JAMES, Roland W., Fitzsimons, James R., Brahs, Dwight M.,
Sacco, Frank, and Maffeo, John H., on behalf of
themselves and their respective classes,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
BALL, Germain H., Conovaloff, Alex M., Rousseau, Bill,
Smith, Leo C., Williams, John M., Jr., Hurley, Thomas P.,
Schrader, William P., Hoopes, John S., Fitch, W. Larkin, and
Finley, Thomas J., in their capacity as members of the Board
of Dir., Salt River Project Agricultural Improvement and
Power District, and Abel, Karl F., in his capacity as
President of the Salt River Project Agricultural Improvement
and Power District, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 76-1918.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Oct. 12, 1979.
Rehearing Denied Feb. 6, 1980.
Bruce E. Meyerson, Phoenix, Ariz., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Jon L. Kyl, Jennings, Strouss & Salmon, Phoenix, Ariz., for defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Arizona.
Before CHOY and KENNEDY, Circuit Judges, and HALL,* District Judge.
KENNEDY, Circuit Judge:
This appeal, from an action commenced in the District of Arizona, challenges the constitutionality of Arizona statutes which provide that voting in elections for directors of the Salt River Project Agricultural and Improvement and Power District (the District) is limited to landowners, with votes essentially apportioned to owned acreage. The appellants are citizens of Arizona residing within the geographical boundaries of the District. Each appellant either rents land or owns less than one acre of land within the District and is thus excluded from the voting franchise. The action was brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The Arizona statutes challenged are Ariz.Rev.Stat. §§ 45-909 and 45-983.1 The district court found those state statutes are consistent with the requirements of the fourteenth amendment and granted the District's motion for summary judgment. We reverse that determination. The district court also denied certification of the suit as a class action, and as to that aspect of the case we affirm.
I. Facts
Under the Reclamation Act of 1902, the Federal Government and the State of Arizona established a joint project for storage and delivery of water in the Salt River Valley. The project was limited to agricultural lands within the physical boundaries of the project.
The Federal Government built water storage and distribution facilities and hydroelectric facilities for the project. The Reclamation Act required that properties benefited by the project bear the costs of construction, and the Salt River Valley Waters Users' Association was organized, under Arizona corporate law, to pay those costs. Only persons holding project land could belong to the Association; only Association members could receive water from the project. The Association's obligations became pro rata liens on the lands of Association members.
By the 1930's the Association found the costs of financing project facilities overly burdensome. To alleviate this problem, the Salt River Project Agricultural Improvement and Power District was established. The District qualified as a municipal corporation. The District's bonds were eligible for tax-exempt status so that interest costs for the project were substantially reduced.
Under a 1937 agreement between the Association and the District, the Association agreed to continue to perform all obligations connected with the operation and maintenance of the project on behalf of the District. The Association also agreed to give title to project facilities to the District, subject only to whatever rights the federal government retained under the original transfer to the Association. The District agreed to provide whatever capital and operating funds the Association needed to operate project facilities. Pursuant to the 1937 agreement, the District now operates the water storage and distribution facilities. In addition the District generates electric power, and today the District is the second largest utility in Arizona. Ninety-eight percent of the District's total revenues are derived from electricity operations.
Arizona statutes mandate the voting system for the District. The District is subdivided into ten electoral divisions, each of which elects one director and three council members. A president and vice-president are elected at large. Qualified electors have votes for these offices apportioned according to the amount of land they hold. In addition, qualified voters elect two at-large directors (to become four in 1980) on a per-person voting basis. The twelve-member Board of Directors and thirty-member Council administer the District.2
II. Equal Protection Claim
Since its decision in Reynolds v. Sims,
In Salyer, plaintiffs challenged the voting system for a water district that allowed only landowners to vote, with votes apportioned according to the assessed valuation of the land owned. The Supreme Court, after examining the nature of the service provided by the particular district, concluded that "by reason of its special limited purpose and of the disproportionate effect of its activities on landowners as a group,"
Critical to an understanding of Salyer is the factual setting of the case. The water district consisted of 193,000 acres, all of it agricultural land, 85% Farmed by one or another of four corporations. It had a total population of 77 residents. Assessments against landowners were the sole means of paying expenses of the District, so that landowners as a class bore the entire financial burden. Moreover, the reason for the District's existence and continued operation was to provide water for farming, Id. at 728,
The case at hand is quite different. Although at one time the Salt River District did bear some similarities to the district in Salyer, today the size and nature of the projects of the District and the effect of its operations on all of the residents of Arizona are far more extensive than those of the district in Salyer. The Salt River District is engaged in far-reaching electric power operations. It is the second largest electric utility in the State of Arizona and services nearly a quarter million persons. The utility owns five hydroelectric facilities and four steam generating plants; it is a partial owner of three coal-fired steam generating facilities; and it is a participant in the Palo Verde nuclear plant.
The water operations of the Salt River District are also significantly more diverse than those in Salyer. The District is not concerned solely with providing water for agriculture. Its formerly rural area encompasses today eight Arizona municipalities, including major portions of Phoenix. About 25% Of the total water delivered by the District goes to these cities for municipal uses, and an additional 15% Of the district water is delivered for other nonagricultural uses, such as schools, parks, playgrounds, and subdivision purposes. In view of the broad scope and impact of its activities, the Salt River District cannot be characterized as having a special limited purpose.
Further, the activities of this District do not disproportionately affect landowners. Unlike Salyer, nearly 40% Of the water delivered by the District is used and paid for in a manner unrelated to agriculture or landownership. As to the electric operations, nearly all the citizens in the District are vitally affected in ways unrelated to ownership of real property. As the Supreme Court stated in Cipriano v. City of Houma,
Appellees argue, nevertheless, that the operations of the District do have a disproportionate effect on landowners. Noting the profits from the sale of electricity are used to defray irrigation expenses, they compare the District to a private company which permits only stockholders to vote for the board of directors. The comparison fails, however. This is a public entity, not a private company. The District is a political subdivision of the State of Arizona with the legal status of a municipality. Ariz.Const., art. 13, § 7. It is entitled to all the immunities and exemptions granted municipalities. Moreover, the scale of the District's operations simply does not permit the interpretation that the electric utility is a side venture that the District dabbles in to pick up a little extra money in order to benefit the landowners. The operation of the utility has taken on independent significance. In view of the magnitude of the electric utility operations and the large percentage of the water services which are used and paid for in a manner unrelated to land ownership, it would elevate form over substance to characterize the District as functioning solely for the benefit of landowners.
The Salyer Court, in analyzing whether the Tulare District had a "special limited purpose," noted that the District did not exercise "normal governmental authority."
With respect to the electric utility operations, appellees rely on Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co.,
Salyer suggests that for purposes of this type of inquiry, the operation of an electric utility is governmental in nature. In reaching its conclusion that the Tulare District did not exercise normal governmental authority, the Court specifically noted that the District provided "no other general public services such as schools, housing, transportation, utilities, roads, or anything else of the type ordinarily financed by a municipal body."
In this Court the District makes repeated reference to statutory and decisional authority indicating that the District's principal purpose and obligation is to provide water to the lands within it. If this legal proposition is correct, then the district will no doubt comply with it or be subject to corrective actions by the courts or the Arizona legislature. It is not, however, an argument that justifies trying to skew the electoral system as an indirect way to produce that result. The electric utility operations of the District are so substantial in scope and are so closely interwoven with the water delivery functions of the District that it is not a special limited purpose district whose operations have a disproportionate effect on landowners as a class. The principle of one person-one vote cannot be abridged in these circumstances.
Implicit in appellees' contention lies a legal assumption that is quite incorrect. It is, specifically, that disproportionate representation may be used to prevent electors who have a direct and substantial interest in a government entity's operations from out-voting certain other electors who own land that constitutes part of the security for the entity's financial structure. Disproportionate electoral representation, under this unstated but implicit rationale, serves as a safety device to protect property interests or expectations of landowners. We find no holding or intimation in any controlling Supreme Court decision that can support such a view. The rationale for departing from the one person-one vote standard is altogether different. It is that under certain conditions, of most narrow dimension, there may exist a state created entity, limited to operations with little effect on the general electorate and a substantially disproportionate effect on the interests of a discrete group permitted to vote. Salyer,
III. Class Action Certification
Appellants argue that the district court erred in refusing to certify the suit as a class action. Appellants' complaint, filed on July 28, 1975, stated that it was brought on behalf of the named plaintiffs and their respective classes under rule 23(b)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. A motion for certification was not filed, however, until February 24, 1976, when appellants filed their motion for summary judgment. The district court denied certification. We affirm its ruling in this respect.
The determination of class action status rests within the sound discretion of the district court. Montgomery v. Rumsfeld,
REVERSED in part, AFFIRMED in part.
PEIRSON M. HALL, District Judge, dissenting:
Upon a study of the majority opinion and a close reexamination of the briefs of the parties, I cannot escape the conclusion that what the court is holding is essentially that the plaintiffs, solely because they are users, are entitled to participate in all of the benefits as owners in the management and the operation of the defendant District. I fail to find anything in any of the cases cited or any of those upon separate research to indicate any "constitutional protection" to the plaintiffs who are simply owners and renters of property and have no interest or obligation whatsoever, substantial or otherwise, in repaying the hundreds of millions of dollars which have been borrowed and are now owed by the District to enable the district to give the plaintiffs the water and electricity which the plaintiffs use. The sale of electric power by the District was authorized by Congress in 1906, 34 Stats. 117: 43 U.S.C. § 522, when it was necessary to or would help in development of the project. The plaintiffs cannot make a claim that development and sale of power was not, and is not, necessary for the water. The majority opinion disregards this preemption of power.
The nonagricultural owners, who are residents and state voters, are given the equal right to vote as the agricultural owners, proportionate to the acreage ownership. But the plaintiffs seek here to make the owner of one-eighth of an acre (50 X 100 lot) And the renter who owns nothing, the same right to participate in the management of the hundred million dollar business of defendants as the landowner of any 500 acres of agricultural land whose land has stood as security throughout the history of building the project and whose present share of lien for indebtedness is more than $3,000 an acre or a total of one and a half million dollars. The development of this project began 119 years ago in 1860. It became government operated after the Federal Reclamation Act of 1902. 32 Stats. 388: 43 U.S.C. § 371. To apply the same one man one vote to the Southern California Edison Company, for instance, would mean that user could have the same rights in management as the owner of $1,000,000 worth of stock.
Not only is there no provision in the Constitution, due process, equal protection or otherwise which suggests such a far-out result, but that is the logical result of the plaintiffs' contention.
The plaintiffs allege no property Damage of any kind, no personal Inconvenience, no personal Injuries, nor Anything which is measurable in the equivalent of money. In fact, their claim is founded, according to their Opening Brief, page 1, upon the claims that the "District's electric and water operations have an Important and substantial Effect and impact on their lives such that they are entitled to participate in district elections on an equal basis with all qualified electors regardless of property ownership." They ultimately actually seek a mandatory injunction, the equitable remedy which requires that the damage be Great and Irreparable.
The case, in my judgment, falls squarely within the holding of the Supreme Court in Salyer Land Co. v. Tulare Lake Basin Water Storage District,
I will not attempt to improve upon the discussions concerning Reynolds v. Sims,
The furnishing of electricity for public use, whether done by a city or otherwise, Is a proprietary business and not a municipal or state business. It is "vested with public interest" only in the sense that it can be regulated by the state, Nebbia v. New York,
The plaintiffs (Plaintiffs' Reply Brief, page 16) claim that the defendants are attempting to rely upon "undue deference to legislative schemes conceived of in days Now gone by." Yet they claim to depend upon the legislative schemes set forth in the Constitution which have been adopted in "days gone by," more than 125 years before the defendants came into existence.
A detailed discussion of the controlling authorities in the case is as follows:
I. Equal Protection Claim
A. Applicability of Salyer Test
Appellants challenge the voter qualification requirements for election of District officials, claiming that these requirements violate the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment by invidiously discriminating against them and persons similarly situated who own less than one acre of real property.1
In Salyer Land Co. v. Tulare Water District,
By distinguishing the Tulare Water Storage District from the government bodies involved in previous representation decisions, the Court explicitly denied the applicability of strict one person, one vote equal protection analysis to such special districts. See Holt Civic Club v. Tuscaloosa,
Avery involved an equal protection challenge to the method of selecting Midland County, Texas, officials that gave disproportionate influence to voters in thinly populated districts. The Court stated the general rule:
When the State apportions its legislature, it must have due regard for the Equal Protection Clause. Similarly, when the State delegates lawmaking power to local government and provides for the election of local officials . . . it must insure that those qualified to vote have the right to an equally effective voice in the election process.
The county also argued that the extra influence of the thinly populated districts was justified because the county officers' work "disproportionately concern(ed)" rural areas. Id. at 483,
We hold today only that the Constitution permits no substantial variation from equal population in drawing districts for units of local government having General governmental powers over the entire geographic area served by the body.
This Court is aware of the immense pressures facing units of local government, and of the greatly varying problems with which they must deal. The Constitution does not require that a uniform straitjacket bind citizens in (designing) mechanisms of local government suitable for local needs and efficient in solving local problems. . . .
. . . Our decision today is only that the Constitution imposes one ground rule for the development of arrangements of local government: a requirement that units with General governmental powers over an entire geographic area not be apportioned among single-member districts of substantially unequal population.
Id. at 484-86,
Thus, Avery recognized the necessity for an escape from the "straitjacket" application of equal protection requirements when dealing with local government units lacking general governmental powers. This contemplated exception did not require the alternative justification for disproportionate voting rights argued in that case: that the exercise of the county officers' powers had a disproportionate impact upon particular citizens.
The Court similarly decided Hadley, involving an equal protection challenge to apportionment that diluted plaintiffs' votes for school district trustees. Though the Court opined that an exception to the strict application of equal protection requirements would be observed where a local body's functions were "far removed from normal governmental activities And . . . disproportionately affect different groups,"
Appellants . . . argue that the junior college trustees exercised General governmental powers over the entire district and that under Avery the State was thus required to apportion the trustees according to population on an equal basis, as far as practicable. Appellants argue that . . . the trustees can levy and collect taxes, issue bonds . . . , hire and fire teachers, make contracts, collect fees, supervise and discipline students, pass on petitions to annex school districts, acquire property by condemnation, and in general manage the operations of the junior college . . . . We feel that these powers, while not fully as broad as those (in Avery), certainly show that the trustees performed Important governmental functions (which) have sufficient impact throughout the district to justify the conclusion that . . . Avery should also be applied here.
. . . (W)e see nothing in the present case that indicates that the activities of (the) trustees fit in (the Avery exception). Education has traditionally been a vital government function, and these trustees . . . are governmental officials in every relevant sense of that term.
Id. at 53-54, 56,
Salyer reinforces this emphasis on whether the local body possesses "general governmental powers" and performs "important governmental functions." The Salyer court explicitly relied upon Hadley and Avery in fashioning its exception to the strict one person, one vote standard. And although the Court noted that the Tulare Water Storage District also had a disproportionate impact on landowners, its reference to this fact in "not only, but also" fashion underscored its primary reliance upon the fact that the district lacked general governmental powers. I conclude that Salyer 's reference to disproportionate effect was not meant to expand the constitutional requirements of Avery and Hadley ; the critical inquiry remains focused on whether the local body performs traditional general governmental functions. See Salyer,
The Salt River District does not perform traditional general governmental functions. The legislature has defined the District's purpose as securing water necessary to improve agricultural land. Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 45-903. See Uhlmann v. Wren,
Moreover, though some municipalities furnish water and electric service, these functions are not traditionally governmental services. In another context, the Supreme Court has noted that "the supplying of utility service is not traditionally the exclusive prerogative of the State" and is not "traditionally associated with sovereignty." Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co.,
Finally, even if some publicly owned utilities can be compared to vital governmental services, this District is not such a utility. The Arizona Supreme Court has written of the District:
Most municipal corporations are owned by the public and managed by public officials. . . . Such is not the case here. . . . The public does not own the District. A governmental entity such as a city or town does not manage or benefit from the profits of this District. Instead the owners are private landholders. The profits from the sale of electricity are used to defray the expense in irrigating these private lands for personal profit. The public interest is merely that of consumers of its product, for which they pay. . . . The District does not function to "serve the whole people" but rather the District operates for the benefit of these "inhabitants of the district" who are private owners.
Local 266,
In short, the District does not perform functions akin to those of general governmental bodies. Accordingly, the Salyer test and not the strict one person, one vote standard of equal protection is applicable in evaluating the District's voter qualification requirements.
The District's disproportionate impact upon District landowners strengthens our conclusion that the Salyer test should be employed here. Although the District's policies affect electrical consumers both within and without the District's geographical area as well as landowners within the District, both the legislative purpose and practical effect of the District's activities disproportionately concern the landowners.
The Arizona legislature created the District to benefit landowners in the District. See Uhlmann,
Just as landowners within the District benefit disproportionately from successful District operations, so too financial reverses of the District disproportionately affect them. Arizona state law provides that bonds issued by the District create liens upon the real property within the District. Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 45-1047(A). And a state statute specifically provides for raising District revenues by taxing the landowners in the District. Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 45-1014(B). Thus, District financial losses have a disproportionate effect on landowners. This potential liability is particularly significant since the Supreme Court in Salyer based its finding of disproportionate effect largely on the fact that Tulare Water District charges constituted a lien upon land within the district.
I conclude that the District's actions disproportionately affect District landowners as a group in terms of District purposes, its successful operations, and the liabilities it may create. Thus, whether Salyer is read as emphasizing possession of general governmental powers, as we think proper, or as warranting consideration of the proportionality of effect as well, the challenge to the District's electoral system must be evaluated according to the standards set forth in that decision.
B. Acceptability of District's Voting System
In Salyer, the Supreme Court wrote:
Even though appellants derive no benefit from the (strict one person, one vote) cases, they are, of course, entitled to have their equal protection claim assessed to determine whether the State's decision to deny the franchise to residents of the district while granting it to landowners was "wholly irrelevant to achievement of the regulation's objectives," Kotch v. River Port Pilot Comm'rs (Commissioners),
In providing for the creation of the District, the Arizona legislature intended to assist landowners in irrigating their land. See Uhlmann,
Moreover, in Salyer, the Supreme Court found that the California legislature "could quite reasonably have concluded" that landowners should be given control of the Tulare district because the district's liabilities would fall upon the landowners in the form of liens upon their lands.
Appellants respond that all persons who use District water or electricity are interested in District policies. But as the Supreme Court wrote in Salyer :
No doubt residents within the district may be affected by its activities. But this argument proves too much. Since assessments imposed by the district become a cost of doing business for those who farm within it, and that cost must ultimately be passed along to the consumers of the produce, food shoppers in far away metropolitan areas are to some extent likewise "affected" by the activities of the district. Constitutional adjudication cannot rest on any such "house that Jack built" foundation, however.
I conclude that the District's voting system is not wholly irrelevant to the legislature's objectives in creating the District. Accordingly, the system does not violate the equal protection provisions of the fourteenth amendment.4
II. Irrebuttable Presumption Claim
Appellants additionally claim that the District's voting system impermissibly creates two irrebuttable presumptions: that only landowners are qualified to participate in District elections, and that individual interests in District matters are affected by the size of land holdings.
The Supreme Court has indicated that at times determination of eligibility for public benefits must be made on a case-by-case basis because generalized rules of eligibility inadequately reflect variations within administratively defined classes. See, e. g., Vlandis v. Kline,
Moreover, within the context of Supreme Court decisions dealing with irrebuttable presumptions, the presumptions embodied in the District's voting system are acceptable. In Matthews v. Lucas,
presumptions in aid of administrative functions, though they may approximate, rather than precisely mirror, the results that case-by-case adjudication would show, are permissible under the Fifth Amendment, so long as that lack of precise equivalence does not exceed the bounds of substantiality tolerated by the applicable level of scrutiny.
See Weinberger v. Salfi,
III. Class Action Certification
Appellants argue finally that the district court erred in refusing to certify the suit as a class action. The determination of class action status rests within the sound discretion of the district court. Montgomery v. Rumsfeld,
I would affirm the lower court in all respects.
Notes
Honorable Peirson Hall, Senior United States District Judge for the Central District of California, sitting by designation
Section 45-909 provides:
No person shall be entitled to vote at any election held under the provisions of this chapter unless he possesses all the qualifications required of electors for state officers under the general elections laws, and is the owner of record of real property located within the boundaries of the district as of sixty days preceding a district election, and on which he has been assessed for county taxes . . . .
Section 45-983 provides:
(E)ach landowner possessing the qualifications of an elector shall be entitled to cast one vote at all elections . . . for each acre of land within the district owned by him.
. . . (E)ach landowner possessing the qualifications of an elector who owns less than one acre of land within the district shall be entitled to a fractional vote . . . equal to the fraction of an acre owned by such elector.
After the district court rendered its decision, Ariz.Rev.Stat. §§ 45-909 & 45-983 were amended to read as quoted above. In reviewing the decision of the district court, we must look to the statute as it presently reads, not as it read at the time the district court rendered its decision. Fusari v. Steinberg,
The 1976 amendments to the statute added the at-large directors and fractional votes. Previously all voting was on a per-acre basis with a one-acre threshold requirement
In Niedner v. Salt River Project Agricultural Improvement & Power District,
Subsequent to Jackson, the Supreme Court has cited and relied on Cipriano with no indication that its holding has been undercut by Jackson. Hill v. Stone,
The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the District. Summary judgment may be granted " 'only where there is no genuine issue of any material fact or where viewing the evidence . . . in the light most favorable to the adverse party, the movant is clearly entitled to prevail as a matter of law.' " Caplan v. Roberts,
Here the parties have stipulated to the facts. Such stipulations conclusively establish the material facts they contain. United States v. Huston,
E. g., Phoenix v. Kolodziejski,
E. g., Hadley v. Junior College District,
Appellants suggest that corporations are unconstitutionally denied the right to vote in District elections. I conclude below, § IV Infra, that the District court did not abuse its discretion in refusing class certification. Because the plaintiffs are all noncorporate individuals, "the (corporate) claim of these petitioners falls squarely within the prudential standing rule that normally bars litigants from asserting the rights or legal interests of others in order to obtain relief from injury to themselves." Warth v. Seldin,
