White v. ARK. CAPITAL CORPORATION/DIAMOND

226 S.W.3d 825
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 2, 2006
Docket05-337
StatusPublished

This text of 226 S.W.3d 825 (White v. ARK. CAPITAL CORPORATION/DIAMOND) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. ARK. CAPITAL CORPORATION/DIAMOND, 226 S.W.3d 825 (Ark. 2006).

Opinion

226 S.W.3d 825 (2006)

Robert WHITE, Appellant,
v.
ARKANSAS CAPITAL CORPORATION/DIAMOND STATE VENTURES, The City of Fort Smith, Arkansas, Jefferson County Minority Business Owners Association, Richard A. Weiss, Individually and in His Official Capacity as Director of the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration, Jimmie Lou Fisher, In Her Official Capacity as Arkansas State Treasurer, The Economic Development of Arkansas Fund Commission, and Raymond Heern, Richard L. Mays, Hayes C. McClerkin, Merle F. Peterson, James C. Pledger, Emon Mahoney, Individually and in their Official Capacities as Members of the Economic Development of Arkansas Fund Commission, Appellee.

No. 05-337.

Supreme Court of Arkansas.

February 2, 2006.

*826 Oscar Stilley, Fort Smith, for appellant.

Mike Beebe, Att'y Gen., by: Patricia Van Ausdall Bell, Ass't Att'y Gen., Little Rock, for appellees Gus Wingfield, The Economic Development Fund Commission, Raymon Heern, Richard Mays, Hayes McClerkin, Merle Peterson, James Pledger, and Emon Mahoney.

Rose Law Firm, a Professional Association, by: Stephen N. Joiner, Little Rock, for appellee Arkansas Capital Corporation and Diamond State Ventures.

Jessica C. McGhee and William E. Keadle, Little Rock, for appellee Richard A. Weiss, individually and in his official capacity as Director of the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration.

ANNABELLE CLINTON IMBER, Justice.

Laura Cullen, on behalf of herself and all other taxpayers similarly situated, filed a lawsuit in Pulaski County Chancery Court[1] to challenge certain appropriation bills adopted by the General Assembly of *827 1997.[2] The first amended complaint was filed August 26, 1999, and named the following defendants: Arkansas State Capital Corporation/Diamond State Ventures; Jefferson County Minority Business Owners Association; Economic Development of Arkansas Fund Commission; City of Fort Smith; Richard Weiss, individually and in his official capacity as Director of the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration (DF & A); Jimmie Lou Fisher as Treasurer of the State of Arkansas; Raymond Heern, Richard L. Mays, Hays C. McClerkin, Merle F. Peterson, James C. Pledger, and Emon Mahony, individually and in their official capacities as members of the Economic Development of Arkansas Fund Commission (hereinafter referred to as Appellees), and Bill J. Blankenship, Robert J. Jones, John Kincannon, Albert E. Qualls, Bobby G. Wood, and Sally Kibler, individually and in their official capacities as members of the Commission on Institutional and Community Development, and the Commission on Institutional and Community Development.[3] The complaint alleged in relevant part:

• The Economic Development of Arkansas Fund Commission, established pursuant to Ark.Code Ann. § 26-59-122 and Ark.Code Ann. § 19-6-472, is a flagrant attempt to bypass the constitutional requirement that no money be drawn from the treasury except by specific appropriation, as required by Arkansas Constitution Article 5, Section 29, and the constitutional requirement that all appropriations save the general appropriation bill be made by separate bill, each embracing but one subject, as required by Arkansas Constitution Article 5, Section 30.
• The Arkansas General Assembly unlawfully delegated its constitutional authority to appropriate money by the enactment of Ark.Code Ann. § 26-59-122, Ark.Code Ann. § 19-6-472, and Act 413 of 1997, which appropriated $15,000,000 to the DF & A disbursing officer to be payable from the Economic Development of Arkansas Fund, for economic development and enhancement in the State of Arkansas.
• Pursuant to the claimed authority of Act 413 of 1997, the DF & A, by and through its director Richard Weiss, paid over to Arkansas Capital Corporation/Diamond State Ventures the sum of $300,000 out of the State Treasury, as a grant of taxpayers' dollars. Within the grant application by Arkansas Capital Corporation, the principals thereof declared that all of the corporation assets would be paid over to the Arkansas Treasury in the event of dissolution. By appropriating public monies to Arkansas Capital Corporation, a private, for profit corporation, and by making the State of Arkansas financially interested in that corporation, the General Assembly violated Article 12, Section 7 of the Arkansas Constitution.
• Act 413 of 1997 is illegal because it is in essence a grant of state money to Richard Weiss and the members of the Economic Development of Arkansas Fund Commission with disbursement to unidentified persons or entities left to their discretion.
• Article 16, Section 3 of the Arkansas Constitution provides penalties for the *828 use of public monies for any purpose not authorized by law.
• The payment of money to Arkansas Capital Corporation, made pursuant to an unconstitutional delegation of the Arkansas General Assembly's constitutional authority to appropriate money, constitutes an illegal exaction from the named Plaintiff and all other Arkansas taxpayers. The court should therefore order said monies returned to the State Treasury.
• Jefferson County Minority Business Owners Association applied for and received the sum of $250,000 from the Economic Development of Arkansas Fund.
• The disbursement of funds to Jefferson County Minority Business Owners Association constitutes a flagrant attempt to bypass the constitutional requirement that no money be drawn from the treasury except by specific appropriation, as required by Arkansas Constitution Article 5, Section 29, and the constitutional requirement that all appropriations save the general appropriation bill be made by separate bill, each embracing but one subject, as required by Arkansas Constitution Article 5, Section 30.
• The payment of money to Jefferson County Minority Business Owners Association, made pursuant to an unconstitutional delegation of Arkansas General Assembly's constitutional authority to appropriate money, constitutes an illegal exaction from the named Plaintiff and all other Arkansas taxpayers. The court should therefore order said monies returned to the State Treasury.
• The Economic Development of Arkansas Fund Commission and DF & A Director Richard Weiss, together with the State Treasurer, have under the auspices of Act 413 of 1997, and pursuant to warrant number 0272383, paid out to the City of Fort Smith the sum of $500,000, for certain infrastructure improvements within said city.
• No specific appropriation of these funds was made by the Arkansas General Assembly; rather, the General Assembly, as previously stated herein, sought to impermissibly delegate the powers of specific appropriation to certain individuals and groups of individuals.
• In addition to the lack of specific appropriation, such a grant to a specific city would also constitute a special and local act and appropriation, in violation of Amendment 14 to the Arkansas Constitution. The payment of said funds therefore constitutes an illegal exaction from the named Plaintiff and all other Arkansas taxpayers.

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White v. Arkansas Capital Corp./Diamond State Ventures
226 S.W.3d 825 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W.3d 825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-ark-capital-corporationdiamond-ark-2006.