Silver v. Pataki
Silver v. Pataki
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). While I recognize the significance of the constitutional question raised in this action, the procedural issues before this Court must first be addressed, that is: whether plaintiff Sheldon Silver, as Speaker of the New York Assembly or as a Member of the Assembly, has the legal capacity or standing to bring an action challenging the Governor’s use of line-item vetoes in connection with certain budget bills passed by the Legislature. Because I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that plaintiff has such capacity or standing, I respectfully dissent and would affirm the dismissal of plaintiff’s complaint.
The sole cause of action asserted in the complaint is that, “[i]n complete contravention of the limitations on the Governor’s line-item veto authority as set forth in Article IV, § 7 of the Constitution, the Governor has unconstitutionally asserted a line-item veto to eliminate provisions in Non-Appropriation
In determining capacity to sue under these circumstances, the requisite inquiry is whether an elected representative serving in one house of the Legislature possesses express or inherent authority to commence an action of this nature. An analysis of capacity to sue involves a litigant’s ability to initiate judicial review of a grievance. In Community Bd. 7 v Schaffer (84 NY2d 148, 155), this Court explained that capacity, a legal concept distinct from standing or justiciability, “concerns a litigant’s power to appear and bring its grievance before the court” which “sometimes depends purely upon a litigant’s status.” Capacity ensures that rights sought to be vindicated in court will be asserted by a party legally entitled to enforce such rights. Here, I find that this dispute essentially involves the extent to which powers are to be shared by the two branches of government in the development of the State budget and whether the Governor unlawfully disturbed the constitutional balance of power by exceeding his line-item veto authority with respect to particular budget legislation. I therefore conclude this is clearly an institutional claim.
There is no question that the State Legislature, the representative branch of government, can exercise only those pow
The majority’s discussion of capacity is focused on whether an individual legislator is vested with authority to challenge Executive action after passage of budget legislation. Certainly, there is no explicit constitutional pronouncement authorizing a legislator to commence such a lawsuit. Similarly, the Legislative Law, enacted to govern the affairs of the legislative branch (see, L 1909, ch 37), also provides no guidance since it primarily addresses the organization and administrative structure of the Legislature. And although article III, § 9 of the State Constitution permits each house to “determine the rules of its own proceedings,” the Rules of the Assembly for 1997-1998 contain no reference to the legal authority of a legislator to initiate litigation related to the performance of official duties or the protection of law-making functions.
Where, as here, there is no explicit authority to sue, the next step in capacity analysis is whether an inherent right has been or should be recognized which vests New York’s 211 State legislators with the authority to individually redress this type of institutional grievance. The majority finds such implied authority arising from the official’s general legislative duties and holds that a legislator’s vote on behalf of constituents would be rendered “meaningless” unless each legislator is vested with the capacity to prevent the nullification of his or her vote cast in support of the passage of a bill. Because plaintiffs claim is premised on an allegation that a “wrong” was committed against the collective will of the Assembly, I cannot adopt the majority’s viewpoint. In the absence of some collective authorization — either by statute, Assembly resolution or otherwise — there is no legal basis to find an individual legislator has the capacity to seek vindication for such alleged institutional harm.
Additionally, I conclude that plaintiff lacks standing as a Member of the Assembly to bring this action. In Matter of Posner v Rockefeller (26 NY2d 970), this Court held that three Members of the Assembly lacked standing to bring a suit challenging, on constitutional grounds, the validity of portions of appropriation bills. In addition to determining that plaintiffs lacked citizen-taxpayer standing (a ground not asserted in this
I rely on the discussion of standing considerations in Society of Plastics Indus. v County of Suffolk (77 NY2d 761, 771-775) where this Court emphasized that the focus of a standing inquiry is whether the party bringing suit is the proper party to request the adjudication of a particular dispute. The pivotal concerns in a standing controversy are what type of injury is being asserted and by whom. Here, I find no basis for empowering plaintiff to redress what resonates as an institutional injury, particularly where he has not pursued this litigation under the color of a resolution authorizing him as Speaker of the Assembly to commence this action on behalf of that legislative body.
While this Court has recognized that the judiciary may “ ‘resolve disputes concerning the scope of that authority which is granted by the Constitution to the other two branches of the government’” (Matter of King v Cuomo, 81 NY2d 247, 251, quoting Saxton v Carey, 44 NY2d 545, 551), to date, this power has been exercised only when a legislator has been deprived of the ability to perform a legislative function or to enforce a constitutional obligation integral to his or her legislative duties (see, e.g., Anderson v Regan, 53 NY2d 356 [whether Legislature entitled to appropriate certain federal funds before disbursement]; Winner v Cuomo, 176 AD2d 60 [Governor’s failure to submit budget bills to Legislature within constitutionally prescribed time period]; Matter of Sullivan v Seibert, 70 AD2d 975 [failure of Executive agencies to comply with statutory requirement for the filing of annual reports with the Legislature]). There is no allegation in this case that the Executive took any action which prevented plaintiff from discharging his legislative duties as a Member of the Assembly. Insofar, as an allegation of vote nullification can be gleaned from this record, plaintiffs vote was no more “nullified” than it would be if a
Coleman v Miller (307 US 433) does not direct otherwise. In 1925, the Kansas Senate adopted a resolution to ratify an amendment to the Federal Constitution by a 20-20 vote, with the Lieutenant Governor casting the deciding vote in favor of passage. Twenty State Senators commenced an action seeking a ruling prohibiting the Kansas Secretary of State from authenticating the resolution. The Supreme Court of Kansas denied the relief and the United States Supreme Court granted certiorari. On the issue of whether the state officials had a sufficient legal interest to establish standing, the Court concluded “that at least the twenty senators whose votes, if their contention were sustained, would have been sufficient to defeat the resolution ratifying the proposed constitutional amendment, have an interest in the controversy which, treated by the state court as a basis for entertaining and deciding the federal questions, is sufficient to give the Court jurisdiction to review that decision” (id., at 446). Those 20 Senators constituted a voting bloc; the action was not brought by one Senator purporting to vindicate the interests of the entire voting bloc.
More recently, the United States Supreme Court held in Raines v Byrd (521 US 811, 816) that six Members of Congress who voted against the Line Item Veto Act lacked standing to pursue a complaint alleging, in part, that the Act was unconstitutional because it “alter[ed] the legal and practical effect of all votes they may cast on bills containing such separately vetoable items.” In rejecting the claim of standing, the Court stated:
*547 “First, appellees have not been singled out for specially unfavorable treatment as opposed to other Members of their respective bodies. Their claim is that the Act causes a type of institutional injury (the diminution of legislative power), which necessarily damages all Members of Congress and both Houses of Congress equally. * * * Second, appellees do not claim that they have been deprived of something to which they personally are entitled— such as their seats as Members of Congress after their constituents had elected them. Rather, appellees’ claim of standing is based on a loss of political power, not loss of any private right, which would make the injury more concrete” (id., at 821 [emphasis in original]; see also, Clinton v City of New York, 524 US 417, 430).
The Court noted that the Coleman Court had “repeatedly emphasized that if these legislators (who were suing as a bloc) were correct on the merits, then their votes not to ratify the amendment were deprived of all validity” (Raines v Byrd, 521 US, at 822), and indicated Coleman stood “for the proposition that legislators whose votes would have been sufficient to defeat (or enact) a specific legislative Act have standing to sue if that legislative action goes into effect (or does not go into effect), on the ground that their votes have been completely nullified” (id., at 823).
Here, plaintiff is a single legislator and he seeks to proceed in the absence of authorization from the Assembly to act on behalf of the voting bloc in that body. I would adopt a rationale similar to that of Raines: the usurpation of legislative authority alleged in the complaint represents an institutional harm and any vote nullification claim must be asserted by a sufficient voting bloc or by the institution itself.
Concluding plaintiff lacks capacity or standing as a Member of the Assembly, I would affirm the judgment dismissing the complaint.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Smith, Levine, Ciparick, Wesley and Rosenblatt concur in Per Curiam opinion; Judge Graffeo dissents and votes to affirm in a separate opinion.
Order modified, etc.
Opinion of the Court
OPINION OF THE COURT
In January 1998, defendant Governor George E. Pataki submitted his Executive budget to the houses of the New York State Legislature, along with several budget bills. Some of the bills submitted appropriated monies while others detailed the utilization of appropriated funds or proposed changes in the operation of certain programs. After public hearings and internal negotiations between houses, the Legislature passed and transmitted to the Governor six appropriation bills and three “non-appropriation” bills,
Plaintiff — as “Member and Speaker, New York State Assembly”
Supreme Court denied the Governor’s motion to dismiss, rejecting his claim that plaintiff lacks standing and legal capacity to bring the action. A majority at the Appellate Division re
Our current Executive budget system is embodied in article VII of the New York Constitution. Each Executive department must initially furnish the Governor with financial estimates, that are also supplied to relevant legislative committees, and upon which budget hearings are then held (see, NY Const, art VII, § 1). Itemized estimates of the financial needs of the Legislature and Judiciary are also transmitted to the Governor. Thereafter, the Governor must submit, along with the budget, a bill or bills containing all of the proposed appropriations and related legislation (see, id,., §§ 2, 3). The action that the Legislature can take on the Governor’s budget bills is limited to striking out or reducing “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” (id., §4). However, any separate items of appropriation added to the Governor’s bills by the Legislature are subject to the line-item veto power of article IV, § 7 (see, id.).
The budget process has been the subject of prior legal skirmishes between the Governor and the Legislature (see, e.g., New York State Bankers Assn. v Wetzler, 81 NY2d 98; People v Tremaine, 281 NY 1 [Tremaine II]; People v Tremaine, 252 NY 27 [Tremaine I]). The present appeal calls upon us to determine only a limited threshold issue: does Mr. Silver, as a Member or Speaker of the Assembly, have capacity and standing to bring this action?
As a Member of the Assembly, plaintiff is entrusted by the Constitution to exercise legislative power (see, NY Const, art III, §§ 1, 2). “[Ejxcept as restrained by the constitution, the legislative power is untrammeled and supreme * * *. Nothing is subtracted from the sum of legislative power, except that which is expressly or by necessary implication withdrawn” (Matter of Thirty-Fourth St. Ry. Co., 102 NY 343, 350-351). Plaintiff has the broad power and functional responsibility to consider and vote on legislation. That responsibility necessarily includes continuing concern for protecting the integrity of one’s votes and implies the power to challenge in court the effectiveness of a vote that has allegedly been unconstitutionally nullified.
Individual legislators have several times in the past challenged the frustration of their authority (see, e.g., Anderson v Regan, 53 NY2d 356 [two Senators brought action against State Comptroller over dispute whether Federal funds must be appropriated by the Legislature prior to disbursement by the Executive department]; Winner v Cuomo, 176 AD2d 60 [three Assembly Members challenged Governor’s untimely submission of budget bills to Legislature]; Matter of Sullivan v Seibert, 70 AD2d 975 [Assembly Member commenced action to compel heads of Executive departments to make timely annual reports to the Legislature as required by statute]). Indeed, legislators and the districts they represent could be disenfranchised from the constitutionally mandated budget process if
We reject the notion that plaintiffs functional responsibilities as a legislator are at an end once a bill is voted upon and leaves the Assembly. Such a narrow view could render a1 legislator’s vote meaningless and unnecessarily dilute one’s legislative responsibilities. A legislator surely would have the capacity to sue if prevented from casting a meaningful vote on legislation at the outset (see, e.g., Winner v Cuomo, supra). We see no principled basis for distinguishing between a legislator’s pre-vote and post-vote interests in the validity and effectiveness of that vote. A procedure that nullifies a legislator’s vote is as harmful as one that precludes it. In each case, the legislator and the thousands of New Yorkers he or she represents are unlawfully precluded from participating in the governmental process. Thus, Mr. Silver does have capacity to sue as a Member of the Assembly.
The Speaker also asserts that as leader of the Assembly, he has the inherent capacity to sue on its behalf. The Constitution, however, does not give the Speaker representative authority for the body over which he presides. Nor has the Assembly passed a resolution expressing its will that the Speaker engage in this litigation.
The Assembly Speaker is nominally a constitutional officer (NY Const, art III, § 9), but his express statutory powers are circumscribed (see, e.g., Legislative Law §§ 7, 12 [appointment of employees and expenditure authorizations]). Other duties are merely administrative, and include preserving order and decorum, appointing committee members and chairpersons, allocating staff, administering internal rules, and promulgating a budget adoption schedule (see, Rules of Assembly of State of NY, 1997-1998, rule I). None of these specific responsibilities are broad enough to confer on the Speaker any special implied authority to seek judicial review on behalf of the interests of the Assembly in general. Accordingly, as Speaker, plaintiff has no special authority to maintain .this action.
Having concluded that plaintiff has capacity to bring this action as a Member of the Assembly, we next address the related question whether plaintiff has suffered an injury in fact sufficient to confer standing on him. We conclude that he has.
Cases considering legislator standing generally fall into one of three categories: lost political battles, nullification of votes and usurpation of power. Only circumstances presented by the latter two categories confer legislator standing (see, e.g., Coleman v Miller, 307 US 433 [vote nullification]; Dodak v State Admin. Bd., 441 Mich 547, 495 NW2d 539 [usurpation of power belonging to legislative body]; cf., Raines v Byrd, 521 US 811 [no standing to challenge lost vote]; Matter of Posner v Rockefeller, 26 NY2d 970 [same]).
Plaintiff identifies two types of injury — one suffered by the Legislature as a whole and the other involving the nullification of his vote.
Here, plaintiff as a Member of the Assembly won the legislative battle and now seeks to uphold that legislative victory against a claimed unconstitutional use of the veto power nullifying his vote. If plaintiffs allegations are correct, and at this point in the litigation we must assume they are, the vetoed provisions were improperly invalidated and should be in effect. Such a direct and personal injury is clearly within a legislator’s zone of interest and unquestionably represents a “ ‘concrete and particularized’ ” harm (Raines, supra, 521 US, at 819 [citation omitted]; accord, Dennis v Luis, 741 F2d 628, 630-631 [3d Cir]; Fordice v Bryan, 651 So 2d 998, 1003 [Miss]; Hendrick v Walters, 865 P2d 1232, 1236-1238 [Okla]). As Supreme Court noted, plaintiff is not “seeking to obtain a result in a courtroom which he failed to gain in the halls of the Legislature” (179 Misc 2d 315, 322).
Matter of Posner v Rockefeller (26 NY2d 970, supra) and Raines v Byrd (521 US 811, supra) do not require a different result. In each case, the plaintiff-legislators lost their political battles when legislation was validly enacted over their opposition. No vote nullification was alleged; they suffered no direct, personal injury beyond an abstract institutional harm. Thus, each lacked standing to sue. Indeed, in Raines the United States Supreme Court recognized the continuing vitality of Coleman and acknowledged that the injury suffered by a legislator voting with the majority whose vote is nullified is cognizable by the courts, explaining that “legislators whose votes would have been sufficient to defeat (or enact) a specific legislative Act have standing to sue if that legislative action goes into effect (or does not go into effect), on the ground that their votes have been completely nullified” (521 US, at 823).
Nor is a controlling bloc of legislators (a number sufficient to enact or defeat legislation) a prerequisite to plaintiff’s standing as a Member of the Assembly. The Coleman Court did not rely on the fact that all Senators casting votes against the amendment were plaintiffs in the action (see, Kennedy v Sampson,
The dissent contends that plaintiff did not establish vote nullification because he still had a remedy within the political process — seeking to override the vetoes by a two-thirds supermajority (see, dissenting opn, at 546; NY Const, art IV, § 7). The existence of other possible political remedies, however, does not negate the injury in fact (see, Campbell v Clinton, 52 F Supp 2d 34, 45 n 11 [“The mere availability of a legislative alternative is not sufficient to defeat standing; if it were, a legislator would never have standing since Congress always has the option of impeaching and removing the President” (emphasis in original)], affd 203 F3d 19, cert denied 531 US 815). The supermajority override is a political remedy for validly imposed vetoes. This case, contrary to the dissent’s view, is not about a general dispute over legislative authority or its limitations. It focuses on a discrete and defined event implicating a constitutional restriction on use of the line-item veto power. It does not call upon this Court to enter a political debate — it presents only a straightforward legal question.
Lastly, that other parties may also be aggrieved by some of the Governor’s contested vetoes does not diminish the direct injury suffered by plaintiff, as a Member of the Legislature (see, Clinton v City of New York, 524 US 417, 434 [it is “self-evident” that “more than one party may have standing to challenge a particular action or inaction”]). Indeed, a contrary conclusion could insulate unconstitutional conduct from judicial review.
Contrary to the Appellate Division majority view, our decision today will not open the possibility of countless legislator lawsuits that would impair the legislative process. That has not been the case — only a handful of legislator lawsuits have arisen in this State to date. We announce nothing new today. We only confirm what was assumed before: in limited circumstances, legislators do have capacity and standing to sue when conduct unlawfully interferes with or usurps their duties as legislators.
The parties’ remaining arguments are without merit.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be modified, without costs, by denying defendant’s motion to dismiss the complaint insofar as it is brought by plaintiff as a Member of the New York State Assembly and, as so modified, affirmed.
. The term “non-appropriation” bill is not found in the Constitution. These bills contain programmatic provisions and commonly include sources, schedules and sub-allocations for funding provided by appropriation bills, along with provisions authorizing the disbursement of certain budgeted funds pursuant to subsequent legislative enactment.
. Plaintiff brought this action in his official capacities only, not as a taxpayer under article 7-A of the State Finance Law.
. Although the Appellate Division based part of its analysis on the absence of any express authorization for the reimbursement of legal fees incurred in such an action (274 AD2d 57, 62-63), the propriety of those expenditures is not before us.
. No other jurisdiction in the nation has held that an individual legislator lacks capacity to sue.
. We agree with our dissenting colleague that plaintiffs allegation of injury to the Assembly as a whole, characterized as interference with his ability “to negotiate the Assembly’s priorities and interests in the budget process” (dissenting opn, at 543), at best reflects a political dispute. This type of political harm is no more than an abstract institutional injury that fails to rise to the level of a cognizable injury in fact (see, Raines v Byrd, supra, 521 US, at 821, 829).
. Federal courts continue to recognize Kennedy as an application of the narrow rule announced in Coleman (see, Chenoweth v Clinton, 181 F3d 112, 115 [DC Cir]).
. In the dissent’s view, only “a sufficient voting bloc” of legislators who voted for the bills in question could act as plaintiffs in the absence of a Resolution of the Assembly authorizing a lawsuit (dissenting opn, at 547). Under that analysis, it would seem that all who voted for the bills in question would need to join. Thus, a suit could be blocked by one legislator who chose, for whatever reason, not to join in the litigation. Such a result would place too high a bar on judicial resolution of constitutional claims. However, if a “sufficient voting bloc” is less than all legislators who voted for the bill, the injury cannot be characterized as institutional and must be viewed as personal to those who assert the claim.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Sheldon Silver, as Member and Speaker of the New York State Assembly, Appellant, v. George E. Pataki, as Governor of the State of New York, Respondent
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- 105 cases
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- Published