In Stephenson v. Bartlett, our Supreme Court held that the North Carolina Constitution guarantees that "the right to vote on equal terms is a fundamental right" in the context of representative positions.
On 6 December 2005, Plaintiffs Brian Blankenship, Thomas J. Dimmock, and Frank D. Johnson, who are citizens, taxpayers, and registered voters in Wake County, filed this lawsuit against the North Carolina State Board of Elections and Attorney General to challenge the constitutionality of the *586Superior Court districts in Wake County, as established by North Carolina General Statute § 7A-41 (2004). Plaintiffs argue that the current judicial districting plan for Wake County violates the Equal Protection Clause of the North Carolina State Constitution because the districts are disproportionate in terms of population.
Section 7A-41 divides Wake County into four judicial districts: 10-A, 10-B, 10-C, and 10-D. Under the statute and according to the 2000 U.S. Census, the six resident Superior Court Judges allotted to Wake County are elected as follows: Two in District 10-A, with 64,398 residents; two in 10-B, with 281,493 residents; one in District 10-C, with 158,812 residents; and one in 10-D, with 123,143 residents. Plaintiffs contend that the disproportionate size of the districts and number of judges elected, particularly of District 10-A, unconstitutionally dilute the voting power of each individual Wake County resident. In their initial complaint, Plaintiffs sought, inter alia, a declaratory judgment that the judicial districts are unconstitutional and an injunction enjoining and restraining Defendants from holding any election for the office of Superior Court Judge in Wake County.
On 9 December 2005, then Chief Justice I. Beverly Lake of the North Carolina Supreme Court designated this matter as "exceptional" pursuant to Rule 2.1 of the General Rules of Practice and assigned an Emergency Superior Court Judge to hear the case. After expedited discovery and motions, the trial court entered a judgment and order on 8 February 2006, concluding that the Wake County judicial districts are unconstitutional as drawn and granting declaratory judgment and a permanent injunction to Plaintiffs. The trial court stayed the judgment and order pending appeal.
Defendants timely appealed, arguing that the trial court erred by (I) concluding that the Equal Protection Clause of Article I, Section 19 of the North Carolina Constitution requires population proportionality in the establishment of Superior Court districts; (II) not treating documents submitted by the Administrative Office of the Courts to the United States Department of Justice to obtain pre-clearance of 1993 N.C. Session Laws 321 as a record of regularly conducted activity or a public record or report; and (III) concluding that the General Assembly acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it established the Superior Court divisions for Wake County. We agree with all of Defendants' arguments.
I.
Defendants first argue that the trial court erred by concluding that the Equal Protection Clause of Article I, Section 19 of the North Carolina Constitution requires population proportionality in the establishment of Superior Court districts. Defendants contend that the principle of "one person, one vote" does not apply to judicial elections under either the United States Constitution or our North Carolina State Constitution. We agree, noting that this is a question of first impression to our State's appellate courts.
The Equal Protection Clause, first placed in our State Constitution in 1971, declares that "[n]o person shall be denied the equal protection of the laws[.]" N.C. Const. art. I, § 19. The United States Supreme Court has held that the cognate Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal constitution requires that the principle of "one person, one vote" govern legislative districting and apportionment. See Reynolds v. Sims,
Nevertheless, federal courts including the United States Supreme Court have drawn a distinction between the requirement of "one person, one vote" in elections for representative positions and those for judicial positions:
[E]ven assuming some disparity in voting power, the one man-one vote doctrine, applicable as it now is to selection of legislative and executive officials, does not extend to the judiciary. Manifestly, judges and prosecutors are not representatives in the same sense as are legislators or the executive. Their function is to administer the law, not to espouse the cause of a particular constituency. Moreover there is no way to harmonize selection of these officials on a pure population standard with the diversity in type and number of cases which will arise in various localities, or with the varying abilities of judges and prosecutors to dispatch the business of the courts. An effort to apply a population standard to the judiciary would, in the end, fall of its own weight.
Holshouser v. Scott,
Of course, we recognize that when "construing and applying our [state] laws and the Constitution of North Carolina, [North Carolina appellate courts are] not bound by the decisions of federal courts, including the Supreme Court of the United States." State ex rel. Martin v. Preston,
*588When "interpreting our Constitution-as in interpreting a statute-where the meaning is clear from the words used, we will not search for a meaning elsewhere." Preston,
In Preston, our Supreme Court construed a state statute related to the election, districts, and terms of office for various Superior Court judgeships.
Here, North Carolina General Statute § 7A-41, establishing the Superior Court judicial districts in North Carolina, as well as the number of judges assigned to each district, was passed into law pursuant to Article IV, Section 9 of the North Carolina Constitution. According to that Section, "[t]he General Assembly shall, from time to time, divide the State into a convenient number of Superior Court judicial districts and shall provide for the election of one or more Superior Court Judges for each district." N.C. Const. art. IV, § 9(1) (emphasis added).
By contrast, the constitutional provisions governing the election of state senators and representatives require that those officials "shall represent, as nearly as may be, an equal number of inhabitants." N.C. Const. art. II, §§ 3(1), 5(1). That population proportionality requirement was added through an amendment in 1968, proposed by the General Assembly and approved by voters to conform with the judicial rulings on "one person, one vote." See John L. Sanders, Director of the Institute of Government, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Our Constitutions: A Historical Perspective, at http://statelibrary.dcr.state.nc.us/nc/stgovt/ preconst.htm# 1971. None of this language- not the requirement for proportionality for state legislative elections, nor the lack thereof with respect to state judicial elections- was changed in the 1971 North Carolina Constitution, which was adopted by voters after comprehensive review and revision.
Accordingly, we find that the distinction between these constitutional provisions "must have been intentional" and "evidences a constitutional intent" not to require population proportionality in state judicial elections. See Preston,
II.
Next, Defendants contend that the trial court erred by not treating documents submitted by the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) to the United States Department of Justice (USDOJ) to obtain pre-clearance of 1993 N.C. Session Laws 321 as a record of regularly conducted activity or a public record or report. We agree.
At the beginning of the trial, Plaintiffs' counsel sought to strike the affidavit of Paul Reinhartsen, AOC Research Specialist for Legal Services, including the attached Exhibit A, which was a copy of the documentation submitted to and received from the USDOJ with regard to preclearance for the proposed state law adding a judgeship to District 10-A. Plaintiffs' counsel argued that Exhibit A included hearsay and information about which the author, AOC Director James C. Drennan, had no personal knowledge. Counsel for the State Board of Elections responded that Exhibit A was a "public record, prepared by public officials and pursuant to their statutory obligation[,]" and was therefore *589"an exception to the hearsay rule." After a lengthy discussion with both parties as to the nature and contents of the exhibit, the trial court reiterated that he would "let it in, but [he would] be very careful, ... to make sure [he] base[d] no findings on anything contained in [the AOC exhibit] that is hearsay or is made without personal knowledge."
North Carolina Rule of Evidence 803(8) provides that "Public Records and Reports" are not excluded by the hearsay rule. N.C. Gen.Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 803(8) (2005). Such records are defined, inter alia, as "[r]ecords, reports, statements, or data compilations, in any form, of public offices or agencies, setting forth ... matters observed pursuant to duty imposed by law as to which matters there was a duty to report, ... unless the sources of information or other circumstances indicate lack of trustworthiness."
Here, Exhibit A was prepared by the Director of the AOC, pursuant to his statutory duty to gain preclearance from the USDOJ under the Voting Rights Act. See
We hold that the trial court should have considered Exhibit A in its entirety, as the hearsay rule did not apply to its contents. Accordingly, the trial court erred by admitting the exhibit on only a limited basis.
III.
Finally, Defendants argue that the trial court committed error by concluding that the General Assembly acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it established the Superior Court districts for Wake County. We agree.
In light of the AOC affidavit and Exhibit A discussed above, it is evident that the General Assembly consulted with the AOC prior to enacting the statute that established a new judgeship in District 10-A. Exhibit A contains analysis as to population and caseload of judicial districts, as well as the AOC Director's recommendations for where to create new judgeships. Although the record also contains concerns expressed with respect to an additional judgeship for Wake County, and indications that the General Assembly did not engage in wide consultations, basing their decision on the recommendation of the AOC Director was not "arbitrary and capricious." Rather, passage of the statute creating the new judgeship in District 10-A followed investigation and analysis and, as such, was the result of logical reasoning.
According to the United States Supreme Court:
The constitutional safeguard [of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment] is offended only if [a law's] classification [of groups of citizens] rests on grounds wholly irrelevant to the achievement of the State's objective. State legislatures are presumed to have acted within their constitutional power despite the fact that, in practice, their laws result in some inequality. A statutory discrimination will not be set aside [as arbitrary or capricious] if any state of facts reasonably may be conceived to justify it.
McGowan v. Maryland,
The concerns addressed by the General Assembly's enactment of N.C. Gen.Stat. § 7A-41, creating the new judgeship in District 10-A, included heavy caseloads and maintaining minority districts, as well as compliance with federal law and the Voting Rights Act. Such issues are compelling state interests, and the state of facts presented by the record reasonably justify the General Assembly's action to address those interests.
*590We conclude that the creation of the Wake County Superior Court judicial districts was not arbitrary and capricious, nor was it "clearly, positively, and unmistakably" unconstitutional sufficient to strike down the statute. Jacobs v. City of Asheville,
Reversed and vacated.
Chief Judge MARTIN and Judge GEER concur.
See Holshouser v. Scott,
Id. at 932 (quoting Buchanan v. Rhodes,
In their brief, Plaintiffs assert that "[t]he only significant difference between this case and Stephenson [v. Bartlett,
Stephenson, however, involved districts and elections for a different type of office altogether, namely, for legislative positions, such that some voters "may not enjoy the same representational influence or `clout'" as others.
Plaintiffs assert that "the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals largely adopted the Wells dissent as law in the context of electing North Carolina superior court judges." The relevant language from the Fourth Circuit states that the court "would be compelled to conclude that the election of superior court judges in North Carolina implicates the goal of equal protection and issues of fair and effective representation." Republican Party of North Carolina v. Martin,
Nonetheless, we observe that the Fourth Circuit also stated it was bound by the Wells decision, and the rejection of the notion that the Equal Protection Clause is not implicated in judicial elections was based on the question of impermissible vote dilution, not on the principle of "one person, one vote"; as such, any position on the necessity of population proportionality was dicta. See id. at 954; see also Voter Information Project, Inc. v. City of Baton Rouge,
