Robert P. DUCKWORTH, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
STATE ADMINISTRATION BOARD OF ELECTION LAWS; Board of Supervisors of Elections for Anne Arundel County; John Willis, In his official capacity as Secretary of State, Defendants-Appellees, and
Nancy Kopp, In her official capacity as Secretary of State, Defendant.
No. 02-1936.
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Argued: May 8, 2003.
Decided: June 19, 2003.
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED ARGUED: John R. Greiber, Jr., Greiber & Scheibe, Glen Burnie, Maryland, for Appellant. Steven Marshall Sullivan, Assistant Attorney General, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Phillip F. Scheibe, Greiber & Scheibe, Glen Burnie, Maryland; Roy L. Mason, MASON, Ketterman & Cawood, P.A., Annapolis, Maryland, for Appellant. J. Joseph Curran, Jr., Attorney General of Maryland, Maureen M. Dove, Assistant Attorney General, Baltimore, Maryland; Robert A. Zarnoch, Assistant Attorney General, Kathryn M. Rowe, Assistant Attorney General, Annapolis, Maryland, for Appellees.
Before LUTTIG and MICHAEL, Circuit Judges, and GOODWIN, United States District Judge for the Southern District of West Virginia, sitting by designation.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge LUTTIG wrote the opinion, in which Judge MICHAEL and Judge GOODWIN joined.
OPINION
LUTTIG, Circuit Judge:
This case presents the question of first impression before our court of whether a plaintiff can sustain his attack on the constitutionality of congressional district apportionment by alleging that the challenged districts are bizarrely drawn.
Appellant, Robert P. Duckworth, sued various Maryland agencies and officials, appellees, alleging that their enforcement of the state's 2002 congressional reapportionment statute, Laws of Maryland Chapter 340, violated the one man-one vote principle embodied within Article I, section 2 of the United States Constitution, the First Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment, by apportioning Anne Arundel County voters into four different bizarrely-drawn congressional districts. The district court dismissed the case for failure to comply with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). On appeal, Duckworth does not challenge the dismissal of his Article I, section 2 and his First Amendment claims. He appeals only the district court's dismissal of his Fourteenth Amendment political gerrymandering claim. Having reviewed Duckworth's pleadings, we too conclude that he failed to state a valid claim, and so, for the reasons given below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I.
The central pleadings within Duckworth's Fourteenth Amendment complaint are that the state's 2002 apportionment of Anne Arundel County voters into four different congressional districts "intentionally, arbitrarily and invidiously debases and dilutes the votes of the residents of Anne Arundel County," First Amended Complaint, J.A. at 11, that the apportionment is "an illegal and intentional prearrangement of voters that ensures the election of Democratic candidates and thereby consistently degrades plaintiff's participation in and influence on the elective and political process as a whole," id. at 12, and that the challenged districts have "bizarre" shapes and are not contiguous. He argues that the bizarre appearance of the districts, and their alleged lack of contiguity, are proof of the state's districting manipulations, of the assured electoral victory of Democratic candidates, and of illegal repression of his political voice.
The district court rejected Duckworth's Fourteenth Amendment complaint, relying principally upon a 1991 decision by a three-judge district court in Anne Arundel County Republican Central Comm. v. State Admin. Bd. of Election Laws,
The district court concluded that since Duckworth's complaint did not differ materially from the Anne Arundel County Republican Central Comm. complaint,1 and since it alleged no particular changed circumstances between the prior apportionment and the new, the complaint failed to state a claim. See District Court's Memorandum Opinion, J.A. at 113 ("As Duckworth fails to allude to any facts that suggest his claims are based on any particular provision in the 2002 plan, he cannot argue now that his claims hinge on a distinction between the plan at issue in the 1991 case and [Chapter 340]."). The district court reinforced its conclusion that Duckworth had not pled facts sufficient to state a claim by examining the facts at issue in Anne Arundel County Republican Central Comm. and demonstrating that Duckworth failed to allege certain equivalent facts here. See J.A. at 114-15.
Having concluded that Duckworth's complaint stated no claim, the court reasoned that the questions presented by the pleadings were insubstantial. As a result, the court did not forward Duckworth's complaint to a three-judge court, as provided for by 28 U.S.C. § 2284(a) (providing that a district court of three judges be convened to hear cases challenging congressional districting as unconstitutional), and instead dismissed the case itself on the authority of this court's precedent in Simkins v. Gressette,
Duckworth now appeals from that dismissal.
II.
We review de novo the district court's grant of a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), inquiring solely whether Duckworth's pleadings adequately state a set of facts, which, if proven to be true, would entitle Duckworth to judicial relief. See Chisolm v. TranSouth Financial Corp.,
A.
The district court's conclusion that Duckworth failed to state a claim rested on errant reasoning, and so we do not rely on it in affirming that court's judgment. While the district court rightly noted that Duckworth's pleading omitted certain facts pled in Anne Arundel County Republican Central Comm. (in particular the court noted the absence here of allegations as to the lack of political success by county Republicans) and that the omitted facts represented elements of the claim, the court improperly evaluated whether the facts Duckworth did plead satisfied the elements the omitted facts might have otherwise satisfied and thus sufficed to state a claim on their own.
The district court rejected the adequacy of the facts Duckworth did plead via a two-step analysis. First, the court concluded that Duckworth alleged no changed circumstances from the prior suit, Anne Arundel County Republican Central Comm. And then on that basis the court reasoned that the prior decision required the conclusion that Duckworth's claims were not well stated. In reaching this conclusion the court did not assert principles of res judicata or collateral estoppel, but instead relied on the precedential value of the earlier case.
Two points make evident the lower court's error in its analysis. First, though the court concluded that Duckworth pled no new changes in the districting, he did in fact plead changes. Because Duckworth's claim involves a different apportionment plan than was involved in Anne Arundel County Republican Central Comm., the maps of the districts that were and are alleged to be unconstitutionally drawn differ. And, since part of Duckworth's claim is that the districts' general appearance is "bizarre," and that that bizarreness evinces unconstitutional political gerrymandering, the pleading of the new districts' general appearance, though utilizing verbatim recitations, necessarily differs from the prior districts' general appearance pleading.
Secondly, the 1991 case on which the district court relied was decided on the merits after full review of the facts. See Anne Arundel County Republican Central Comm.,
The district court was therefore both presented with new allegations as to general appearance and with a decision from Anne Arundel County Republican Central Comm. that at least implied that pleadings as to general appearance might state a valid political gerrymandering claim on their own. In light of these circumstances, the lower court's conclusion that Duckworth's claims were foreclosed by precedent was in error.
B.
1.
Notwithstanding the district court's analytical error, we nonetheless conclude that its judgment of dismissal was proper. This is so because none of Duckworth's allegations, including his general appearance pleadings, are adequate to prove an unconstitutional political gerrymander, as that claim has been defined by the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court established that political gerrymandering claims are justiciable in federal courts in Davis v. Bandemer,
First, the Court made clear that a "political gerrymander" refers not just to line-drawing (i.e., the drawing of election district lines in a fashion intended to achieve certain advantageous political effect) but also refers to other political action that affects electoral processes so as to advantage some citizens over others. Thus, the Court referred to all the complained of conduct that was before it as "political gerrymandering," even though that conduct included both claims that "the particular district lines were drawn [in an unconstitutional fashion] and [that] the mix of single-member and multimember districts were intended to and did violate their [constitutional] rights." Id. at 115,
Secondly, by articulating specific elements required to be proven in order to prevail on a political gerrymandering suit, Davis made clear that not all political gerrymandering is unconstitutional. Rather, the Court explained, "political gerrymandering" of the unconstitutional sort is conduct possessed of two particular characteristics: (1) intentional discrimination against an identifiable group; and (2) actual discriminatory effect on that group (i.e., denial of that group's chance to influence the political process effectively). See id. at 127,
That a political gerrymander might be either constitutional or unconstitutional is a critical insight with respect to cases challenging political gerrymanders, for it relieves courts from having to pretend that a legislature has not engaged in political gerrymandering when it is obvious that the legislature has in fact gerrymandered its districts, but in a constitutionally permissible fashion. See, e.g., Davis,
As a consequence of the Court's holding in Davis, no plaintiff alleging an unconstitutional political gerrymander can survive a motion to dismiss, such as that Duckworth faces, by simply alleging that political gerrymandering has occurred. Rather, he must plead facts adequate to prove Davis' two required elements: that there has been intentional discrimination against an identifiable group and an actual discriminatory effect on that group.
Simple, formulaic restatements of Davis' two required elements cannot sustain a suit alleging unconstitutional political gerrymandering. Just as in the antitrust context we have said that "the pleader must provide, whenever possible, some details of the time, place, and alleged effect of the conspiracy[,]" Estate Const. Co. v. Miller & Smith Holding Co.,
2.
We conclude that the district court's judgment of dismissal was proper because none of Duckworth's allegations, including his general appearance pleadings, adequately state the second element of a political gerrymandering claim under Davis — actual discriminatory effect. Since Duckworth has not sufficiently pled this more onerous second element, we do not reach the adequacy of his pleadings as to the first.
Duckworth's pleadings contain principally two types of allegations of discriminatory effect: (1) conclusory statements that the necessary discriminatory effect exists; and (2) factual allegations that the challenged districts have a bizarre appearance. For example, emblematic of his conclusory statements, Duckworth complains that Chapter 340 "fails to recognize the right of an individual, political group or association to effectively influence and participate in the political process[.]" J.A. at 11. And, emblematic of his general appearance allegations, he complains that Chapter 340 creates districts that "are laboriously and elaborately twisted, elongated and contrived to [] an extreme and excessive degree[.]" J.A. at 18.
The first category of his allegations, by virtue of their conclusory nature, are insufficient to state a claim for relief. See Estate Const. Co.,
The second category of Duckworth's pleadings — allegations that the districts have a bizarre appearance — are not probative as to the discriminatory effect that must be proven in political gerrymandering cases because no reasonable inference can be drawn from the fact of a bizarre appearance that supports the conclusion that districting has caused such effects. At most it may be fairly inferred from bizarreness that the apportionment was the result of intentional political action and resulted in political effect. But, of course, political effect itself is an expected, and indeed intended, result of apportionment. See Gaffney v. Cummings,
Discriminatory political effects instead emanate from majority action that establishes political mechanics that preclude minority participation, to some degree, in the political process writ large. Bizarre looking congressional districts do not imply such action because, despite their strange appearance, all affected voters still have a congressional representative, cast equally weighted votes for that representative, and so enjoy true representation — the essence of participation in the political process. There is thus no rationale for inferring from a district's appearance that it has discriminatory political effects, as opposed to non-discriminatory political effects.
It may be objected to this reasoning that general appearance allegations are probative as to discriminatory effect in racial gerrymandering cases, and so should likewise be considered probative in the context of political gerrymandering cases. But the Supreme Court precedent establishing that such evidence is so probative in racial gerrymandering cases does not, by its own logic, extend to political gerrymandering cases.
In Shaw v. Reno,
Of critical importance to the case at hand, the Supreme Court's conclusion that bizarreness could be adjudged was not a conclusion that bizarreness could be adjudged simply as a matter of general appearance, but that it could be adjudged bizarre in the context of a racial gerrymandering claim if "on its face [ ] it is unexplainable on grounds other than race."
That the Court summarily affirmed the dismissal of a political gerrymandering action brought with regards to the same bizarre looking districts later at issue in Shaw's racial gerrymandering action only further makes the point that the Court's conclusions about appearance allegations in racial gerrymandering cases do not carry over to political gerrymandering cases. See id. at 636,
Duckworth's complaint does also allege that the challenged districts are not contiguous, and that the apportionment plan violates the Constitution by virtue of this lack of contiguity. But contiguity presents a matter of readily discernible fact. A district either is, or is not, contiguous.4 And though Duckworth's complaint repeatedly asserts that the challenged districts are not "contiguous," his pleadings contain maps that demonstrate the opposite: that the districts are contiguous. There can be no doubt that the districts are, as one of the articles Duckworth attaches as an exhibit to his complaint states, "just barely contiguous," J.A. at 45. But since his proffered exhibits make clear that the districts are contiguous in fact, his allegations that they are not contiguous are simply conclusory, and thus insufficient to support his action. See Frigorifico Wilson de la Argentina v. Weirton Steel Co.,
Duckworth's complaint, devoid of pleadings that allege facts sufficient to prove actual discriminatory effect, cannot survive the demands of Rule 12(b)(6). And, having failed to state a claim at all, Duckworth also failed to present a substantial question. Thus, the district court was justified in acting on the case itself and refraining from referring it to a three-judge district court. See Simkins,
C.
At oral argument, Duckworth complained to the court that if complaints such as his are deemed inadequately pled then no challenge to political gerrymandering could ever survive a motion to dismiss, functionally undercutting the Supreme Court's assurance in Davis that such cases will receive judicial review. We reject this contention. Review will be had where there is some allegation that political gerrymandering violates the Constitution, as such violations are defined under Davis' two element standard. But where no such allegation exists, and all that is present is a proffer that political gerrymandering has occurred, combined with conclusory allegations that that gerrymandering is unconstitutional, dismissal is proper.
In order to understand fully the failings of Duckworth's pleadings, one need only contrast his allegations with the type of claims of discriminatory effect that have previously supported political gerrymandering cases. For instance, claims that a state employs some electoral mechanism that dilutes political representation have received our review. Thus, in Republican Party of North Carolina v. Martin,
Such gerrymanders to the electoral process are not unfamiliar. Many have been presented for review to the Supreme Court in the context of racial gerrymandering allegations. See, e.g., Rogers v. Lodge,
So too, though we do not have occasion to address the question here, might a plaintiff be able to offer probative evidence of discriminatory political effect in a political gerrymandering case by way of a non-contiguity complaint. The Supreme Court has said that contiguousness represents one of the principles of apportionment, along with compactness and respect for political subdivisions. See Shaw v. Reno,
Duckworth's complaint, pointing to no electoral mechanism that, by force of its own logic, dilutes political voice and precludes his participation in the political process, and stating no sufficient claim of non-contiguity, contrasts with the types of complaints that might set out a valid complaint under the terms of Davis' two element standard. Ultimately, he complains simply that more Democrats than Republicans live in his district, and thus that Republican candidates are bound to lose. This outcome is not evidence of discriminatory effect. To the contrary, it is the embodiment of democratic representation: the majority of people selecting their choice of representative.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED.
Notes:
Notes
Indeed, thirty-seven of Duckworth's forty complaining paragraphs were copied verbatim from the 1991 complaint into the complaint at issue here
Though this two-element standard was articulated by the plurality opinion of Justice White, it constitutes a holding of the Supreme Court because it was endorsed by Justice Powell's opinion, joined also by Justice Stevens, concurring in part and dissenting in part,
ThoughShaw's holding, necessarily implying that bizarreness, a seemingly unmanageable judicial standard, can be adjudged by courts, forecloses the conclusion that general appearance evidence is not probative because no manageable judicial standard exists by which to determine whether a district looks "bizarre" vel non, that such evidence is, for other reasons, not probative of discriminatory political effect results in the advantageous result that we do not have to adopt such an unwieldy standard and so invite courts to wade into political waters for which they are ill-suited.
Contiguous in this context means that the districts are composed only of contiguous neighborhood blocks ("blocks" being the smallest geographic unit in the apportionment mapping process, which when assembled together create a district). Thus, in a contiguous district, one could travel from any one block in the district to any other block in the district without ever leaving the district
