Jim Boeving v. Missouri Secretary of State Jason Kander Missouri State Auditor Nicole Galloway, Raise Your Hand For Kids and Erin Brower

493 S.W.3d 865, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 680
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 8, 2016
DocketWD79694 and WD79697 and WD79725
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 493 S.W.3d 865 (Jim Boeving v. Missouri Secretary of State Jason Kander Missouri State Auditor Nicole Galloway, Raise Your Hand For Kids and Erin Brower) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jim Boeving v. Missouri Secretary of State Jason Kander Missouri State Auditor Nicole Galloway, Raise Your Hand For Kids and Erin Brower, 493 S.W.3d 865, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 680 (Mo. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

■ Alok Ahuja, Judge

Missouri resident and taxpayer Jim Boeving filed suit in the Circuit Court of Cole County to challenge the fairness and sufficiency of the official ballot title for an initiative petition. The petition seeks to amend the Missouri' constitution to increase the taxes and fees to be paid on the sale of cigarettes, and to use the revenues to fund programs addressing children’s health and education. ■ •

The circuit court rejected Boeving’s challenge to the summary statement prepared by the Secretary of-State. But the court agreed with Boeving that the fiscal note summary prepared by the State Auditor'was insufficient and unfair. State Auditor Nicole Galloway, and ballot initiative proponents Raise Your Hand for Kids and Erin Brower, appeal the trial court’s ruling that the ballot title’s fiscal note summary was insufficient. Boeving cross-appeals the circuit court’s conclusion that-the summary statement was adequate. We conclude that, while the fiscal note summary is fair and sufficient, the summary statement is not. We accordingly reverse, and certify to the Secretary of State modified language for the summary statement.

Factual Background

On November 20, '2015, Raise Your Hand for Kids submitted an initiative petition sample sheet to the Secretary of State. Raise Your Hand is a Missouri not-for-profit corporation and campaign committee formed under Missouri law to support the petition.

The initiative petition seeks to amend Article IV of the Missouri constitution by adding new §§ 54, 54(a), 54(b), and 54(c). Several features of the initiative petition are relevant to the issues on appeal.

First, the proposed constitutional amendment imposes a new tax on the re *870 tail sale of cigarettes. New § 54(c).l provides:

In addition to any- tax levied upon the sale of cigarettes in this state, a tax shall be levied upon the sale of cigarettes in an amount equal to thirty mills per cigarette (or sixty cents per pack of twenty cigarettes) phased in, in four equal annual increments of seven and one-half mills (or fifteen cents per pack of twenty cigarettes) on January 1, 2017, January 1, 2018, January 1, 2019 and January 1, 2020.

Section 54(c).2.a provides that, “[i]n addition to the tax provided in section 54(c).l, effective January 1, 2017, an equity assessment fee is imposed upon the first to occur of the following: the purchase, storage, use, consumption, handling, distribution or wholesale sale of each package of twenty (20) cigarettes manufactured by a nonparticipating manufacturer.” “Non-participating manufacturers” are those who are not parties to the Master Settlement Agreement entered into by the State and certain tobacco manufacturers on November 23, 1998. The petition specifies that “[t]he equity assessment fee shall be paid by the wholesaler, and collected by the director of revenue at the same time cigarette tax stamps are purchased from the director of revenue.” Section 54(c).2.b states that, as an initial matter, “[t]he rate of the equity assessment fee shall be sixty-seven cents ($0.67) per package of twenty (20) cigarettes,” but that “[beginning with equity assessment fees due in 2018, the equity assessment fee shall be adjusted each year in accordance with the Inflation Adjustment in the Master Settlement Agreement.” The parties agree that application of the Inflation Adjustment will require an annual increase in the equity assessment fee of 3% or the annual increase in the Consumer Price Index, whichever is greater.

The proposed amendment provides that the funds generated by the new taxes and fees will be deposited in a newly created Early Childhood Health and Education Trust Fund, which “shall be kept separate from the general revenue fund as well as any other funds or accounts in the state treasury.” The proposed amendment specifies the following uses for monies in the Fund:

• “[a]t least seventy-five percent (75%) of funds shall be disbursed in grants for improving the quality and increasing access to Missouri early childhood education programs”;
• “[n]o less than ten percent (10%) and no more than fifteen percent (15%) of funds shall be disbursed in grants to Missouri hospitals or other health care facilities to improve access to quality early childhood health and development programs”; and
• “[n]o less than five percent (5%) and no more than ten percent (10%) of funds shall be disbursed in grants to provide evidence-based smoking cessation and prevention programs for Missouri pregnant mothers and youth.”

The proposed amendment specifies that funds shall not “be used for human cloning or research, clinical trials, or therapies or cures using human embryonic stem cells, as defined in Article III, section 38(d).” The amendment also provides that the distribution of funds under the amendment will be exempt from the restrictions of Article IX, § 8 of the Missouri constitution. Article IX, § 8 generally prohibits the State and its political subdivisions from distributing State or local funds or property “in aid of any religious creed, church or sectarian purpose,” or in support of any educational institution “controlled by any religious creed, church or sectarian denomination.”

*871 Finally, the initiative petition contains a “hold harmless” provision which requires that,

[o]n an annual basis, the director of revenue, in consultation with the director of health and senior services, shall determine whether the taxes imposed by section 54(c) have resulted in a decrease in consumption of tobacco products and thereby directly caused a reduction in the amount of moneys collected and deposited in the fair share fund, the health initiatives fund, or the state school moneys fund, revenues generated from local tobacco taxes, or revenues generated from local sales taxes.

If such revenue reductions are found, monies in the Fund shall be transferred to the entities experiencing the revenue decreases, provided that the aggregate amount of “hold harmless” payments in any year “shall not exceed four percent (4%) of the total moneys collected pursuant to this section during that same year.”

On January 5, 2016, the Secretary of State certified the official ballot title for the petition. An official ballot title consists of a summary statement prepared by the Secretary of State, as well as a fiscal note summary prepared by the State Auditor. See §§ 116.010(4), 116.175, 116.334 1 ; Brown v. Carnahan, 370 S.W.3d 637, 646 (Mo. banc 2012). As certified, the official ballot title reads:

Shall the Missouri Constitution be amended to:

• increase taxes on cigarettes each year through 2020, at which point this additional tax will total 60 cents per pack of 20;
• create a fee paid by cigarette wholesalers of 67 cents per pack of 20 on certain cigarettes; and
• deposit funds generated by these taxes and fees into a newly established Early Childhood Health and Education Trust Fund?

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Bluebook (online)
493 S.W.3d 865, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jim-boeving-v-missouri-secretary-of-state-jason-kander-missouri-state-moctapp-2016.