FORTSON, SECRETARY OF STATE OF GEORGIA v. DORSEY ET AL.
No. 178
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued December 10, 1964. Decided January 18, 1965.
379 U.S. 433
Edwin F. Hunt argued the cause for appellees. With him on the brief were William C. O‘Kelley and Charles A. Moye, Jr.
Georgia‘s 1962 Senatorial Reapportionment Act1 apportions the 54 seats of the Georgia Senate among the State‘s 159 counties. The 54 senatorial districts created by the
The appellees, registered voters of Georgia, brought this action in the District Court for the Northern District of Georgia against the Secretary of State of Georgia аnd local election officials seeking a decree that the requirement of county-wide voting in the seven multi-district counties violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. A three-judge court granted appellees’ motion for summary judgment, stating that “The statute causes a clear differеnce in the treatment accorded voters in each of the two classes of senatorial districts. It is the same law applied differently to dif-
Only last Term, in our opinion in Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533, decided after the decision below, we rejected the notion that equal protection necessarily requires the formation of single-member districts. In discussing the impact on bicameralism of the equal-рrotection standards, we said, “One body could be composed of single-member districts while the other could have at least some multi-member districts.” 377 U. S., at 577. (Emphasis supplied.) Again, in holding that a State might legitimately desire to maintain the integrity of various political subdivisions, such as counties, we said: “Single-member districts may be the rule in one State, while another State might desire to achieve some flexibility by creating multi-member or floterial districts. Whatever the means of accomplishment, the overriding objective must be substantial equality of population among the various districts, so that the vote of any citizen is approximately equal in weight to that of any other citizen in the State.” 377 U. S., at 579. (Emphasis supplied.)
It is not contended that there is not “substantial equality of population” among the 54 senatorial districts. The equal protection argument is focused solely upon the question whether county-wide voting in the seven multi-
In reversing the District Court we should emphasize that the equal-protection claim below was based upon an аlleged infirmity that attaches to the statute on its face. Agreeing with appellees’ contention that the multi-member constituency feature of the Georgia scheme was per se bad, the District Court entered the decree on summary judgment. We treat the question as presented in that
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, concurring.
Under the compulsion of last Term‘s reapportionment decisions I join the opinion and judgment of the Court, but with one reservation. There is language in today‘s opinion, unnecessary to the Court‘s resolution of this case, that might be taken to mean that the constitutionality of
As this Court embarks on the difficult business of putting flesh on the bones of Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533, and its companion decisions of last June, I desire expressly to reserve for a case which squarely presents the issue, the question of whether the principles announced in those decisions require such a sterile approach to the concept of equal protection in the political field.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting.
Georgia—whose political hierarchy was long constructed on the county-unit* basis—has made an important change. The Georgia Constitution was amended to read:
“The Senate shall consist of 54 members. The General Assembly shall have authority to create, rearrange and change senatorial distriсts and to provide for the election of Senators from each senatorial district, or from several districts embraced within one county, in such manner as the General Assembly may deem advisable.” (Italics added.)
Art. III, § II, par. I .
The “senatorial district” is thus made the unit in the election of senators. But the Senatorial Reapрortionment Act provides in relevant part:
“Each Senator must be a resident of his own senatorial district and shall be elected by the voters of his own district, except that the Senators from those senatorial districts consisting of less than one county shall be elected by all the voters of the county in which such sеnatorial district is located.”
Thus “senatorial districts” are put into two classifications: first, those comprising one or more counties; sec-
There are seven senatorial districts within Fulton County:
District 34 containing 82,195 voters.
District 35 containing 82,888 voters.
District 36 containing 79,023 voters.
District 37 containing 78,540 voters.
District 38 containing 78,953 voters.
District 39 containing 79,713 voters.
District 40 containing 74,834 voters.
There are three senatorial districts in De Kalb County:
District 41 containing 75,117 voters.
District 42 containing 95,032 voters.
District 43 containing 86,633 voters.
As appellees point out, even if a candidate for one of those districts obtained all of the votes in that district, he could still be defeated by the foreign vote, while he would of course be elected if he were running in a district in the first group. I have no idea how this weighted voting might produce prejudice race-wise, religion-wise, politics-wise. But to allow some candidates to be chosеn by the electors in their districts and others to be defeated by the voters of foreign districts is in my view an “invidi-
* South v. Peters, 339 U. S. 276.
