Moon v. Investment Board

SHEPARD, Justice,

dissenting.

I am impelled to dissent for a number of reasons. This Court has since statehood indulged in the presumption of the constitutionality of legislative action. Engelking v. Investment Board, 93 Idaho 217, 458 P.2d 213 (1969); Leonardson v. Moon, 92 Idaho 796, 451 P.2d 542 (1969); Caesar v. Williams, 84 Idaho 254, 371 P.2d 241 (1962); State ex rel. Brassey v. Hanson, 81 Idaho 403, 342 P.2d 706 (1959). In my view, the legislature has obeyed the constitutional mandate that the Public School Fund, while “inviolate” be “securely and profitably invested as may be by law directed.’’ (Emphasis supplied.) This Court most recently in Moon v. Investment Board, 96 Idaho 140, 525 P.2d 335 (1974), has held that the legislature did not constitutionally infringe upon the duties of the office of State Treasurer when it, by statute, provided that the Investment Board was created and vested with power and authority to make the investments of the Public School Fund. The legislature next by statute appropriated a portion of those investment earnings to defray the expenses incurred in the investment. Here there is no argument but that the monies so appropriated by the legislature were reasonably necessary to and represent the reasonable expenses incurred by the Board in its investment duties. There can be no argument that such legislation is merely a ruse to allow invasion of the corpus of the school fund since the Constitution also requires that any losses to that fund, occasioned by investment, will be by the legislature made up to the Public School Fund. See, Moon v. Investment Board, supra.

I find it hard to conceive that the drafters of the Constitution, while specifically providing that the corpus of the Public School Fund should remain “inviolate” and requiring the makeup of all losses to said fund, also meant that the gross earnings from the investments are similarly “inviolate” from any costs reasonably incurred in the investment process. I realize that the language of the Constitution:

“No part of this fund, principal or interest, shall ever be transferred to any other fund, or used or appropriated except as herein provided”

could be so construed, however, I do not believe that such a narrow construction of that clause is either necessary or desirable.

It appears clear that the Public School Endowment Fund constitutes the corpus of a trust, and that the State of Idaho through the legislature and its delegates are the trustees thereof. In my judgment the general law is clear that a trustee is entitled to reimbursement or setoff of those expenses reasonably incurred in the investment and administration of the trust corpus. See, Restatement, Trusts, 2d § 244; 90 C.J.S. Trusts § 394 at pp. 716-717; Bogert, Law of Trusts (1973) § 153, at p. 509.

I would hold that in the case at bar the Court should be guided by the principle announced in Moon v. Investment Board, supra:

“Implementation of constitutional principals is an appropriate function of legislation, and unless such implementing legislation is clearly in violation of the constitutional principle, it is a valid exercise of the legislative power.

*202I would further note that although this action was supposedly brought to protect the interests of the school children of the State of Idaho, certain parties such as the State Superintendent of Public Instruction and the State Board of Education, who bear at least the primary constitutional responsibility for the protection of those interests, are strangely missing in the case at bar. In the early days of statehood the primary source of state level funding for public schools may well have been the income from the investment of the Public School Endowment Fund. In more modern times and particularly today, however, the state level monies so received by the schools from the investment return is almost miniscule as contrasted with those funds directly appropriated from the general fund of the State of Idaho. See Thompson v. Engelking, 96 Idaho 793, 537 P.2d 635 (1975). I suspect that when the tumult and the shouting dies the school children of the State of Idaho will be left exactly where they were. The legislature, being forbidden from reimbursing the expenses incurred in investment from the proceeds of the investment, will undoubtedly reduce the otherwise general fund legislative appropriation to the public schools by an equivalent amount.