Can the University of Idaho buy its own risk or property insurance instead of going through the state's Department of Administration?
Plain-English summary
Idaho's Department of Administration runs the state's risk management program. Every state agency gets its liability and property insurance through the Department's Division of Insurance Management, paying assessments from agency appropriations into a shared retained-risk account. Kit Coffin, the Department's Risk Management Program Manager, asked whether the University of Idaho was an exception, in light of the U of I Board of Regents' constitutional authority over university funds under Article IX, section 10. Attorney General Lawrence Wasden answered: no, with one carve-out.
For premiums paid with state-appropriated funds, the University must go through the Department. Idaho Code § 6-920 says only the administrator of the Division of Insurance Management may "procure liability insurance" for the state, and the Idaho Tort Claims Act defines colleges and universities as part of "the state." Sections 67-5773 and 67-5775 give the Department exclusive authority over property and risk insurance purchased with state funds. The "economic family" reasoning in State v. Continental Casualty Co. (Continental II), 126 Idaho 178 (1994), reinforced this: Idaho State University was treated as part of the state for insurance purposes, and the same logic applied to U of I.
The carve-out was for non-state funds. Section 67-5773(1)(a) ties the Department's authority to premiums "payable in whole or in part from funds of the state." If the University used genuinely non-state money (donations, bequests, certain auxiliary revenues), it could buy its own property insurance, and the constitutional supremacy of Regents' control over non-appropriated funds (per State ex rel. Miller v. State Bd. of Educ., 56 Idaho 210 (1935)) reinforced the narrow exception even for liability insurance.
Currency note
This opinion was issued in 2014. Subsequent statutory amendments, court decisions, or later AG opinions may have changed the analysis. Treat this page as historical context, not current legal advice. Verify current law before relying on any specific rule, deadline, or remedy mentioned here.
Background and statutory framework
The constitutional provision at the heart of this opinion, Article IX, section 10 of the Idaho Constitution, gives the Board of Regents "general supervision of the university, and the control and direction of all the funds of, and appropriations to, the university, under such regulations as may be prescribed by law." The framers debated whether to give the Regents "exclusive" control; they removed that word in the constitutional convention, leaving the regents subject to legislative regulation but with constitutional standing.
The Idaho Supreme Court had not directly decided whether risk management was within the Regents' constitutional autonomy or within the legislature's regulatory power. The opinion walked through the major cases, Roach v. Gooding (1905), Moscow Hardware (1911), Black (1921), Miller (1935), and Dreps (1943), and pulled out the durable rule: appropriated funds are subject to legislative conditions; non-appropriated funds belong to the Regents.
The opinion noted the Continental II "economic family" doctrine. Even though the legislature had created Idaho State University as a separate "body politic and corporate," the Court found that for insurance purposes the State, BRM (then the Bureau of Risk Management), and ISU were all "one economic family," because the State ultimately bore the loss. The same reasoning applied to U of I.
A future court could conclude that beyond the share the University already pays into the retained risk account, further legislative interference with how the Regents spend remaining appropriated funds is unconstitutional. Wasden flagged that argument as not frivolous but unanswered, and recommended that absent contrary judicial precedent, both agencies should follow the existing statutes.
Common questions
Q: What did "state funds" mean here?
A: Money appropriated to the University by the legislature. Donations, gifts, federal grants, and certain self-generated revenues that don't pass through the appropriation process were treated as non-state funds.
Q: Did the same rule apply to Idaho State University and Boise State?
A: The opinion focused on the U of I because U of I has constitutional status under Article IX, section 10. ISU and BSU are statutory creations and Continental II already held they were within the state for insurance purposes. The opinion's reasoning would treat them at least as restrictively as U of I.
Q: Could the Regents challenge the statutes in court?
A: The opinion expressly invited that argument as plausible but unsettled. A court could find that Article IX, section 10 immunizes the Regents from legislative micromanagement once the University has paid its share into the retained risk account.
Q: What about employee group health insurance?
A: That is governed by sections 67-5765 and 67-5766, which expressly say the Department's authority is "in addition to and not in derogation of" colleges' and universities' authority to procure group insurance. Group health was outside the question presented.
Q: What practical change did this opinion produce?
A: It confirmed the existing arrangement and gave the Department of Administration a written defense if the University tried to opt out of the centralized risk pool for state-funded operations.
Citations and references
Statutes:
- Idaho Constitution, Article IX, section 10 (Regents' control of university funds)
- Idaho Tort Claims Act, Idaho Code §§ 6-919, 6-920, 6-922
- Idaho Code §§ 67-5773, 67-5775, 67-5776, 67-5777, 67-5778 (risk management)
Cases:
- Roach v. Gooding, 11 Idaho 244, 81 P. 642 (1905) (Idaho Supreme Court)
- Moscow Hardware Co. v. Regents of Univ. of Idaho, 19 Idaho 420, 113 P. 731 (1911) (Idaho Supreme Court)
- State ex rel. Black v. State Bd. of Educ., 33 Idaho 415, 196 P. 201 (1921) (Idaho Supreme Court)
- State ex rel. Miller v. State Bd. of Educ., 56 Idaho 210, 52 P.2d 141 (1935) (Idaho Supreme Court)
- Dreps v. Bd. of Regents of Univ. of Idaho, 65 Idaho 88, 139 P.2d 467 (1943) (Idaho Supreme Court, plurality)
- State v. Continental Cas. Co., 121 Idaho 938, 829 P.2d 528 (1992) (Continental I, Idaho Supreme Court)
- State v. Continental Cas. Co., 126 Idaho 178, 879 P.2d 1111 (1994) (Continental II, Idaho Supreme Court)
- KGF Dev., LLC v. City of Ketchum, 149 Idaho 524, 263 P.3d 1284 (2010) (Idaho Supreme Court)
Source
- Landing page: https://www.ag.idaho.gov/office-resources/opinions/
- Original PDF: https://ag.idaho.gov/content/uploads/2018/04/Opinion14-3.pdf
Original opinion text
STATE OF IDAHO
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
LAWRENCE G. WASDEN
ATTORNEY GENERAL OPINION NO. 14-3
To:
Kit Coffin
Risk Management Program Manager
Idaho Department of Administration
STATEHOUSE MAIL
Per Request for Attorney General's Opinion
You have requested an Attorney General's Opinion concerning whether the University of
Idaho has any exemption from the requirement that it procure its insurance solely as prescribed
by the Depaiiment of Administration. This opinion addresses the question you have presented.
QUESTION PRESENTED
Does the University of Idaho have any exemption from the requirement for sole provision
of insurance by the State of Idaho Risk Management Program within the Depaiiment of
Administration (other than group insurance for State employees)?
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated below, the University of Idaho should not obtain its own risk (i.e. ,
liability) or property insurance unless it does so by paying premiums with moneys not derived in
whole or in paii from State funds. It may obtain its own risk or property insurance if it pays the
premiums with money not obtained in whole or in part from State funds.
I reach these conclusions for the following reasons. There are two exceptions in title 67,
chapter 57, Idaho Code, under which the University of Idaho may obtain insurance coverage in
addition to that procured by the Director of the Department of Administration. The first is in
Idaho Code sections 67-5765 and 67-5766, which are among the sections authorizing purchase of
group insurance for life, medical and disability coverage. Group insurance was not within the
scope of the Question Presented, so this exception is not relevant.
The second exception is implicit, not explicit. Idaho Code sections 67-5773 and 67-5775
give the Director authority to determine the nature and extent of insurance coverage for risk and
prope1iy and to procure necessary insurance and/or not to insure according to the Director's
determination of what is cost beneficial. However, there is an implicit exception to the
P.O. Box 83720, Boi se, Idaho 83720-001 O
Telephone: (208) 334-2400, FAX: (208) 854-8071
Located at 700 W. Jefferso n St reet, Suite 21 0
Director's authority under Idaho Code section 67-5773(1)(a) - when premiums are not paid in
whole or in part from State funds. Under section 67-5773(1)(a), it would appear that the
University of Idaho could obtain risk or prope11y insurance on its own if no State funds were
involved. However, Idaho Code section 6-920 of the Idaho Tort Claims Act would preclude even
that where liability insurance (what section 67-5773 calls risk insurance) is involved. Under
these statutes, the only risk or property insurance that the University of Idaho may obtain on its
own is property insurance paid with premiums not derived in whole or in pai1 from State funds.
This statutory review does not complete the analysis, however. Idaho Constitution, art.
IX, sec. 10, gives the University of Idaho's Regents "general supervision of the university, and
the control and direction of all the funds of, and appropriations to, the university, under such
regulation as may be prescribed by law." No Idaho Supreme Com1 case law has extended the
Regents' authority under this section to trump the statutes cited, although one cannot say with
assurance that this could not happen. On the other hand, there is case law that the Legislature
may not restrict the University's use of funds other than State funds.
There is a presumption that statutes are constitutional. There is no existing case law
holding that ai1. IX, sec. 10, overrides the Idaho T011 Claims Act or the Risk Management
statutes. In the absence of precedent that construes art. IX, sec. 10, to the contrary, both the
Department of Administration and the University of Idaho should follow the applicable statutes
and the scant constitutional case law under ai1. IX, sec. 10, as follows: The University of Idaho
cannot use appropriated funds to purchase its own risk or prope11y insurance, but may use funds
other than State funds to purchase whatever risk or property insurance it wishes.
ANALYSIS
This Opinion begins with a statutory analysis, then turns to a constitutional analysis under
ai1. IX, sec. 10 of the Idaho Constitution.
A.
Statutory Analysis
Title 67, chapter 57, Idaho Code, creates the Department of Administration and gives it
authority to manage many programs for other agencies of State government. Chapter 57 is the
starting point of this statutory analysis. After that, the Idaho Tort Claims Act, title 6, chapter 9,
Idaho Code, is reviewed and tied back into Chapter 57.
1.
The Structure of Title 67, Chapter 57, Idaho Code.
Chapter 57 is not explicitly organized into separate pai1s for the Department's various
functions. However, its sections may be catalogued as follows:
Creation of the Department and general
[A]
Sections 67-5701 through 67-5704.
provisions for accounting of funds.
[B]
Section 67-5705. Division of Public Works created.
[B.1]
Sections 67-5706 through 67-5709A. Division of Public Works of existing State facilities.
2
management
[B.2]
Sections 67-5710 through 67-5713. Division of Public Works retrofitting of State facilities.
construction or
[C]
Sections 67-5714 through 67-5744. Division of Purchasing management of State property.
purchasing and
[D]
Sections 67-5745 through 67-5745E. Idaho Education Network.
[E]
Sections 67-5746 through 67-5759.
sections.
[F]
Section 67-5760. Insurance.
[F.1]
Sections 67-5761 through 67-5772.
disability.
[F.2]
Sections 67-5773 through 67-5778. Risk management - risk and prope1iy.
[G]
Sections 67-5779 through 67-5782. Property records management.
2.
The Department's Authority Over Risk and Property Insurance Is Unique There Are No Explicit Statutory Exceptions From the Depaiiment's Authority.
Miscellaneous provisions and repealed
Group msurance -
life, medical and
In addition to risk management, which is the subject of this opinion, title 67, chapter 57's
principal statutory authorities that authorize the Depaiiment to administer programs on behalf of
other State agencies are: 1
•
Office Space, Office Buildings and Related Facilities. The Department allocates office
space for State agencies in Boise, leases space for multi-agency facilities elsewhere,
controls parking at the Capitol Mall, prepares a statewide facilities needs plan, manages
facilities in the Capitol Mall, and sells, transfers or disposes of certain administrative
facilities. Idaho Code§§ 67-5706 through 67-5709A.
•
Construction of Public Works. The Department's Division of Public Works and/or the
Permanent Building Fund Advisory Council approve, contract for and/or build major
public works. Idaho Code§§ 67-5710 through 67-5711D.
•
Purchasing. The Department's Division of Purchasing purchases, acquires, trades, sells
and disposes of State property and maintains adequate stocks of prope1iy. Idaho Code
§§ 67-5714 through 67-5744.
1
This Opinion does not comprehensively list every program in Chapter 57 that the Depaiiment administers for
other State agencies lest it inadvertently omit one or more of them. Likewise, it does not comprehensively list every
exception to the Department's authority in Chapter 57. Instead, it identifies the principal programs that the
Depaiiment administers to show the kinds of exceptions that State agencies have from the Depaiiment's authority.
3
•
Information and Communications Technology. The Department's Idaho Technology
Authority reviews, plans, coordinates, approves and promotes information technology
and telecommunications for State agencies. Idaho Code §§ 67-5745 through 67-6745E.
•
Group Insurance. The Depmiment procures life, medical and disability group insurance
for State employees. Idaho Code§§ 67-5761 through 67-5772.
•
Property Records. The Department controls and manages the State's integrated property
management records. Idaho Code§§ 67-5779 through 57-5782.
There are numerous exceptions to the Department of Administration's authorities over
other State agencies that are listed above. For example:
•
Office Space, Office Buildings and Related Facilities. Legislative facilities are excepted
from the Department's management of Capitol Mall facilities. Idaho Code § 67-5709(6).
State institutions of higher learning are excepted from the Depmiment's planning for
facilities needs. Idaho Code § 67-5708B.
•
Construction of Public Works. The Board of Regents of the University of Idaho and the
Depmiments of Transportation, Fish and Game, Parks and Recreation, Lands and Water
Resources are excepted from contracting for public works through the Depmiment of
Administration. Idaho Code § 67-5711.
•
Purchasing. State institutions of higher learning, the legislative and judicial branches,
and constitutional executive officers are excepted from using the Division of Purchasing
when acquiring property. Idaho Code§§ 67-5716(14) and 67-5728.
•
Information and Communications Technology. State institutions of higher learning are
covered by Idaho Technology Authority sections, but constitutional executive officers are
not. Idaho Code § 67-5745A(2). Constitutional officers and institutions of higher learning are not required to obtain Depmiment approval for communications equipment and
facilities, but are subject to Depmiment coordination of their acquisition and installation
of equipment and facilities. Idaho Code§ 67-5747(1).
•
Group Insurance. The Department's authority to obtain group insurance "is in addition to
and not in derogation of' other governmental entities' (including universities') abilities to
obtain group insurance. Idaho Code§§ 67-5765 and 67-5767.
•
Property Records. Universities are among the State agencies for which the Department is
in possession and control of their property records, but constitutional officers, the Legislature and the judiciary are not. Idaho Code § 67-5779(4).
In contrast to the statutes described above, many of which explicitly exclude or include
colleges and universities, the risk management statutes that the Director administers have no
explicit exceptions. Idaho Code § 67-5773 gives the Director decision-making authority over
insurance coverage (other than coverage for life and disability insurance) if the premium is paid
in whole or in pmi with State funds. Under section 67-5773, the Director may give due
4
consideration to the recommendations of other State institutions, 2 but in the end, the Director
may "[ d]etermine the nature and extent of needs for insurance coverages ... as to risks and
property of all ... institutions ... of the state" when the premiums are paid in whole or in paii
from State funds and "[ d]etermine the character, terms, and amount of insurance coverages
required by such needs":
67-5773. Powers and duties - Risk management. the department of administration shall:
(1) The director of
(a) Determine the nature and extent of needs for insurance coverages of all
kinds, other than life and disability insurances, as to risks and property of
all offices, departments, divisions, boards, commissions, institutions,
agencies and operations of the government of the state of Idaho, the premiums on which are payable in whole or in partji·omfwuls of the state.
2
The term "institution" is not defined every time it is used in Chapter 57. However, its use in Chapter 57
strongly suggests that colleges and universities, which are sometimes referred to as "institutions of higher
education," are institutions when that word is used elsewhere in Chapter 57 without a definition. For example:
•
"State agency" is defined in section 67-5708B addressing facilities needs planning to include institutions in
general, but explicitly excepts institutions of higher learning.
•
"Agency" is defined in section 66-5716(14) of the purchasing statutes to include "officers, departments,
divisions, bureaus, boards, commissions and institutions of the state,'' which strongly suggests that colleges
and universities would be included among the covered "institutions" if they were not explicitly excepted.
•
"State institutions of higher learning" are defined in section 67-5728 in a manner that strongly suggests that
State colleges and universities are a subset of State institutions.
•
Section 67-5740(b) addressing the acquisition of surplus Federal property uses the word "institutions" in a
manner that includes the State colleges and universities mentioned in subsection (a).
•
"Agency" is defined in section 67-5745A(2) in the Idaho Technology Authority to include "institutions of
higher education," which suggests that colleges and universities are institutions.
•
The group insurance statutes cover "offices, depmiments, divisions, boards, commissions, institutions, agencies,'' e.g., subsection 67-5761 ( 1)(c), and refer to colleges and universities "and other institutions operated
by the State," section 67-5764, which also suggests that colleges and universities are State "institutions."
Thus, when the word "institution" is used but not defined in the risk management statutes, it seems likely that
colleges and universities are institutions covered by the statutes. Cf State ex rel. Miller v. State Bd. of Educ., 56
Idaho 210, 215, 52 P.2d 141, 143 (1935) (the University of Idaho Board of Regents are "the managers and corporate
representative of an educational institution"). Moreover, the first example used in a dictionary definition of
"institution" refers to a college as a kind of "institution": "1. an organization, establishment, foundation, society, or
the like, devoted to the promotion of a pmiicular cause or program, especially one of a public, educational, or
charitable character: 'This college is the best institution of its kind.'" Dictionary-Reference.com (2014).
If that were not enough, the Idaho Tort Claims Act, which cross-references the risk management statutes, see
sections 6-919 through 6-922, defines the State to include colleges and universities. Idaho Code § 6-902( I). It is
doubtful that the Idaho Tort Claims Act would require colleges and universities to be part of the State for tort
liability purposes, but not for risk management purposes, without spelling out such an exception. Finally, although a
definition in the Education Title of the Idaho Code would not necessarily apply to title 67, chapter 57, Idaho Code,
section 33-101 lists all ofldaho's four-year State supported colleges and universities as among the "state educational
institutions" subject to the State Board of Education's control.
For all of these reasons, I conclude that the University of Idaho is a State institution within the meaning of the
risk management statutes.
5
(b) Determine the character, terms, and amounts of insurance coverages
required by such needs.
(d) Administer all such coverages on behalf of the insured, including making
and settlement of loss claims arising thereunder....
(2) As to all such needs and coverages, the director shall give due consideration to information furnished by and recommendations of any office, department,
division, board, commission, institution or agency.
Idaho Code§ 67-5773 (emphasis added).
Section 67-5773 does not explicitly state that the Director's authority "over the character,
terms and amounts of insurance coverages" for risk and property required by her determinations
of need for insurance premiums paid in whole or in part from State funds is exclusive, but it does
not vest authority in any other officers or agencies to determine insurance needs, to determine the
character, terms and amounts of insurance coverages, or to administer insurance coverages. It
would be inconsistent with the scheme of the Director's determination of insurance needs and of
the character, terms and amounts of insurance coverages to construe this statute to allow other
agencies and institutions to make their own independent determinations of how the agency
should or should not be insured for risk or property, at least with regard to premiums purchased
in whole or in part with State funds.
Likewise, under Idaho Code section 67-5775, the Director determines the need for, form
of, and amount of insurance for liability and prope1iy with the goal of overall savings to the State
rather than to any one department or institution. Under that section, the Director also determines
whether it is cost effective to insure certain risks and/or property or to leave them uninsured:
67-5775. Risk management guidelines. - Jn determining need for, form
and amount of, procuring and administering insurance coverages, the director
of the department of administration shall give due consideration to:
(1) omission of insurance policy coverage as to property and risks as to
which insurance and claim administration costs may be disproportionately
great in reference to the amount of risk;
(2) ultimate economies possible tltrouglt use of reasonable deductions;
(3) use of comprehensive coverages and blanket coverages insuring
prope1iy and risks of two (2) or more offices, departments, divisions, boards,
commissions, institutions and agencies;
(4) reliability of and service provided by insurers to be selected as insurance carriers, as well as financial condition and competitive premium rate;
6
(5) means through which risks may be improved with ultimate savings to
the state through reduction in insurance losses and costs.
Idaho Code § 67-5775 (emphasis added). Again, although this section does not explicitly state
that the Director's authority to "procur[ e] and administer[] insurance coverages" is exclusive, it
does not invest the authority to procure insurance in any other officer or agency.
The presence of exceptions from the Department's authority over other State agencies
and institutions in all of Chapter 57's major programs but one is telling - the absence of
exceptions for risk management indicates that there are no exceptions for risk management.
KGF Dev., LLC v. City of Ketchum, 149 Idaho 524, 528, 263 P.3d 1284, 1288 (2010) (where a
statute contains a specific and exhaustive list of interests that allow exercise of authority under
the statute, that list is exclusive and does not include matters not listed).
3. Construing Sections According to Chapter 57's Structure.
Chapter 57's structure plays an important role in this analysis. In pmiicular, one
generally worded section must be placed in context. Idaho Code section 67-5766 states that the
"authority hereby given shall be in addition to and not in derogation of any power existing in any
... college, ... university or other institution ... supported in whole or in pmi by public funds."
This section does not explicitly state what power is given to whom or what power is not
derogated. Read in isolation, this section might apply to all powers listed in Chapter 57.
Idaho Code sections 67-5762 through 67-5764 give the Department and other
governmental entities the power to purchase group insurance. Idaho Code sections 67-5764 and
67-5766 include colleges and universities in nearly identical lists of government entities with
those powers. Idaho Code section 67-5765 refers to existing contracts for group insurance for a
similar list of government entities.
Thus, I conclude that the "power" referred to in Idaho Code section 67-5776 is the power
of the Depmiment and many other governmental agencies to purchase the types of group
insurance listed in the preceding sections and not other powers listed elsewhere in Chapter 57.
See generally State v. Hammersley, 134 Idaho 816, 821, 10 P.3d 1285, 1290 (2000) ("where a
word is capable of many meanings," "a word is known by the company it keeps"); State ex rel.
Wasden v. Daicel Chemical Indus., Ltd., 141 Idaho 102, 109, 106 P.3d 428, 435 (2005) ("[w]here
a statute contains specific terms followed by a general term the latter will typically be regarded
as refen-ing to things of a like class to those pmiicularly described").
This conclusion is supported by the legislative history. The Idaho Code sections now
codified as 67-5763 through 67-5766 were sections one through four of 1959 Idaho Session Law,
chapter 216. That session law dealt exclusively with group insurance and was codified as
sections 59-1201 through 59-1204. 1980 Idaho Session Law, chapter 237, sections 12 through
15, redesignated these four sections as 67-5763 through 67-5766 without otherwise amending
them and placed them amid other sections addressing group insurance. Thus, the legislative
history suppmis the conclusion that Idaho Code section 67-5766's broad language applies only to
group insurance and not to other insurance.
7
4. The Idaho Tmi Claims Act Explicitly Gives the Department Exclusive Authority Over
Risk Insurance.
The Idaho Tmi Claims Act (ITCA) includes State colleges and universities within its
definition of the State. Idaho Code § 6-902( 1). The ITCA subjects the State and its employees
to liability under State tmi law and commits the State to provide defenses to the State and its
employees under both State and Federal tmi law (with such exceptions as are contained in the
Act). Idaho Code§ 6-903(a)-(c). Idaho Code sections 67-5773's and 67-5775's centralization in
the Department of decision-making authority over risk insurance is consistent with the ITCA,
which places all decisions regarding acquisition of the State's liability insurance 3 (or, in the
alternative, use of the retained risk account) in the Department. ITCA sections 6-919 and 6-920
give the Depaiiment authority to procure liability insurance and the latter section gives the
Department exclusive authority to obtain liability insurance:
6-919. Liability insurance for state - Comprehensive plan by division of
insurance management. - The administrator of the division of insurance
management in the department of administration shall provide a comprehensive
liability plan which will cover and protect the state and its employees from claims
and civil lawsuits. He shall be responsible for the acquisition and administration of all liability insurance of the state or for the use of the retained risk
account provided in section 67-5776, Idaho Code, to meet the obligations of the
comprehensive liability plan.
The administrator shall, after consultation with the departments, agencies,
commissions, and other instrumentalities of the state, provide a comprehensive
liability plan for the state providing liability coverage to the state and its
employees in amounts not less than the minimum specified in section 6-924,
Idaho Code. He shall have the authority to use the retained risk account
provided in section 67-5776, Idaho Code, or to purchase, renew, cancel and
modify all policies according to the comprehensive liability plan.
3
The Idaho To1i Claims Act refers to "liability" insurance and "liability" plans in sections 6-919 and 6920; sections 67-5773 and 67-5775 refer to "risk management" and insurance for "risk." This Opinion treats "risk"
as including "liability" for the following reasons.
First, the Legislature placed risk management authority for the State in the Depmiment of Administration
40 years ago. See 1974 Idaho Sess. Laws, chapter 252, sections 2 through 6, enacting sections 67-5773 through 675777. Sections 7 through 9 of that Session Law amended sections 6-919 through 6-921 of the Tort Claims Act to
put the Depmiment's Risk Manager (a statutory office that no longer exits) in charge of acquiring and administering
"liability" insurance for the State. In the context of that Session Law, "risk" for tmi and prope1iy purposes and
"liability" under tmi law and for loss of property appear to be the same thing or very closely related with regard to
the State bearing financial uncertainty with regard to tort and prope1iy claims.
Second, the second dictionary definition of "risk," which applies to insurance, associates risk with financial
responsibility for loss: "2. Insurance. a. the hazard or chance ofloss. b. the degree of probability of such loss. c. the
amount that the insurance company may lose. d. a person or thing with reference to the hazard involved in insuring
him, her, or it. e. the type of loss, as life, fire, marine disaster, or earthquake, against which an insurance policy is
drawn." Dictionary-Reference.com (2014). The meaning of "risk" in the insurance context is thus closely tied to
liability (financial responsibility) in the tort or prope1iy context.
8
6-920. Liability insurance for state procured by division of insurance
management. - No state agency or institution other than the administrator of
the division of insurance management in the department of administration may
procure liability insurance under this act. All state agencies and institutions
shall comply with this act and the comprehensive liability plan developed by the
administrator of the division.
Idaho Code §§ 6-919 and 6-920 (emphasis added).
Thus, I conclude that Idaho statutes do not allow the University to obtain its own liability
insurance except as provided by the Depaiiment (Idaho Code §§ 6-919, 6-920, 67-5773 and 675775) unless the premiums are not paid in whole or in part with State funds. Fmiher, although
the Idaho statutes are not explicit with regard to property insurance, I further conclude that they
do not allow the University of Idaho to separately insure its property, unless the premiums are
not paid in whole or in part with State funds (Idaho Code§§ 67-5773(l)(a) and 67-5775).
This conclusion is bolstered by State v. Continental Cas. Co., 126 Idaho 178, 879 P.2d
1111 (1994) (Continental II). Continental II followed State v. Continental Cas. Co., 121 Idaho
938, 829 P.2d 528 (1992) (Continental I), in which the Idaho Supreme Court held that Idaho
State University's statutory authority as a legal entity was similar to the University of Idaho's
constitutional authority as a legal entity, that under the statutes ISU was a legal entity separate
from the State of Idaho, and that the State was not a named insured on ISU's insurance policy.
121 Idaho at 940, 829 P.2d at 530.
Neve1iheless, just two years later in Continental II, the Court equated ISU with the State
for economic, tmi, insurance and self-insurance purposes. Acknowledging that the Legislature
created ISU as "a body politic and corporate ... having power to sue and be sued in its own
name, ... the focus of our inquiry is not so much on the legal-political relationship between ISU
and the State, but on the economic relationship between the State, ISU and BRM [the Bureau of
Risk Management, which was then a statutorily-created Bureau in the Depaiiment]." 126 Idaho
at 183, 879 P.2d at 1116. The Cami reviewed Idaho Code §§ 67-5773 and 67-5775 and related
sections dealing with the BRM's program of retained risk management and purchase of insurance, including BRM's option "not to procure insurance to cover those risks, but to manage those
risks through a program of 'retention' or 'self-insurance.'" Id.
Continental II explained that Idaho Code sections 67-5773 and 67-5775 are part of a
larger scheme directly tied to State funding and State appropriations:
These code sections make it clear that the State funds its risk management
program through mandatory assessments to the various state agencies. The State,
through the BRM, assesses the risk exposure of the various agencies, determines
what risks to insure, negotiates the purchase of insurance, and charges the
agencies propmiionately to pay for the insurance and to fund a reserve account to
pay for those losses which are not insured. Titus, at the same time the State
funds its various agencies, it also requires those agencies to remit a portion of
those state funds to the retained risk account to finance the State :S risk management program. Because the State is ultimately liable for those uninsured losses
9
incurred by agencies as a result of claims brought under the ITCA, the State is
essentially requiring agencies to use their state appropriated money to fund a
reserve account to pay losses for which the State is ultimately liable.
126 Idaho at 184, 879 P.2d at 1117 (emphasis added).
We conclude that the economic family concept is applicable to the facts of this
case. The State, ISU and BRM represent one "economic family." The State, in
funding ISU, and requiring ISU to remit funds into the retained risk account, has
done nothing other than move assets among separate members of the same economic family. It is actually the State who is funding the retained risk account, and
it is the State which bears the ultimate economic burden of loss. The State
required /SU, as well as its other agencies, to contribute to the retained risk
account, out of funds appropriated to these agencies by the state legislature.
The retained risk program and payments made thereto by ISU did not shift any
risk of loss from ISU to the State. The State established and mandated agency
participation in the retained risk program in order to create reserves from which
the State could pay for losses for which the State would be ultimately liable.
126 Idaho at 185, 879 P.2d at 1118 (emphasis added).
The statutes regarding the Depmiment's authority to decide what to insure and what not
to insure are still like they were when Continental II was decided. Continental II did not erode
Continental I's observation that ISU's statutory authority was like the University of Idaho's
constitutional authority in the sense that both were legally distinct from the State. Thus, the
"economic family" analysis would also apply to the State, the Depmiment of Administration and
the University of Idaho like it applied to the State, BRM and ISU. Because the State ultimately
bears losses associated with the University of Idaho's tort liability or property loss, the State and
the University are one economic family for such purposes under Continental II. These observations are important elements in construing the University of Idaho's constitutional authority.
A.
Constitutional Analysis
- Origin of Art. IX, Sec. 10 of the Idaho Constitution.
Art. IX, sec. 10 of the Idaho Constitution addresses the University of Idaho. It was
amended during the Idaho Constitutional Convention to reduce the Board of Regents' authority
over appropriated funds. As first taken up during the convention, mi. IX, sec. 10 (which was
then sec. 14 of the draft of art. IX) gave the University of Idaho Board of Regents exclusive
control over funds appropriated to the University. The motion to adopt this section proposed the
following language:
The location of the university of Idaho, as established by existing laws, is hereby
confirmed. All the rights, immunities, franchises and endowments heretofore
granted by the territory of Idaho are hereby perpetuated unto the said university.
The regents shall have the general supervision of the university and exclusive
control and direction of all the funds of, and appropriations to the university,
under such regulations as may be prescribed by law.
10
Proceedings and Debates of the Constitutional Convention ofldaho 1889 (1912), p. 766 (emphasis added) (Constitutional Debates).
The motion to adopt this section prompted a debate, in Delegate Claggett's words, over
the wisdom of "taking the whole subject of the control of the university and university funds
away from the legislature and away from any and every other authority." Constitutional Debates,
p. 766. After a discussion about whether the words "under such regulations as may be prescribed
by law" preserved a legislative role for oversight of university funds, id. at 766-772, the
delegates resolved the issue by agreeing to strike the word "exclusive" from what was then the
final sentence of the section and adopting it with that amendment. Id. at 772. The section was
later amended to add a sentence concerning sale of the University's endowment land, id. at 850861, and adopted as it appeared in the original Idaho Constitution, id. at 1450-1452:
§ 10. State University - Location, regents, tuition, fees and lands -The
location of the University of Idaho, as established by existing laws, is hereby
confirmed. All the rights, immunities, franchises, and endowments, heretofore
granted thereto by the territory of Idaho are hereby perpetuated unto the said university. The regents shall have the general supervision of the university, and
the control and direction of all the funds of, and appropriations to, the
university, under such regulations as may be prescribed by law. No university
lands shall be sold for less than ten dollars per acre, and in subdivisions not to
exceed one hundred and sixty acres, to any one person, company or corporation.
(Emphasis added). In 2010, this section was amended to insert the following sentence
authorizing tuition before the last sentence: "The regents may impose rates of tuition and fees on
all students enrolled in the university as authorized by law." The amendment authorizing tuition
does not address the subject matter of the balded, italicized sentence above and should not
change the application of the case law decided under art. IX, sec. 10.
A1i. IX, sec. 10 has an unresolved tension between the regents' "general supervision of
the university, and the control and direction of all funds of, and appropriations to, the university,"
and the extent to which those funds are subject to "such regulations as may be prescribed by
law." The case law does not resolve this tension with regard to risk and property insurance.
2. The Supreme Court of Idaho's Construction of Art. IX, Sec. 10 of the Idaho
Constitution and Related Laws.
The Supreme Court of Idaho has interpreted art. IX, sec. 10, and statutory provisions
relating to the University of Idaho several times. This section of the opinion reviews those cases.
Roach v. Gooding, 11 Idaho 244, 81 P. 642 (1905), construed section 8 of the Idaho
Admissions Act, which included the phrase "university purposes." Section 8 provided:
§ 8. University land grant. - The lands granted to the territory of Idaho by
the Act . . . entitled, "An act to grant lands to . . . Idaho . . . for university
purposes," are hereby vested in the state of Idaho ... and the proceeds [from sale
of university lands] shall constitute a permanent fund ... the income thereof to be
used exclusively for university purposes . ...
11
Idaho Admissions Act, ch. 656, § 8, 26 Stat. L. 15 (emphasis added).
In Roach, the issue was whether the Legislature could use income from the endowment
fund established under section 8 of the Idaho Admission Act to pay for bonds for the construction
and equipment of a science building at the University of Idaho. The answer was a resounding
"no" because the construction of campus buildings was not a "university purpose":
Counsel for plaintiffs further contend that the words "university purposes,"
as used in section 8 of the admission act, include the erection of buildings. We
cannot agree with that contention, as the provisions of that section must be
construed in connection with the other provisions of said act, taking them all
together. It is clear that it was not intended to permit the interest or income
from such funds to be used in the erection or equipment of buildings. As we
view it, the "purpose" of the university is not in any sense the erection or
equipment of buildings therefor.
11 Idaho at 251, 81 P. at 644-645 (emphasis added).
Roach held under the Idaho Admissions Act that providing buildings for the University of
Idaho was a State responsibility separate from "university" or "educational" purposes: "[T]he
general attitude and policy of Congress has been to provide an endowment fund for educational
purposes; the income thereof only to be used to support the institution, leaving the people of the
state to furnish the buildings." 11 Idaho at 251-252, 81 P. at 645. Thus, Roach drew a line
between the use of endowment funds for university purposes and for the construction of
buildings. Under Roach, to the extent the Regents of the University of Idaho have constitutional
authority over ce1iain funds under art. IX, sec. 10, it would seem likely that their authority is at
its weakest for funds not associated with "university purposes"; and funds related to buildings or
equipment of buildings fall outside of "university purposes." Although Roach does not address
this issue, the general tenor of its analysis also suggests that tort liability or property insurance
would similarly fall outside of "university purposes."
Idaho Revised Political and Civil Code § 491 (1908) authorized the Board of Regents to
spend certain funds on the construction of buildings. Consistent with Roach's treatment of such
funds as distinct from funds for educational purposes, those funds were subject to claims arising
from the construction project (even if general university funds or the State Treasury was not)
even though§ 491 contained no explicit authorization for making construction-related claims.
. . . The Board of Regents should make payment accordingly out of any funds
that they have in their hands for the erection of said foundation [for the building].
If they have not sufficient funds for that purpose, they ought to make said
payments out of the first money coming into their hands for the erection and
construction of said Administration Building ....
. . . They have no authority whatever to incur any indebtedness against the
state, directly or indirectly, in the erection of university buildings for which they
have no funds to pay....
12
Moscow Hardware Co. v. Regents of Univ. of Idaho, 19 Idaho 420, 431-432, 113 P. 731, 734
(1911 ). From this, I conclude that when the Legislature authorizes the University of Idaho to
spend funds for a specific purpose, those funds are subject to the ordinary rules of law that apply
to funds associated with the purpose
in Moscow Hardware's case to claims associated with a
construction project. Putting Roach and Moscow Hardware together, it seems likely that the
non-"university" business side of managing prope1iy (or, by analogy, liability regarding
property) with appropriated funds would be subject to "such regulations as may be prescribed by
law."
State ex rel. Black v. State Bd. of Educ., 33 Idaho 415, 196 P. 201 (1921), involved a
direct confrontation between the authority of the Board of Regents and the Executive Branch.
The Regents asse1ied the right to retain proceeds from the sale of a University boiler rather than
give the proceeds to the State Treasurer; to pay claims against the University without submitting
them to the Board of Examiners; to purchase supplies and to enter into printing contracts without
using the Depmiment of Administration's predecessor, the Commissioner of Public Works; and
to employ attorneys without going through the Attorney General. 33 Idaho at 424-425, 196 P. at
203. After quoting art. IX, sec. 10 of the Idaho Constitution, the Comi explained that the
"regulations as may be prescribed by law" under that section are those dealing with "methods
and rules for the conduct of business" that do not interfere with the "constitutional discretion" of
the Regents:
The regulations which may be prescribed by law, and which must be observed
by the regents in their supervision of the University, and the control and direction
of its funds, refer to methods and rules for the conduct of its business and
accounting to authorized officers. Such regulations must not be of a character to
interfere essentially with the constitutional discretion of the board, under the
authority granted by the Constitution.
33 Idaho at 427, 196 P. at 204. Thus, "[i]f a claim against the regents is a claim against the state,
it must be presented to the Board of Examiners for approval," id., i.e., when the State is also subject to a claim against the University, the normal rules that apply to all State entities apply to the
University. As the Court elaborated, when appropriated funds are coupled with ce1iain conditions, the Regents must abide by them; but the Regents need not comply with the conditions of
appropriation if the funds spent are not State funds:
When an appropriation of public funds is made to the University, the
Legislature may impose such conditions and limitations as in its wisdom it may
deem proper. If accepted by the regents, it is coupled with the conditions, and
can be expended only for the purposes and at the time and in the manner
prescribed, and can be withdrawn from the state treasury only as provided by
law.
If the regents have funds available for the purpose of making purchases of
supplies, they may do so without requisition upon and without the consent of the
Commissioner of Public Works, and if they have money which is available for the
13
purchase of land, or the payment of counsel fees, or to employ accountants and
auditors, other than state accountants and auditors, we know of no valid reason
why they should not do so. This in no way would involve the power of the
Legislature to provide that the accounts and records of the regents shall also be
examined and audited by regular accountants and auditors of the state.
In the absence of conditions contained in an appropriation which, by being
accepted, raised an implied contract on the part of the Board of Regents, there is
no obligation resting upon them to pay to the State Treasurer the proceeds of the
sale of property belonging to the University. The same may be paid to the
treasurer of the University.
33 Idaho at 430, 196 P. at 205 (emphasis added).
Under Black, the Legislature may attach conditions to the use of appropriated funds with
which the University must comply, at least with regard to matters that do not interfere "with the
constitutional discretion of the board." However, the Legislature cannot similarly restrict the
University's use of other funds. Roach and Moscow Hardware both suggest that the Legislature
may attach conditions to the funding of University buildings and equipment and that those
conditions do not interfere with the constitutional discretion of the Board of Regents. Although
there is no case law to that effect, analogous reasoning would also apply to tort liability, which,
like buildings, would not seem to be pmi of the Regents' constitutional discretion for matters that
would pertain to education.
Thus, when the University of Idaho wished to construct an infirmary on campus with a
grant of Federal funds and a Federal loan, it was within the Regents' power to do so only so long
as no appropriated funds (which would be subject to mi. VIII, sec. 3 's provisions on debt
limitations) would be used to repay the loan; only net income from the infirmary and from a
residence hall could be used to repay the loan. State ex rel. Miller v. State Bd. of Educ., 56 Idaho
210, 215-216, 52 P.2d 141, 143 (1935). In Miller, the line continued to be clear: appropriated
funds were subject to legislative or constitutional terms; other funds were not.
The final case to be reviewed is Dreps v. Bd. of Regents of Univ. of Idaho, 65 Idaho 88,
139 P.2d 467 (1943). Dreps presented the question of whether an anti-nepotism statute applied
to the University of Idaho, and, if so, whether it was unconstitutional to apply it to the
University. Id. at 89, 139 P.2d at 467.
Only four of the five justices of the Idaho Supreme Court participated in the Dreps
hearing and opinion. 65 Idaho at 101, 139 P.2d at 474. Two of the five justices joined an
opinion that held that an anti-nepotism statute did not apply to the University of Idaho because it
would be unconstitutional for it to apply. Id. at 89-101, 139 P.2d at 467-473. Their plurality
opinion appeared first in the Idaho Repmis. The remaining two justices held that the antinepotism law was not intended to apply to the University of Idaho and declined to reach the
constitutional issues because it was unnecessary to do so. Id. at 100-101, 139 P.2d at 473-474.
Their opinion followed the first plurality.
14
The first plurality's broad view of the University of Idaho's constitutional prerogatives,
based in pmi upon the Constitutional Debates earlier reviewed, appeared to state on the one hand
that any interference with the Regents' constitutional discretion was unconstitutional, id. at 9697, 139 P.2d at 471, while acknowledging on the other hand while quoting from a Michigan case
that "[i]n making appropriations for its supp01i, the Legislature may attach any conditions it may
deem expedient and wise, and the Regents cannot receive the appropriation without complying
with the conditions. This has been done in several instances." Id. at 98-99, 139 P.2d at 472.
Whatever else can be said of Dreps, the first plurality's ambiguous discussion of mi. IX,
sec. 10, did not command a majority of the Court and is not precedent. 4 Gonzalez v. Thacker,
148 Idaho 879, 881, 231 P.3d 524, 526 (2009), citing Osick v. Pub. Employee Ret. System of
Idaho, 122 Idaho 457, 460, 835 P.2d 1268, 1271 (1992). As Osick summarized: "The provisions
of art. 5, § 6 of our constitution ... lead us to conclude that where the third vote necessary to
pronounce a decision is by a justice who concurs in the result only, the rationale contained in the
opinion is not a decision of the Comi and is not controlling in other cases," and, "the opinion is
interesting, but not controlling." Id. When there are two different two-Justice pluralities, as
there were in Dreps, then there is no basis for elevating the discussion of one opinion over the
other. Thus, in the end, Dreps does not bear on this analysis. Thus, Roach, Moscow Hardware,
Black and Miller provide whatever guidance there is.
3. Applying the Statutes in Light of Aii. IX, Sec. 10.
The Idaho Supreme Court has not construed art. IX, sec. 10 of the Idaho Constitution to
determine whether the Legislature may constitutionally put conditions on the University of
Idaho's procurement of insurance for risks and/or property. As a result, this opinion's analysis
must acknowledge that uncertainty.
The Legislature appropriates general fund moneys to the University of Idaho. E.g., 2014
Idaho Sess. Laws 307, page 763, section 1, pmi III ($79, 155,000 of general funds appropriated to
the University of Idaho for fiscal year 2015). Appropriation bills are ordinarily silent regarding
risk management and insurance, as they are on other provisions of State law, as well.
However, the Department of Administration is authorized by statute to "charge each
office, department, division, board, commission, institution, agency and operation for which the
department provides insurance coverage and receive payment in advance for the reasonably
app01iioned share of the cost incuned." Idaho Code § 67-5777(1 ). Those moneys are deposited
into the retained risk account, section 67-5776(2)(a), which "shall be used solely for payment of
premiums, costs of maintaining the operation of the risk management office, or upon losses not
otherwise insured and suffered by the state as to prope1iy and risks," section 67-5776(1).
The amounts that the Department of Administration can charge "shall not exceed the
current appropriation or funds available for the purpose of the affected office, department,
division, board, commission, institution, agency or operation." Idaho Code § 67-5777(2). If an
agency refuses to pay what the Department charges, the Department may certify the delinquency
4
1977 Idaho Attorney General Opinion No. 17 cites the first Dreps plurality as though it were a majority
opinion without qualifying that there was no majority.
15
to the State Treasurer, and the State Controller may draw a warrant on the agency's funds in the
State Treasury for the Department's benefit. Idaho Code § 67-5778. Thus, every legislative
appropriation of funds to the University ofldaho (as well as every other appropriation to a State
agency) is subject to the condition that the appropriation may be charged by the Department for
risk management purposes and may be intercepted by the Department if not paid over as
charged.
"It is generally presumed that legislative acts are constitutional, that the state legislature
has acted within its constitutional powers, and any doubt concerning interpretation of a statute is
to be resolved in favor of that which will render the statute constitutional." Med. Recovery
Services, LLC v. Strawn, 156 Idaho 153, 159, 321 P.3d 703, 709 (2014), quoting Olsen v. J.A.
Freeman Co., 117 Idaho 706, 709, 791P.2d1285, 1288 (1990). Given (1) the statutory scheme
that provides that the Department shall procure such risk or property insurance as the Director
determines is necessary, and that gives exclusive authority to the Department to procure liability
insurance for the State, and (2) the Comi's decision in Moscow Hardware that University funds
for the construction of a building are subject to the nonnal rules of law associated for claims
against such funds and its dicta in Black that the Legislature may impose conditions and
limitations that it deems wise on funds appropriated to the University of Idaho, there is a sound,
defensible argument to be made that the University of Idaho cannot spend appropriated funds to
procure risk or property insurance in addition to that obtained by the Department.
Given the availability of this sound, defensible argument and the presumption of
constitutionality that every statute enjoys, I conclude that the Department of Administration and
the University of Idaho should comply with the statutory provisions giving the Department and
only the Department authority to spend appropriated funds to pay premiums for risk or prope1iy
insurance, unless and until a court of competent jurisdiction declares otherwise.
However, this opinion must acknowledge that some language in Black suggests
otherwise. In particular, Black twice explained how the Legislature may regulate the University:
"When an appropriation of public funds is made to the University, the Legislature may impose
such conditions and limitations as in its wisdom it may deem proper," and, "In the absence of
conditions contained in an appropriation which, by being accepted, raised an implied contract on
the part of the Board of Regents, there is no obligation resting upon them to pay to the State
Treasurer the proceeds of the sale ofprope1iy belonging to the University." 33 Idaho at 430, 196
P. at 205.
These two statements of the principle that the Legislature may impose conditions on the
University make sense in context: If the Legislature expects to claw back to the Treasury some
of the funds that it appropriates to the University, which was an issue in Black, it must say so in
the appropriation itself. But neither statement is tied to the more general language of mi. IX,
sec. 10, of the Idaho Constitution concerning the regents' "control and direction of all the funds
of, and appropriations to, the university, under such regulations as may be prescribed by law."
And neither statement discusses the other side of the coin discussed in Black: "If a claim against
the regents is a claim against the state, it must be presented to the Board of Examiners." 33
Idaho at 427, 196 P. at 204.
16
Continental II made it clear that risk management claims against a University (in that
case ISU) are claims against the State. Continental II extensively discussed the regulations
concerning risk management funds that are prescribed by law, none of which were contained in
an appropriation bill, but which are of general applicability to State agencies and institutions.
The University of Idaho might argue in court that once it pays to the Department the
pmiion of its appropriated funds necessary to finance the University's share of the retained risk
account, then any further interference with the Regents' decision on how to spend its remaining
appropriated funds is an unconstitutional interference with the Regent's control and direction of
those funds. Such an argument would not be frivolous and would present an unanswered
question of constitutional law to the Idaho comis. However, the answer to that question cannot
be predicted with any certainty from the existing case law. Unless and until an Idaho comi rules
to the contrary, as said before, both the Department and the University should abide by the
existing statutes with regard to appropriated funds.
However, given Miller's clear holding that the University of Idaho is not legislatively
constrained in how it spends funds that are not derived from appropriation, and the implicit
exception in Idaho Code § 67-5773(l)(a) to the Depmiment's authority when insurance
premiums are not paid in whole or in part with State funds, I conclude that the University of
Idaho is free to spend funds not derived in whole or in part from appropriated funds for risk or
property insurance, even if Idaho Code § 6-920 would otherwise apply with regard to liability
insurance and would otherwise prohibit the University from doing so.
AUTHORITIES CONSIDERED
1.
Idaho Constitution:
Art. V, § 6.
Art. VIII, § 3.
Aii. IX,§ 10.
2.
Idaho Code:
Idaho Revised Political and Civil Code § 491 (1908).
§ 6-902(1).
§ 6-903(a)-(c).
§ 6-919.
§§ 6-919 through 922.
§ 6-920.
§ 33-101.
Title 67, Chapter 57.
§ 67-5701 through 67-5704.
§ 67-5705.
§ 67-5706 through 67-5709A.
§ 67-5708B.
§ 67-5709( 6).
§ 67-5710 through 67-5711D.
17
§ 67-5710 through 67-5713.
§ 67-5711.
§ 67-5714 through 67-5744.
§ 67-5716(14).
§ 67-5728.
§ 67-5740(b).
§ 67-5745 through 67-5745£.
§ 67-5745A(2).
§ 67-5746 through 67-5759.
§ 67-5747(1).
§ 67-5760.
§ 67-5761 through 67-5772.
§ 67-5761(1)(c).
§ 67-5762 through 67-5764.
§ 67-5763 through 67-5766 (former§ 59-1201through59-1204).
§ 67-5764.
§ 67-5765.
§ 67-5766.
§ 67-5767.
§ 67-5773.
§ 67-5773 through 67-5778.
§ 67-5773(1)(a).
§ 67-5775.
§ 67-5776.
§ 67-5776(1).
§ 67-5776(2)(a).
§ 67-5777.
§ 67-5777(1).
§ 67-5777(2).
§ 67-5778.
§ 67-5779 through 67-5782.
§ 67-5779(4).
3.
Session Laws:
1959 Idaho Sess. Laws 471.
1974 Idaho Sess. Laws 164 7.
1980 Idaho Sess. Laws 525.
2014 Idaho Sess. Laws 763.
4.
Idaho Cases:
Dreps v. Bd. of Regents of Univ. ofldaho, 65 Idaho 88, 139 P.2d 467 (1943).
Gonzalez v. Thacker, 148 Idaho 879, 231 P.3d 524 (2009).
18
KGF Dev., LLC. v. City of Ketchum, 149 Idaho 524, 263 P.3d 1284 (2010).
Med. Recovery Services, LLC v. Strawn, 156 Idaho 153, 321 P.3d 703 (2014).
Moscow Hardware Co. v. Regents of Univ. ofldaho, 19 Idaho 420, 113 P. 731 (1911 ).
Olsen v. J.A. Freeman Co., 117 Idaho 706, 791 P.2d 1285 (1990).
Osick v. Pub. Employee Ret. System ofldaho, 122 Idaho 457, 835 P.2d 1268 (1992).
Roach v. Gooding, 11 Idaho 244, 81 P. 642 (1905).
State v. Continental Cas. Co., 121 Idaho 938, 829 P.2d 528 (1992).
State v. Continental Cas. Co., 126 Idaho 178, 879 P.2d 1111 (1994).
State v. Hammersley, 134 Idaho 816, 10 P.3d 1285 (2000).
State ex rel. Black v State Bd. of Educ., 33 Idaho 415, 196 P. 201 (1921).
State ex rel. Miller v. State Bd. of Educ., 56 Idaho 210, 52 P.2d 141 (1935).
State ex rel. Wasden v. Daicel Chemical Indus., Ltd., 141Idaho102, 106 P.3d 428 (2005).
5.
Other Authorities:
Proceedings and Debates of the Constitutional Convention ofldaho 1889 (1912).
Idaho Admissions Act, ch. 656, § 8, 26 Stat. L. 215 .
1977 Idaho Att'y Gen. Ann. Rpt. 129.
Dictionary-Reference.com.
Dated this
~ay ofNovember, 2014.
~Ac__
D-E-N~~~~~-
A ttorn ey General
Analysis by:
MICHAEL S. GILMORE
Deputy Attorney General
19