From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Taxpayer Protection v. Unfair Tax Schemes

Supreme Court of Arizona
Jan 10, 2001
199 Ariz. 180 (Ariz. 2001)

Summary

holding that court has no authority to sever sections of a proposed amendment to the constitution

Summary of this case from Clean Elections Institute, Inc. v. Brewer

Opinion

Supreme Court No. CV-00-0300-AP/EL

Filed January 10, 2001.

Appeal from the Superior Court of Arizona in Maricopa County, The Honorable Jeffrey S. Cates, Maricopa County Superior Court No. CV 2000-012971.

AFFIRMED

Norton Frickey, P.C. by Robert B. Carey, Phoenix, Attorneys for Taxpayer Protection Alliance, Richard Mahoney, Chairman; Jeffery Singer Treasurer; and Lori Klein.

Lewis and Roca LLP, by John P. Frank and Richard A. Halloran and Randal T. Evans, Attorneys for Arizonans Against Unfair Tax Schemes, Billy E. Shields, Kevin McCarthy, and Jacque Steiner Phoenix.

Janet Napolitano, The Attorney General, by Thomas I. McClory, Assistant Attorney General, by Mark Wilson, Assistant Attorney General, Attoneys for Betsy Bayless, Secretary of State Phoenix.

Janet Napolitano, The Attorney General, by Scott Bales, Solicitor General, Amicus Curiae Phoenix.


OPINION


¶ 1 Appellants bring this appeal from the superior court's order removing Proposition 107, a citizen-proposed initiative, from the ballot because the proposition failed to conform to the single-subject requirement of Article XXI of the Arizona Constitution. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) section 19-122.C, we affirmed the superior court's decision by Order of August 31, 2000, with this opinion to follow.

¶ 2 The Arizona Constitution requires that "[i]f more than one proposed amendment shall be submitted at any election, such proposed amendments shall be submitted in such a manner that the electors may vote for or against such proposed amendments separately." ARIZ. CONST. art. XXI, § 1. In applying this constitutional requirement, "[w]e consistently have examined initiatives challenged under the single-subject rule to determine whether their provisions are sufficiently related to a common purpose or principle that the proposal can be said to `constitute a consistent and workable whole on the general topic embraced,' that, `logically speaking, . . . should stand or fall as a whole.'" Korte v. Bayless, No. CV-00-0308-AP/EL, slip. op. at ¶ 10 (Ariz.Sup.Ct. Jan. 10, 2001) (quoting Kerby v. Luhrs, 44 Ariz. 208, 221, 36 P.2d 549, 554 (1934)).

¶ 3 Proposition 107 contains three proposals. First, the proposition would amend Article IX, Section 12 of the Arizona Constitution, which gives to the legislature the power to levy and collect various fees and taxes, including the state income tax. Section 3 of Proposition 107 forbids the taxation of any income of an individual, corporation, partnership or other legal entity after January 1, 2005. Second, the proposition amends Article IX, Section 22 of the Arizona Constitution, which articulates the legislative process required to increase state revenues. Section of Proposition 107 deems legislative acts resulting in a net increase in state revenue only preliminarily effective upon adoption by the legislature and signature of the Governor. At this point, any such act would be referred to the voters at the next general election and would become effective only if approved by a majority of voters. Third, section 5 of the proposition adds a new section to Article VII of the Arizona Constitution. Section 5 allows candidates seeking the office of President or United States Senator or Representative from this state to file a "federal income tax elimination pledge." The proposition defines the text of the pledge and requires election officials to identify on the ballot those candidates who have signed the pledge. The appellants contend the provisions of the initiative relate to the single subject of taxation and that each proposal plays an integral part in accomplishing the goal of relieving the burden of the tax system.

¶ 4 To decide whether a proposed initiative complies with the single-subject rule, we apply neither an overly expansive nor a severely restrictive test. See Korte, slip op. ¶ 10. Instead, we consider objective factors, such as facial relationship, placement within a single section of the constitution, qualitative similarity, historical treatment, and the reaction of reasonable voters, that help us determine whether the various provisions of a proposal further a common purpose or objective. Id. ¶ 11.

¶ 5 The appellees argue that section 4 alone violates the single-subject requirement because it applies to any net increase in state revenues, and encompasses not only state income taxes but also all taxes and fees set by the legislature. As a result, if section 4 were adopted, the legislature could not increase any of the numerous license fees now set by the legislature, without approval from the public. The appellees argue that the term "single-subject" cannot be so broad as to include both provisions that eliminate the state income tax and provisions that affect license fees completely unrelated to the income tax. The appellants, however, assert that the subjects of taxes and fees constitute a single subject because a single section of the Arizona Constitution, added by Proposition 108 in 1992, addresses both topics. See ARIZ. CONST. art. XI, § 22.

See, e.g., ARIZ. REV. STAT. (A.R.S.) § 28-3002 (2000) (setting driver's license fees); A.R.S. § 32-328 (2000) (setting barber license application and license fees); A.R.S. § 32-2132 (2000) (setting real estate broker examination and license fees).

¶ 6 We need not decide, however, whether an initiative that affects both taxes and fees would comply with the single-subject requirement, for section 5 is so distinct from either section 3 or section 4 and from appellants' proposed common purpose that the proposition cannot be said to "constitute a consistent and workable whole on the general topic embraced." Korte, slip op. ¶ 10. Requiring ballots to disclose whether candidates for federal office have signed a pledge to eliminate federal income taxes is unrelated either to eliminating the state income tax or to requiring public approval of proposals to increase state revenues. Neither logic nor reason suggests that section 5 should stand or fall as a whole with sections 3 and 4. See id.

¶ 7 The appellants also argue that, if the various proposals included in Proposition 107 cannot be combined, this court should somehow sever sections 3, 4, and 5, and allow each to appear on the ballot as a separate initiative. The Arizona Constitution, however, gives us no authority to adopt such an extraordinary measure. The Constitution describes how initiative petitions must be circulated and processed. See ARIZ. CONST. art. IV, pt. 1, § 1. No single provision of Proposition 107 complied with those express constitutional requirements, and we cannot overlook that failure.

¶ 8 We hold, therefore, that Proposition 107 violates the single-subject requirement of Article XXI of the Arizona Constitution and affirm the decision of the superior court.

_____________________________ Ruth V. McGregor, Justice

CONCURRING: ____________________________________ Thomas A. Zlaket, Chief Justice ____________________________________ Charles E. Jones, Vice-Chief Justice ____________________________________ Stanley G. Feldman, Justice ____________________________________ Frederick J. Martone, Justice


Summaries of

Taxpayer Protection v. Unfair Tax Schemes

Supreme Court of Arizona
Jan 10, 2001
199 Ariz. 180 (Ariz. 2001)

holding that court has no authority to sever sections of a proposed amendment to the constitution

Summary of this case from Clean Elections Institute, Inc. v. Brewer

finding violation where three provisions called for requiring ballots to disclose if federal office candidates have signed a pledge to eliminate federal income taxes, eliminating state income taxes and requiring public approval to increase state revenue because proposition could not be said to constitute a consistent and workable whole so that the pledge provision should stand or fall with the other provisions

Summary of this case from Bentley v. Building Our Future

invalidating initiative for violation of constitutional single-subject rule

Summary of this case from Molera v. Reagan

invalidating an initiative petition under the state constitution's one-subject rule and declining to sever the petition into three separate petitions because the constitution gave the court "no authority to adopt such an extraordinary measure," when no single provision separately met the threshold constitutional requirements for initiative petitions

Summary of this case from Nevadans for the Protection of Property Rights, Inc. v. Heller
Case details for

Taxpayer Protection v. Unfair Tax Schemes

Case Details

Full title:TAXPAYER PROTECTION ALLIANCE, an unincorporated association; RICHARD…

Court:Supreme Court of Arizona

Date published: Jan 10, 2001

Citations

199 Ariz. 180 (Ariz. 2001)
16 P.3d 207

Citing Cases

Bentley v. Building Our Future

2001) (propositions involving two provisions serve the purpose of allowing competition to set…

Molera v. Reagan

¶ 11 Thus, although our decisions safeguard the voters’ legislative power, this Court in many cases has…