Opinion No. 45-82 (1982)

CourtMissouri Attorney General Reports
DecidedJune 22, 1982
StatusPublished

This text of Opinion No. 45-82 (1982) (Opinion No. 45-82 (1982)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion No. 45-82 (1982), (Mo. 1982).

Opinion

Dear Dr. Antonio:

This is in response to your questions as follows:

1. Is the Missouri Housing Development Commission subject to 15 CSR 40-2.020, which requires that any contracts for independent auditing or accounting services entered into by state officers, agencies and institutions be submitted to the state auditor for approval?

2. Is the Missouri Housing Development Commission subject to the rules and regulations concerning travel and subsistence expenses promulgated by the commissioner of administration pursuant to Section 33.090, RSMo 1978?

3. Is the Missouri Housing Development Commission subject to the state purchasing requirements of Chapter 34, RSMo 1978?

4. Is it legally permissible for the Missouri Housing Development Commission to hire employees by contracting directly with them rather than hiring them through the merit system? Is it legally permissible for MHDC to contract to pay the executive director a higher salary than that specified in CARL's departmental plan, approved by Governor Teasdale on March 18, 1980, found in Appendix C(1), RSMo Supp. 1980?

The General Assembly created the Missouri Housing Development Commission (MHDC) in 1969 as "a governmental instrumentality of the state of Missouri . . . which shall constitute a body corporate and politic." Section 215.020.1, RSMo 1978. From its inception until the effective date of the Omnibus State Reorganization Act of 1974 (Appendix B, RSMo 1978), May 2, 1974, MHDC was not assigned to any department of state government. The Omnibus State Reorganization Act assigned MHDC to the Department of Social Services by a type III transfer. Appendix B, Section 13.10. A type III transfer is described in Appendix B, Section 1.7(c) as:

the transfer of a . . . commission . . . to the new department with only such supervision by the head of the department for budgeting and reporting as provided under subdivisions (4) and (5) of subsection 6 of this section and any other supervision specifically provided in this act or later acts. Such supervision shall not extend to substantive matters relating to policies, regulative function or appeals from decisions of the . . . commission unless otherwise provided by this act or later acts.

On May 3, 1974, House Bill 1797, Second Regular Session, 77th General Assembly (Appendix B(1), RSMo 1978), transferred MHDC to the Department of Consumer Affairs, Regulation and Licensing (CARL). Section 1 of H.B. 1797 provides in pertinent part:

The provisions of [the Omnibus State Reorganization Act of 1974], as they relate only to the . . . state housing development commission shall not take effect as provided in that act. . . . [Emphasis added].

Thus, H.B. 1797, by its own terms, not only nullifies the type III transfer originally contemplated for MHDC, it removes MHDC entirely from the provisions of the Omnibus State Reorganization Act of 1974.

Section 3 of H.B. 1797 provides:

The Missouri Housing Development Commission, Chapter 215, RSMo, 1972 Supplement, is assigned to the Department of Consumer Affairs, Regulation, and Licensing but shall remain a governmental instrumentality of the State of Missouri and shall constitute a body corporate and politic. [Emphasis added].

In our Opinion No. 168, Antonio, 1981, we opined that:

fees and revenues of MHDC are not subject to constitutional and statutory mandates that all state revenue and other moneys from any source whatsoever be deposited in the state treasury and that the MHDC fees and revenues are not subject to appropriation by the General Assembly.

In so ruling we stated:

[Chapter 215], coupled with the provisions creating MHDC as a governmental instrumentality constituting a body corporate and politic, make it clear that the legislature intended MHDC to be an entity distinct from the state, established for the specific purpose of providing low-income or moderate-income housing to residents of Missouri. Although MHDC represents the state in the performance of its duties, . . . it is but an instrumentality through which the state provides a service it could not otherwise provide. [Emphasis added].

H.B. 1797, Appendix B(1), Section 6, describes the relationship which exists between MHDC and CARL as follows:

All staff for . . . the Missouri Housing Development Commission shall be provided by the [director] of the [department it is] assigned to. The [director] shall appoint [a director] of staff to service . . . the Missouri Housing Development Commission. The [director] of staff shall be qualified by education, training, and experience in the technical matters of the body to which he or she is assigned and his or her appointment shall be approved by the body to which he or she is assigned, and he or she shall be removed or reassigned on their request in writing to the [director] of the [department]. All other employees assigned to work for . . . the Missouri Housing Development Commission except the [director] of staff, [his or her] personal [secretary], and two deputies shall be appointed by the [director] of the [department] in accord with chapter 36, RSMo 1969, and shall be assigned and may be reassigned as required by the [director] of the [department] in such manner as to provide optimum service, efficiency, and economy. [Such] body shall be charged for state costs relating to administration, under contract negotiated by [the] department and the body assigned to the department and approved by the commissioner of administration. All charges shall be payable to the state's general revenue fund.

By its passage of H.B. 1797, which nullified the type III transfer contemplated in the Omnibus State Reorganization Act for MHDC, by its requirement that MHDC contract with CARL for CARL services, and by its designation of MHDC as a governmental instrumentality and body corporate and politic, we believe the General Assembly intended that MHDC remain an entity distinct from the state except to the extent expressly provided in H.B. 1797 and in Chapter 215.

The General Assembly's treatment of the Missouri Health and Educational Facilities Authority, Chapter 360, RSMo, is instructive. The statutory scheme creating the Missouri Health and Educational Facilities Authority (HEFA) is substantially similar to that under which MHDC operates. The General Assembly stated that HEFA "is hereby constituted a public instrumentality and body corporate, . . ." Section 360.020, RSMo 1978. HEFA was created after the passage of the Omnibus State Reorganization Act and H.B. 1797, and was assigned to CARL. Section 360.140, RSMo 1978, provides:

The health and educational facilities authority is assigned to the department of consumer affairs, regulation and licensing. The authority shall, annually, on or before February first of each year, file with the director of said department a report of its previous year's income, expenditures and revenue bonds issued and outstanding.

In Menorah Medical Center v. Health and Educational FacilitiesAuthority, 584 S.W.2d 73 (Mo. banc 1979), the Missouri Supreme Court, in construing Chapter 360, RSMo, stated:

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Related

Menorah Medical Center v. Health & Educational Facilities Authority
584 S.W.2d 73 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1979)
State ex inf. Danforth v. State Environmental Improvement Authority
518 S.W.2d 68 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1975)

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