142 N.Y. 523 | NY | 1894
When this case was here on a former appeal (Baird v.Supervisors,
The court is again asked to interfere on two grounds: (1) That the division has not been made in such a way as to secure equality of population among the districts as near as may be. (2) That at least one of the districts, though made up of contiguous territory, has not been formed with reference to convenience as required by the Constitution. This is the 16th district composed of two towns and a part of three wards of Brooklyn. The learned counsel for the relators has printed and placed upon his points a map of this district side by side with one of that famous district in Massachusetts credited to Governor Gerry which introduced a word of somewhat odious signification into the language. The district is certainly irregular in form though there is nothing to show that it is inconvenient. The comparison is liable to be quite misleading. A shoestring district cut across the state of Massachusetts eighty years ago embracing the sparsely peopled regions of that state might well be said to be inconvenient, while a district of irregular form in the densely populated parts of a great city of to-day would not be. The Constitution does not require the districts to be made up of compact territory. When the Constitution of 1846 was framed the idea of convenient territory and the integrity of towns in the formation of legislative divisions referred principally if not wholly to the rural parts of the state where the population was scattered. It did not forbid the division of wards in cities nor *528
was it supposed that any great inconvenience could result from the formation of districts of irregular shape in the great cities as they exist to-day. Indeed, it is quite conceivable that assembly districts in New York and Brooklyn might be so irregular in form as to present an unfavorable appearance when mapped upon paper, but which would in fact be more convenient when laid out with reference to streets, blocks and election districts than if they were compact and regular. The difficulties of intercourse between different sections of a large county, which were present to the minds of the framers of the Constitution in that day have been largely overcome by modern means of communication, and, if they ever existed, they have entirely disappeared in the great cities of the state. The record discloses no ground for judicial interference with the action of the board on account of any actual inconvenience or difficulty arising from the territorial form of any of the districts. The only ground of complaint, if any exists, is the inequality of population. The learned counsel for the relators has attempted to show how this could and should have been avoided and how a division could have been made which would make the population of each district more nearly equal. It is quite possible that he could have made a more equitable division of the population. It is quite likely that the courts could have made a better apportionment than the one now before us. But neither the courts nor the counsel have been intrusted with this power or duty by the Constitution. This division of the county of Kings into assembly districts is the product of many minds and not of one mind. It is what the board finally agreed upon. Each member may have had views of his own with reference to his locality. These conflicting views and local demands, always clamorous in such a body, had to be reconciled. It was the duty of the members to agree upon some plan of division reasonably fair and just, and it was perhaps impossible to formulate one that would be mathematically accurate. In the nature of things much must be left to the discretion of the board, the members of which come from every ward and town of the county. The remarks *529
of the learned judge who gave the opinion of this court in another case where the action of the legislature in the formation of senate districts was under review are applicable: "Certain districts may be picked out from the whole number and compared with certain others, and inequality be charged against them. But when all the counties in the state are to be arranged, and brought into connection upon some plan in which the express commands of the Constitution as to contiguous territory and county lines are to be observed, it will pass the wit of man to make such an alteration of the senate districts for this state that may not be the subject of adverse criticism, and of alleged possible improvement." (People ex rel. Carter v. Rice,
The board had the same difficulties to meet in the formation of assembly districts that the legislature had in the formation of senate districts. I do not think that the present apportionment is of such a character as to justify the interference of the courts within the principle laid down in the former appeal. It may not be, and probably is not, an ideal one. But it was made by the body having the power and discretion under the Constitution for that purpose. It adopted no erroneous rule or principle of action as it did in making the first apportionment. The objection to the result grows out of the exercise of the discretion which, it must be conceded, the board possesses. The Supreme Court in the locality has examined its action and refused to interfere. The order of the court below was right unless legislative apportionments are to be made, in the end, by the courts instead of the legislature and the local boards appointed for that purpose. The great and principal function of this court is to review questions of law passed upon by inferior courts or arising from the action of ministerial or governmental bodies, and not to revise official action involving the exercise of discretion. If this apportionment does not, upon the face of the record, indicate such a manifest abuse of discretion as virtually to amount to an evasion or disobedience of our former decision, then the court cannot interfere or set it aside without drawing to itself powers which *530 have been confided by the Constitution to other departments of the government. The power of the court to compel local boards of apportionment to perform the duty imposed upon them by the Constitution was asserted on the former appeal, and nothing more need now be added to what was then decided. The record now before us does not disclose such an abuse of discretion as to justify judicial interference. There is inequality of population in the districts as formed, but not to such an extent or in such a degree as to warrant us in holding as matter of law that the board has abused its powers or refused to exercise its discretion. It does not seem to me that all the criticism of the learned counsel for the relators upon the action of the board is well founded. The division of a great county containing a million of people or more into assembly districts in such a way that one-half the members of assembly were elected by each of the two great political parties at the last election, as was admitted upon the argument, cannot be so essentially and plainly vicious as to justify an appeal to the courts. If the one hundred and twenty-eight members composing the assembly could be based upon constituencies without any greater inequality in population than exists in the eighteen districts of Kings it would, I think, be regarded as a reasonably fair distribution of power. But, as already observed, the question here is not whether the division is the best that could have been made, but whether the board had jurisdiction and proceeded according to legal rules. If so, the courts cannot require them to undo the work on account of errors, mistakes or inequalities resulting from the exercise of their discretionary powers, and to perform it in some other way, without assuming governmental powers with which they have not been intrusted by the Constitution or the laws. The Constitution forbids the division of towns, but not the division of wards in the formation of assembly districts. The town is a municipal division of the state of very ancient origin. The wards into which cities are divided have no resemblance to it unless it be in the circumstance that they are represented in the board of supervisors. The indivisibility of wards in the creation *531 of assembly districts cannot be implied from the provision against dividing towns. A ward is not a town, though it may be treated as a town for some purposes of municipal government. The framers of the Constitution, in prohibiting the division of towns, had no intention to include the wards of a city within the provision. If they had, they would have said so. Hence, the board did not transcend its powers by dividing wards in the formation of the districts.
The order appealed from should be affirmed.
All concur.
Order affirmed.