Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On March 1, 1965, this court held Chapter 2, Laws of 1964, Special Session, apportioning the seats of the House of Representatives to be unconstitutional and void as being in violation of the requirement of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitutiоn of the United States. (Harris
“For the purpose of affording the legislature ample opportunity to undertake the necessary reapportionment, we withhold further determination of this action, retaining jurisdiction to hear the matter further aN to take such additional action as is deemed advisable and within such reasonable time as the circumstances require.” (1. c. 312.)
On February 4, 1966, the governor called the legislature into Special Session to enact an apportionment statute “as will comply with constitutional mandate pertaining thereto.” The legislature met in Special Session, and on February 28, 1966, enacted House Bill No. 504 which apportioned the state into 125 representative districts. The bill was signed by the governor on March 7, 1966, and was duly published in the official state paper, thus becoming an effective law, if otherwise constitutional.
On March 8, 1966, counsel for the parties filed separate motions requesting this court to judicially review House Bill No. 504 and determine whether it complied with the constitutional requisite announced in Reynolds v. Sims,
On March 9, 1966, this court ordered that the motions be heard on March 21, 1966, and directed counsel to file written briefs and present oral argument. Upon consideration, the Act was sustained by this court as being in compliance with both the Constitution of the Stаte of Kansas and the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. Because the public question involved was important and pressing, the court filed an interim opinion on March 22, 1966, so the people and officials of the state would be advised of its decision sustaining thе validity of the Act. (Harris v. Anderson,
K. S. A. 4-101 provides that the Kansas House of Representatives shall consist of 125 members, and based upon the 1965 annual state
The following tabulation shows the distribution of the 125 districts by intervals of five hundred population. It is noted that 97 of the districts have populations between 16,500 and 18,500, which indicates there is a very substantial convergence of district populations around the average of 17,583.
District Population
Number of Districts
15.500- 15,999 ....... 1
16.000- 16,499 ...... 11
16.500- 16,999 ...... 11
17.000- 17,499 ...... 35
17.500- 17,999 ...... 33
18.000- 18,499 ...... 18
18.500- 18,999 15
19.000- 19,499 ...... 0
19.500- 19,999 ...... 1
125
The total population of the 63 districts having the least number of people is 1,072,286, which is equivalent to 48.79 percent of the total populatiоn of the state. In other words, a majority of the House of Representatives (63 members) would represent approximately 49 percent of the total state population.
Seventy-three of the 105 counties were kept intact, that is, no segment of any county was attached to another district. Fifteen of the remaining counties were divided because their populations were greater than the amount which entitled them to a whole number of representatives, using the same maximum deviation for the smallest and largest districts of 11 percent. In other words, to keep those counties intact would have produced a deviation
In comparing the voting power of a citizen under the Apportionment Act (Ch. 2, 1964 Special Session) declared unconstitutional in Harris v. Anderson, supra, with the present Act (House Bill No. 504), we note the following relevant factors: (1) that the range in population from the district having the lowest population to the district having the highest population was 2234 to 45,471 under the old law, and is reduced to 15,609 to 19,521 under the new law; (2) that considering 17,583 as the theoretical average district population (1965 census), the deviation from that average was 159 percent in the highest populated district and 87 percent in the lowest populated district under the old law, and is 11 percent for both the highest and lowest populated districts under the new law; (3) that the ratio of the highest district population to the lowest district population has been reduced from 20.4 to 1 under the old law, to 1.25 to 1 under the new law; (4) that the-ratio of total population of the 63 smallest districts to the state total population has been increased from 19 percent under the old law, to approximately 49 percent under the new law; (5) that the number of single-distriсt counties has been reduced from 100 under the old law, to 3 under the new law; (6) that all 105 counties were kept intact under the old law, and under the new law there are 73 (no segments attached to another district), and (7) that under the new law the most counties in one district are 5.
We think it is evident frоm the foregoing that the legislature followed a rational and logical plan of maintaining the integrity of the various counties, insofar as possible to permit faithful adherence to the equal-population rule announced in Reynolds, and providing for compact districts of contiguous territory in apportioning the representative districts of the state. It is permissible for the legislature to comply with the clear command of Article 10, Sections 1 and 2 of the Kansas Constitution, that county boundary lines be observed in the creation of representativе districts so long as the basic standard of equality of population among districts is maintained. (Reynolds v. Sims, supra.) The districts created by the Act are compact and contain a population and area as similar as may be 'in their economical, political and cultural interests. Where population would permit, 73 districts were created by
Viewed in its extremes, the Act provides districts which vary in population little more than the 10 percent above оr below the mean average which we found acceptable in Harris v. Shanahan, supra, pp. 189, 190, and below the 15 percent range of variation found by a three-judge federal court in Georgia to be the “departure figure” of reasonableness. (Tombs v. Fortson,
“In other respects, the Act relating to the reapportionment of the Senate contains no constitutionally impermissible deviation on the basis of population. The ratio of the population of the most underrepresented district to the population of the most overrepresented district is 1:1.459. The minimum percentage of the State’s population which would be represented by a majority of the senators is 47.8%.” (p. 106.)
Likewise, in Baker v. Carr,
In Schaefer v. Thomson,
"Mathematical precision is not a constitutional requisite. Reynolds v. Sims, supra. We havе prescribed apportionment on a population basis, reducing the dilution in voting power from the ratio of 20 to 1 under the Wyoming Reapportionment Act of 1963 to the ratio of 2.08 to 1. It is not our goal to intrude on the state’s political affairs; rather, we would formulate a bаsic pattern of equality in the right of suffrage to guide the state legislature in its future periodic readjustments and revisions as they become necessary to accommodate population shifts and growth.” (p. 453.)
On appeal by intervenors who contended the judicial reaрportionment did not satisfy the requirement of the equal protection clause, the United States Supreme Court, on February 28, 1966, affirmed. (Harrison v. Schaefer,
In Yancey v. Faubus,
When the Act is viewed as a whole, it is apparent that the legislature acted neither arbitrarily nor capriciously. On the contrary, the Act represents a diligent, earnest and good-faith effort on the part of the Kansas legislature to comply with this court’s previous order to reapportion the House of Representatives in accordance with the requirement of equal-populated districts announced in Reynolds. Furthermore, we believe the minds of reasonаble men could not doubt that a range of variance above and below the average district population of House districts created by the Act constitutes as close an approximation to equal representation as possible in conformity with Article 10, Sеctions 1 and 2 of the Kansas Constitution.
Accordingly, we hold House Rill No. 504 is constitutional and valid, meeting the standards of both the state and federal Constitutions, including the creation of representative districts as nearly of equal population as is practicable in the judgment of the legislature, and that the permissible bounds of legislative discretion have not been exceeded.
This holding concludes the litigation of this case, and it follows that judicial action has ceased.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring: Under the compulsion of Harris v. Anderson,
