[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 1132
¶ 1 The dispositive issues on appeal are: [1] Were the actions taken by the Board of County Commissioners of Oklahoma County [commissioners] effective to change the county's 1996-1997 fiscal-year budget (a) through the June 24,1996 resolution disapproving a salary supplement for the district attorney (and his assistants) or (b) through theJanuary 21, 1997 resolution that confined claims for the budgeted salary supplement to only the firsthalf of the fiscal year? and [2] Is a county-funded salary supplement for the district attorney — initiallyauthorized by the *Page 1133 terms of 19 O.S.Supp. 1996 § 215.30[19-215.30]3 and later implemented before the district attorney's term of office had begun — rendered invalid by Art. 23 § 10, Okla. Const.'s4 prohibition against an elected official's salary change during the term of office. We answer all thesequestions in the negative. In sum, the invoked commissioners' actions were ineffective and the cited provision of the constitution does not affect legislatively authorized county salary supplement.
¶ 3 The DA submitted to the Oklahoma County Budget Board [budget board] an estimate of office needs for fiscal-year 1996-1997, which included $106,244.467 for the DA's (and his assistants') salary supplement. The commissionersvoted on 24 June 1996 to deny that supplement.8 Disregarding this negative resolution, the budget boardincluded in its reported county budget the full amount the DA had requested for the salary supplement. This figure was later *Page 1134 approved by the county excise board.9 On 21 January 1997 the commissioners receded in part from their earlier resolution by approving the DA's salary request but only for the first six months of the fiscal year.10
¶ 5 The trial court's summary relief to the DA (a)concluded that the commissioners may not deny payment of claims for DA's salary supplement so long as funds are available up to the appropriated amount and (b) declared the included supplement to be free from constitutional restraint.12 The commissioners brought this appeal. *Page 1135
¶ 7 Assuming, as we do solely for argument's sake, that the commissioners had the authority to affect the budget beforeit became final, the dispositive issue here is whatlegal effect, if any, the commissioners' June 24, 1996 andJanuary 21, 1997 resolutions had on the criticalappropriation14 that was in fact made forthe DA's 1996-1997 salary supplement.15 Based on this record's contents, we accept the parties' admissions that (a) the budget board — in utter disregard of the June 24 resolution — did in fact include in its budget an appropriation that gave full funding to the DA's office for the entire requested fiscal-year salary supplement,16 and that (b) the budget passed on to the excise board where it was finally approved without any challenge from the commissioners.17 When filed with the excise board, the county budget constitutes an appropriation for each of the included items subject only to the exciseboard's final approval.18 The excise board's role at this terminal stage of the *Page 1136 process is (a) to examine the budget for conformity to the law19 and (b) if the budget will pass legal muster, to certify it as approved.20
¶ 9 The control over the county budget (1) passesex lege from the budget board to the excise board when the conditions prescribed in 19 O.S. 1991 §§1408-1413[19-1408-19-1413] are met, and (2) as soon as the provisions of 19 O.S. 1991 §§ 1414-1416[19-1414-19-1416] are fulfilled, the budget is placed beyond the excise board'sreach to become an appropriation. That appropriation, whichat its final stage passed the excise board's scrutiny, must controlover any discordant board of commissioners' resolutions which eitherpreceded or followed the de jure budget's birth. For a detailed explanation of these critical stages, the reader is referred to the descriptive material in footnotes 22 and 24.
¶ 13 Today's pronouncement does not collide with the notion that only a taxpayer can complain against an ad valoremassessment.30 A § 1415 protest before the excise board against illegality is not an attack on an assessment, but rather on the legal correctness of the budget (or of one of its items). Like any other participant in the county budget process, the commissioners, though budget beneficiaries, have standing to assail any facial legal flaws. Unavailable to "tax consumers" are only protests against tax assessments.31
¶ 15 Tulsa Tribune Co. v. Okla. Horse RacingCom'n34 teaches that litigants who comprise a class interested in the subject matter must be accorded an identical remedy to vindicate the divergent rights in their interest. There, the legislature created an action for those who would seek a public document's release. The court treated asa single class all those persons with an interest in a public document's release as well as in the suppression of the release. Those who seek to prevent the budget frombecoming final on the grounds of its illegality must all betreated alike as an indivisible class. While the commissioners qua consumers may have goals divergent from taxpayers, they must be accorded an equally effective remedy. In short, the excise board's authority to correct the final budget by revision must also be invocable by the commissioners in order to prevent the extended presence of that illegality which could have been removed by a taxpayer's protest.
¶ 16 When a statute — as § 1415 in this case — may be susceptible of more than one meaning, the court's duty is to give its text that construction which would save the legislation from facial absurdity35 as well as make it impervious to constitutional attack.36 This is the meaning we place on it today.
The pertinent terms of Art. 23 § 10, Okla.Const., are:
"Except wherein otherwise provided in this Constitution, in no case shall the salary or emoluments of any public official be changed after his election or appointment, or during his term of office, unless by operation of law enacted prior to such election or appointment; * * *"
(emphasis supplied).
The "unless" phrase in Art. 23 § 10 permits that change to occur in a public official's salary during his term of office which results from the operation of a statuteenacted before that official's election.38 The salary of an officer may hence be increased (or decreased) after one's election (or during *Page 1140 one's term of office) if the law that operates to effect that salary change was enacted before that officer's election.
¶ 18 The statute authorizing the county to supplement the DA's state salary (19 O.S.Supp. 1996 §215.30[19-215.30](C)(1))39 was enacted in 1990.40 It clearly contemplates salary supplement that is subject to change by the fiscal-year budgetary process. The statute's terms provide that the county "may" supplement the DA's salary based on the statutory formula. Macy's term of office (that is pertinent to this litigation) began in January 1995.41 Because the statutory scheme allowing county supplement was enacted well before Macy's term of office had begun,42 any increase (or decrease) in salary supplement, which is brought about by the county budgetary process, would stand unaffected by the restrictions imposed by Art. 23 § 10.
¶ 20 Because the statute that allows a county to supplement the DA's state-paid salary was enacted before Macy's term of office had begun, the supplement may be increased (or decreased) by the county budgetary process without offending Art. 23 § 10 of the state fundamental law.
¶ 21 The trial court's summary judgment is accordingly affirmed.
¶ 22 HARGRAVE, V.C.J., and HODGES, LAVENDER, SIMMS, OPALA, WILSON and KAUGER, JJ., concur;
¶ 23 SUMMERS, C.J., concurs in judgment but not in the court's opinion;
¶ 24 WATT, J., concurs in part and dissents in part.
"C. * * * The salaries of the district attorneys and the salaries of the assistant district attorneys and their operating and maintenance expenses in each county shall be paid by the state. Provided however:
1. In counties having a population of five hundred fifty thousand (550,000) or more, the salary of the district attorney and assistant district attorneys may be supplemented by the county. Such supplement for the district attorney shall not exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of the salary provided for district attorneys by this section. Such supplement for the assistant district attorneys shall not exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of the salary authorized for assistant district attorneys in Section 215.34[19-215.34] of Title 19 of the Oklahoma Statutes."
(emphasis supplied).
The quoted text was not changed by the 1997 amendment.
In Board of School Trustees of Washington City Administrative Unit v. Benner, 222 N.C. 566, 572, 24 S.E.2d 259, 263 (1943), where the functus officio maxim was applied in a like setting as that in this case, the court stated that "[w]hen the budget is perfected by approval, thepower of the various authorities instigating, adopting andapproving it is functus officio — it is a task performed— and neither these officials, nor any others in theirstead, are clothed with the power of budgetary control, whichmight be invoked to modify its terms" (emphasis supplied).
"The Legislature shall not, except as otherwise provided in this Constitution, pass any local or special law authorizing:
* * * * * *
Regulating the affairs of counties . . .;
Regulating the practice or jurisdiction of . . . in judicial proceedings or inquiry before the courts . . . or other tribunals. . . .;"
(emphasis supplied).
Within fifteen (15) days after the filing of any county budget with the State Auditor and Inspector, any taxpayer may file protests against any alleged illegality of the budget in the manner provided by Sections 24104[68-24104] through 24111[68-24111] of Title 68 of the Oklahoma Statutes. If no protest is filed by any taxpayer within the fifteen-day period, the budget and any appropriation thereof shall be deemed legal and final until amended by the county budget board. Taxpayers shall have the right at all reasonable times to examine the budget on file with the county clerk, county excise board or the State Auditor and Inspector for the purpose of checking for illegalities in the levies made or for filing protests in accordance with this section.
(emphasis supplied).
At the primaries and general elections held in 1966, and each four (4) years thereafter, there shall be nominated and elected in each and every District Attorney's district in the State of Oklahoma, a District Attorney, who shall hold office for a term of four (4) years, beginning on the first Monday of January following his election, and until his successor is elected and qualified.