Joanne McCall, Senator Geraldine etc. v. Rick Scott, Governor of Florida, etc. , 199 So. 3d 359 ( 2016 )


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  •                             IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA
    JOANNE McCALL, SENATOR      NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO
    GERALDINE THOMPSON,         FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND
    RABBI MERRILL SHAPIRO,      DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED
    REV. HARRY PARROTT, JR.,
    REV. DR. HAROLD BROCUS,     CASE NO. 1D15-2752
    FLORIDA EDUCATION
    ASSOCIATION, FLORIDA
    CONGRESS OF PARENTS AND
    TEACHERS, INC., LEAGUE OF
    WOMEN VOTERS OF
    FLORIDA, INC., AND
    FLORIDA STATE
    CONFERENCE OF BRANCHES
    OF NAACP.
    Appellants,
    v.
    RICK SCOTT, GOVERNOR OF
    FLORIDA, IN HIS OFFICIAL
    CAPACITY AS HEAD OF THE
    FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF
    REVENUE, ET AL. AND
    UMENE PROPHETE ET AL.,
    Appellees.
    _____________________________/
    Opinion filed August 16, 2016.
    An appeal from the Circuit Court for Leon County.
    George S. Reynolds, III, Judge.
    Ronald G. Meyer, Jennifer S. Blohm, and Lynn C. Hearn of Meyer, Brooks, Demma
    and Blohm, P.A., Tallahassee; Pamela L. Cooper and William A. Spillias of Florida
    Education Association, Tallahassee; John M. West of Bredhoff & Kaiser, P.L.L.C.,
    Washington, D.C.; Alice O’Brien of National Education Association, Washington,
    D.C.; David Strom of American Federal of Teachers, Washington, D.C., and Alex
    J. Luchenitser of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, Washington,
    D.C., for Appellants.
    Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, and Rachel Nordby, Deputy Solicitor General,
    Tallahassee, for Appellees Rick Scott, Pam Bondi, Jeff Atwater, Adam Putnam, Pam
    Stewart, and the Department of Revenue and Education.
    Karen D. Walker and Nathan A. Adams IV of Holland & Knight LLP, Tallahassee;
    Daniel J. Woodring of Woodring Law Firm, Tallahassee; Howard Coker of Coker,
    Schickel, Sorenson, Posgay, Camerlengo & Iracki, Jacksonville; Jay P. Lefkowitz
    and Steven J. Menashi of Kirkland & Ellis LLP, New York, NY; Raoul G. Cantero
    of White & Case LLP, Miami, for Intervenor Appellees.
    Michael Ufferman of Michael Ufferman Law Firm, P.A., Tallahassee, for Amicus
    Curiae Black Alliance For Educational Options;
    ROWE, J.
    The Florida Education Association, the Florida Congress of Parents and
    Teachers, Inc., the League of Women Voters of Florida, Inc., the Florida State
    Conference of Branches of the NAACP, a group of parents of children in public
    schools, teachers employed by public schools, and religious and community leaders
    2
    (collectively, Appellants) argue that the Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program
    (FTCSP) is unconstitutional. They filed suit, seeking a declaration that the FTCSP
    violates the Florida Constitution by diverting public funds from Florida’s public
    schools to religiously affiliated schools and by using taxpayer funds to create a
    parallel and non-uniform system of schools. Governor Rick Scott, Attorney General
    Pam Bondi, Chief Financial Officer Jeff Atwater, Commissioner of Agriculture
    Adam Putnam, Commissioner of Education Pam Stewart, the Florida Department of
    Revenue, and the Florida Department of Education (collectively, the State) moved
    to dismiss the suit on grounds that Appellants lacked standing to challenge the
    FTCSP.     Appellants claim that they have standing, pursuant to Rickman v.
    Whitehurst, 
    74 So. 205
    (Fla. 1917), based on their allegation of special injury, and
    also as taxpayers under the limited exception to the special injury rule expressed
    in Department of Administration v. Horne, 
    269 So. 2d 659
    (Fla. 1972). Rejecting
    both arguments for standing advanced by Appellants, the trial court dismissed their
    complaint with prejudice. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
    I. Background
    Beginning in 1999, the Florida Legislature passed several laws to “[e]xpand
    educational opportunities for children of families that have limited financial
    resources.” Ch. 2001-225, § 5, Laws of Fla. The Legislature expressed its intent to
    ensure “that all parents, regardless of means, may exercise and enjoy their basic right
    3
    to educate their children as they see fit . . . .” § 1002.395(1)(a)3., Fla. Stat. (2014).
    Among the education reforms adopted by the Legislature were two programs
    authorizing scholarships for children in failing public schools and children in low-
    income households: (1) the Florida Opportunity Scholarship Program and (2) the
    Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program.
    A. The Florida Opportunity Scholarship Program
    In 1999, the Florida Legislature established the Florida Opportunity
    Scholarship Program (OSP) to give students attending “failing” public schools the
    choice to attend better-performing schools. Ch. 99-398, § 2, Laws of Fla. The
    Legislature declared that:
    a student should not be compelled, against the wishes of the student’s
    parent or guardian, to remain in a school found by the state to be failing
    for 2 years in a 4-year period. The Legislature shall make available
    opportunity scholarships in order to give parents and guardians the
    opportunity for their children to attend a public school that is
    performing satisfactorily or to attend an eligible private school when
    the parent or guardian chooses to apply the equivalent of the public
    education funds generated by his or her child to the cost of tuition in
    the eligible private school . . . .
    § 229.0537(1), Fla. Stat. (1999) (repealed 2002).            The Legislature directly
    appropriated funds to the Department of Education for the OSP. The Department
    of Education transferred those funds to the private school chosen by a qualified
    student’s parent or guardian via a state warrant. § 229.0537(6)(b), Fla. Stat. (1999)
    (repealed).
    4
    Four years after the OSP was established, this Court held the OSP
    unconstitutional on grounds that it violated the no-aid provision of the anti-
    establishment clause in Florida’s Constitution because state revenues were used to
    pay the cost of tuition at religiously affiliated schools. Bush v. Holmes, 
    886 So. 2d 340
    (Fla. 1st DCA 2004) (en banc) (Holmes I). Two years later, the supreme court
    held that the OSP was an unconstitutional violation of the mandate in article IX,
    section 1 because it “foster[ed] plural, nonuniform systems of education in direct
    violation of the constitutional mandate for a uniform system of free public
    schools.” Bush v. Holmes, 
    919 So. 2d 392
    , 398 (Fla. 2006) (Holmes II).
    B. The Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program
    In 2001, the Legislature established the FTCSP. Ch. 2001-255, § 5, Laws of
    Fla. Designed to further expand school choice opportunities beyond those available
    under the OSP, scholarships offered under the FTCSP are not limited to students
    attending “failing” schools.      Rather, students receiving certain government
    assistance or students whose families have an annual income below 185% of the
    federal poverty level are eligible to receive scholarships. § 1002.395(3)(c), Fla. Stat.
    (2015).
    The FTCSP operates as follows. Individual and corporate taxpayers make
    voluntary contributions to Scholarship Funding Organizations (SFOs), including
    state   universities,   independent   colleges   and    universities,   and   nonprofit
    5
    organizations. After making a contribution to an SFO, the taxpayer may seek a credit
    against their liability for the following taxes: (1) oil, gas, and mineral severance tax,
    (2) alcoholic beverage tax, (3) corporate income tax, (4) insurance premium tax, and
    (5) self-accrued direct-pay sales tax. § 1002.395(5)(b), Fla. Stat. (2015). Parents
    and guardians apply to SFOs to secure a scholarship for their student at a school of
    their choice. Scholarships may be used to pay tuition and fees at an eligible private
    school or to pay for transportation to a Florida public school that is outside of the
    student’s district or to a lab school. § 1002.395(6)(d), Fla. Stat. (2015). An eligible
    private school may be religiously affiliated. § 1002.395(8), Fla. Stat. (2015). SFOs
    pay the scholarship funds directly to the participating private schools.
    § 1002.395(7)(f), Fla. Stat. (2015). For the 2014-2015 school year, 69,950 children
    from low-income families applied for and received scholarships under the
    FTCSP. See Fla. Dep’t of Educ., Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program Fact Sheet
    1 (November 2015),
    http://www.fldoe.org/core/fileparse.php/5606/urlt/FTC_Nov_2015.pdf.
    II. Procedural History
    Thirteen years after the FTCSP was created, Appellants filed their lawsuit.
    They alleged that the FTCSP violates two provisions of the Florida Constitution:
    article I, section 3 and article IX, section 1(a). Appellants assert that the FTCSP
    violates the no-aid provision of article I, section 3, by diverting funds from the public
    6
    treasury and channeling those funds to religiously affiliated schools. Appellants
    claim that the FTCSP violates the mandate for the provision of a system of free and
    uniform public schools pursuant to article IX, section 1(a) by redirecting taxpayer
    funds from public schools to provide private-school scholarships and by creating a
    non-uniform system of public education.
    The State argued that Appellants lack standing to bring suit because (1)
    Appellants did not allege any special injury, (2) Appellants failed to identify any
    legislative appropriation subject to a constitutional limitation on the Legislature’s
    spending authority, and (3) Appellants’ claims are not based on any constitutional
    provision limiting the Legislature’s taxing authority. A group of parents whose
    children receive tax credit scholarships intervened in the action and moved to
    dismiss the complaint, echoing the State’s arguments concerning Appellants’ lack
    of special injury and taxpayer standing.
    At the hearing on the motion to dismiss, the trial court determined that
    Appellants’ allegations of harm were insufficient to establish standing. The court
    provided Appellants with an opportunity to amend their complaint to include
    additional factual allegations to support their claim of harm. But Appellants refused
    this offer. Appellants’ counsel maintained at the hearing:
    Judge, we don’t think we need to amend in any way at all. We think
    what we have said here in the second sentence of paragraph 19 is fully
    sufficient to allege that some of the . . . [Appellants] who have children
    in the public schools, . . . [or] who are teachers and administrators in
    7
    the public schools have been directly injured because of the loss of
    funding caused directly by the scholarship program.
    The trial court concluded that Appellants failed to allege special injury standing
    because “whether any diminution of public school resources resulting from the
    [FTCSP] will actually take place is speculative, as is any claim that any such
    diminution would result in reduced per-pupil spending or in any adverse impact on
    the quality of education.” The trial court added that it was not bound to “defer to a
    speculative and conclusory allegation, such as pleaded here, that some Plaintiffs
    have been ‘injured’ by the [FTCSP].” Finally, the trial court determined that
    Appellants lacked taxpayer standing because their claims were not directed at any
    exercise of the Legislature’s spending authority. Appellants now appeal that order.
    III. Analysis
    The sole issue before this Court is whether Appellants have standing to
    challenge the FTCSP. Standing is a question of law, which we review de novo. Pub.
    Def., Eleventh Jud. Cir. of Fla. v. State, 
    115 So. 3d 261
    , 282 (Fla. 2013).
    In order to have standing to challenge a governmental action, a citizen
    taxpayer must show that he or she suffered or will suffer a special injury, distinct
    from other members of the community at large. Council for Secular Humanism, Inc.
    v. McNeil, 
    44 So. 3d 112
    , 121 (Fla. 1st DCA 2010); see also Miller v. Publicker
    Indus., Inc., 
    457 So. 2d 1374
    , 1375 (Fla. 1984) (“A party may challenge the
    constitutionality of a statute after showing that enforcement of the statute will
    8
    injuriously affect the plaintiff’s personal or property rights.”). An exception to the
    special injury requirement has been recognized for challenges to governmental
    action on constitutional grounds based directly on the Legislature’s taxing and
    spending powers. 
    Horne, 269 So. 2d at 663
    ; Alachua Cty. v. Scharps, 
    855 So. 2d 195
    , 198 (Fla. 1st DCA 2003). Thus, we consider whether Appellants have alleged
    any special injury or whether the Legislature’s authorization of the FTCSP violates
    specific constitutional limitations on the Legislature’s taxing and spending power.
    A. Requirements for Special Injury Standing
    “[A] private citizen is precluded from filing a taxpayer complaint to challenge
    government action unless the private citizen alleges and proves a ‘special injury,’
    which is an injury that is different from that of the general public.” Smith v. City
    of Fort Myers, 
    944 So. 2d 1092
    , 1094 (Fla. 2d DCA 2006). The special injury rule
    was first explained by the supreme court in 
    Rickman, 74 So. at 206
    . There, taxpayers
    challenged the county commissioners’ decision to spend bond proceeds on the
    construction of roads and bridges. 
    Id. at 206.
    In holding that the taxpayers in that
    case were required to allege that they suffered a special injury distinct from other
    members of the public, the court explained:
    We have . . . found no case in which such a suit has been maintained
    where it did not appear that special injury would result to the
    complainant as a taxpayer in the increased public burden as the result
    of the unauthorized act. The principle is universally recognized that to
    entitle a party to relief in equity he must bring his case under some
    acknowledged head of equity jurisdiction. In a case where a public
    9
    official is about to commit an unlawful act, the public by its authorized
    public officers must institute the proceeding to prevent the wrongful
    act, unless a private person is threatened with or suffers some public or
    special damage to his individual interests, distinct from that of every
    other inhabitant, in which case he may maintain his bill.
    
    Id. at 207.
      The rationale for the special injury rule is grounded in the doctrine of
    separation of powers and requires courts to accord proper deference to legislative
    actions rather than opening the courthouse doors to disgruntled taxpayers who are
    not pleased with the taxing and spending decisions of their elected representatives.
    Paul v. Blake, 
    376 So. 2d 256
    , 259 (Fla. 3d DCA 1979) (“[I]t has long been
    recognized that in a representative democracy the public’s representatives in
    government should ordinarily be relied on to institute the appropriate legal
    proceedings to prevent the unlawful exercise of the state or county’s taxing and
    spending power.”); see also DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno, 
    547 U.S. 332
    , 344-45
    (2006) (“A taxpayer plaintiff has no right to insist that the government dispose of
    any increased revenue it might experience as a result of his suit by decreasing his
    tax liability or bolstering programs that benefit him. To the contrary, the decision
    of how to allocate any such savings is the very epitome of a policy judgment
    committed to the broad and legitimate discretion of lawmakers, which the courts
    cannot presume either to control or to predict.” (internal quotations omitted)).
    Since adopting the Rickman rule almost one hundred years ago, the supreme
    court has rejected invitations to eliminate the requirement of special injury for
    10
    taxpayer lawsuits. See, e.g., 
    Fornes, 476 So. 2d at 156
    (finding no reason to modify
    the special injury requirement for taxpayer suits); Dep’t of Revenue v. Markham,
    
    396 So. 2d 1120
    , 1121 (Fla. 1981) (reiterating that in the absence of a constitutional
    challenge a taxpayer must show a special injury distinct from that suffered by other
    taxpayers to have standing); U.S. Steele Corp. v. Save Sand Key, Inc., 
    303 So. 2d 9
    ,
    13 (Fla. 1974) (stating that although it had created a limited exception to the
    Rickman rule in Horne “this Court did not intend to abrogate in any way the special
    injury rule”).
    B. Appellants Failed to Allege that They Suffered Any Special Injury
    Here, the trial court correctly determined that Appellants lacked special injury
    standing because they failed to allege that they suffered a harm distinct from that
    suffered by the general public. Indeed, Appellants failed to allege any concrete harm
    whatsoever.      Although Appellants were given an opportunity to amend their
    complaint, they chose to rest their argument for standing on the following allegations
    in their complaint:
    As Florida citizens and taxpayers, and organizations whose members
    are Florida citizens and taxpayers, plaintiffs have been and will
    continue to be injured by the unconstitutional expenditure of public
    revenues under the Scholarship Program. In addition, many of the
    plaintiffs (and members of the plaintiff organizations) whose children
    attend public schools, or who are teachers or administrators in the
    public schools, have been and will continue to be injured by the
    Scholarship Program’s diversion of resources from the public schools.
    Thus, Appellants’ entire argument for special injury standing is that they have been
    11
    harmed by the FTCSP’s alleged diversion of public revenues from public schools to
    private schools.
    Appellants’ diversion theory is incorrect as a matter of law.           A close
    examination of the statutory provisions authorizing the FTCSP exposes the flaws in
    Appellants’ argument. No funds under the FTCSP are appropriated from the state
    treasury or from the budget for Florida’s public schools. See §§ 1002.395(2)(e),
    1002.395(6)(d), Fla. Stat. (2015). Rather, all funds received by private schools under
    the FTCSP come from private, voluntary contributions to SFOs, after a parent or
    guardian has exercised their choice to enroll their child in a private school.
    § 1002.395(1)(b)1., Fla. Stat. (2015). Further, as will be discussed in further detail,
    tax credits received by taxpayers who have contributed to SFOs are not the
    equivalent of revenues remitted to the state treasury. § 1002.395(5)(b), Fla. Stat.
    (2015). Because there was no diversion of any state revenues from public schools
    to private schools through the operation of the FTCSP, Appellants’ theory of harm
    and argument for special injury are insufficient to support standing.
    Further, even assuming that Appellants’ diversion theory was legally
    sufficient, Appellants’ allegations that the FTCSP has harmed them are conclusory
    and speculative. Although it was bound to accept all material allegations within the
    complaint as true when evaluating Appellants’ standing, Sun States Utilities, Inc. v.
    Destin Water Users, Inc., 
    696 So. 2d 944
    , 945 n.1 (Fla. 1st DCA 1997), the trial
    12
    court was not required “to accept internally inconsistent factual claims, conclusory
    allegations, unwarranted deductions, or mere legal conclusions made by a party,”
    Shands Teaching Hospital and Clinics, Inc. v. Estate of Lawson ex rel. Lawson, 
    175 So. 3d 327
    , 331 (Fla. 1st DCA 2015) (en banc). Examining the allegations of injury
    claimed by Appellants, the trial court properly determined that they were conclusory
    and speculative. See Response Oncology, Inc. v. The Metrahealth Ins. Co., 978 F.
    Supp. 1052, 1058 (S.D. Fla. 1997) (“Courts must liberally construe and accept as
    true allegations of fact in the complaint and inferences reasonably deductible
    therefrom, but need not accept factual claims that are internally inconsistent; facts
    which run counter to facts of which the court can take judicial notice; conclusory
    allegations; unwarranted deductions; or mere legal conclusions asserted by a
    party.”).
    Appellants argue that but for the tax credits offered in exchange for
    contributions to SFOs, taxpayers would remit their full tax liability to the state, state
    revenues would increase, and the Legislature would appropriate those revenues to
    fund the public school system, in some manner that would benefit Appellants. This
    argument is founded entirely on supposition. To reach such a conclusion, the trial
    court would be required to anticipate whether the tax credit program positively or
    negatively stimulates economic growth, and thus affects state revenue collection.1
    1
    “When a government expends resources or declines to impose a tax, its budget
    13
    Then, assuming tax revenues decrease as a result of the tax credits available under
    the FTCSP, the court would have to predict whether the tax revenue that would have
    been collected in the absence of the tax credit would have been allocated to the
    budget for the public school system. The trial court would have to forecast whether
    and how the Legislature would fund the education budget based on changes in public
    school enrollment. Finally, the court would have to foretell how fluctuations in the
    state’s overall budget would affect the budget for the public school system. The
    cloudy crystal ball the trial court would be required to gaze into in order to identify
    a particularized harm to Appellants underscores the speculative nature of their
    arguments for standing.
    The United States Supreme Court considered a similar theory of harm alleged
    by a group of taxpayers challenging Arizona’s tax credit scholarship program.
    
    Winn, 563 U.S. at 126
    . The Arizona program operates very much like the FTSCP
    – offering tax credits in exchange for contributions to organizations that fund
    scholarships to students attending private schools. The Arizona taxpayers argued
    that the program was unconstitutional and advanced a similar theory of injury to the
    one asserted in this case – that the tax credit program unconstitutionally diverted
    does not necessarily suffer. On the contrary, the purpose of many governmental
    expenditures and tax benefits is ‘to spur economic activity, which in turn increases
    government revenues.’” Arizona Christian Sch. Tuition Org. v. Winn, 
    563 U.S. 125
    ,
    136 (2011) (quoting 
    Cuno, 547 U.S. at 344
    )).
    14
    public funds from the Arizona public school system to private schools, resulting in
    harm to the plaintiffs. 
    Id. at 129-30.
    The Supreme Court rejected the Arizona
    taxpayers’ allegations that the scholarship program caused them harm:
    Even assuming the STO tax credit has an adverse effect on
    Arizona’s annual budget, problems would remain. To conclude there
    is a particular injury in fact would require speculation that Arizona
    lawmakers react to revenue shortfalls by increasing respondents’ tax
    liability. A finding of causation would depend on the additional
    determination that any tax increase would be traceable to the STO tax
    credits, as distinct from other governmental expenditures or other tax
    benefits. Respondents have not established that an injunction against
    application of the STO tax credit would prompt Arizona legislators to
    “pass along the supposed increased revenue in the form of tax
    reductions.” Those matters, too, are conjectural.
    Each of the inferential steps to show causation and redressability
    depends on premises as to which there remains considerable doubt. The
    taxpayers have not shown that any interest they have in protecting the
    State Treasury would be advanced. Even were they to show some
    closer link, that interest is still of a general character, not particular to
    certain persons. Nor have the taxpayers shown that higher taxes will
    result from the tuition credit scheme. The rule against taxpayer
    standing, a rule designed both to avoid speculation and to insist on
    particular injury, applies to respondents’ lawsuit.
    
    Id. at 137-38
    (internal citations omitted). This same logic applies to Appellants’
    allegations of harm here. Their alleged injury is simply too abstract to support
    standing.
    Despite the speculative nature of the harm they allege, Appellants argue that
    two decisions of the Florida Supreme Court support their argument for standing.
    Appellants first rely on the decision in Coalition for Adequacy and Fairness in
    15
    School Funding, Inc. v. Chiles, 
    680 So. 2d 400
    (Fla. 1996). In Chiles, the supreme
    court held that public school students and their parents had standing to challenge the
    denial of an adequate education under article IX, section 1 of the Florida Constitution
    where the plaintiffs alleged concrete harm to particular students and to the school
    system. 
    Id. at 403
    n.4. The complaint in that case contained very specific allegations
    of harm, including that certain students were not receiving adequate special
    programs and that capital outlays were insufficiently funded. Thus, the Chiles case
    is readily distinguishable from this case, and it exposes the infirmities in Appellants’
    complaint.
    Appellants also rely on the Florida Supreme Court’s decision in Holmes II.
    Their reliance on this case is equally misplaced. There, the court held that the OSP
    undermined the quality of the public school system by appropriating state funds to
    private schools. Holmes 
    II, 919 So. 2d at 405
    . Although the court did not address
    standing in that case, the court found the diversion of appropriated education funds
    from the public school system to private schools to be a tangible, concrete harm. 
    Id. at 408.
    Appellants assert no such concrete harm or particularized injury in this case.
    While the FTCSP has been fine-tuned since its creation in 2001, the essential
    function of the program – using voluntary private contributions to fund scholarships
    for eligible students – has remained unchanged. See Ch. 2001-225, Laws of Fla.;
    ch. 2016-140, Laws of Fla. Thus, there has been ample opportunity in the ensuing
    16
    fifteen years since the creation of the FTCSP for any decrease in funding to the
    public school system to manifest. And yet despite arguing that public funds have
    been diverted from the public school system, Appellants make no argument
    whatsoever that public school funding has actually declined. Because Appellants’
    allegations of harm are legally insufficient, entirely speculative, and express no
    particularized injury to Appellants, they lack standing to bring suit on grounds of
    special injury.
    C. The Horne Exception to the Special Injury Rule
    Alternatively, Appellants insist that they have standing to challenge the
    constitutionality of the FTCSP as taxpayers under the exception to the special injury
    rule adopted in Horne. In Horne, the Florida Supreme Court recognized a limited
    exception to the special injury rule in cases where a taxpayer challenges a legislative
    exercise of the taxing and spending power in contravention of specific constitutional
    
    provisions. 269 So. 2d at 663
    . Horne followed a United States Supreme Court case,
    Flast v. Cohen, 
    392 U.S. 83
    (1968), which established a narrow exception for
    standing in federal taxpayer suits.
    In Flast, a group of federal taxpayers challenged the appropriation of federal
    funds to “finance instruction in reading, arithmetic, and other subjects in religious
    schools, and to purchase textbooks and other instructional materials for use in such
    
    schools.” 392 U.S. at 85-86
    . The taxpayers argued that Congress exceeded its
    17
    authority in appropriating funds in violation of the Establishment and Free Exercise
    Clauses of the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. 
    Id. at 86.
    The
    Supreme Court determined that the taxpayers in that case had standing, explaining
    the narrow circumstances in which a taxpayer may challenge congressional action:
    [W]e hold that a taxpayer will have standing consistent with Article III
    to invoke federal judicial power when he alleges that congressional
    action under the taxing and spending clause is in derogation of those
    constitutional provisions which operate to restrict the exercise of the
    taxing and spending power. The taxpayer’s allegation in such cases
    would be that his tax money is being extracted and spent in violation of
    specific constitutional protections against such abuses of legislative
    power. Such an injury is appropriate for judicial redress, and the
    taxpayer has established the necessary nexus between his status and the
    nature of the allegedly unconstitutional action to support his claim of
    standing to secure judicial review. Under such circumstances, we feel
    confident that the questions will be framed with the necessary
    specificity, that the issues will be contested with the necessary
    adverseness and that the litigation will be pursued with the necessary
    vigor to assure that the constitutional challenge will be made in a form
    traditionally thought to be capable of judicial resolution. We lack that
    confidence in cases such as Frothingham where a taxpayer seeks to
    employ a federal court as a forum in which to air his generalized
    grievances about the conduct of government or the allocation of power
    in the Federal System.
    
    Id. at 105-06.
       Thus, the exception to the general rule against taxpayer standing
    established in Flast requires a taxpayer to allege more than just that a legislative act
    is unconstitutional. 
    Id. at 102-03.
    Rather, a taxpayer must allege that a legislative
    act violates a specific constitutional limitation on the Legislature’s taxing and
    spending power.
    18
    In Horne, the Florida Supreme Court similarly allowed a narrow exception to
    the special injury rule it established in Rickman and held that a taxpayer has standing
    to sue where the taxpayer can show that a government taxing measure or expenditure
    violates a specific constitutional limitation on the Legislature’s taxing and spending
    power. 
    Smith, 944 So. 2d at 1094
    ; 
    Scharps, 855 So. 2d at 198
    . Subsequently, Florida
    courts have found standing in a number of cases involving taxpayer challenges to
    constitutional limits on the Legislature’s spending authority. See, e.g., Holmes 
    II, 919 So. 2d at 406
    (determining that article IX, section 1(a) was a restriction on the
    Legislature’s spending power by “provid[ing] both a mandate to provide for
    children’s education and a restriction on the execution of that mandate”); 
    McNeil, 44 So. 3d at 122
    (Fla. 1st DCA 2010) (holding that taxpayers had standing under the
    no-aid provision to challenge the constitutionality of statutes that authorized the state
    to direct appropriations to sectarian institutions). Courts have also found standing
    under the Horne exception where taxpayers identified a constitutional limit on the
    Legislature’s taxing authority. See, e.g., Charlotte Cty. Bd. of City Comm’rs v.
    Taylor, 
    650 So. 2d 146
    , 148 (Fla. 2d DCA 1995) (determining that a taxpayer had
    standing to bring a constitutional challenge to a county tax exemption that was
    inconsistent with general laws which required county commissioners, not electors,
    to establish a budget and levy ad valorem taxes); 
    Paul, 376 So. 2d at 257
    (holding
    that a taxpayer had standing to challenge the county’s authority to issue ad valorem
    19
    tax exemptions that violated specific limitations imposed by the Florida
    Constitution).
    Thus, in order to establish standing under the Horne exception to the special
    injury rule, Appellants were required to identify both (1) a specific exercise of the
    Legislature’s taxing and spending authority, and (2) a specific constitutional
    limitation upon the exercise of that authority. Appellants failed to establish taxpayer
    standing for two reasons. First, while both article I, section 3 and article IX, section
    1(a) of Florida’s Constitution either expressly or implicitly limit the Legislature’s
    spending authority, Appellants failed to identify any portion of the FTCSP that
    exceeds the Legislature’s spending authority under either constitutional provision.
    Second, neither provision limits the Legislature’s taxing authority.
    D. Appellants Lack Taxpayer Standing Pursuant to article I, section 3
    Appellants allege that the Legislature exceeded both its taxing and spending
    authority in violation of article I, section 3 (Florida’s so-called “Blaine
    Amendment”), which is also known as the no-aid provision. 2 Appellants assert that
    the no-aid provision limits the authority of the Legislature to grant tax credits and to
    2
    Blaine Amendments, which prohibit the use of public funds to support religious
    schools, were widely enacted in response to political disputes over whether churches
    or sectarian organizations should receive public assistance. Holmes 
    I, 886 So. 2d at 348-50
    . Approximately thirty states have “Blaine Amendments.” Mark Edward
    DeForrest, An Overview and Evaluation of State Blaine Amendments: Origins,
    Scope, and First Amendment Concerns, 26 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 551, 576 (2003).
    20
    authorize the funding of scholarships through voluntary contributions to SFOs under
    the FTCSP. We disagree. The plain language of the no-aid provision imposes no
    limitation on the Legislature’s taxing authority. And although the no-aid provision
    expressly limits the Legislature’s spending authority by prohibiting the
    appropriation of state revenues to aid any sectarian institution, Appellants identify
    no such appropriation connected with the FTCSP.
    Any interpretation of a constitutional provision must begin with an
    examination of the provision’s plain language. Brinkman v. Francois, 
    184 So. 3d 504
    , 510 (Fla. 2016). “If that language is clear, unambiguous, and addresses the
    matter in issue, then it must be enforced as written.” 
    Id. (quoting Fla.
    Soc’y of
    Ophthalmology v. Fla. Optometric Ass’n, 
    489 So. 2d 1118
    , 1119 (Fla. 1986)).
    Article I, section 3 of the Florida Constitution provides:
    There shall be no law respecting the establishment of religion or
    prohibiting or penalizing the free exercise thereof. Religious freedom
    shall not justify practices inconsistent with public morals, peace or
    safety. No revenue of the state or any political subdivision or agency
    thereof shall ever be taken from the public treasury directly or
    indirectly in aid of any church, sect, or religious denomination or in
    aid of any sectarian institution.
    (emphasis added). The express language of Florida’s no-aid provision contains no
    limit on the Legislature’s taxing authority, including the Legislature’s power to enact
    laws creating tax credits or exemptions; rather, this provision “focuses on the use of
    state funds to aid sectarian institutions, not other kinds of support.” Holmes I, 
    886 21 So. 2d at 352
    .
    Further, the plain language of the no-aid provision restricts only the
    Legislature’s authority to appropriate state revenues from the public treasury. In
    construing this provision, our Court recognized that the grant of a tax exemption to
    a sectarian institution is not prohibited by the no-aid provision because it does not
    involve a disbursement from the public treasury. 
    Id. at 356-57.
    Thus, in order for a
    taxpayer to have standing to challenge legislative action under the no aid provision,
    “the challenge must be to legislative appropriations.” 
    McNeil, 44 So. 3d at 121
    ; see
    also Philip J. Padovano, Florida Civil Practice § 4.3 n.9 (2015-2016 ed.) (“The rule
    is often applied to challenges to appropriations acts, but it can also be used to
    challenge other kinds of statutes, provided they authorize the expenditure of public
    funds. But as the court explained in Flast, the expenditure must be for a specific
    purpose that is related to the alleged constitutional violation and not merely
    incidental to the regulatory scheme adopted by the statute.”). But Appellants
    identify no legislative appropriation here.
    Indeed, the legislative actions challenged in this case, the authorization of tax
    credits under the FTCSP and the payment of private funds to private schools via
    scholarships authorized under the FTCSP, involve no appropriation from the public
    treasury. The program is funded through voluntary, private donations by individual
    and corporate taxpayers. §§ 1002.395(1)(b)1.; 1002.395(2)(e), Fla. Stat. (2015).
    22
    Despite the lack of any appropriation by the Legislature in funding the FTCSP,
    Appellants urge this Court to hold that the use of tax credits to fund the program
    amounts to an indirect appropriation of revenue from the public treasury in violation
    of the no-aid provision. Appellants assert that any distinction between tax credits
    and revenues is constitutionally immaterial because the funds credited to taxpayers
    could have been collected and transferred to the state treasury. In advancing this
    novel construction of the no-aid provision, Appellants ignore the substantial
    difference between tax credits and state revenues. In Holmes I, we explained that,
    “[i]n the case of direct subsidy, the state forcibly diverts the income of both believers
    and nonbelievers to churches. In the case of an exemption, the state merely refrains
    from diverting to its own uses income independently generated by the churches
    through voluntary contributions.” 
    Id. (quoting Donald
    A. Giannella, Religious
    Liberty, Nonestablishment, and Doctrinal Development, 81 Harv. L. Rev. 513, 553
    (1968)). In so holding, our Court relied on the following reasoning advanced by
    Justice Brennan:
    Tax exemptions and general subsidies, however, are qualitatively
    different [than the payment of state funds]. Though both provide
    economic assistance, they do so in fundamentally different ways. A
    subsidy involves the direct transfer of public monies to the subsidized
    enterprise and uses resources exacted from taxpayers as a whole. An
    exemption, on the other hand, involves no such transfer. It assists the
    exempted enterprise only passively, by relieving a privately funded
    venture of the burden of paying taxes. In other words, in the case of
    direct subsidy, the state forcibly diverts the income of both believers
    and nonbelievers to churches, while in the case of an exemption, the
    23
    state merely refrains from diverting to its own uses income
    independently generated by the churches through voluntary
    contributions. Thus, the symbolism of tax exemption is significant as a
    manifestation that organized religion is not expected to support the
    state; by the same token the state is not expected to support the church.
    
    Id. at 356-57
    (quoting Walz v. Tax Comm’n of City of New York, 
    397 U.S. 664
    ,
    690-91 (1970) (Brennan, J., concurring)).
    The United States Supreme Court made precisely the same distinction
    between revenues and tax credits (as opposed to tax exemptions) when it considered
    the constitutionality of the tax credits offered under the Arizona scholarship program
    in 
    Winn. 563 U.S. at 141-42
    . The Supreme Court observed that the expenditure of
    state revenues on religiously affiliated activities made it known to a dissenter that
    her tax dollars were spent in violation of her conscience. 
    Id. However, when
    the
    government declined to impose a tax, there was no connection between the
    dissenting taxpayer and a religiously affiliated activity. 
    Id. at 142.
    The Supreme
    Court also rejected the argument that taxpayers who benefited from tax credits were
    in effect paying their state income tax to scholarship organizations. 
    Id. at 143.
    “Respondents’ contrary position assumes that income should be treated as if it were
    government property even if it has not come into the tax collector’s hands. That
    premise finds no basis in standing jurisprudence.” Id.; accord Kotterman v. Killian,
    
    972 P.2d 606
    , 618 (Ariz. 1999) (en banc) (“[N]o money ever enters the state’s
    control as a result of this tax credit. Nothing is deposited in the state treasury or
    24
    other accounts under the management or possession of governmental agencies or
    public officials. Thus, under any common understanding of the words, we are not
    here dealing with ‘public money.’”); Manzara v. State, 
    343 S.W.3d 656
    , 664 (Mo.
    2011) (en banc) (finding no taxpayer standing because “tax credits are not
    government expenditures”). Tax credits offered under the FTCSP involve no public
    funds. And Appellants failed to identify any portion of the FTCSP authorizing
    legislative appropriations or any other exercise of the Legislature’s spending
    authority. See 
    Winn, 563 U.S. at 142
    (holding that when taxpayers choose to
    contribute to scholarship organizations, they are expending their own funds, not
    revenue collected by the state). For this reason, we affirm the trial court’s ruling that
    Appellants failed to demonstrate taxpayer standing under article I, section 3.
    E. Appellants Lack Taxpayer Standing Pursuant to article IX, section 1(a)
    Appellants also argue that in authorizing the FTCSP, the Legislature exceeded
    its taxing and spending authority under article IX, section 1(a) of the Florida
    Constitution. Appellants’ argument is set forth in the following two paragraphs of
    their complaint:
    60. Like the OSP, the Scholarship Program is unconstitutional because
    through it the State has established a governmental program providing
    for private-school vouchers, funded by redirecting taxpayer funds, that
    educates Florida children in a manner other than through the system of
    free public schools mandated by Article IX, § 1.
    61. In addition, the Scholarship Program is – as was the case with the
    OSP – unconstitutional because it funds the education of Florida
    25
    children in a system of schools that is not “uniform,” as required by
    Article IX, § 1.
    These allegations fail to show that the Legislature exceeded any limit on its taxing
    and spending authority.
    In order to establish standing under Horne, Appellants were required not only
    to identify a specific exercise of the Legislature’s taxing and spending authority, but
    also a specific constitutional limitation on that authority. Article IX, section 1(a)
    provides:
    The education of children is a fundamental value of the people of the
    State of Florida. It is, therefore, a paramount duty of the state to make
    adequate provision for the education of all children residing within its
    borders. Adequate provision shall be made by law for a uniform,
    efficient, safe, secure, and high quality system of free public schools
    that allows students to obtain a high quality education and for the
    establishment, maintenance, and operation of institutions of higher
    learning and other public education programs that the needs of the
    people may require.
    The plain language of article IX, section 1(a) does not contain any express or implied
    limitation on the Legislature’s taxing authority. But see, art. VII, § 3(c)-(d), Fla.
    Const. (imposing restrictions on the authority of counties and municipalities to levy
    certain taxes); art. VII, § 9, Fla. Const. (imposing restrictions on certain entities’
    abilities to levy ad valorem taxes); art. VIII, §1(h), Fla. Const. (imposing a limit on
    the authority of municipalities to impose a tax on property for services rendered by
    the county exclusively for the benefit of the property or residents in unincorporated
    areas). Because article IX, section 1(a) does not limit the Legislature’s taxing power,
    26
    Appellants may only raise a constitutional challenge under that provision by
    showing that the Legislature exceeded its spending authority.
    On two occasions, the Florida Supreme Court has recognized that article IX,
    section 1(a) limits the Legislature’s spending authority. In Chiles, the supreme court
    construed this provision to require the Legislature to appropriate sufficient public
    revenue to adequately fund Florida’s public school 
    system. 680 So. 2d at 405-06
    .
    In Holmes II, the supreme court construed this provision to restrict the Legislature’s
    authority to use public revenues to fund private 
    schools. 919 So. 2d at 408
    .
    Although neither decision discussed standing in any significant detail, the court’s
    holdings in those cases expose the flaws in Appellants’ arguments for standing here.
    First, in Chiles, the plaintiffs alleged that the Legislature violated article IX,
    section 1 by failing to allocate adequate resources to public 
    schools. 680 So. 2d at 402
    . There, the plaintiffs alleged:
    (1) Certain students are not receiving adequate programs to permit them
    to gain proficiency in the English language; (2) Economically deprived
    students are not receiving adequate education for their greater
    educational needs; (3) Gifted, disabled, and mentally handicapped
    children are not receiving adequate special programs; (4) Students in
    property-poor counties are not receiving an adequate education; (5)
    Education capital outlay needs are not adequately provided for; and (6)
    School districts are unable to perform their constitutional duties
    because of the legislative imposition of noneducational and quasi-
    educational burdens.
    
    Id. These allegations
    by the Chiles plaintiffs enumerated a number of specific harms
    to the public school system, including inadequate special programs for specific
    27
    groups of students and insufficient funding of capital outlays. Here, unlike the
    Chiles plaintiffs, Appellants do not allege that the Legislature failed to adequately
    fund Florida’s public school system. They do not allege that the authorization of the
    FTCSP resulted in the deprivation of access to special programs, the inability to meet
    capital outlay needs, nor any other specific harm held by the Chiles court to violate
    article IX, section 1(a). Thus, a comparison to Chiles reveals the deficiencies in
    Appellants’ complaint.
    Second, in Holmes II, the supreme court held that “[article IX, section 1(a)]
    mandates that the state’s obligation is to provide for the education of Florida’s
    children, specifies that the manner of fulfilling this obligation is by providing a
    uniform, high quality system of free public education, and does not authorize
    equivalent alternatives.” Holmes 
    II, 919 So. 2d at 408
    . In holding the OSP
    unconstitutional, the supreme court identified a number of ways the Legislature
    violated article IX, section 1(a) by exceeding its spending authority. 
    Id. The court
    concluded that the Legislature authorized some students “to receive a publicly
    funded education through an alternative system of private schools that [were] not
    subject to the uniformity requirements of the public school system,” 
    id. at 412,
    “divert[ed] public dollars into separate private systems,” 
    id. at 398,
    and
    “transfer[red] tax money earmarked for public education to private schools” 
    id. at 408.
    The court focused on the Legislature’s appropriation of public funds:
    28
    Our decision does not deny parents recourse to either public or private
    school alternatives to a failing school. Only when the private school
    option depends upon public funding is choice limited. This limit is
    necessitated by the constitutional mandate in article IX, section 1(a),
    which sets out the state’s responsibilities in a manner that does not
    allow the use of state monies to fund a private school education.
    
    Id. at 412-13.
    Thus, the supreme court’s analysis of whether the Legislature
    exceeded its spending authority under article IX, section 1(a) was limited to
    determining if the Legislature appropriated public funds for use in private schools.
    Here, Appellants failed to allege that the Legislature appropriated any public
    funds to private schools. Appellants failed to allege any inadequacy in the funding
    of the state’s system of education. Because of these failures, Appellants have
    insufficiently alleged that the Legislature exceeded its spending authority under
    article IX, section 1(a). Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s finding that
    Appellants failed to establish taxpayer standing under this provision.
    IV. Conclusion
    Appellants failed to allege that they suffered any special injury as a result of
    the operation of the Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program and failed to establish
    that the Legislature exceeded any constitutional limitation on its taxing and spending
    authority when it authorized the program. At most, Appellants quarrel with the
    Legislature’s policy judgments regarding school choice and funding of Florida’s
    public schools. This is precisely the type of dispute into which the courts must
    decline to intervene under the separation of powers doctrine. Markham, 
    396 So. 2d 29
    at 1122. Appellants’ remedy is at the polls. 
    Paul, 376 So. 2d at 259
    .
    We conclude that the trial court properly found that Appellants lack standing
    to attack the constitutionality of the Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program. We
    thus AFFIRM the trial court’s order dismissing the complaint.
    MAKAR and BILBREY, JJ., CONCUR.
    30