Question Submitted by: Richard Lillard, Chairman, Oklahoma Housing Finance Agency

2017 OK AG 4
CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedJune 2, 2017
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2017 OK AG 4 (Question Submitted by: Richard Lillard, Chairman, Oklahoma Housing Finance Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Question Submitted by: Richard Lillard, Chairman, Oklahoma Housing Finance Agency, 2017 OK AG 4 (Okla. Super. Ct. 2017).

Opinion

Question Submitted by: Richard Lillard, Chairman, Oklahoma Housing Finance Agency
2017 OK AG 4
Decided: 06/02/2017
Oklahoma Attorney General Opinions


Cite as: 2017 OK AG 4, __ __

¶0 This office has received your request for an Official Attorney General Opinion in which you ask, in effect, the following question:

If the Oklahoma Housing Finance Agency, a public trust, uses monies from its trust estate to create an emergency fund to assist Oklahoma citizens displaced by natural disaster to secure temporary housing, would expenditures from that fund violate the gift prohibition of Article X, Section 15 of the Oklahoma Constitution?

I.

Background

A. Public Trusts in Oklahoma

¶1 Oklahoma trust laws provide for the formation of express trusts having public entities as their beneficiaries. See 60 O.S.2011 & Supp.2016, §§ 176-180.4; see generally M. Thomas Arnold, Public Trusts in Oklahoma, 19 Tulsa L.J. 192 (1983). Beneficiaries may include the State of Oklahoma, any of its counties or municipalities, or any combination thereof. 60 O.S.Supp.2016, § 176(A). Public trusts may be created to, among other things, "provide funds for the furtherance and accomplishment of any authorized and proper public function or purpose of the state[.]" Id.; see also Shotts v. Hugh, 1976 OK 73, ¶13, 551 P.2d 252, 254 ("Trusts for the benefit of the public may be established with a broad field of objectives as long as the objectives encompass a benefit to a large class of the public or lessen the burdens of government."). In cases where the State is the trust beneficiary, the trust must be approved by the Legislature and the Governor, the trust instrument must be approved as to form by the Attorney General, and the beneficial interest in the trust must be accepted by the Governor. 60 O.S.2011 & Supp.2016, §§ 176(A), 177.

¶2 The trustees of a public trust are deemed an "agency of the state," see 60 O.S.2011, § 179, but it is "presumed for all purposes of Oklahoma law" that the trust itself "[e]xist[s] as a legal entity separate and distinct from...the governmental entity that is its beneficiary." Id. § 176.1(A)(2). Similarly, the affairs of a public trust are a considered "separate and independent from the affairs of the beneficiary in all matters or activities...including, but not limited to, the public trust's budget, expenditures, revenues and general operation and management of its facilities or functions[.]" Id. § 176.1(D). Because of this unique construct, laws that normally apply to governmental entities receive varying application as to public trusts. Compare 25 O.S.2011, § 304(1) (requiring public trusts to comply with the Open Meeting Act) and 75 O.S.2011, § 250.5 (requiring State-beneficiary public trusts to comply with the Administrative Procedures Act), with Okla. City Zoological Trust v. State ex rel. Pub. Emp. Rel. Bd., 2007 OK 21, ¶ 8, 158 P.3d 461, 465 (emphasizing that a public trust was a separate legal entity from its municipal beneficiary and therefore holding that the trust was not subject to the Oklahoma Municipal Employee Collective Bargaining Act) and A.G. Opin. 96-47, at 115 (concluding that a State-beneficiary public trust is not an "agency" subject to the Oklahoma Personnel Act).

B. The Oklahoma Housing Finance Agency

¶3 The Oklahoma Housing Finance Agency ("OHFA") is a public trust created pursuant to Title 60, Section 176(A)(1) by trust indenture executed on May 1, 1975. See OHFA Third Amended Trust Indenture (Sept. 24, 2002) (hereafter, the "Trust Indenture") (on file with author). OHFA operates for the benefit of the State by fulfilling the public purposes set forth in the Trust Indenture. See id., p. 1. These purposes include, but are not limited to, the following:

(3) To formulate, develop, and administer...short or long range...programs, plans or activities relating to the improvement of the housing for Residential Use or economic and environmental conditions of residents of the State in order to provide...assistance, services, facilities and resources for the benefit of the people of the State;
(5) To provide funds and assistance for the purposes set out in [the Trust Indenture]; and
(6) To...supply services...for the conservation and implementation of the public welfare and protection and promotion of the public health...to such extent and in such manner as now is or hereafter shall be a proper function of the [State] as or if expressly authorized by law for the furtherance of the general convenience, welfare, public health and safety of the State of Oklahoma and its inhabitants.

Id. art. IV, pp. 6-7.

¶4 In accepting the beneficial interest in the Trust Indenture, the Governor "affirm[ed] the designation of OHFA as an agency of the state and the regularly constituted authority of the Beneficiary[.]" Trust Indenture art. II, p. 3 (emphasis added); see also Approval and Acceptance of Trust Indenture (Aug. 19, 2002) (on file with author). Despite this characterization, indebtedness incurred by the Trustees on behalf of OHFA "shall not constitute an indebtedness of the [State]," but instead "shall constitute obligations of OHFA payable solely from the Trust Estate[.]" Trust Indenture art. VII, p. 13. Similarly, the State has "no legal title, claim, or right to the Trust Estate, its income, or to any part thereof, or to demand or require any partition or distribution thereof." Id. art. IX, p. 23. Funds that make up OHFA's trust estate1 are generated primarily through the issuance of bonds, investment income, and the administration of various housing programs. See OHFA Financial Statements, p. 3 (Jan. 24, 2017);2 see also OAC 330:10-5, 35-5-7, 50-1-1.

¶5 With this background in mind, we consider the effect of Article X, Section 15 of the Oklahoma Constitution on OHFA's use of funds in its trust estate.

II.

Discussion

A. Because OHFA's trust estate is not made up of public funds, the gift prohibition of Article X, Section 15 does not restrict OHFA's use of those funds.

¶6 Article X, Section 15 of the Oklahoma Constitution prohibits the State from, among other things, "mak[ing a] donation by gift, subscription to stock, by tax, or otherwise, to any company, association or corporation." Okla. Const. art. X, § 15(A). For purposes of Section 15, a gift is "a gratuitous transfer of the property of the state voluntarily and without consideration." Hawks v. Bland, 1932 OK 101, ¶ 22, 9 P.2d 720, 722 (emphasis added); see also Orthopedic Hospital of Okla. v. State Dept. of Health, 2005 OK CIV APP 43, ¶ 10, 118 P.3d 216, 222 (Section 15 prohibits "making a gift of public monies to any company, association or corporation.") (emphasis added). Accordingly, to determine whether the restrictions in Section 15 would apply to expenditures from OHFA's trust estate, we must ascertain whether the trust estate consists of public funds.

¶7 The Oklahoma Supreme Court addressed a similar question, albeit in a different context, in Bd. of Cty. Comm'rs of Okla. Cty. v. Warram, 1955 OK 198, 285 P.2d 1034.

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