OPINION
In this аction, citizens of the Town of Blacksburg and Montgomery County, Virginia challenge the constitutionality of certain annexation statutes in Virginia, which are Chapter 25 of Title 15.1 of the Va.Code, §§ 15.1-1032 to 1058. They contend that the statutes are unconstitutional as applied in the Town of Blacksburg’s annexation of a portion of Montgomery County. Specifically, they assert that since December 31, 1972 ap *644 proximately 12,573 residents of the Town of Blacksburg have had no representation on the Town Council, that total lack of representation shall continue to exist until the next election, July 1, 1974, and that the resulting discrimination constitutes a denial of equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Because the statutes in question apply throughout the State, and because the annexation court, in discharging its statutory duty, performs a State function pursuant to statewide policy, a three-judge court was convened рursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2281. Cf. Turner v. Fouche,
I
Plaintiffs 1 brought this suit as a class аction on November 1, 1972, but have made no further move to proceed with the case as a class action. Since they have standing to sue, the case will be decided on the merits. Federal jurisdiction is claimed under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and, by a supplemental complaint filed on December 29, 1972, under 42 U. S.C. § 1983.
The facts have been stipulated. At' midnight on December 31, 1972, 15.4 square miles of Montgomery County became a part of the Town of Blacksburg, Virginia by virtue of a decree of an annexation court, pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 25, Title 15.1 of the Code of Virginia. The original decree was entered by the annexation court on Octоber 23, 1970, and an appeal was taken by the county to the Supreme Court of Virginia. On January 17, 1972, the Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the annexation court and, because under Virginia law annexation can only become effective at midnight on December *645 31, amended the decree to make the annеxation effective at midnight, December 31, 1972.
At the time of the annexation trial, the Town of Blacksburg consisted of 2139 acres with an estimated population of 10,427. The annexation increased the size of the town to approximately 11,700 acres and its population of approximately 23,000 persons, including 6,900 resident students of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.
The governing body of the town is a Town Council consisting of six councilmen and a mayor. The Council exercises general local governmental power over the territory and residents within town boundaries including the power to levy taxes, adopt criminal ordinances, and adopt ordinances affecting the property rights of citizens and the use of property within the Town of Blacksburg. Pursuant to the Town Charter, three members of the council were elected to four year terms on May 9, 1972. The remaining three members and the mayor are serving four year terms which do not expire until July 1, 1974. Since the election of May 9, 1972 was held subsequent to the Supreme Court’s decision that the residents in the 15.4 square mile area would become citizens of Blacksburg at midnight, December 31, 1972, but before the effective date of the annexation, none of these residents were eligible either for election or to vote in the May, 1972 election.
The newly annexed citizens have their first right to vote for Town Council members (three) and the Mayor, in May, 1974, the date of the next election. No person in the older part of the town may vote for more, or is in any way entitled to vote in the meantime unless the newly annexed residents mаy also vote in the same election.
Seeking analogy to the reapportionment cases, e. g., Avery v. Midland County,
Plaintiffs’ prayer for relief, however, contains no request for vacation of the office of any of the seven elected persons on the Town Council or for an immediate election in which citizens of the newly annexed portion of Montgomery County would be entitled to vote and stand for office. Instead, they seek to enjoin the Town of Blacksburg from annexing any portion of^ Montgomery County or exercising any governmental prerogatives over the disputed territory. They also seek a declaratory judgment that Chapter 25, Title 15.1 of the Code of Virginia is unconstitutional and void under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United Stаtes.
The Town argues that, since 13 of the 17 plaintiffs here, who were parties to the case in the State court, did not raise the federal questions when they could have, and did not appeal the same in any event, the case is barred by the doctrines of res adjudicate, and estoppel by judgment (collateral estoppel).
While it may well be that 13 of the 17 plaintiffs are bound by
res adjudicate,
4 of them are not, because they were not parties to the suit or privies. They took no part and had no laboring oar. Partmar v. Paramount Corp.,
As to the four not barred by
res adjudicate,
collateral estoppel is ineffective to bar their suit because no decision on the federal questions was made in the State court. Commissioner v. Sunnen,
We аre not faced with a case in which a federal question has been raised in and decided by a State court.
*646 II
In the case of Yick Wo v. Hopkins,
Plaintiffs argue that because there are no town elections until May, 1974, the effect of the annexation is to disenfranchise the new residents of Blacksburg, and thus create two legislative districts within the town with unequal voting rights. Analоgizing the situation to the one man, one vote decisions, plaintiffs contend that Reynolds v. Sims and its progeny control the result to be reached in this case.
The reapportionment cases relied upon, however, are inapposite to the situation presented here. Unlike the voters’ dilemma in
Wesberry, Reynolds,
and
Avery,
plaintiffs’ lack of representation is not the result of a State sanctioned, built-in bias favoring small districts, e. g., Hadley v. Junior College District,
The authorities, although limited, support the result we reach. In Avens v. Wright,
In Pate v. El Paso County, Texas,
In the instant case, it should be noted that no citizen of the annexed area is denied the right to vote for the governing body of the Town. Tо the contrary, all citizens are treated equally once they become citizens. But the logical product of plaintiffs’ argument, if accepted, would be to invalidate every annexation statute which does not require that a new election be held immediately after every annexation to еnable new citizens of the town to vote at once. The effect would, of course, be highly disruptive of the continuity and orderly processes of local government, a result which the State has a compelling interest in avoiding. In this regard, the Supreme Court has stated that “the privilege to vote in a State is within thе jurisdiction of the State itself, to be exercised as the State may direct, and upon such terms as to it may seem proper, provided, of course, no discrimination is made between individuals in violation of the Federal Constitution.” Carrington v. Rash,
Until the moment of annexation, each of the plaintiffs was a citizen of Montgomery County, the Board of Supervisors of which was the governing body. They had the same right as every other citizen of the County to vote for members of the Board and were under no control whatsoever of the town government of Blacksburg. After December 31, 1972, the citizens of the area annexed into the town were, of course, subject to the ordinances of the Town of Blacksburg. After annexation, they had precisely the same right as every other resident of the town to vote for members of the Town Council. They were treated by law exactly the same as any other citizen of Blacksburg, no more and no less. We fail to find in the treatment of these citizens any invidious discrimination. Although it is undoubtedly true that they were annexed into the town against their wishes, while citizens of the county, they were treated the same as other county citizens, and when they became citizens of the town, they were treated the same as other town citizens.
Frоm the undisputed facts, it is difficult to find any discrimination at all against the recently annexed residents of Blacksburg, much less the arbitrary or invidious discrimination required to invalidate the annexation. “The Equal Protection Clause does not, of course, require that the State never distinguish between citizens, but only that the distinctions that arе made not be arbitrary or invidious.”
Avery,
Since we are of opinion there is no arbitrary or invidious discrimination in the Blacksburg annexation proceedings, and that Chapter 25, Title 15.1 of the Code of Virginia falls clearly within the State’s constitutional prerogatives, it follows that relief should not be granted.
An order consistent with this opinion is this date entered.
Notes
. The plaintiffs, at the time this action was commenced and at all times material to this action, were adult residents of Montgomery County, Virginia, mеeting the necessary requirements to register and vote in the elections of that county. Each was also at such times a resident of that portion of the county which, at midnight December 31, 1972, became a part of the town of Blacksburg, Virginia, and thus able to participate in all town elections after December 31, 1972.
13 of the 17 plaintiffs were intervening parties opposing annexation in the annexation case in the State court. In Virginia, annexation by a town of adjoining area of a county is accomplished by a judicial proceeding. Va.Code § 15.1-1032 et seq. When the county, and 13 of the plaintiffs here, lost the аnnexation case in the State circuit court, the county appealed to the Virginia Supreme Court. Upon the petition of the county, an appeal and supersedeas was awarded December 29, 1970. The record does not indicate, and we have not been advised of, any opposition to the issuance of the supersedeas by the 13 plaintiffs here who were parties to the suit in the State court. Indeed, it may be inferred that plaintiffs favored such procedure. Thus, the writ of supersedeas, and the unavoidable delay which always accompanies appeals, were the reasons the effective date of annexation was lоgically set by the Virginia Supreme Court for the 31st of December following its decision.
In Virginia, every annexation is effective at midnight on the 31st day of December following the entry of the final order of the court. Va.Code § 15.1-1041. The payments due the county from the town for loss of sales tax and ABC funds under the decree of annеxation are paid by calendar year. Real estate levies (reserved for local taxation, Va.Const. Art. X, § 4) are effective January 1st of each year, but are payable on December 5th. Va.Code §§ 58-796, 58-963. Licenses, which of course are taxed, generally expire December 31st of eаch year. Va. Code § 58-247. Other reasons for the choice of.January 1st as the first day under a new government suggest themselves, but it suffices to say that not only is the date of January 1st fixed by statute as the effective date for annexation, it is quite consistent with the assessment and collection of revenues for the localities involved, and is entirely consonant with an orderly and fair transition from one form of government to another in the annexed area.
