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Request By:

Vic Hellard, Jr.
Director
Legisalative Research Commission
State Capitol
Frankfort, Kentucky 4060'

Opinion

Opinion By: Chris Gorman, Attorney General; Ross T. Carter, Assistant Attorney General

you have submitted the following questions pertaining to House Bill 89:

Does this legislation violate Section 59 and 60 of the Constitution of Kentucky since it applies only in limited areas of the state and since it applies only to certain programs in which staste funding is provided and not to all programs?

Does this legislation vilolate numerous sections of the Constitution of Kentucky relating to taxation as an illegal form of tax not authorized by the Constitution?

If the tax can be considered legal under taxation sections of the Constitution of Kentucky, does it not violate Seftions 59 and 60 as special legislation for the reasons cited above.

House Bill 89, entitle "An act relating to economic development, " contains seventy-eight sections and makes substantial changes to KRS chapters 154 and 155. You state that the bill "proposes that employees who work for companies which locate in selected areas where state moneys are expended pay part of their salaries to cover the cost of providing the state money." This provision appears in section 28 of the bill. We will confine our analysis to that section. It enacts the following language:

(1) The approvewd company may require that each employee, as a condition of employment, agrees to pay a job development assessment fee, not to exceed six percent (6%) of the gross wages of each employee whose job was created as a result of the economic development project, for the purpose of retiring the bonds which fund the economic development project.

(2) Each employee so assessed shall be entitled to credits against Kentucky income and local occupational taxes as follows:

(a) Two-thirds (2/3) of the job development assessment fee withheld from wages during the calendar year shall be permitted as a credit of Kentucky income tax withheld as provided by KRS 141.350;

(b) One-third (1/3) of the job development assessment fee withheld from wages during the calendar year shall be permitted as a credit against any local occupational license fee incurred by the employee for the taxable year in the jruisdiction in which the economic development project is located.

(3) If an approved company shall elect to impose the assessment as a condition of employment, it shall deduct the assessment from each paycheck of each employee.

Interpretation of this passage requires an understanding of the term "approved company," which is defined with reference to other terms that also require definition. An approved company is, according to section 22 of the bill, "any eligible company seeking to locate an economic development project in a qualified county, which eligible company is approved by the authority pursuant to Section 22 to 28 of this Act." The same section defines eligible company as "any corporation, partnership, sole proprietorship, business trust, or other entity engated in manufacturing which meets the standars promulgated by the authority pursuant to Sections 22 to 28 of this Act." A qualified county is "any county certified as such by the authority pursuant to Sections 22 to 28 of this Act." The Authority referred to in the bill is "the Kentucky Economic Development Fiance Authority as created in Section 17 of this Act."

Essentially the bill allows eligible companies to finance economic development pronjects by using the state's power to issue bonds as a conduit for financing. The state issues the bonds and allows the company to use the amount raised to pay for its project. The company then reimburses the state for the cost of the debt service on the bonds.

I. Local and Special Legislation

In engaging in constitutional analysis we are aware of the presumption of constitutional validity of legislative enanctments. A liberal construction is given to constitutional limitations, with reasonable doubts being resolved in favor of validity of questioned enactments.

Dalton v. State Property and Buildings Commission, Ky., 304 S.W.2d 342 (1957). The widom of legislative action and the soundness of its underlying economic theories do not affect an analysis of whether an enactment is constitutional.

Hayes v. State Property and Buildings Commission, Ky., 731 S.W.2d 797 (1987).

Sections 59 and 60 of the state constitution prohibit the legislature from enacting local or special legislation. Local legislation is "confined to territorial limits other than that of the whole state or . . . applicable to some political subdivision and not to others."

Board of Education of Jefferson County v. Board of Education of Louisville, Ky., 472 S.W.2d 496 (1971). Local legislation is valid if it is based onj a classification having natural, real, or substantial distinctions inherent in the subject matter. Id . Special legislation "arbitrarily or beyond reasonable justification discriminates against some persons or objects and favors others. Id .

House Bill 89 contains objective standards for the Authority to use in certifying qualified counties and eligible companies. A qualified county must "have had a countywide rate of unemployment exceeding the statewide unemployment rate of the Commonwealth in four (4) of the most recent five (5) consecutive years. HB 89, § 25. An eligible company must meet standards promulgated by the Authority in administrative regulations; the standards are to include the creditworthiness of companies, the number of jobs that will be created by a proposed economic devlopment project, and the likelihood of success of the project.

We believe that these objective standards provide a reaonable classification that supports the application of the Act to the particular counties and companies that are certified. The distinction that the Act draws are inherent in the subject matter. Therefore in response to your first and third questions we do not find a violation of sections 59 and 60 of the state constitution.

II. Other constitutional provisions regarding taxation.

You ask whether HB 89 enacts and illegal form of tax not authorized by the constitution. The questioned provision, in section 28 of the bill, says:

(1) The approved company may require that each employee, as a condition of employment, agrees to pay a job development assessment fee, not to exceed six percent (6%) of the gross wages of each employee whose job was created as a result of the economic development project, for the purpose of retiring the bonds which fund the economic development project.

Although the bonds are issued by the state, the eligible company is responsible for the annual debt service on the bonds; therefore we construe the phrase "for the purpose of retiring the bonds which fund the economic development project" as referring to the obligation of the company rather than the obligation of the state. Under this construction, the job development assessment fee constitutes a transaction solely between the company and its employees. The fee is not a tax since it is not payable to the government and it does not defray the cost of government.

Long Run Baptist Association v. Louisville and Jefferson County Metropolitan Sewer District, Ky.App., 775 S.W.2d 520 (1989).

Since the job development assessment fee is not a tax, it does not represent an illegal tax in violation of any constitutional provision.

Disclaimer:
The Sunshine Law Library is not exhaustive and may contain errors from source documents or the import process. Nothing on this website should be taken as legal advice. It is always best to consult with primary sources and appropriate counsel before taking any action.
Type:
Opinion
Lexis Citation:
1992 Ky. AG LEXIS 55
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