State Attorney General Josh Stein is appealing a Wake County judge’s order last month that $12 million Smithfield Foods has paid to North Carolina since 2019 should fund environmental enhancements in public schools.
Stein had been using the money to fund his own environmental grant program.
Lawyers from Stein’s state Justice Department filed a notice of appeal Thursday on behalf of the attorney general and two other defendants: Gov. Roy Cooper and State Controller Nels Roseland.
Stein is the Democratic nominee in this year’s election to succeed Cooper as governor.
The legal dispute involves $12 million Smithfield Foods has paid to the state since July 2019. Superior Court Judge Graham Shirley determined in July that the money must be used to support North Carolina’s public schools.
Randolph County pastor Jonathan Burris had sued Stein on behalf of the local school board. Critics have described the money as a “slush fund” the attorney general’s office has used to fund environmental grants since 2001. Smithfield has paid $2 million a year based on a 2000 agreement with then-Attorney General Mike Easley.
“Any money received by the State from Smithfield Foods pursuant to the Agreement must be appropriated by the General Assembly in such a manner as to protect Smithfield Foods’ purpose. The purpose of these payments is environmental enhancement,” wrote Judge Graham Shirley in an order filed July 17.
State lawmakers made no appropriations of the funds from 2019 to 2021. Since then, the money has been placed into an account designated for seized and forfeited assets. Yet Stein had access to the funds to pay for environmental grants chosen by his office.
“When the funds from the Smithfield Agreement were not appropriated for fiscal years 2019-2021, N.C. Const. Art. IX, § 6 mandates that these funds must be appropriated and used as required by that section but may only be used in a manner consistent with the purposes set forth in the Smithfield Agreement: environmental enhancement,” Shirley wrote.
“For fiscal years 2021-2025, the General Assembly was not required to appropriate these funds into an account for seized and forfeited assets,” the order continued. “The appropriation of the funds into an account for seized and forfeited assets does not convert the nature of the funds into clear proceeds of civil penalties, forfeitures, or fines. However, N.C. Const. Art. IX, § 7(b) states that ‘[m]Joneys in such State fund shall be faithfully appropriated by the General Assembly … to be used exclusively for maintaining free public schools.’”
“Given the importance our Constitution and Supreme Court have placed on providing a sound basic education to the children of this State, the Court concludes that if funds of whatever nature are placed in such account, they must be used exclusively for maintaining free public schools,” Shirley wrote.
“The Court Declares that all funds received from Smithfield Foods after July 1, 2019, must be used for the purpose of environmental enhancement in public schools,” Shirley concluded.
“I am thankful that the NC Constitution, particularly Article IX, has won the day and that these funds will ‘be used exclusively for maintaining free public schools,’” Burris said in a statement to Carolina Journal when Shirley issued his decision.
Shirley heard nearly 90 minutes of arguments in the case on June 11. State lawyers argued for the lawsuit to be dismissed. The plaintiff asked Shirley to issue a final ruling in his favor without holding a trial.
Burris sued in the place of the Randolph County Board of Education. He argues that money Stein has used for environmental grants since 2019 should have been used for environmental projects at North Carolina’s public schools, including Randolph County.
Attorney Paul “Skip” Stam represents Burris. A former top Republican state House leader, Stam is a board member of the John Locke Foundation. Locke oversees Carolina Journal.
“This case is the third attempt by Mr. Stam to seize money that has been designated to environmental grants,” argued Matthew Tulchin, the state special deputy attorney general representing Stein and two fellow defendants: Gov. Roy Cooper and state Controller Nels Roseland.
The state Supreme Court has rejected two earlier attempts to block Stein from using money tied to Easley’s 2000 deal with Smithfield Foods. Smithfield agreed to pay the state $2 million a year for 25 years. Easley and Smithfield reached the agreement as Smithfield faced possible state investigations over hog farm operations in North Carolina.
The current suit deals only with money Smithfield has paid the state since 2019. The General Assembly approved a law that year clarifying that the Smithfield funds should be deposited in the state treasury.
“The money was deposited there, but it wasn’t kept there,” Stam argued to Shirley. The suit contends that Stein has been able to requisition money for his environmental grants without authorization from state legislators.
State attorneys responded that state budgets approved since 2021 have included the money. It has been designated for environmental grants.
Stam responded that the budget code indicates that the money was placed in a Seized and Forfeited Asset Fund. Article IX of the state Constitution requires that money of that type must head to public schools, Stam argued before Shirley.
The judge signaled some skepticism about the funding arrangement. “I don’t see anything … that specifically authorizes withdrawal of funds from the state treasury,” he said as Tulchin explained the funding arrangement.
The legal dispute stems from a multimillion-dollar deal Easley negotiated with Smithfield Foods during his successful run for governor in 2000. Easley’s successors as attorney general controlled the money completely until 2019.
Since that time, the money has been deposited in the state treasury. Stam argued that Stein continued to control the money through arrangements made with other state employees.
“There is still about $12 million in controversy (i.e., $2 million per year from 2020 to 2025),” according to a court filing from the plaintiffs. “The Attorney General has continued to ‘requisition’ the money from the treasury and distribute the money to his chosen grantees.”
Stein argues “that the money does not have to be appropriated by the General Assembly, nor does it have to go to public schools,” according to the court filing. Critics argue that Stein’s legal argument goes against Article V and Article IX of the state constitution.
Burris sued Stein in July 2023 on behalf of the local school board. A Superior Court judge transferred the case from Asheboro to Raleigh on April 15.
Burris, officially known as the “relator” in the case, is not seeking any money for himself. “[N]ot a single penny of Relator’s requested relief would find its way into his own bank account, as would a direct refund,” Burris’ lawyers wrote. “Instead, it will return to its rightful place, the Treasury, from where the General Assembly can lawfully appropriate funds to the public schools as the Constitution requires.”
The suit argues that Stein violated the state constitution when he “requisitioned” more than $5.1 million from the state treasury from July 2019 to November 2023. Stein requested that money after the General Assembly approved a law in 2019 treating future Smithfield payments as gifts to the state.
“When the Attorney General takes funds after a short ‘dip’ in the treasury before requisitioning them right back, his action is not a real ‘deposit,’” Burris’ lawyers argued. “It is akin to paying for groceries with a check and then, after cooking and eating dinner, stopping payment on the check before it is deposited by the grocer.”
Burris’ court filing rebutted arguments against sovereign immunity for government defendants.
“The Plaintiff seeks declaratory and injunctive relief to stop the ongoing misappropriation of state funds, a matter of significant public concern and constitutional import,” Burris’ lawyers wrote. “The Defendants’ reliance on Sovereign Immunity overlooks the critical distinction between suits which award money from the state treasury to private parties and suits that aim to ensure governmental actions conform to constitutional and statutory requirements.”
“The actions of the Governor, the Controller, and the Attorney General are subject to correction when such actions contravene the state’s constitution,” the court filing added.
Burris urged the court to “harmonize” Article IX of the state constitution, the original Smithfield agreement, and the 2019 state law. “That resolution is to use Smithfield’s funds to promote environmental enhancement, as and when appropriated by the General Assembly to the public schools for grants named ‘Smithfield Environmental Enhancement Grants.’”
Defendants in the case filed a memorandum rejecting Burris’ arguments. Defenders of the current grant system note that state courts already have upheld the attorney general’s environmental grants twice.
“This third attempt essentially repackages the same arguments that have already beenrejected twice, hoping for a different outcome,” defendants’ lawyers wrote. “But the legal principles remain unchanged.”
“Plaintiff’s complaint, on its face, reveals that he does not have standing to bring his claims,discloses that no case or controversy exists between the parties that is ripe for adjudication, fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, and does not demonstrate the prerequisites have been met to bring an action against the State. Plaintiff’s Complaint should be dismissed,” the court filing added.
A unanimous state Supreme Court ruled in 2022 in favor of Stein in an earlier suit targeting the Smithfield funds. At the time, the author of the high court’s opinion noted that a new lawsuit could challenge funds that reached state government after the 2019 law took effect.
Burris is a “citizen and taxpayer of Randolph County who made a demand on the Randolph County Board of Education to file this action. The Randolph County Board of Education wrongfully refused to file this action,” according to the case’s amended complaint.
The lawsuit originally targeted Stein, Cooper, Roseland, and two other state employees. Burris voluntarily dismissed his complaint against the final two defendants in May.
Easley’s original deal with Smithfield Foods required the company “to pay each year for 25 years an amount equal to one dollar for each hog in which the Companies … have had any financial interest in North Carolina during the previous year, provided, however, that such amount shall not exceed $2 million in any year,” according to the lawsuit.
“From 2000 [through] 30 June 2019 the Attorney General deposited funds directly into an account solely within the Attorney General’s control,” the suit continued. “The Attorney General then disbursed the Agreement funds from his account to grant recipients selected in the Attorney General’s sole discretion.”
The General Assembly approved a law in 2019 — NC General Statute 147-76.1 — requiring “all funds received by the State, including cash gifts and donations, shall be deposited into the State treasury.”
After the law took effect, Stein “began depositing the Agreement funds into the State treasury a total of more than $8,150,000.00 through June of 2023,” according to the lawsuit.
A later court filing indicated total deposits topped $10.2 million by November 2023.
“Although the Attorney General began depositing Agreement funds into the State treasury, the Attorney General continued to ‘requisition’ Agreement funds from the Treasury to the Department of Justice for payments to his selected grant recipients,” the lawsuit alleged. “From 1 July 2019 to June 2023, the Attorney General has consistently requisitioned Agreement Funds without legal authority to do so.”
Burris’ lawyers argued that Stein’s actions violated the state constitution.
“Article V of the North Carolina Constitution provides that ‘[nJo money shall be drawn from the State treasury but in consequence of appropriations made by law,’” according to the lawsuit. “There are no ‘appropriations made by law’ for the drawing of Agreement funds from July 1, 2019 to the present.”
If the judge determined that an appropriation has occurred, the money should go to North Carolina’s civil penalty forfeiture fund, the suit argued. That fund benefits local school systems.
“The purpose of Article V is to ensure that the people, through their elected representatives in the General Assembly, have full and exclusive control over the allocation of the state’s expenditures. ‘The power of the purse is the exclusive prerogative of the General Assembly,’” according to the lawsuit.
“By drawing or abetting the drawing of Agreement funds from the State treasury without an appropriation, Defendants have violated Article V of the North Carolina Constitution and Chapter 143C of the General Statutes,” the plaintiffs argued.
Article IX of the state constitution focuses on education funding.
“This Court should declare that Defendants’ actions violated Article IX and deprived the public schools of these funds,” according to the lawsuit. “As part of that judgment, the Court should order all unappropriated funds placed in the State treasury after 1 July 2019 may only be appropriated to the public schools and require the Attorney General to return to the State treasury all the funds that it ‘requisitioned’ from 1 July 2019 to the present. The Court should order that such funds go to the Civil Penalty Forfeiture Fund to be used for environmental enhancement at K-12 public schools.”
Stam filed a motion asking a judge to grant summary judgment favoring Burris.
State lawyers representing Stein, Cooper, and Roseland filed a motion to dismiss the case. “The grounds for dismissal include but are not limited to lack of standing, mootness, sovereign immunity, and failure to state a claim for relief. Plaintiff’s claims fail as a matter of law,” according to the court filing.
Burris filed suit more than a year after the state Supreme Court’s 2022 decision in New Hanover County Board of Education v. Stein. The 6-0 decision allowed Stein to continue using the money to fund an environmental grant program he controls.
The Supreme Court’s decision overruled the state Court of Appeals. That court had ruled in December 2020 that money connected to the Smithfield deal should head to the state treasury.
The Appeals Court’s decision followed an April 2020 state Supreme Court victory for Stein. With a 6-1 vote, the high court had rejected the New Hanover County school board’s argument that the Smithfield money should be considered a civil penalty.
A ruling in favor of the school board at that time would have sent all proceeds from the Smithfield deal to a state fund supporting public schools. Instead the court determined that the Smithfield funds amounted to a gift to the state.
When the Supreme Court returned the case to the Appeals Court in 2020, judges at that intermediate appellate court determined that the 2019 state law required shifting the money to the treasury. NCGS § 147-76.1 says cash gifts and donations to the state “shall be deposited into the State treasury.”
Justice Sam “Jimmy” Ervin IV wrote both the 2020 and 2022 Supreme Court opinions.
“We agree with the Attorney General that the Board of Education’s complaint did not suffice to state a claim for relief,” Ervin wrote in 2022.
Ervin noted that the Appeals Court addressed the impact of the 2019 law long after the case had gone to trial.
“In this case, … the trial court was never asked to consider whether the Board of Education’s complaint sufficed to state a claim pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 147-76.1 and could not have done so because the relevant statutory provision did not exist at the time that the trial court decided to grant summary judgment in the Attorney General’s favor,” Ervin wrote. “As a result, this case does not involve ‘mislabel[ing]’ or a ‘fail[ing] to label’ a claim properly; instead, the Board of Education could not have asserted a claim based upon § 147-76.1 before the trial court because the amended complaint was filed years before the relevant statutory provision was enacted.”
“In other words, the Court of Appeals lacked the authority to address and decide a wholly new claim,” he added.
Though the New Hanover County case was over in 2022, the school board could have filed a new lawsuit based on the 2019 law, Ervin wrote.
Smithfield and its subsidiaries made a $50 million deal in 2000 with Easley. Easley’s immediate successor, Cooper, set up the grant program that Stein has overseen since 2017.
The legal fight against the attorney general’s environmental grant fund started in October 2016. Francis De Luca, then-president of the Civitas Institute, went to court to have the proceeds of the fund declared a state penalty against Smithfield. As the case proceeded through the state’s legal system, courts ruled De Luca out as a plaintiff. The New Hanover County school board proceeded with the case after De Luca bowed out.
The Civitas Institute merged capabilities in 2021 with the John Locke Foundation.
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