Appellant sued the judges of election for the precinct in whieh he was registered to recover damages for their refusal to permit him to vote at the primary election held in Texas in 1928 for the nomination of candidates of the Democratic Party. He alleged in his petition that he was- a citizen of the United States and of Texas,.a member of the Democratic Party, and in every way qualified to vote; that he is a negro, and solely because of his race and color-he was denied the right to vote by appellees, who as precinct 'judges of election based their denial of such right upon a resolution, adopted by the State Democratic Executive Committee of Texas, whieh provided “that all white Democrats, * * * and none other, be allowed to participate in the primary elections to be held,” etc.; that this resolution was void and of no effect because chapter 67 of the Laws of 1927, 1st Called Sess. (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 3107), enacted by the Legislature of Texas, pursuant to whieh it was passed, violates the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States.
The action was dismissed by the District Court on motion of appellees.
It is of course to be conceded, since the decision in Nixon v. Herndon, supra, that the right of a qualified citizen to vote extends to primary elections as well as to general elections. The distinction between appellant’s eases, the one under the 1923 statute and the other under the 1927 statute, is. that he was denied permission to vote in the former by state statute, and in the latter by resolution of the State Democratic Executive Committee. It is argued on behalf of appellant that this is a distinction without a difference, and that the state through its Legislature attempted by the 1927 act to do indirectly what the Supreme Court had held it was powerless to accomplish directly by the 1923 act. We are of opinion, however, that there is a vast difference between the two statutes. The Fourteenth Amendment is expressly directed against prohibitions and restraints imposed by the states, and the Fifteenth protects the right to vote against denial or abridgment by any state or by the United States; neither operates against private individuals or voluntary associations. United States v. Cruikshank,
Each political party is represented by its own election officials who have nothing to do with conducting the primary of any other party. In these particulars the primary election law of Texas differs radically from that of Virginia, where the state conducts and pays the expenses of holding the primary for all political parties just as it does in the general election. West v. Bliley (D. C.)
The judgment is affirmed
