Pataki v. New York State Assembly

190 Misc. 2d 716, 738 N.Y.S.2d 512, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 51
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 190 Misc. 2d 716 (Pataki v. New York State Assembly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pataki v. New York State Assembly, 190 Misc. 2d 716, 738 N.Y.S.2d 512, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 51 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Bernard J. Malone, Jr., J.

The plaintiff Governor moves and the defendants Assembly [717]*717and Senate cross-move for summary judgment in this action by the Governor for a judgment declaring unconstitutional 46 budget bills passed by the Assembly and Senate in August 2001.

The Change from a Legislative to an Executive Budget

Prior to 1927, New York had a legislative budget process whereby appropriation bills originated in the Legislature, were referred to committees, and were often passed in the waning hours of the session. It was then left to the Governor, through the veto power, to attempt to trim that which the Governor believed was excessive from that which the Governor believed were the necessary expenditures.

The gathering of financial information for the use by the Legislature in creating a budget was haphazard with over 150 departments, boards and bureaus submitting estimates of their financial needs, which were often characterized by many as grossly excessive in anticipation of budget cuts. Since each senator and assemblyman represented only a limited district the tendency was to look out for the needs of that district with an eye towards reelection. Many felt that the overall financial interests of the people on a statewide basis were often overlooked. Between 1885 and 1914 the spending of the State increased over 600% while the population increased by only 82%.

The Constitutional Convention of 1915

During the Constitutional Convention of 1915, the Committee on State Finances, Revenues and Expenditures Relative to a Budget System for the State (Committee) was directed to study the issue and make appropriate recommendations. The primary mover behind the reform effort was Henry L. Stimson, the Chairman of the Committee on Finance of the Constitutional Convention. The Committee recommended changes to the State Constitution through the implementation of an executive budget process.

The proposed amendments provided that before November 15 of each year each department of the State, except the Legislature and the Judiciary, would submit to the Governor itemized estimates of that department’s financial needs. After holding public hearings, the Governor was to revise those estimates according to the Governor’s judgment. The proposed budgets of the Legislature and the Judiciary were to be submitted to the Governor and passed on to the Legislature without revision but with any recommendation the Governor wished to [718]*718add. By February 1 of the next year, the Governor was to submit to the Legislature “a budget containing a complete plan of proposed expenditures and estimated revenues” which was to “be accompanied by a bill or bills for all proposed appropriations and reappropriations clearly itemized.” What was to be included in the Governor’s proposed budget was described in detail in the proposed constitutional amendments and the Governor was permitted to amend or supplement the budget before final passage. A copy of the budget was to be given to the Comptroller and he, the Governor and department heads were given the right, and the duty if requested by the Legislature, to appear before the Legislature with respect to the proposed budget. The proposed amendment went on to provide that:

“The Legislature may not alter an appropriation bill submitted by the Governor except to strike out or reduce items therein; but this provision shall not apply to items for the Legislature or judiciary. Such a bill when passed by both Houses shall be a law immediately without further action by the Governor, except that appropriations for the Legislature and judiciary shall be subject to his approval as provided in Section 9 of Article IV.[1]

“Neither House shall consider further appropriations until the appropriation bills proposed by the Governor have been finally acted upon by both Houses; nor shall such further appropriations be then made except by separate bills each for a single work or object which bills shall be subject to the Governor’s approval as provided in Section 9 of Article four. Nothing herein shall be construed to prevent the Governor from recommending that one or more of his proposed bills be passed in advance of the others to supply the immediate needs of Government.”

The Committee determined that the Legislature was not the appropriate body to formulate a budget because, among other reasons, the: “Legislature is under the further disadvantage that its members, instead of being responsible solely to the State as a whole, are each responsible to and dependent upon a single district of the State. A financial program made up in the first instance by the Legislature necessarily tends to represent a compromise or bargain between different districts rather than the viewpoint of the State as a whole. The treatment of the multitude of separate items necessarily tends to that pro[719]*719cess of give and take which has become so common in America as to be stigmatized by the terms log rolling’ and ‘pork barrel.’ ” (Reprinted in Journal of NYS Constitutional Convention of 1915, at 390-391.)

The Committee decided that the “ultimate responsibility of revising the estimate and preparing the budget must rest with the Governor” because “as the head of the State he is the one who can best explain and defend a given fiscal policy to the people of the State and he is the one who, above all others, is interested in upholding before the people of the State a policy of economy and who should be held responsible to them for the success or failure of such a policy.” {Id. at 396.) Chairman Stimson wrote in support of the amendment as follows:

“We cannot expect economy in the future unless some one man will have to lie awake nights to accomplish it. The only way to stop waste is for the people of the State to know exactly whose fault it is if waste occurs, or if the cost of government steadily rises without compensating increase in service rendered.
“So the proposed Constitution provides that the estimates of all administrative departments shall be first submitted to the Governor, and shall be revised by him. The responsibility for securing an economical and systematic plan for the annual budget of the State is thus laid squarely on his shoulders.
“When the Governor has reduced the estimates he formulates them into a budget, which is simply a financial plan showing how much money is needed and where it should come from, together with balance sheets of the State’s resources and liabilities and statements of the expenditures of past years for the purpose of comparison. He then transmits this budget to the Legislature not later than the first of February. He and his heads of departments have the right to appear before the Legislature and defend this budget. The Legislature has the right to call them and interrogate them about its items. The Legislature can cut down the budget but cannot add to it or raise items and when they act upon the budget their action is final. The responsibility is thus placed squarely upon the Legislature to make the final decision as to how much money shall be appropriated. They cannot swell the appropriation bills in reliance upon the Governor’s veto to prune them down, as so often happens under our present system.

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Related

Pataki v. New York State Assembly
7 A.D.3d 74 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2004)
Silver v. Pataki
192 Misc. 2d 117 (New York Supreme Court, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 Misc. 2d 716, 738 N.Y.S.2d 512, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pataki-v-new-york-state-assembly-nysupct-2002.