "is a matter with the legislature," not for this Court to decide.
Because our constitution's text, structure, and history clearly show that article 8, section 2 was "not self-acting in [its] operation,"
Meyer
,
Judgment affirmed.
Goff, J., concurs.
Rush, C.J., concurs in result in Part I, concurs in Part II, and dissents from Part III, with separate opinion in which Justice David joins in part.
David, J., concurs in result in Part I and concurs in Parts II and III.
Slaughter, J., concurs in the judgment with separate opinion.
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