Silver v. Pataki

3 A.D.3d 101, 769 N.Y.S.2d 518, 2003 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13222
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 11, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 A.D.3d 101 (Silver v. Pataki) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silver v. Pataki, 3 A.D.3d 101, 769 N.Y.S.2d 518, 2003 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13222 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Gonzalez, J.

This appeal involves a dispute between the executive and legislative branches of our state government over their respective powers of appropriation under the New York State Constitution. Our analysis of the controversy is guided by certain amendments to our State Constitution adopted in 1927 that transferred primary responsibility for creating a budget from the Legislature to the Executive. We find that the actions taken by the Legislature in this case clearly violated the non-alteration provision of article VII, § 4 of the State Constitution which, if upheld, would seriously undermine the 1927 constitutional amendments adopting an executive budget system for this State. Accordingly, we affirm Supreme Court’s grant of summary judgment to the Governor. In light of this holding, we also agree with Supreme Court that the constitutionality of the Governor’s exercise of line-item vetoes in this case need not be addressed.

On January 20, 1998, Governor George E. Pataki submitted his executive budget to the Legislature consisting of 12 budget bills, six of which included the Governor’s proposed appropriations (see NY Const, art VII, §§ 2, 3). Thereafter, the Legislature took various actions with respect to the Governor’s appropriation bills, not at issue here, such as striking out or reducing certain items or adding separate new items of appropriation (see NY Const, art VII, § 4). Ultimately, the Legislature approved each of the Governor’s appropriation bills.

Notwithstanding its approval of his appropriation bills, the Legislature amended three of the Governor’s so-called “non-[103]*103appropriation bills” in ways that had the effect of modifying some of the Governor’s appropriations by reallocating or itemizing such appropriations, or conditioning them on subsequent legislative action.1 The Legislature accomplished this by inserting language in the non-appropriation bills that cross-referenced the Governor’s items of appropriation in his appropriation bills, and then adding the modifying or conditional language.

The Legislature’s actions are illustrated by two examples. First, the Governor proposed a $180 million appropriation for the Department of Correctional Services for “the development of a new 750 cell maximum security facility to be located in the county of Franklin.” Incorporating the language of this appropriation into a non-appropriation bill verbatim, the Legislature added the condition that “no funds shall be available for the purpose of such appropriation from any source until a subsequent chapter of the laws of 1998 is enacted which allocates and authorizes the disbursement of such funds.” Second, the Governor proposed a $17 million lump-sum appropriation for the Office of Real Property Services to be used for local administration of the STAR tax relief program. The Legislature, by the same method of cross-referencing the Governor’s item of appropriation and adding modifications to it in a non-appropriation bill, segregated the lump-sum appropriation and directed that certain amounts be made available to specific entities for express purposes.

With respect to these legislative amendments and the 53 others that altered the Governor’s appropriations in similar fashion, the Governor struck these amendments by exercising his line-item veto pursuant to article iy § 7 of the State Constitution.2

In June 1998, plaintiff Sheldon Silver, the Speaker of the New York State Assembly, commenced the instant action challenging the Governor’s use of the line-item veto against the 55 amendments that do not themselves constitute items of appropriation. Litigation ensued over the Governor’s challenge to the Speaker’s standing and capacity to sue, which resulted in a July 2001 Court of Appeals ruling in the Speaker’s favor (see Silver v Pataki, 96 NY2d 532 [2001]).

[104]*104Upon conclusion of the appellate proceedings, both parties moved for summary judgment in Supreme Court, relying on two key provisions of our State Constitution. Plaintiffs argued that under article iy § 7 of the Constitution, the Governor may only exercise his line-item veto against “items of appropriation of money,” which, according to the Speaker, does not include amendments to non-appropriation bills. Article iy § 7 states in pertinent part: “If any bill presented to the governor contain several items of appropriation of money, the governor may object to one or more of such items while approving of the other portion of the bill” (emphasis added).

For his part, the Governor relies on what has come to be known as the “non-alteration” provision in article VII, § 4 of the Constitution, which restricts the power of the Legislature to alter an appropriation bill submitted by the Governor to three specified circumstances. Section 4 provides:

“The legislature may not alter an appropriation bill submitted by the governor except to strike out or reduce items therein, but it may add thereto items of appropriation provided that such additions are stated separately and distinctly from the original items of the bill and refer each to a single object or purpose.”

In the order appealed from, the motion court granted the Governor’s motion for summary judgment and declared that the provisions he line-item vetoed were unconstitutionally enacted by the Legislature and, thus, were void. The court reasoned that since the legislative amendments altered “when, how or where” the appropriated money could be spent, they were part of the Governor’s “items of appropriation,” and therefore were subject to the no-alteration restriction of article VII, § 4. The court stated that “[b]y inserting these [alterations] that affect appropriations in bills that do not appropriate money, but which refer to bills that do appropriate money, the Legislature impermissibly attempted to do indirectly that which could not be done directly.” (192 Misc 2d 117, 126 [2002].) It also held that in light of its determination that the vetoed provisions were not constitutionally adopted, there was no need to determine whether the items were unconstitutionally vetoed.

On appeal, the Speaker and the New York State Senate (Senate) argue that the Governor’s line-item veto power is limited by the Constitution to “items of appropriation of money,” and that the legislative amendments of the non-appropriation bills [105]*105at issue here do not fall within that definition.3 In addition, they assert that the non-alteration provision of article VII, § 4 does not restrict the Legislature from altering the Governor’s non-appropriation bills, and therefore the provisions at issue were constitutionally enacted. Finally, they claim that the court erroneously failed to mle on the main issue in this case, namely, the constitutionality of the Governor’s line-item vetoes. We disagree with each of these contentions and affirm the order on appeal.

The present dispute between the executive and legislative branches is the latest in the ongoing process by which they seek to define their respective budgetary powers under the Constitution. In our tripartite form of government, it is the judicial branch that has the constitutional obligation and duty, by interpreting the intent of the framers, to define the respective powers of the legislative and executive branches in the budget process (see Saxton v Carey,

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Bluebook (online)
3 A.D.3d 101, 769 N.Y.S.2d 518, 2003 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silver-v-pataki-nyappdiv-2003.