Silver v. Pataki

179 Misc. 2d 315, 684 N.Y.S.2d 858, 1999 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 179 Misc. 2d 315 (Silver v. Pataki) 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
Silver v. Pataki, 179 Misc. 2d 315, 684 N.Y.S.2d 858, 1999 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Edward H. Lehner, J.

The initial issue to be resolved on these motions is whether the plaintiff, as a member and Speaker of the New York State Assembly (the Assembly) has the standing and legal capacity to challenge as unconstitutional the Governor’s line-item veto of certain budget bill provisions.

In January 1998, defendant Governor George E. Pataki (the Governor) submitted an executive budget to the houses of the New York State Legislature (the Legislature) for the fiscal year 1998-1999, as well as numerous budget bills pursuant to article VII of the New York Constitution. Some of said bills approprL ated monies, whereas others detailed the manner in which appropriated monies are to be expended and also proposed changes in the laws concerning the operations of certain governmental programs. When the Governor and the legislative leaders failed to come to an agreement on an over-all budget, the Legislature enacted a series of budget bills which struck out or reduced certain appropriations proposed by the Governor and also added new items of appropriations and directives. In acting on the bills submitted to him, the Governor exercised 55 separate line-item vetoes in bills which plaintiff asserts were “non-appropriation bills”, a term which both parties agree is not in the Constitution.

Thereafter, plaintiff filed this action as a “Member and Speaker, New York State Assembly” (the Speaker), asserting that, while the Governor constitutionally has the right to veto items in an appropriation bill, he has no constitutional right to veto items in “non-appropriation bills”, and that such bills must be either approved or vetoed in their entirety. Consequently, plaintiff seeks a declaration that: “(a) The Governor’s assertion of the line-item veto [in the 55 instances] violates Article IV, § 7 of the Constitution of the State of New York [and that] (b) Legislation relating to the Executive Budget that does not appropriate moneys is not subject to the Governor’s line-item veto power under Article IV, § 7 of the Constitution” (complaint U 90).

[317]*317The Speaker brings this action in his official capacity, specifically declining to sue as a taxpayer under article 7-A of the State Finance Law. The Governor moves to dismiss the complaint pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (2) and (3) based on a claimed lack of standing and legal capacity to bring the action or, in the alternative, to transfer venue to Albany County. Plaintiff cross-moves to convert defendant’s motion to one for summary judgment in his favor.

The issue of standing and capacity to sue must be considered at the outset of any litigation (Matter of Dairylea Coop. v Walkley, 38 NY2d 6, 9 [1975]).

“Standing is a threshold determination, resting in part on policy considerations, that a person should be allowed access to the courts to adjudicate the merits of a particular dispute that satisfies the other justiciability criteria * * * That an issue may be one of ‘vital public concern’ does not entitle a party to standing * * * a litigant must establish its standing in order to seek judicial review * * *

“The burden of establishing standing to raise that claim is on the party seeking review” (Society of Plastics Indus. v County of Suffolk, 77 NY2d 761, 769 [1991]).

“To this essential principle of standing, the courts have added rules of self-restraint, or prudential limitations: a general prohibition on one litigant raising the legal rights of another; a ban on adjudication of generalized grievances more appropriately addressed by the representative branches; and the requirement that the interest or injury asserted fall within the zone of interests protected by the statute invoked” {supra, at 773).

A discussion of the modern concept of standing must start with the Court of Appeals decision in St. Clair v Yonkers Raceway (13 NY2d 72, 76 [1963]), where it stated that “the constitutionality of a State statute may be tested only by one personally aggrieved thereby, and then only if the determination of the grievance requires a determination of constitutionality”, citing Schieffelin v Komfort (212 NY 520, 537 [1914]), which stated “that the courts of this state have denied the right of a citizen and taxpayer to bring before the court for review the acts of another department of government simply because he is one of many such citizens and taxpayers”.

In Matter of Posner v Rockefeller (26 NY2d 970 [1970]), a case heavily relied upon by defendant, three assemblymen sued to invalidate certain appropriation bills passed by the Legisla[318]*318ture and signed by the Governor because the bills consisted in a number of instances of “lump sum” appropriations without the detail required by article VII of the NY Constitution. Relying on St. Clair v Yonkers Raceway (supra) and Matter of Donohue v Cornelius (17 NY2d 390 [1966]) (which followed St. Clair in dealing with a constitutional challenge to an administrative rule), the Court of Appeals dismissed the proceeding for lack of standing “as citizens and taxpayers”, a four-Judge majority adding the following (at 971-972): “Nor does their status as Assemblymen give them the requisite standing to challenge in the judicial branch the validity of appropriation bills submitted by the Governor, and it matters not whether such bills have been passed by the Legislature or were still pending before that body at the time the proceeding was instituted.” Three Judges concurred solely on the constraint of St. Clair, thus disassociating themselves from the above-quoted statement.

The next important case in this area was Boryszewski v Brydges (37 NY2d 361, 362 [1975]), which modified St. Clair (supra) by holding that “a taxpayer has standing to challenge enactments of our State Legislature as contrary to the mandates of our State Constitution”. In that case a taxpayer challenged the constitutionality of both the legislative practice of providing members with an allowance in lieu of expenses (the so-called “lulus”), and certain provisions of the legislative and executive retirement plan. In revising the rules on standing, the Court initially noted that “[i]n other settings in which questions of standing have been posed it has been our disposition to expand rather than to contract the doctrine” (at 363), and then wrote (at 364):

“We are satisfied that the time has now come when the judicially formulated restriction on standing (which we recognize has had a venerable existence) should be modified to bring our State’s practice with respect to review of State legislative action into conformity not only with the practice in the majority of other States but also with the procedural standing of taxpayers to challenge local actions (General Municipal Law, § 51). We are now prepared to recognize standing where, as in the present case, the failure to accord such standing would be in effect to erect an impenetrable barrier to any judicial scrutiny of legislative action. In the present instance it must be considered unlikely that the officials of State government who would otherwise be the only ones having standing to seek review would vigorously attack legislation under which each is or may be a personal beneficiary * * *

[319]

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Bluebook (online)
179 Misc. 2d 315, 684 N.Y.S.2d 858, 1999 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silver-v-pataki-nysupct-1999.