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NO. COA06-770
NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
Filed: 18 March 2008
CHARLES HEATHERLY; THOMAS
SPAMPINATO; W. EDWARD
GOODALL, JR.; PAUL STAM; WAKE
COUNTY TAXPAYERS
ASSOCIATION; and THE NORTH
CAROLINA FAMILY POLICY COUNCIL,
Plaintiffs,
WILLIS WILLIAMS; NORTH
CAROLINA FAIR SHARE; and NORTH
CAROLINA COMMON SENSE
FOUNDATION,
Plaintiff-Intervenors,
v
.
Wake County
No. 05 CVS 17197
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA;
CHARLES A. SANDERS, BRYAN E.
BEATTY, LINDA CARLISLE, ROBERT
A. FARRIS, JR., JOHN R.
MCARTHUR, JIM WOODWARD, and
ROBERT W. APPLETON, Members of
the North Carolina Lottery Commission,
in their official capacity; NORTH
CAROLINA LOTTERY COMMISSION;
THOMAS N. SHAHEEN, Executive
Director of the North Carolina Education
Lottery, in his official capacity;
MICHAEL F. EASLEY, Governor of the
State of North Carolina, in his official
capacity; RICHARD H. MOORE,
Treasurer of the State of North
Carolina, in his official capacity,
Defendants.
Appeal by plaintiffs from order entered 21 March 2006 by Judge
Henry W. Hight, Jr. in Superior Court, Wake County. Heard in the
Court of Appeals 22 May 2007.
North Carolina Institute for Constitutional Law, by Robert F.Orr and Jeanette Doran Brooks, for plaintiffs-appellants
Charles Heatherly, Thomas Spampinato, W. Edward Goodall, Jr.,
Paul Stam, Wake County Taxpayers Association, and the North
Carolina Family Policy Council.
North Carolina Justice Center, by Jack Holtzman, for
plaintiff_intervenors-appellants Willis Williams and the North
Carolina Common Sense Foundation.
Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Special Deputy Attorneys
General Norma S. Harrell and Ronald M. Marquette, for
defendant-appellee the State of North Carolina.
Maupin Taylor, P.A., by Charles B. Neely, Jr. and Kevin W.
Benedict, for amicus curiae the Tax Foundation.
WYNN, Judge.
To pass constitutional muster, revenue bills must, inter alia,
be read three several times in each house of the General Assembly
and passed three several readings, which readings shall have been
on three different days.
(See footnote 1)
Here, Plaintiffs argue that the trial
court erred in holding that the North Carolina Education Lottery
Act is not a revenue bill and thus was not required to be enacted
under the mandated constitutional procedural requirements. Because
we conclude that the Lottery Act was not a bill enacted to raise
money on the credit of the State, or to pledge the faith of the
State directly or indirectly for the payment of any debt, or to
impose any tax upon the people of the State,
(See footnote 2)
we agree with the
trial court that the Lottery Act does not constitute a revenue
bill.
In December 2005, Plaintiffs Charles Heatherly, ThomasSpampinato, W. Edward Goodall, Jr., Paul Stam, the Wake County
Taxpayers Association, and the North Carolina Family Policy
Council, brought an action under the Uniform Declaratory Judgment
Act challenging the constitutionality of the Lottery Act.
Plaintiffs allege that the Lottery Act violates Article II, Section
23 of the North Carolina Constitution, which requires that all
revenue bills meet certain constitutional mandates in their
enactment into law. Indeed, all parties to the lawsuit agree that
the Lottery Act was not passed in compliance with those
requirements, outlined in Article II, Section 23 of the North
Carolina Constitution, as the Lottery Act did not receive the
requisite three readings on three separate days, nor were the yeas
and nays properly entered. As such, the lawsuit filed by
Plaintiffs turns on the question of whether the Lottery Act is,
indeed, a revenue bill, such that its passage must comply with the
provisions of Article II, Section 23 of the North Carolina
Constitution. Plaintiffs further contend that the Lottery Act
violates Article V, Section 7 of the North Carolina Constitution,
which prohibits the drawing of money from the State treasury except
in consequence of appropriations made by law.
On 30 August 2005, the General Assembly passed the Lottery Act
providing for the creation of the North Carolina State Lottery
Commission (the Lottery Commission):
There is created the North Carolina State
Lottery Commission to establish and oversee
the operation of a Lottery. The Commission
shall be located in the Department of Commerce
for budgetary purposes only; otherwise, the
Commission shall be an independent, self-supporting, and revenue-raising agency of the
State. The Commission shall reimburse other
governmental entities that provide services to
the Commission.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 18C-110 (2005). Governor Michael Easley signed
the Lottery Act into law the following day. Under the Lottery Act,
the State provided ten million dollars to the Lottery Commission
for start-up costs, and the agency began moving forward with hiring
employees, entering into contracts, and engaging in other
activities necessary for the establishment of a lottery.
In addition to the creation of the Lottery Commission, the
Lottery Act established the North Carolina State Lottery Fund as an
enterprise fund within the state treasury, appropriated to the
Commission and may be expended without further action of the
General Assembly for the purposes of operating the Commission and
the lottery games. Id. § 18C-160. Moreover, the Lottery Act
specified the types of revenue income to be deposited into the
North Carolina State Lottery Fund: (1) [a]ll proceeds from the
sale of lottery tickets or shares[;] (2) [t]he funds for initial
start-up costs provided by the State[;] (3) [a]ll other funds
credited or appropriated to the Commission from any source[; and]
(4) [i]nterest earned by the North Carolina State Lottery Fund.
Id. § 18C-161.
The Lottery Act earmarked the proceeds of the lottery to fund
education-related projects. Specifically, the Lottery Act provides
for total annual revenues from the lottery to be allocated in the
following manner, [t]o the extent practicable: at least fifty
percent for prizes to the general public; at least thirty-fivepercent for the Education Lottery Fund; no more than eight percent
for lottery expenses; and no more than seven percent for
compensation paid to lottery game retailers. Id. § 18C-162(a).
The net revenues from the North Carolina State Lottery Fund shall
be transferred periodically to the Education Lottery Fund, which
shall be created in the State treasury. Id. § 18C-164(a). In
turn, the remaining net revenue of the Education Lottery Fund is
designated to support reduction of class size in early grades, to
the Public School Building Capital Fund, and to the State
Educational Assistance Authority to fund college and university
scholarships. Id. § 18C-164(c). Additionally, the Lottery Act
states that, from the Education Lottery Fund, the Commission shall
transfer a sum equal to five percent (5%) of the net revenue of the
prior year to the Education Lottery Reserve Fund[,] which will be
used to make up for any shortfall between actual net revenues and
the amount of funds appropriated by the General Assembly for
projects in a given year. Id. § 18C-164(b), (d), (e).
After the filing of the initial complaint, Plaintiff-
Intervenors Willis Williams and the North Carolina Common Sense
Foundation moved to intervene on 21 December 2005. On 31 December
2005, Plaintiffs moved for a preliminary injunction to enjoin
Defendants from proceeding with implementation of the Lottery Act.
Defendants thereafter filed a motion to dismiss on 18 January 2006.
On 13 February 2006, the trial court allowed the motion to
intervene and heard Plaintiffs and Defendants on the other two
motions. On 15 February 2006, the trial court denied the motionfor preliminary injunction and granted Defendants' motion to
dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be
granted as to Plaintiffs' two counts alleging that the Lottery Act
unconstitutionally created an express tax on residents and non-
residents, respectively.
Following a final hearing, the trial court entered an order on
23 March 2006, dismissing Plaintiffs' claims alleging that the
Lottery Act unconstitutionally raises money on the credit of the
State for the payment of lottery winnings, pledges the faith of the
State for the payment of a debt, and creates an implicit tax, for
failure to state claims upon which relief could be granted. The
trial court also dismissed all of the claims asserted by the
corporate Plaintiffs, namely, Wake County Taxpayers Association,
the North Carolina Family Policy Council, and the North Carolina
Common Sense Foundation, for lack of standing, and assessed the
costs of litigation to Plaintiffs.
Plaintiffs appeal, arguing that the trial court erred by (I)
holding that the Lottery Act was not a revenue bill and thus, did
not constitute legislation within the purview and mandates of
Article II, Section 23 of the North Carolina Constitution; (II)
holding that the corporate plaintiffs Wake County Taxpayers
Association, the North Carolina Family Policy Council, and the
North Carolina Common Sense Foundation lacked standing to prosecute
their claims; and (III) ordering Plaintiffs and Plaintiff-
Intervenors to pay the costs of this litigation.
I.
Plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred by holding that
the Lottery Act was not a revenue bill, such that it was not
required to comply with the requirements of Article II, Section 23
of the North Carolina Constitution. Plaintiffs contend that the
Lottery Act's provisions meet all three fiscal conditions to be
considered a revenue bill under the state Constitution. We
disagree.
The North Carolina Constitution defines revenue bills as those
enacted to raise money on the credit of the State, or to pledge
the faith of the State directly or indirectly for the payment of
any debt, or to impose any tax upon the people of the State, or to
allow the counties, cities, or towns to do so[.] N.C. Const. art.
II, § 23. To pass constitutional muster, such bills must meet
certain procedural requirements, namely:
[Revenue bills] shall have been read three
several times in each house of the General
Assembly and passed three several readings,
which readings shall have been on three
different days, and shall have been agreed to
by each house respectively, and unless the
yeas and nays on the second and third readings
of the bill shall have been entered on the
journal.
Id. Again, all parties to this lawsuit agree that the Lottery Act
did not meet these procedural requirements. We therefore turn to
the question of whether the provisions of the Lottery Act satisfy
the fiscal conditions to define the legislation as a revenue bill.
Raises money on the credit of the State and
Pledges the faith of the State for the payment of a debt
Plaintiffs contend that the Lottery Act raises money on the
credit of the State and pledges the faith of the State for the
payment of a debt because lottery winners are entitled to payment
of their respective winnings from the State. We disagree.
First, we note that the Lottery Act explicitly states that
[a]t least fifty percent (50%) of the total annual revenues [of
the North Carolina State Lottery Fund] . . . shall be returned to
the public in the form of prizes. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 18C-162(a).
The Lottery Act also established the North Carolina State Lottery
Fund as an enterprise fund appropriated to the [Lottery]
Commission and may be expended without further action of the
General Assembly[,] and defined the Lottery Commission as an
independent, self-supporting, and revenue-raising agency[.]
Id.
§§ 18C-110, 160. As such, the Lottery Act by its terms establishes
that the Lottery Commission, not the State, is responsible for
payment of prizes and debts incurred in the course of the
administration of the lottery.
Nevertheless, Plaintiffs assert that the General Assembly
should have limited the liability to pay lottery prizes to the
Lottery Commission and expressly absolved the State from paying
lottery winners. Plaintiffs state in their brief that
[a]dmittedly, the Lottery Act specifies that lottery winners are
to be paid from lottery revenues . . . , but that legislative
directive is irrelevant. We find this argument to be without
merit, as the legislative directive would be determinative of anydirect action by a lottery winner to recover from the State rather
than the Lottery Commission and would reflect that the General
Assembly created a dedicated revenue stream, i.e., the sale of
lottery tickets by the Lottery Commission, to pay prize winners, as
well as a limitation of liability to those revenues.
Further, we see no reason why the sale of lottery tickets
should be considered to be the functional equivalent of the
issuance of state bonds. With the latter, a consumer chooses to
make an investment, essentially loaning money to the State for the
financing of certain projects, in exchange for the guarantee that
the loan will be repaid with interest, either from the treasury (in
the case of general obligation bonds) or from the dedicated revenue
stream in question (in the case of revenue bonds). However, with
the lottery, a consumer chooses to purchase a ticket that promises
only the possibility of winning a cash prize in return. There is
no guarantee of payment or any investment made; the lottery ticket
is a simple purchased good that represents the possibility of
payment. As such, the State is not pledging its faith or credit
for a debt it definitively owes. Accordingly, the two are
materially different and should not be treated in the same manner
under the law.
Moreover, even assuming
arguendo that a lottery ticket is the
functional equivalent of a state bond, tickets would certainly be
considered revenue bonds, which do not pledge the State's credit,
rather than general obligation bonds, which do.
See, e.g.,
North
Carolina State Ports Auth. v. First-Citizens Bank & Trust Co., 242N.C. 416, 424, 88 S.E.2d 109, 114 (1955) ([S]uch revenue bonds do
not constitute 'debts' of the State agency by which they are
issued.) (citing
Brockenbrough v. Board of Water Comm'rs, 134 N.C.
1, 46 S.E. 28 (1903) and
Williamson v. High Point, 213 N.C. 96, 195
S.E. 90 (1938)
). A revenue bond is distinguished from a general
obligation bond because it has both an exclusive, dedicated revenue
stream and a statutory limitation of liability to that revenue
stream.
See generally North Carolina Turnpike Auth. v. Pine
Island, Inc., 265 N.C. 109, 117, 143 S.E.2d 319, 325 (1965)
(holding that a bond issued for the Turnpike Authority was a
revenue bond, not a general obligation bond, because the statute
specified a dedicated revenue stream and a limitation of
liability). As noted above, the Lottery Act likewise meets both
those criteria.
Our Supreme Court has further remarked that, when considering
if the State's faith and credit has been pledged, [w]hat is being
pledged as security is the constitutionally significant factor.
Wayne County Citizens Ass'n for Better Tax Control v. Wayne County
Bd. of Comm'rs, 328 N.C. 24, 31, 399 S.E.2d 311, 316 (1991).
Although that case involved a comparison between general obligation
bonds, wherein the taxing power of the governmental unit is
pledged, and installment purchase contracts, where only the
property improved is pledged[,]
we find instructive the Court's
observation that [t]he possibility that appropriations which might
include income from tax revenues will be used to repay the
indebtedness under the contract is not a constitutionallysignificant factor.
Id. In the instant case, the statute does
not even pledge income from tax revenues; rather, it pledges
only
the revenues raised by the sale of lottery tickets, which is not
constitutionally significant.
We observe, too, that the General Assembly established the
Education Lottery Reserve Fund to make up for shortfalls. Even
more significantly, the number and amount of prizes are determined
by ticket sales and the amount of revenue generated; as such, and
given that prizes are limited to only fifty percent of revenues, it
is difficult to envision a scenario in which the prizes claimed by
winners would ever outstrip the capacity of the Lottery Commission
to pay. Moreover, while the dissent would argue that the phrase
[t]o the extent practicable in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 18C-162(a)(1)
does not limit the State's liability, we believe the General
Assembly's insertion of this phrase was deliberate and should be
taken according to its plain meaning, which is to define and limit
the scope of revenue allocation and liability.
(See footnote 3)
Because the Lottery Act neither pledges the faith of the State
for payment of a debt nor attempts to raise money on the credit of
the State, these assignments of error are overruled.
Creates an implicit tax
According to Plaintiffs, the Lottery Act is an attempt . . .
to raise revenue to defray the necessary governmental expenses of
providing an adequate educational opportunity for all of North
Carolina's children, as required by the State Constitution.
(See footnote 4)
While we agree that the lottery is unquestionably intended and
designed to raise revenue, we find that this purpose does not
transform such revenue into a tax.
We have previously defined a tax as a pecuniary charge or
levy
enforced by government to raise money for the maintenance and
expense of government[.]
North Carolina Assoc. of ABC Bds. v.
Hunt, 76 N.C. App. 290, 292, 332 S.E.2d 693, 694 (emphasis added),
disc. review denied, 314 N.C. 667, 336 S.E.2d 400 (1985).
(See footnote 5)
Morespecifically, a tax [i]s 'a charge' levied and collected as a
contribution to the maintenance of the general government . . . [It
is]
imposed upon the citizens in common at regularly recurring
periods for the purpose of providing a continuous revenue.
State
ex rel. Utilities Comm'n v. Carolina Util. Customers Ass'n, 336
N.C. 657, 683, 446 S.E.2d 332, 347 (1994) (citations and quotation
omitted) (alterations in original) (emphasis added).
Nevertheless, as noted by our Supreme Court, raising revenue
alone is insufficient to meet the definition of a revenue bill:
Revenue bills, as defined by law, are those that
levy taxes in the
strict sense of the word and are not bills for other purposes which
may incidentally create revenue.
Hart v. Board of Comm'rs, 192
N.C. 161, 164, 134 S.E. 403, 404 (1926) (citations omitted)
(emphasis added);
see also Carolina Util. Customers Ass'n, 336 N.C.
at 683, 446 S.E.2d at 347
(noting that the collection of funds is
not a tax if it is not a charge
levied upon the general citizenry
for the general maintenance of the government (emphasis added)).
As such, our Supreme Court has also held that, Tolls are not
taxes. A person uses a toll road at his option; if he does not use
it, he pays no toll. 'Taxes are levied for the support of
government, and
their amount is regulated by its necessities.'
Pine Island, 265 N.C. at 116-17, 143 S.E.2d at 325 (quoting
Ennisv. State Highway Comm'n, 231 Ind. 311, 323, 108 N.E.2d 687, 693
(1952)) (emphasis added).
For purposes of defining what constitutes a tax, we find the
payment of a toll to be analogous to the purchase of a lottery
ticket. In both instances, an individual chooses to engage in a
purely voluntary activity by paying a fee; in neither situation can
the government be said to be levying or enforcing a charge
against citizens. Rather, unlike the compulsory nature of a tax,
a toll and participation in the lottery are activities freely
undertaken by citizens of their own volition.
Moreover, unlike a sales tax, the lottery is not imposed on
consumers as part of each transaction they undertake with
businesses in the State; instead, the Lottery Commission itself is
the business selling the product, a lottery ticket, directly to the
consumer citizen, who chooses to pay for that product. That
citizen - and any other who purchases a ticket - receives the
exclusive benefit of the right to a chance of winning the lottery
prizes, a benefit that is not conferred upon the general population
of the State through the disbursement of state funds. A sales tax,
by contrast, is a cost of conducting business in North Carolina and
is imposed on all members of the general population; it can hardly
be considered to be voluntary under any practical definition of
the term.
Although the General Assembly openly declared that the
purpose of [the Lottery Act] is to establish a State-operated
lottery to generate funds for the public purposes described in thisChapter[,] N.C. Gen. Stat. § 18C-102, namely, the education-
related projects outlined in the Act's provisions, the revenue-
raising purpose of the lottery is not the critical factor in
determining if the Lottery Act imposes a tax. Indeed,
notwithstanding the dissent's focus on the purpose behind the
fee, we note that the purpose behind virtually
any fee is to raise
revenue. Instead, the constitutional language itself answers the
question of whether the Lottery Act meets the definition of a
revenue bill: to
impose any tax. (Emphasis added). Given the
voluntary nature of participation in the lottery, we find that the
Lottery Act does not impose any tax upon the people of the State.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the Lottery Act is
not a revenue bill within the meaning of Article II, Section 23 of
the North Carolina Constitution. Accordingly, we affirm the trial
court's grant of Defendants' motion to dismiss.
II.
Next, Plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred by holding
that the corporate plaintiffs Wake County Taxpayers Association,
the North Carolina Family Policy Council, and the North Carolina
Common Sense Foundation lacked standing to prosecute their claims.
Because we hold that the trial court did not err in finding that
the Lottery Act was not a revenue bill, the question of the
corporate plaintiffs' standing to prosecute their claims is no
longer relevant. We therefore decline to consider this issue.
III.
Finally, Plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred by
ordering Plaintiffs and Plaintiff-Intervenors to pay the costs of
this litigation. We disagree.
In any proceeding under the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act,
the court may make such award of costs as may seem equitable and
just. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-263 (2005). Such a decision is within
a trial court's discretion.
See City of New Bern v. New
Bern-Craven County Bd. of Educ.,
338 N.C. 430, 444, 450 S.E.2d 735,
743 (1994) (It was within the trial court's discretion under this
statute to apportion costs as it deemed equitable.).
A trial
court may be reversed for abuse of discretion only upon a showing
that its actions are manifestly unsupported by reason.
Briley v.
Farabow, 348 N.C. 537, 547, 501 S.E.2d 649, 656 (1998).
Additionally, under longstanding precedent of the North Carolina
courts, if nothing in the record appears to the contrary, we will
presume that the trial court exercised discretion in awarding such
costs.
See, e.g.,
Wooten v. Walters, 110 N.C. 251, 259, 14 S.E.
734, 737 (1892).
In the instant case, the trial court included in the findings
and conclusions of the order that Plaintiffs' allegations were
without merit and should be dismissed, as well as that no
justification has been shown for the delay in initiating this
litigation in December 2005[,] three and a half months after the
passage of the Lottery Act. In that time period, the trial court
found that the Lottery Commission was established and hiredemployees, entered into contracts, collected application fees,
expended large sums of money and engaged in other activities
necessary for the establishment of a lottery. Furthermore, the
trial court noted that the money expended by the Lottery
Commission cannot be unspent[,] the legal position and reliance
of those who entered into contracts with the Lottery Commission
cannot be dimissed[,] a large number of people (notably the
employees of the Lottery Commission) altered their economic, legal
and planning positions in reliance on the Lottery Act[,] and it
is doubtful that lottery employees could return to their former
employment. Perhaps most significantly, the trial court found
that the plaintiffs and plaintiff-intervenors had actual and
constructive knowledge of their claims and of the efforts being
made to implement the Lottery Act prior to the filing of their
respective complaints.
Although Plaintiffs challenge several of these findings of
fact on appeal, they do not dispute the truth of the findings
related to the establishment and activities of the Lottery
Commission; rather, they contend only that the findings are
irrelevant to the legal issues at hand. Nevertheless, we conclude
that the findings bear directly on the question of whether the
trial court employed reason when exercising discretion to assess
costs in this matter. Plaintiffs have failed to make any showing
that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding costs beyondconclusory statements to that effect.
(See footnote 6)
In light of the trial court's findings, as well as the
presumption we accord the trial court that it exercised discretion,
we decline to find an abuse of discretion in ordering Plaintiffs to
bear the costs of this litigation. This assignment of error is
overruled.
Affirmed.
Judge HUNTER concurs.
Judge CALABRIA dissents by separate opinion.
NO. COA06-770
NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
Filed: 18 March 2008
CHARLES HEATHERLY; THOMAS
SPAMPINATO; W. EDWARD
GOODALL, JR.; PAUL STAM; WAKE
COUNTY TAXPAYERS ASSOCIATION;
and THE NORTH CAROLINA FAMILY
POLICY COUNCIL
Petitioners-Appellants, Wake County
No. 05 CVS 17197
WILLIS WILLIAMS; NORTH
CAROLINA FAIR SHARE; and NORTH
CAROLINA COMMON SENSE
FOUNDATION,
Petitioners-Intervenors-Appellants
v
.
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA;
CHARLES A. SANDERS, BRYAN E.
BEATTY, LINDA CARLISLE, ROBERT
A. FARRIS, JR., JOHN R. MCARTHUR,
JIM WOODWARD, and ROBERT W.
APPLETON, Members of the North
Carolina Lottery Commission, in their
official capacity, NORTH CAROLINA
LOTTERY COMMISSION; THOMAS N.
SHAHEEN, Executive Director of the
North Carolina Education Lottery, in his
official capacity; MICHAEL F. EASLEY,
Governor of the State of North Carolina, in
his official capacity; RICHARD H.
MOORE, Treasurer of the State of North
Carolina, in his official capacity,
Respondents-Appellees
CALABRIA, Judge, dissenting.
Since I conclude that the Lottery Act is a revenue bill that
was not passed in accordance with constitutional mandates, I
respectfully dissent from the majority opinion. I further concludethat the trial court abused its discretion in determining
plaintiffs should bear the costs of this action.
I. Revenue Bill
Article II, Section 23 of the North Carolina Constitution
states in pertinent part:
No law shall be enacted to raise money on the
credit of the State, or to pledge the faith of
the State directly or indirectly for the
payment of any debt, or to impose any tax upon
the people of the State, or to allow the
counties, cities, or towns to do so, unless
the bill for the purpose shall have been read
three several times in each house of the
General Assembly and passed three several
readings, which readings shall have been on
three different days, and shall have been
agreed to by each house respectively, and
unless the yeas and nays on the second and
third readings of the bill shall have been
entered on the journal.
N.C. Const. art. II, . 23.
The principles governing constitutional interpretation are
generally the same as those which control in ascertaining the
meaning of all written instruments. Stephenson v. Bartlett, 355
N.C. 354, 370, 562 S.E.2d 377, 389 (2002) (internal quotation marks
omitted) (citations omitted). In determining the will or intent of
the people as expressed in the North Carolina Constitution, all
cognate provisions are to be brought into view in their entirety
and so interpreted as to effectuate the manifest purposes of the
instrument. State ex rel. Martin v. Preston, 325 N.C. 438, 449,
385 S.E.2d 473, 478 (1989) (quoting State v. Emery, 224 N.C. 581,
583, 31 S.E.2d 858, 860 (1944)). If the meaning of the language of
Article II, . 23 is plain, then we must follow it. See Martin v.State of North Carolina, 330 N.C. 412, 416, 410 S.E.2d 474, 476
(1991) (where the meaning is clear from the words used we will not
search for a meaning elsewhere.) (quotation omitted). In the case
sub judice, the language regarding raising money on the credit of
the State, pledging the faith of the State for payment of a debt,
and not imposing a tax is straightforward. Yet, the majority
incorrectly concludes the Lottery Act does not raise money on the
credit of the State, does not pledge the faith of the State for the
payment of a debt, and does not impose a tax, and therefore does
not constitute a revenue bill.
The majority holds that because the Lottery Act establishes
the Lottery Commission as an independent agency and pays prize
winners from the pool of lottery revenues, that the State has not
raised money on its credit or pledged its faith for payment of a
debt. The relevant statutory provision states as follows:
§ 18C-162. Allocation of revenues
(a) To the extent practicable, the Commission
shall allocate revenues to the North Carolina
State Lottery Fund in the following manner:
(1) At least fifty percent (50%) of the total
annual revenues, as described in this Chapter,
shall be returned to the public in the form of
prizes.
N.C. Gen. Stat. . 18C-162(a)(1) (2005) (emphasis supplied).
This provision makes it clear that while the State intends to
pay lottery winners from lottery revenues, it has not expressly
limited its liability to lottery revenues. Thus, although lottery
proceeds are used to pay prize winners to the extent practicable,
there is no statutory provision prohibiting prize winners fromasserting claims against other State funds in the event of a
shortfall of lottery revenues. Id. The majority mistakenly
asserts that a dedicated revenue stream alone is sufficient to
insulate the State's liability to that particular revenue stream,
but such is not the case.
The State's obligations created by the Lottery Act can be
analogized to the sale of state bonds. The State at times finances
projects with revenue bonds backed by a dedicated revenue stream,
as the State has done with the creation of the Lottery Commission.
Revenue bonds are not general obligations of the State when the
State has taken care to limit its liability to the revenue stream
identified to service the debt. See generally Turnpike Authority
v. Pine Island, Inc., 265 N.C. 109, 117, 143 S.E.2d 319, 325
(1965). Here, the State has failed to limit its liability in any
way, although it certainly could have chosen to do so. Such a
limitation of liability would have prevented the Lottery Act from
raising money on the credit of the State or pledging its credit for
the repayment of a debt, and would have successfully circumvented
Art. II, § 23.
By selling lottery tickets, the State is contracting with
purchasers for the opportunity to have a claim for State revenues,
but it has neither dedicated an exclusive revenue stream from which
they are to be paid nor has it limited its liability to such a
revenue stream. As such, a prize winner may assert a claim
generally against the State and thus the State has pledged itscredit for payment of prizes. This fact alone makes the Lottery
Act a revenue bill for purposes of Article II, . 23.
Contrast the language of N.C. Gen. Stat. . 18C-162(a)(1),
which does not require payment from lottery revenues to lottery
winners, with the language enabling the sale of bonds by the North
Carolina Housing Authority, which states:
An authority shall have power to issue bonds
from time to time in its discretion for any of
its corporate purposes. An authority shall
also have power to issue or exchange refunding
bonds for the purpose of paying, retiring,
extending or renewing bonds previously issued
by it. An authority may issue such types of
bonds as it may determine, including (without
limiting the generality of the foregoing)
bonds on which the principal and interest are
payable from income and revenues of the
authority and from grants or contributions
from the federal government or other source.
Such income and revenues securing the bonds
may be:
(1) Exclusively the income and revenues of the
housing project financed in whole or in part
with the proceeds of such bonds;
(2) Exclusively the income and revenues of
certain designated housing projects, whether
or not they are financed in whole or in part
with the proceeds of such bonds; or
(3) The income and revenues of the authority
generally.
Any such bonds may be additionally secured by
a pledge of any income or revenues of the
authority, or a mortgage of any housing
project, projects or other property of the
authority.
Neither the commissioners of an authority nor
any person executing the bonds shall be liable
personally on the bonds by reason of the
issuance thereof. The bonds and other
obligations of an authority (and such bonds
and obligations shall so state in their face)shall not be a debt of any city or
municipality and neither the State nor any
such city or municipality shall be liable
thereon, nor in any event shall such bonds or
obligations be payable out of any funds or
properties other than those of said authority.
The bonds shall not constitute an indebtedness
within the meaning of any constitutional or
statutory debt limitation of the laws of the
State. Bonds may be issued under this Article
notwithstanding any debt or other limitation
prescribed in any statute.
This Article without reference to other
statutes of the State shall constitute full
and complete authority for the authorization,
issuance, delivery and sale of bonds hereunder
and such authorization, issuance, delivery and
sale shall not be subject to any conditions,
restrictions or limitations imposed by any
other law whether general, special or local.
N.C. Gen. Stat. . 157-14 (2005) (emphasis supplied).
The State, in passing the Lottery Act, could have added
similar language to the statute and limited lottery prizes to
lottery revenues. However, it chose not to do so. Absent a
limiting provision, the State has exposed itself to claims against
general funds and thus has pledged the credit of the State of North
Carolina.
In determining that the Lottery Act does not constitute a tax,
the majority incorrectly focuses on the voluntary nature of
purchasing a lottery ticket. This Court has adopted the balancing
approach commonly called the San Juan Cellular test, first
articulated by Judge Breyer of the First Circuit Court of Appeals,
in determining whether a government charge is a fee or tax. See
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Long, 129 N.C. App. 164, 168, 497S.E.2d 451, 453 (1998). In State Farm, this Court specifically
utilized the San Juan Cellular test:
In applying San Juan Cellular to determine
whether a charge is a tax, courts have
developed a three-part test considering (1)
the entity that imposes the assessment; (2)
the parties upon whom the assessment is
imposed; and (3) whether the assessment is
expended for general public purposes, or used
for the regulation or benefit of the parties
upon whom the assessment is imposed.
Id., 129 N.C. App. at 168, 497 S.E.2d at 453-54 (internal quotation
marks omitted) (citations omitted). The majority incorrectly
states that because the Long Court applied the San Juan Cellular
test to determine whether a government charge was a regulatory fee
or tax, the test is largely irrelevant to the case sub judice.
However, our opinion in Long did not restrict the San Juan Cellular
test solely to cases where this Court must determine whether a
charge is a regulatory fee or a tax.
Applying the San Juan Cellular test to the case sub judice
leads to the conclusion that the thirty-five percent assessment is
a tax. First, the General Assembly imposed the assessment, and
such enactments favor the finding of a tax. See id., 129 N.C. App.
at 168, 497 S.E.2d at 454. Second, the assessment is imposed on
every purchaser of lottery tickets. Id. (An assessment imposed
upon a broad class of parties is more likely to be a tax . . . .)
(quoting Bidart Bros. v. California Apple Comm'n, 73 F.3d 925, 931
(9th Cir. 1996)). Third, the purpose of the assessment is to raise
revenue for education programs which is a general public
purpose[]. Id.; see N.C. Gen. Stat. . 18C-102 (2005) (TheGeneral Assembly declares that the purpose of this Chapter is to
establish a State-operated lottery to generate funds . . . .).
Unlike a fee, the assessment does not merely create incidental
revenue used for education. Rather, the revenues generated are
placed in a special state fund unrelated to gambling which
indicates the assessment does not merely create incidental revenue
used for education.
This Court has defined a tax as a pecuniary charge or levy
enforced by government to raise money for the maintenance and
expense of government. N.C. Association of ABC Boards v. Hunt, 76
N.C. App. 290, 292, 332 S.E.2d 693, 694 (1985). The majority
analogizes lottery revenues to toll revenues, which we have held
are not taxes. Turnpike Authority, 265 N.C. at 116-17, 143 S.E.2d
at 325. Likewise, we have held that a surcharge on liquor is not
a tax. N.C. Association of ABC Boards, 76 N.C. App. at 293, 332
S.E.2d at 695. However, in those cases we noted that the surcharge
was a fee and not a tax because the revenue was used to support the
administration and regulation of the facility or product, and was
not used to provide revenue for the maintenance and expense of
government. Id.
The toll revenue and liquor surcharge cases are
distinguishable from the case sub judice because in those cases,
the use of the fees is reasonably related to the facilities
generating the fees. Although the revenue may find its way into
the general fund coffers, the purpose of the facilities is not
primarily to raise general revenues but to provide a service. Assuch, the surplus revenues are incidental to the operation of the
facilities.
As in the toll revenue and liquor surcharge cases, the key
point in the case sub judice is the purpose behind the fee. The
majority focuses on whether a person voluntarily chooses to
purchase a lottery ticket. Yet, it does not matter whether a
person voluntarily chooses to purchase a lottery ticket or
voluntarily chooses to pay a toll. Virtually every purchase is
voluntary and the majority's analysis would convert nearly every
assessment, including a general sales tax, into a fee.
Rather than focusing on the voluntary nature of purchasing a
lottery ticket, the focus must be on the purpose behind the fee.
The purpose of a toll payment is to generate funds to pay for state
highway expenses. However, the purpose of the lottery is to raise
revenues for North Carolina's education fund. As such, the
revenues raised are not incidental to the game nor reasonably
related to the maintenance and operation of the game, but are
central to the game's purpose; therefore the revenues from the
lottery are taxes. The Lottery Act is unconstitutional because it
is a revenue bill and was not passed in accordance with the
constitutional mandates pursuant to Article II, . 23.
The majority opinion correctly states that all parties to the
lawsuit agree that the Lottery Act was not passed in compliance
with the constitutional requirements, outlined in Article II, . 23
of the North Carolina Constitution, as the Lottery Act did not
receive the requisite three readings on three separate days, norwere the yeas and nays properly entered. Neither the trial court
nor the majority opinion propose a solution to an act that is a
legal nullity.
The trial court was faced with a case of first impression.
Therefore, as a practical matter, the trial court found that the
Lottery Commission was established and hired employees, entered
into contracts, collected application fees, expended large sums of
money and engaged in other activities necessary for the
establishment of a lottery. The trial court also noted that the
money expended by the Lottery Commission cannot be unspent[;] the
legal position and reliance of those who entered into contracts
with the Lottery Commission cannot be dismissed[;] a large number
of people (notably the employees of the Lottery Commission) altered
their economic, legal and planning positions in reliance on the
Lottery Act[;] and it is doubtful that lottery employees could
return to their former employment. These are valid concerns, but
they cannot be our only concerns. Constitutionally-mandated
procedures are a concern of the highest order, and they may not be
estopped by a hurry to sell lottery tickets.
If it is our Legislature's will that there be a statewide
lottery, it may gather and pass a measure that is constitutionally
sound. This decision has a 20 day mandate. A twenty day period is
ample time for the Legislature to cure the constitutional defects
in the Lottery Act.
Our State legislators may not skirt our State's constitutional
mandates simply because the Lottery Commission already is anestablished, ongoing business. This is not to suggest the Lottery
Commission should refund or return any money that our State
treasury previously transferred to it, nor to suggest halting the
lottery. While there is nothing in our State's Constitution
prohibiting the enactment of a lottery, such an act must, as all
our laws must, follow constitutional commands.
II. Attorneys' Fees
The majority disagrees with the plaintiffs' contention that
the trial court erred by ordering plaintiffs and plaintiff-
intervenors to pay the costs of this litigation. In affirming the
trial court's award of costs to plaintiffs and plaintiff-
intervenors, the majority cites N.C. Gen. Stat. . 1-263 (2005),
which states, In any proceeding under this article the court may
make such award of costs as may seem equitable and just.
The
trial court's award of costs will not be reversed absent an abuse
of discretion.
See City of New Bern v. New Bern-Craven Co. Bd. of
Educ., 338 N.C. 430, 450 S.E.2d 735 (1994). Specifically, [a]
trial court may be reversed for abuse of discretion only upon a
showing that its actions are manifestly unsupported by reason.
Castle McCulloch,
Inc. v. Freedman, 169 N.C. App. 497, 504, 610
S.E.2d 416, 422 (2005).
In the case
sub judice, the trial court found that plaintiffs'
allegations were without merit and should be dismissed, as well
as that no justification has been shown for the delay in
initiating this litigation in December 2005. I disagree that a
valid constitutional challenge to enacted legislation withmeritorious arguments should be dismissed. More importantly, there
was a justification for the December 2005 litigation.
The trial court found that the plaintiffs and plaintiff-
intervenors had actual or constructive knowledge both of their
claims and of the efforts being made to implement the Lottery Act
prior to the filing of their respective complaints. However, the
trial court's reasoning for imposing costs to plaintiffs because of
their actual or constructive knowledge is wrong. On 17 November
2005, plaintiffs hand delivered letters addressed to the Chairman
of the Lottery Commission, Dr. Charles A. Sanders, State Treasurer,
Richard H. Moore, and Attorney General Roy Cooper. Significantly,
each letter notified the defendants of possible legal action to
challenge the constitutionality of the Lottery Act and demanded
that defendants refrain from carrying out the Lottery Act. On 15
December 2005, less than 30 days after notifying the defendants,
plaintiffs filed suit.
In addition, although plaintiffs may have been generally aware
of the terms of the proposed lottery, they were unaware of its
provisions until its enactment. Because plaintiffs were unaware of
the Lottery Act's specific provisions until the lottery was
implemented, they could not allege a constitutional challenge to
specific sections of the Lottery Act. Moreover, as plaintiffs
note, this case is one of great complexity requiring extensive
research due to multiple issues requiring constitutional
interpretation.
In conclusion, Article II, . 23 is applicable to the Lottery
Act. Imposing costs upon litigants who bring forth important
constitutional challenges to legislation may have a chilling effect
on such challenges in the future. It was not equitable and just
to determine that plaintiffs bear the costs of this action. N.C.
Gen. Stat. . 1-263. The plaintiffs' allegations are meritorious.
The trial court abused its discretion in ordering plaintiffs and
plaintiff-intervenors to pay the costs of litigation. Since there
is no dispute that the Lottery Act was not passed in accordance
with that constitutional provision, it is a legislative nullity.
Therefore, the judgment of the trial court should be reversed.
Footnote: 1 Additionally, although the dissent states that [t]here is
no statutory provision prohibiting prize winners from asserting
claims against other State funds in the event of a shortfall of
lottery revenues[,] neither is there any provision that would
allow a prize winner to assert such a claim against other state
funds. The lottery is operated by a separate entity, the Lottery
Commission, which does have a dedicated revenue stream - ticket
sales - from which it pays prizes. It is unclear under what
legal theory a prize winner could bring a successful claim
against the State for payment out of other state funds.
Footnote: 4 Plaintiffs do not challenge the creation of the lottery
system itself as unconstitutional; instead, Plaintiffs contend
that distributing at least thirty-five percent of the revenues
from the lottery to the Education Lottery Fund constitutes an
unconstitutional tax. Since the establishment of a lottery
system itself is not challenged by Plaintiffs, an ostensible
remedy to Plaintiffs' tax claim would be to strike that part of
the bill directing funds to benefit education.
See, e.g.,
Jackson v. Guilford County Bd. of Adjustment, 275 N.C. 155, 168,
166 S.E.2d 78, 87 (1969) (It is well settled that if valid
provisions of a statute, or ordinance, are separable from invalid
provisions therein, so that if the invalid provisions be stricken
the remainder can stand alone, the valid portions will be given
full effect if that was the legislative intent. (citations
omitted)).
Footnote: 5 The dissent refers to the
San Juan Cellular test, applied
by this Court in
State Farm Mutual Auto Insurance Company v.
Long, 129 N.C. App. 164, 497 S.E.2d 451 (1998),
aff'd per curiam,
350 N.C. 84, 511 S.E.2d 303 (1999), to determine whether a
government charge is a fee or tax. Our opinion in
Long indeed
applied the
San Juan Cellular test to an insurance regulatory
charge to determine if it was a regulatory fee or a tax.
Id. at
168-71, 497 S.E.2d at 453-55. However, the charge imposed in
Long was compulsory, not voluntary, and was imposed by theCommissioner of Insurance, a state agency, as part of the cost of
doing insurance business in North Carolina.
Id. at 164-65, 497
S.E.2d at 451-52. Moreover, we are not considering here whether
the lottery is a regulatory fee or a tax; we are determining only
whether it is a tax. As such, the
San Juan Cellular test is
largely irrelevant to the question at hand.
Footnote: 6 We emphasize again that we review the trial court's
imposition of attorneys' fees for an abuse of discretion. As
such, our agreement or disagreement with its decision is
immaterial; rather, to reverse its ruling, we must conclude that
the trial court had no reasonable basis to support its decision.
Although we - and the dissent - may define what is equitable and
just differently than did the trial court here, we cannot
conclude after reviewing the extensive and thorough findings of
fact and conclusions of law that the trial court employed no
reason in imposing attorneys' fees on Plaintiffs. Accordingly,
the proper application of our standard of review compels that we
find no abuse of discretion.
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