SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION
This matter comes before the Court upon the application of the Plaintiff, Frederick Carlton “Carl” Lewis, for a preliminary injunction barring Defendants from removing his name from a primary ballot. Plaintiff contends that the provision of New Jersey’s state constitution relied upon to remove his name from the ballot violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. On April 28, 2011, after a hearing and oral argument, the Court concluded Plaintiff failed to demonstrate a likelihood of success on the merits, in that Sununu v. Stark,
I. BACKGROUND
On April 11, 2011, Plaintiff Frederick Carlton “Carl” Lewis
II. ANALYSIS
This Opinion is intended to supplement the Court’s oral decision denying Plaintiffs Motion. Plaintiff requested that the Court enter a preliminary injunction enjoining Defendants Atlantic County Clerk, Burlington County Clerk and Camden County Clerk (hereinafter “Defendant County Clerks”) from printing or mailing the primary election ballots without his name. In
A. Pullman
In Railroad Commission of Texas v. Pullman Co.,
The'Court concluded that the present matter failed to implicate the first and third prongs of Pullman. With respect to the first prong, the issue before the Court, while important to the parties, was exceptionally narrow. The Court only decided whether New Jersey’s constitutional рrovision requiring candidates for state senate to reside in New Jersey for at least four-years was, on its face, violative of the federal constitution. This question is purely one of federal law, which can be resolved entirely without opining on, or resolving, any issue of state law. Consequently, the Court did not need to address any uncertain issues of state law.
The third prong was also not implicated. The Court did not interpret any provisions of state law, but merely determined whether the provision in the state constitution violated the Equal Protection Clause. Furthermore, in the present matter, the Court concluded that the provision did not violate the Fourteenth Amendment. Therefore, the Court’s decision did not disrupt any state interests.
B. Younger Abstention
“Under Younger v. Harris,
In rendering its decision on abstention, the Court was especially mindful of the delicate balance between state and federal interests. Specifically, the Court recognized that the underlying principles of Younger are grounded in notions of comity, and the idea that, in some instances, federal courts should not interfere with state courts or state sovereignty. Although a literal application of Younger may suggest this Court should abstain, (1) the binding Supreme Court authority addressing the narrow issue presented and (2) the extraordinary pressing need for resolution of the federal issue justified the Court’s exercise of jurisdiction.
The Court was asked to address whether, on its face, Article 4, Section 1, Paragraph 2 of the New Jersey Constitution violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. This issue is not only a question of substantial federal concern, but also is controlled, as discussed in greater detail below, by binding Supreme Court precedent. Consequently, to resolve the federal constitutional issue this Court did not need to apply or interpret any provisions of the state constitution. Rather, in deciding the narrow issue presented, we only needed to examine whether the provision, on its face, violated the Constitution, and this inquiry merely required an application of Sununu.
The Court also concluded that a quick resolution of this matter was of paramount concern. See Diamond D Constr. Corp. v. McGowan,
C. The Merits
“[T]he grant of injunctive relief is an extraordinary remedy, which should be granted only in limited circumstances.” Frank’s GMC Truck Ctr., Inc. v. General Motors Corp.,
In the present matter, after the April 28, 2011 hearing and oral argument, the Court concluded Plaintiff had failed to establish a likelihood that he would prevail on the merits at the final hearing.
1. Sununu is Controlling Precedent
The Court found Sununu to control the outcome of this matter. In Sununu, a three-judge panel concluded that the New Hampshire Constitution’s seven-year durational residency requirement for the office of state senator did not violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment because the state articulated a compelling interest for the provision. Sununu,
Several courts have specifically found Sununu binding and controlling precedent. In Beil v. City of Akron, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals opined that in Sununu and Chimento the Supreme Court summarily affirmed “that seven year durational residency requirements are not violative of the equal protection clause.” Beil v. City of Akron,
Although not directly addressing the precedential value of Sununu, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, in dicta, stated “[w]e, accordingly, do not reach the question of the constitutional validity of the five-year duration-of-residency requirement, though we should indicate that we have grave doubt as to whether this matter is not foreclosed by the action of the Supreme Court in summary affirmances of ... seven-year residency duration statutes” in Sununu. Billington v. Hayduk,
Other courts have similarly concluded that Sununu constitutes binding authority. See, e.g. Joseph v. City of Birmingham,
In Metromedia the Supreme Court opined that the precedential value of summary affirmances is limited to the “precise issues presented and necessarily decided by those actions.” Metromedia, Inc.,
In support of his position Plaintiff only argued one dissimilarity and noted a sеcond. First, he argued that in Sununu, decided in 1974, the people of New Hampshire had directly rejected any changes to the durational residency requirement for state senator only eight years before, in 1966. In the present matter, however, the last direct vote on the particular provision of the New Jersey Constitution at issue here occurred in 1947. Additionally, the Plaintiff noted that the ratio between the number of members of the upper house and the lower house is smaller in New Jersey, suggesting a greater parity between the two than might exist in New Hampshire. The Court does not find these differences substantial enough to undermine the precedential value of Sununu.
Moreover, these two minor differences are far outweighed by the similarities between the cases. Both cases involve a bicameral legislature, a substantial difference in the length of office between a state senator and a member of the lower house,
Even if the Court did not find Sununu controlling, it would still conclude that Plaintiff would not prevail on the merits. Despite language in Clements
Presently, the State met its burden and articulated a compelling interest for its four-year residency requirement. First, the State has a compelling interest to ensure that its senate candidates are familiar with the district because of the important duties and authority a New Jersey state senator possesses. As articulated by the State Defendants, the office of senator is of anсient origin and its more modern version dates to the American Revolution. A senator exercises a variety of powers, including trial of impeachments and advice and consent on the appointment of judges, executive cabinet officials and prosecutors. State senators also vote for governor and lieutenant governor in the event of a tie, stand in the line of succession to the governorship, may exercise the executive power when the governor and lieutenant governor are not in the State, and, just to name a few additional powers, exercise police and taxing powers.
Furthermоre, a senator’s authority is not limited to a city, district or municipality. Rather, the entire State is affected by his or her decisions. In order to properly perform these functions, it is of upmost importance for the senator to be intimately familiar with not only his or her district, its people, its problems and its issues, but also the issues and political structure of the entire State. This type of familiarity does not occur overnight and cannot be gleamed from watching television, reading the newspaper or surfing the Internet. Ultimately, the State has a compelling interest that this individual not only possess knowledge of the operation of the State Gоvernment, but also to ensure that he or she is sufficiently well-versed in the needs and interests of all the State’s citizens. Without this type of knowledge of the needs of both the government and the governed, a senator cannot wield the aforementioned important powers and
The State also provided a second compelling interest as justification for its four-year residency requirement. According to the State, the people of the district need time to become familiar with a candidate and their position on the substantive issues of the day. Although Plaintiffs counsel described Plaintiff as the “Bruce Springsteen of track”, his fame and nоtoriety are not directly relevant to the proper exercise of a position of public trust. The State has a compelling interest in insuring the voters become familiar with the candidate’s platform. This type of familiarity develops over time and requires the candidate to “press the flesh.” In order to become an effective state senator, a candidate must live among and interact with his or her potential constituents. Even in the age of the Internet, there is a meaningful difference between what one hears or reads on a computer screen and what one learns and hears at the local cоffee shop or firehouse.
The cases Plaintiff relied upon to demonstrate that the State does not have a compelling interest are distinguishable because they address intrastate durational residency requirements. In the present matter, however, an interstate requirement is at issue. In other words, Plaintiff relies upon cases that address a candidate’s ineligibility because he failed to live in the proper area of the state, not the state itself. This intrastate/interstate dichotomy is of primary significance.
First, the intrastate cases invalidate local ordinances or state statutes rather than organic law of state constitutional dimension. Second, the federal constitutional concerns and the opportunity for an improper motive to bar an otherwise legitimate candidate, may be more pronounced where the case involves a narrowly defined geographical area and a less significant political subdivision. As an example, imagine a city which annexes an adjoining municipality and imposes a durational residency requirement to run for office. This action would essentially disenfranchise the residents of the annexed municipality because they would be precluded from running for municipal office or city gоvernment by the simple fact of having been annexed.
Both Sununu and the present matter, however, are different. Absent invidious
Furthermore, unlike the intrastate disenfranchisement scenario discussed above, the provision at issue in this case treats everyone from outside the state similarly. Whether a Democratic African-American male from California, a Republican AsianAmeriean female from Topeka or a Native American third party candidate from Maine, each has the same hurdle to overcome. All classes of individuals must reside in this State for four years before they could run for the Office of State Senator. No recently re-drawn line, intentionally or not, harms аny protected class of citizens or represents a sinister political plot to shift some geographical balance of power. The borders of the state are static and have remained so and are likely to remain so. Consequently, it is difficult to articulate how Plaintiff is treated differently than anyone else from outside the State of New Jersey or how he could be fairly characterized as a victim of anything other than his own volitional decisions as to his domicile.
Finally, the Court acknowledges the principles of comity and the proper balance between the State and Federal Government required by the Tenth Amendment. Although Plaintiff might one day be an excellent state senator and appears to have many fine qualities that would commend him to public office, it is not for this Court to overturn a provision of the New Jersey Constitution that has been part of the state’s standing law for approximately 167 years.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated both above and in the Court’s April 28, 2011 oral decision, Plaintiffs Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order and Order to Show Cause Why a Preliminary Injunction Should Not be Entered was denied.
Notes
. Carl Lewis represented the United States in the 1984, 1988, 1992 and 1996 Olympic games. He won nine gold medals in track and field and is considered by some as the greatest Olympian of all time.
. The Court interpreted this claim as a facial challenge to the provision.
. During oral argument, Dеfendants appeared to concede that the Court could exercise its jurisdiction to address whether, on its face, the Constitution’s four-year residency provision violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
. Furthermore, as discussed in the merits section, this Court upheld the constitutionality of the provision at issue because of binding Supreme Court precedent. In such a situation where an inferior federal court cannot engage in its own analysis of the issue because the precise legal question has already been resolved by a higher court, in this instance the Supreme Court no less, we find that the principles behind Younger are substantially less pronounced. This conclusion is especially true when a court's ultimate resolution is to uphold the state action, law, or constitution provision. When a court affirms a state's law, the notions of comity and concern for the respect of states are simply not present because the delicate balance between state and federal relations is not interfered with or otherwise disturbed.
. We recognize that at the time of this Court’s oral ruling a judicial proceeding in a forum competent to consider the federal constitutional claim was pending. However, final briefs had not yet been filed in the state appellate division and while we were confident that the state courts would act promptly, the actual date and the scope of that ruling was unknown at the time this Court ruled.
. The Court concluded that the other three prongs of the test weighed in Plaintiff's favor.
. Approximately a year before Sununu, a three-judge panel in the District of New Hampshire decided Chimento v. Stark,
.See United States v. Carver,
. As discussed in an earlier footnote, both Chimento and Sununu involved the New Hampshire Constitution's seven-year durational residency requirement for candidates for the public offices of state senator and governor.
. We note that in New Jersey this difference between the terms of office is mirrored in the durational residency requirements found in the state constitution. In New Jersey, as in ' New Hampshire, the longer the term of office the longer the durational residency requirement.
. It should be noted that the members of the New Jersey Senate have even greater power than thеir counterparts in New Hampshire. New Jersey Senators also have the power to advise and consent on the confirmation of judicial and executive officers. In New Hampshire these duties are performed by a board of councilors. Albeit this is a distinction between the two cases, it cannot preclude Sununu’s binding effect.
. During oral argument Plaintiff contended that the Court was bound by the Third Circuit's decision in Wellford v. Battaglia.
. The Court opined that a durational residency requirement for candidacy, is the “sort of insignificant interference with access to the ballot need only rest on a rational predicate in order to survive a challenge under the Equal Protection Clause.” Clements,
. By applying the strict scrutiny standard, the Court recognized that if it were to apply the rational basis standard, the result would remain the same and the constitutional provision would be upheld. Furthermore, because the Court applied essentially the same reasoning of the District Court in Sununu, it felt further bound to apply the heightened standard of review.
. During oral argument Plaintiff contended that the State cannot justify why the residency requirement for a state senator was two years longer than the residency requirement of a member of the general assembly. The Court concluded that the State is justified in making this distinction because (1) assembly members serve two year terms and senators serve four year terms and (2) a state senator exercises greater power and has more responsibilities than a member of the general assembly.
. This type of situation could further implicate the Equal Protection Clause because it might adversely impact a protected class of individuals, such as a minority or ethnic group.
. As mentioned above, the people of New Jersey had two opportunities to amend this provision, first in the 1844 revision of the New Jersey Constitution and, most recently, in 1947 and failed to do so. The power to change this provision and the failure to do so stands for the proposition that a majority of the people of New Jersey want a four-year restriction on candidates for the office of state senator and have always wanted such a restriction.
. Of course the Tenth Amendment can not save state law, even a constitutional provision, that violates the Fourteenth Amendment. Indeed, the history and function of the Fourteenth Amendment is to act as a check against state action which violates fundamental rights and privileges. While this Court would not hesitate to strike a different balance in the right case, no such violation has occurred here.
