Robert D. BERRY, Appellant,
v.
John E. BOURNE, Mayor of the City of North Charleston, Pete
B. Adams, James V. Edwards, Oatman C. Gerald, Robert A.
Ankersen, Jr., Patsy W. Hughes and R. E. Zipperer, members
оf the city council of the City of North Charleston, City of
North Charleston and James E. Gonzales, Appellees.
No. 78-1497.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued Oct. 5, 1978.
Decided Dec. 5, 1978.
David G. Jennings, Charleston Heights, S. C. (Goodstein & Jennings, P. A., Charleston Heights, S. C., on brief), for appellant.
James E. Gonzales, City Atty., North Charleston, S. C., for appellees.
Before HAYNSWORTH, Chief Judge, BRYAN, Senior Cirсuit Judge, and RUSSELL, Circuit Judge.
DONALD RUSSELL, Circuit Judge:
The plaintiff/appellant sought an injunction against the annexation of a contiguous area by the defendant/appellee City of North Charleston. It is the contеntion of the plaintiff, a resident and registered elector of the area to be annexed, that the statutory authority for the proposed annexation violates the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. He asserts federal jurisdiction under §§ 1331, 1343(3) and 1343(4), 28 U.S.C. and grounds his action on § 1983, 42 U.S.C. After the filing of his complaint he moved the district court for a preliminary injunction against the annexation. The district court denied the motion on the ground that the plaintiff had not shown the "likelihood of success" on his constitutional claim. From that denial he has aрpealed. We affirm.
The statute under which the defendants propose to annex the area in controversy is § 5-3-150, Code of Laws of South Carolina (1976).1 It authorizes the governing body of any city in South Carolina, upon the filing of a petition signed by seventy-five percent or more of the freeholders in any area contiguous to the city requesting annexation, to annex such area by the adoption of an appropriate resolution. The plaintiff, one of thirteen registered voters living in the area proposed to be annexed,2 asserts that the statute, by denying to the registered voters the right to vote on the annexation, violates the rights of the registered voters under the equal protection clause.
Hunter v. Pittsburgh (1907)
The decisions of this court have followed Hunter. We recently declared that, under its annexation statutes, "South Carоlina need not grant anyone the right to vote on annexation." Hayward v. Clay (4th Cir. 1978)
The plaintiff urges that Hunter and the many cases which have followed it must be considered to have been overruled by the later decisions in Cipriano v. City of Houma (1969)
The procedure here is similar to that which was sustained in Adams v. City of Colorado Springs, supra (
In upholding this statute we are, of course, mindful that the Supreme Court's decision in Hunter v. City of Pittsburgh, * * * continues to be the law, and we are not at liberty to limit the effect of this decision by grafting the voting rights decisions on to this annexation body of law.
The plaintiff cites Heyward v. Clay as contrary to the viеw here expressed. That case, however, involved an alternative provision for annexation under the South Carolina Code. This alternative procedure provided for an election on annexation on the basis of a petition of fifteen percent of the freeholders in the area to be annexed, as contrasted with the procedurе prescribed by § 5-3-150, which, upon request of three-fourths of the freeholders in such area, empowered the governing body of the annexing city to decide on annexation without the pаrticipation of the voters of either the area to be annexed or of the annexing city. Clearly, if the statute before us had provided that annexation required the favorablе vote of the freeholders of the area to be annexed and made no provision for voting by the electors of that area, the statute would be condemned as violative of the equal protection clause. However, that is not the procedure under the statute under review. There is, we repeat, no election either for freeholders or electors and Heyward is not in point.
We find nothing in the several decisions dealing with restrictions on the right to vote (characterized by the plaintiff as cases touching on the burden of the right tо vote) applicable in the context of the issue before us. In all those cases cited by the plaintiff, there was to be an election and the constitutional attack was dirеcted at restraints upon the right to vote in that election. The procedure challenged by the plaintiff in this case, however, involves no election; in fact, it is a procedure which does not contemplate an election. Consequently, we are not concerned with any unconstitutional limitations upon the right to vote in an election.
It might be noted that the plaintiff has not raised the point made in the Note in 88 Harvard Law Review at 1599-1600, that, because the electors in the area to be annexed had not voted for the members of the governing board of the annexing city, they had "not been able to participate equally in the annexation decision." Such an argument is supported by no authority and appears to us to be an extreme exercise in preciosity and without merit.
The decision of the district court denying a temporary injunction is accordingly
AFFIRMED.
Notes
§ 5-3-150. Alternate methods where petition signed by all or seventy-five percent of landowners
(1) Any area or property which is contiguous to a city or town may be annexed to the city or town by filing with the municipal governing body a petitiоn signed by seventy-five percent or more of the freeholders, as defined in § 5-3-240 owning at least seventy-five percent of the assessed valuation of the real property in the area requesting annexation. Upon the agreement of the governing body to accept the petition and annex the area, and the enactment of an ordinance deсlaring the area annexed to the city or town, the annexation shall be complete and the election provided for in §§ 5-3-50 through 5-3-270 shall not be required. No member of the governing body who owns property or stock in a corporation owning property in the area proposed to be annexed shall be eligible to vote on such ordinance. This method of annexation shall be in addition to any other methods authorized by law; * * *.
The area to be annexed consists of five tracts of land aggregating about 32 acres. In excess of 400 persоns reside in the area but only 13 are registered electors or voters. The reason for the low voter registration is the apparent temporary residence within the area оf most of the residents. The vast majority of the persons live in mobile home units and, in many instances, are members of either the Navy or Air Force. There is just one dwelling house in the entire area. There are 14 apartment units but there is not one registered voter living in any of those apartments. The remaining residences are mobile home units. The plaintiff is a tenant of a trailer park
Note, The Right to Vote in Municipal Annexations, 88 Harv.L.Rev. 1571, 1579 (1975)
Deane Hill Country Club, Inc. v. City of Knoxville (6th Cir. 1967)
Gomillion v. Lightfoot (1960)
