John B. ANDERSON, Independents for Anderson Party of North
Carolina, Phillip A. Diehl, Gerald Eisenstat, Appellees,
v.
R. Kenneth BABB, Sidney Barnwell, Shirley M. Herring, Ruth
T. Samashko, John L. Stickley, Alex K. Brock, Appellants.
No. 80-1590.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued Sept. 8, 1980.
Decided Sept. 19, 1980.
Walter E. Dellinger, School of Law, Duke University, Durham, N. C. (James Wallace, Jr., Deputy Atty. Gen. for Legal Affairs, North Carolina Dept. of Justice, Raleigh, N. C., on brief), for appellants.
Herbert L. Hyde, Asheville, N. C., David F. Kirby, Kirby & Wallace, Ronald D. Eastman, Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft, Washington, D. C., on brief, for intervenors.
George T. Frampton, Jr., Washington, D. C. (Mitchell Rogovin, Vicki C. Jackson, Ellen M. Semonoff, Rogovin, Stern & Huge, Washington, D. C., Jonathan Harkavy, Smith, Patterson, Follin, Curtis, James & Harkavy, Greensboro, N. C., on brief), for appellees.
Before HAYNSWORTH, Chief Judge, WINTER and PHILLIPS, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
On this appeal the Democratic National Committee (DNC) as an intervening defendant1 challenges the district court's determination that the plaintiff John B. Anderson (Anderson) "did not participate in the presidential primary election in North Carolina" within the meaning of N.C.Gen.Stat. § 163-213.6, and that he is, therefore, entitled to have his name placed on the November 4, 1980 general election ballot as the presidential candidate of the political party, Independents for Anderson Party of North Carolina. Faced as it was with the cryptic wording of N.C.Gen.Stat. § 163-213.6 and the conflicting interpretations that had been placed upon that statute by the North Carolina State Board of Elections and its Executive Secretary-Director, we conclude that it was proper for the district court, exercising its pendent jurisdiction, to make its own interpretation of that statute. Concluding further that the district court's ensuing interpretation of the statute was, as a matter of law, a valid one, we affirm its injunctive decree directing that Anderson's name be placed on the general election ballot.
* The factual background, essentially as recited by the district court in its memorandum opinion, is as follows. At its 1971 session the General Assembly of North Carolina enacted Article 18A of Chapter 163 of the General Statutes entitled "Presidential Preference Primary Act," which provides for a primary election in which the voters of North Carolina are given an opportunity "to express their preference for the person to be the presidential candidate of their political party," the election to be held on the Tuesday after the first Monday in May of the year in which presidential elections are held. N.C.Gen.Stat. § 163-213.4 provides in pertinent part that the State Board of Elections shall convene on Tuesday following the first Monday in February preceding "the presidential preference primary election" and at that time nominate as presidential primary candidates all candidates affiliated with a political party recognized pursuant to other provisions of the election laws. N.C.Gen.Stat. § 163-213.6, the provision of the Presidential Preference Primary Act that is in controversy here, reads as follows:
§ 163-213.6. Notification to candidates.-The State Board of Elections shall forthwith contact each person who has been nominated by the Board or by petition and notify him in writing that, upon his written request, to be filed with the Board within 15 days of the notice to him by the Board, his name will be printed as a candidate of a specified political party on the North Carolina presidential preference primary ballot. A candidate who participates in the North Carolina presidential preference primary of a particular party shall have his name placed on the general election ballot only as a nominee of that political party. The board shall send a copy of the "Presidential Preference Primary Act" to each candidate with the notice specified above.
Acting pursuant to this statute, the Board on February 6, 1980 notified Anderson that he had been nominated as a candidate for the Republican presidential primary to be held in North Carolina on May 6, 1980. In a letter dated February 12, 1980, Anderson notified the Board that he accepted the nomination.
On April 24, 1980, Anderson publicly announced his intention to withdraw his name as a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination and to pursue an independent candidacy for the office of President of the United States. This announcement was widely publicized in the news media of North Carolina and throughout the nation. On that same day, Anderson mailed a notarized notice of withdrawal of his candidacy as a Republican presidential candidate to the Board and specifically revoked his previous acceptance of the Board's nomination. He requested that his name be removed from the ballot for the primary election to be held on May 6, 1980, but his letter was not received by the Board until April 30, 1980, at which time the ballots had already been printed and distributed.
Between the date of his acceptance of the Board's nomination on February 12, 1980 and his withdrawal as a candidate on the Republican ticket on April 24, 1980, Anderson's campaign efforts in North Carolina were minimal. He made no visits to the state, opened no campaign offices and set up no campaign apparatus. A total of $2,411.30 was expended in North Carolina by the Anderson campaign to reimburse expenses incurred "to determine the political climate in North Carolina with respect to Anderson's candidacy."
Following his withdrawal from the primary election campaign on April 24, 1980, Anderson was faced with two options as to methods of having his name placed on the November general election ballot in North Carolina: he could have collected signatures on a petition from registered voters of ten percent of the number of votes cast in the last gubernatorial election, or he could have set up a new political party. Had he chosen the petition route, it would have been necessary for Anderson to produce over 166,000 signatures by April 25, 1980, one day after he had announced his candidacy as an independent, a practical impossibility. Anderson therefore chose the new party route.
There followed a series of discussions between Anderson's attorneys and the Executive Secretary-Director of the State Board of Elections concerning procedures to be followed for establishing a new political party and nominating Anderson for President as the nominee of that party. A hand-delivered letter by Anderson's attorneys to the Executive Secretary-Director of the Board dated May 5, 1980, stating counsel's understanding of the manner in which the Board interprets and applies the law pertaining to the formation of new political parties in North Carolina, was endorsed by Alex K. Brock, the Executive Secretary-Director of the Board, in a statement appended to the end of the letter providing that "I agree that the interpretations of North Carolina law set forth above are accurate." Included in the letter was a paragraph reading as follows:
The fact that a person's name appears on the North Carolina primary as a nominee for the office of President does preclude such person from having his name placed on the general election ballot as the nominee of a new political party for the same office in the same year.
Following the words "does" in the quoted paragraph, however, there appears an asterisk referring to a handwritten notation at the bottom of the letter, apparently made by Mr. Brock, which reads:
* Not in the case of John Anderson inasmuch as he "revoked" his nomination in the N. C. Primary prior to the date of the primary election. (S) AKB
As stated before, when the Board received Anderson's letter withdrawing his candidacy and requesting that his name be removed from the primary ballot, the ballots had already been printed, and on the day of the election Anderson's name remained on the ballot. In fact, absentee ballots containing his name had been distributed by the Board beginning on March 7, 1980, and in the May 6 election Anderson received 8,542 votes, which represented 5.07 percent of the votes cast in the Republican presidential preference primary. This figure included some absentee ballots.
On June 17, 1980, the Board of Elections approved the petition filed on behalf of Anderson to organize a new political party to be known as "Independents for Anderson Party of North Carolina" and certified the party to submit its nominees selected by convention provided the nominees were otherwise qualified under the laws and Constitution of North Carolina. Pursuant to this action of the Board, the party held its convention and in apt time certified the name of John B. Anderson as its candidate for President of the United States.
On July 29, 1980, the Board held a public hearing, at which both Anderson and the DNC were represented by counsel, to determine the validity of Anderson's placement on the November general election ballot as the presidential candidate of the Independents for Anderson Party of North Carolina. In addition to the foregoing facts, the Board found that Anderson "did participate in the North Carolina presidential preference primary within the meaning of G.S. 163-213.6." It therefore concluded that, while the Independents for Anderson Party of North Carolina was a bona fide political party in North Carolina, Anderson was not qualified to represent that party as its presidential candidate in the November general election.
Anderson, the Independents for Anderson Party of North Carolina and several Anderson supporters immediately instituted suit against the Board in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina. In this suit seeking injunctive and declaratory relief filed pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, they alleged violations of their rights under the first, fifth and fourteenth amendments of the United States Constitution. They contended that, under the Board's interpretation, N.C.Gen.Stat. § 163-213.6 was unconstitutional as applied to Anderson because it deprived Anderson of his first amendment right to run for public office and because it violated the fundamental rights of Anderson's supporters to nominate and vote for the candidate of their choice. In the alternative they argued that the Board had misinterpreted the statute. After a hearing on August 12, 1980, the district court granted the DNC's motion to intervene and issued a temporary restraining order preventing the Board from printing the general election ballots without Anderson's name.
After a subsequent hearing on cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court found that the reference in N.C.Gen.Stat. § 163-213.6 to a "candidate who participates in the North Carolina presidentialpreference primary" was intended to include only those candidates who willfully, intentionally or knowingly took part in the primary election itself. It therefore concluded that, because Anderson had "revoked" his nomination as a Republican presidential candidate prior to the date of the North Carolina primary election, his name could not be barred from placement on the general election ballot by virtue of N.C.Gen.Stat. § 163-213.6.
Although the DNC has raised a number of procedural and substantive issues, its appeal resolves itself ultimately into two questions. First, was it proper for the district court to make its own interpretation of N.C.Gen.Stat. § 163-213.6? Second, if so, is the construction that resulted a valid one?
II
In order for a federal court not sitting in diversity to respond to a question of local law, that question must be so entwined with a substantial federal claim "that the entire action before the court comprises but one constitutional 'case.' " United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
Id. at 730,
Assuming the existence of a substantial federal claim, the instant action would seem to fall very much in the mold of Siler v. Louisville & Nashville R. R.,
Having concluded that it was proper for the district court to make its own interpretation of North Carolina's "sore loser" provision, we turn now to the question whether that interpretation was a valid one. It should first be noted that N.C.Gen.Stat. § 163-213.6 is a statute that begs for judicial construction or legislative clarification. Not only is its wording subject to a wide variety of interpretations and its administrative construction conflicting, it is accompanied by little in the way of legislative history.4
Despite this virtual absence of guidance, the district court's determination must still be reviewed for its adherence to two principles of statutory construction. The first of these is the canon that where, as here, neither legislative history nor administrative interpretation sheds clear light on the meaning of an ambiguous statute, a court is bound only to render a decision that is reasonable in light of the overall policy of the legislation under consideration and the commonly accepted meaning of the words used in the statute. See Hassett v. Welch,
This basic range of choice was rightly influenced, however, by the second principle by which the district court properly felt itself constrained in construing North Carolina's "sore loser" statute. That principle is the constitutional commonplace that a court should avoid, if possible, that construction of a statute that would result in its constitutional invalidation. Lynch v. Overholser,
Within these principles of statutory construction we therefore conclude that the district court's interpretation was a proper and valid one. The court's resulting conclusion that under this construction of the state statute and on the undisputed facts Anderson had not participated in the presidential preference primary is manifestly without error, so that the constitutional questions presented are not necessary to decision and Anderson is entitled to the relief sought in this action.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
The original defendants-the members and Executive Secretary-Director of the North Carolina State Board of Elections-did not appeal. On oral argument we were advised by counsel for the DNC that this did not represent any abandonment by the original defendants of the position being urged by the DNC as intervenor on appeal, but merely a tactical judgment that that position could be adequately represented by the DNC. In substantiation of this representation-which has no relevance to resolution of the legal issues-counsel noted for the court that he was accompanied at counsel table by the Chairman of the State Board of Elections, and that the Attorney General of North Carolina had authorized the Assistant Attorney General to sign and fully endorse the briefs filed by the DNC in this court
Storer was actually the decision of the Supreme Court in a pair of cases that, while never technically consolidated, were ruled on together by the trial court. The first, Storer v. Brown, involved a constitutional challenge to California's election laws as applied to a direct party primary for congressional office.
The second appeal decided by the Storer Court, Hall v. Brown, also involved a challenge to the constitutional validity of California's election laws, but this time as applied to a presidential preference primary. Id. at 727-28,
Therefore, although there may be some implication in Storer that what the Court said with respect to the application of a "disaffiliation" requirement to a direct party primary for congressional office has validity with respect to a presidential preference primary, that implication is certainly weakened by the Court's emphasis on the application of its "disaffiliation" decision to a direct party primary, id. at 734-35,
Against this conclusion the DNC contended below and on this appeal that the district court should have abstained under principles applied in Huffman v. Pursue,
Aside from any question of Huffman's basic applicability to a state civil proceeding of the type here involved, cf. Juidice v. Vail,
The res judicata contention goes beyond choice of law concerns in the exercise of a federal court's pendent jurisdiction to determine state law questions. Res judicata would dictate the choice, not on notions of federalism and comity, but because of the preclusive effect to which the valid and final judgment of one court is commonly entitled in any other in our federal system. Pointing out that in appropriate cases the judgment of an administrative agency acting in a judicial capacity may well be accorded res judicata effect, see United States v. Utah Constr. & Mining Co.,
Further, we observe that, though the Board's proceeding provided the rudiments of a truly adversarial presentation of the critical issue, that issue was more-perhaps totally-one of law than of fact. In respect of such an issue, this kind of tribunal is not intended nor can it be expected to bring to bear the special expertise of the traditional common-law tribunal. In consequence, though determinations of legal as well as factual issues may sometimes be entitled to collateral estoppel effect, Restatement (Second) of Judgments, § 68, comments c, j (Tent. Draft No. 4, 1977), this factor also militates here against preclusion. See id. § 68.1(c).
On total balance, we therefore conclude that the determinations of the State Board should not be accorded preclusive effect in this federal action.
In the district court, the defendants filed with the summary judgment materials an affidavit by the Hon. J. Allen Adams, a member of the General Assembly of North Carolina during the session at which the challenged statute was enacted. This affidavit identified certain attached documents from which can be traced the evolution of the statute as enacted from the original bill as introduced. Presumably because nonexistent, no reports by committees, floor debates or comparable sources for divining legislative purpose were included. The affiant offered no independent conclusions as to the implications of the identified documents, nor any opinion based upon his participation in the legislative process. The only completely extraneous item included was a contemporary newspaper account of the statute's final enactment, which did contain some assumptions as to its intended operation
On oral argument on this appeal, counsel for Anderson suggested that the materials were probably inappropriate for consideration on the cross-motions for summary judgment, without specifying whether because of their content or the procedures by which they were made part of the record. Having made the tactical judgment not to object to inclusion of the materials below, counsel did not press any objection on appeal, and indeed suggested that the materials were at least as supportive of its contention respecting the statute's proper interpretation as they were of the DNC's.
Both because there has been no formal objection to the consideration of the affidavit and the attached legislative materials, and because, except for the newspaper account, they were apparently appropriate for consideration so far as content is concerned, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e), we have felt free to consider them. Without detailed analysis, our conclusion is that they are inconclusive on the precise matter at issue; but our conclusion that the district court's interpretation of the statute's meaning was a valid one has taken them into account.
This is the interpretation suggested by the DNC as the most likely reflection of legislative intent: i. e., that a person has "participated" when, having accepted the Board's invitation to have his name printed on the primary ballot as a candidate of a specified political party, he then fails within the period given to accept the invitation to revoke the acceptance. The DNC also, of course, contends that if this be not the proper interpretation, then (3) must be
This is the interpretation contended for by Anderson. It is the interpretation apparently made administratively by the Board's Executive Secretary-Director; and it is, of course, the interpretation made by the district court. The DNC points out that this interpretation does not answer the question of how far into the election day process a candidate must "participate" in order to come under the "sore loser" ban. But of course that question was not presented by Anderson's conduct
This was the interpretation apparently made by the State Board, as indicated by its specific, undisputed findings of active campaign activities and expenditures by Anderson after the deadline for accepting the Board's invitation to appear on the primary ballot had expired
