The appeals are dismissed and the District Court is directed to dismiss the bill in each case. See
United States
v.
Anchor Coal Co.,
Reported below:
These appeals seek to invalidate Georgia’s county unit system for selecting candidates for election to public office. No. 531 relates to the office of Representative in Congress, No. 532 to that of Governor. In each instance the basic substantive claim is that the system operates to deprive the appellants and other voters of the equal protection of the laws in respect to their rights of suffrage, contrary to *676 the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment. Presented also are important questions of jurisdiction and of discretion in exercising it. 1 Both declaratory relief and injunc-tive relief in various forms were sought.
The District Court in each case denied applications for interlocutory injunctions. At the same time it formally declined to pass finally upon motions to dismiss the causes, although stating “We consider them, however, on the general question of the grant of interlocutory relief.”
2
The court then went on to deny the applications upon grounds which, if sustained, would conclude the entire controversy in each case in all but formal entry of an. order for dismissal.
3
The principal ground of decision in both cases was reliance upon
Colegrove
v.
Green,
In each case, however, the court refused to rest on this ground alone. In No. 531 it went on to rule, apparently, that the county unit system is imposed by party action, not by state action; and that the system was not being *677 applied in fact, since the state executive committee prior to the decisions had certified both candidates, subject to later action by the party’s state convention. In No. 532 “in order that all questions may be ripe for consideration in the Appellate Court, if necessary,” the opinion further stated that “on the ultimate merits we do not think the State of Georgia has been shown to have deprived the plaintiffs of the equal protection of the laws.” The decisions come here therefore not only as somewhat dubious rulings upon strictly jurisdictional matters but as decisive and conclusive adjudications upon the merits.
It may be that the orders now in appeal have become moot in part because actions in execution of the challenged Georgia laws which appellants sought to have restrained have now taken place. 4 But in No. 532 in one respect at least injunctive relief prayed for still could be given, if appellants should be found, on hearing, entitled to have it. 5 And in each case declaratory relief, appropriate in many instances where aid by way of injunction cannot be afforded, 6 is sought.
Obviously the appeals present questions related closely to the issues in
Colegrove
v.
Green,
but in my opinion not
*678
necessarily determined by that decision. A majority of the justices participating refused to find that there was a want of jurisdiction, but at the same time a majority, differently composed, concluded that the relief sought should be denied.
7
I was of the opinion that, in the particular circumstances, this should be done as a matter of discretion, for the reasons stated in a concurring opinion.
Notes
The jurisdiction of this Court is invoked under §§ 238 and 266 of the Judicial Code as amended, 28 U. S. C. §§ 345, 380. In No. 532 it is not questioned that the attack is upon the validity of a state statute. In No. 531 one ground of appellee’s motion to dismiss the appeal is that the appellant’s suit attacks, not a state statute, but the rules and action of a political party. Cf.
Ex parte Collins,
The two decisions were rendered by three-judge District Courts, constituted identically, pursuant to § 266 of the Judicial Code.
The quoted language is from the opinion in No. 532. A similar statement appears in the opinion in No. 531.
In view of this fact an affirmance of the judgments here would preclude the District Court from taking any other action than to dismiss the causes, upon their'being remanded to it.
Thus, in No. 532, party officials have certified the results of the primary elections to the Secretary of State and he in turn has sent out the forms for ballots to county ordinaries on the basis of those certifications. The applications sought to restrain these acts.
By amendment, to avoid the effect of the actions taken as set forth in note 4, appellant sought to restrain the Secretary of State from certifying the returns from the general election to the General Assembly.
It was to avoid the limitations resulting from the fact that injunc-tive or other immediately effective equitable relief could not be given that relief by way of declaratory judgment was authorized by Congress. This Court has not yet determined that declaratory relief cannot be given beyond the boundaries fixed by the preexisting jurisdiction in equity, compare
Nashville, C. & St. L. R. Co.
v.
Wallace,
Three of the justices so ruling thought the relief should be denied for want of jurisdiction.
The discretionary exercise or nonexercise of equitable or declaratory judgment jurisdiction, see
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co.
v.
Huffman,
See note 3.
