Wе are confronted with a challenge to the constitutionality of Conn.Gen.Stat. Ann. § 9-48,
William Bynum contends that this fee discriminates against the indigent, thus deрriving them of the equal protection of the law in violation of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution. He brought an action in the district court for the District of Connecticut, seeking an injunction and declaratory judgment restraining the enforcement of the statute and deсlaring it unconstitutional. He also moved to convene a three-judge court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2281, for the purpose of requiring the Commission to accept his petition without fee. Judge Blumenfeld denied his motion and dismissed the complaint. For the reasons set out bеlow, we believe that Bynum raises a substantial question which merits the consideration of a three-judge court.
William Bynum, now 42, was convicted of statutory burglary in 1955.
In 1968 Bynum submitted a pеition to the Commission, seeking to regain his right to vote. Subsequently, he was notified by the executive secretary of the Commission that no action whatsoever would be taken by the Commission on his application until he paid the $5.00 fee required by § 9-48 “to cover reсording costs.”
Bynum complains that he is unable to pay this sum by reason of his poverty. His only source of income, he states, is a monthly award from the Connecticut State Welfare Department under its Aid to the Disabled Program, which does not include an amount for payment of this fee. Bynum’s wife, the only other member of his household, receives a similar monthly award under the State Welfare Department’s Aid to the Blind Program.
Bynum contends that the state’s rule requiring the $5.00 fee before his petition will be considered, unjustly discriminates against thе poor. We believe it appropriate at this point to clarify Bynum’s argument so that it can be distinguished from the claim urged upon the court in Green v. Board of Elections,
Having stated the sole issue raised by the complaint we proceed to determine whether Judge Blumenfeld was correct in dismissing the complaint denying Bynum’s motion for a three-judge court — the only body which can enjoin the enforcement of a state statute, 28 U.S.C. § 2281 — because as Judge Blumenfeld put it, the argument Bynum raised was not “substantial” enough to merit the § 2281 procedure. It is retrodding well-plowed ground to state that an issue must be substantial before the costs of convening a three-judge court should be incurred. Idlewild Bon Voyage Liquor Corp. v. Epstein,
Consideration of Bynum’s claim leads us to the conclusion that it is not insubstantial or obviously without merit; nor is it foreclosed by the decisions of the Supreme Court. Indeed, much of plaintiff’s argument is buttressed by the Court’s recent opinion in Harper v. Virginia State Board of Elections,
We have no need to labor or determine the merits of Bynum’s contention. Kramer v. Union Free School Dist.,
In any event, we believe we should indicate why we are of the view that By-num’s claim is substantial. As indicated, his principal argument stems from Harper which decreed that “[w] ealth, like race, creed, or color, is not germane to one’s ability to participate intelligently in the electoral process.”
To reinforce his argument, we are directed to the explicit Congressional finding, in the Voting Rights Act of 1965, that the poll tax “does not bear a reasonable relationship to any legitimate State interest in the conduct of elections * * *” 42 U.S.C. § 1973h(a). See also Harman v. Forssenius,
To rebut arguments raised in defense of § 9-48, Bynum contends that it does not matter whether granting him permission to filе his petition is denominated a "‘right” or a “privilege.” See Sherbert v. Verner,
The District Court’s opinion indicates that much reliance was being placed on the fact that the relevant equal protection cases were limited to criminal proceedings. Scholars, however, have recently construed Harper, as Bynum does, to move equal protection beyond the area of criminal law and perhaps point “the way to a more general attack by the Court on inequalities caused by differing private circumstances.” Developments in the Law: Equal Protection, 82 Harv. L.Rev. 1065, 1180-81 (1969). While there may well be civil fees to which the equal protection clause does not apply, see Boddie v. Conneсticut,
We are well aware of the extra burden in time and effort that convening a three-judge court imposes upon the judicial system, particularly when the district judge has already gone to the effort of writing a carefully considered opinion denying the motion. See generally, Car-rington, Crowded Dockets and the Courts of Appeals: The Threat to the Function of Review and the National Law, 82 Harv.L.Rev. 642 (1969). It would not be inappropriate, therefore, to reiterate the words of my brother Hays in Kramer, supra, that “[although an occasional reversal is therefore the inevitable priсe of a district judge’s exercise of his responsibility in cases where a three-judge court is requested, the risk of reversal is much to be preferred to the alternative of automatically convening a three-judge court to hear such claims without a сareful consideration of their substan-tiality,”
In sum, the question is certainly within the scope of § 2281. Accordingly we rеverse and remand so that a three-judge court may be convened. We add that there are certain factual issues, such as the exact degree of Bynum’s poverty, which will have to be resolved by that court.
Notes
. Section 9-48 provides as follows:
“Petitions to the commission for the restoration of the privileges of an elector shall be in the form of an affidavit from the petitioner, or from a relative or friend of such petitioner if he is on active duty in the armed forces, stating (a) the crime by conviction of which his electoral rights stand forfeited, the date of such conviction, the court before which it was had, the sentence and date thereof and the date on which such petitioner was released from parole or probation, provided, in lieu of such statements, a certified copy of the judgment against him and a certifed copy of his release from parole or probation may accompany the petition, (b) his complete criminal record and (e) his present address and occupation or еmployment. Bach such petition shall he accompanied hy a fee of five dollars to cover recording costs. Notice of the pendency of the petition and of the time of the hearing shall be given by the commission to the state’s attоrney or prosecuting attorney of the -court in which such conviction was had, to the chief executive officer of the municipality in which the petitioner resides and to the petitioner or to such friend or relative making such petition at least twо weeks before the date fixed for such hearing, and such commission may, in its discretion, require the petitioner or such friend or relative presenting such petition to appear in person. The commissioner of state police shall investigate аnd report to the commission on each such petitioner prior to the hearing if so requested. No petition shall be heard or considered by said commission until six months after the petitioner has been discharged from jail, prison or the reformatory; if thе petitioner was released from jail, prison or the reformatory on parole or probation, no such petition shall be heard until six months after the date of discharge from such parole or probation; if the petitioner was fined and no prison, jail or reformatory sentence was imposed or if such*175 sentence was imposed and suspended, no hearing shall be held on any such petition until six months after the date of conviction of the petitioner or until six months after the date of discharge from probation if such probationary period was imposed.” (Emphasis supplied.)
. For the purposes of deciding this appeal, we must accept all the allegations of his complaint as true. See 2A Moore, Federal Practice fl208 at 2244 (2d ed. 1968).
