Paul W. PREISLER et al., Plaintiffs, v. The SECRETARY OF STATE OF MISSOURI and the Attorney General of Missouri, Defendants, and F. V. Heinkel, R. J. Rosier, W. W. Beckett, A. D. Sappington, L. O. Wallis, Miller Hern, Herman Hetlage, Herman Kertz, Turpin Youtsey and Glen Myers, Intervenor-Defendants.
No. 1064
United States District Court W. D. Missouri, Central Division
Aug. 5, 1966
257 F. Supp. 953
Before MATTHES, Circuit Judge, and OLIVER and COLLINSON, District Judges.
(1) The parties are required to stipulate that Zim be restricted to bringing any claim arising out of the November 26, 1964, collision between the S.S. SHALOM and the M/V STOLT DAGALI in the Gothenburg court of Sweden in which A/S Ocean‘s action against Zim is now pending. This restriction should be made subject to the further condition that if A/S Ocean, for any reason other than complete settlement of all claims between the parties, voluntarily discontinues its own action in Gothenburg, Sweden, then this dismissal shall not restrict Zim‘s right to commence a new action in any other appropriate jurisdiction. (A stipulation to this effect has already been entered into between the parties.)
(2) The parties are required to stipulate that all of the depositions of the STOLT DAGALI witnesses, SHALOM witnesses, and third party witnesses, be permitted to be introduced in evidence in the Gothenburg court subject to the restriction that if a witness appears and testifies in person the depositions may be used only for purposes of cross-examination. (A stipulation to this effect has already been entered into between the parties.)
(3) The parties are required to stipulate that all of the documents marked in evidence at the pretrial proceedings in this court be admitted in the Gothenburg trial, except that any objection reserved on the record here may be raised again in the Gothenburg court.
European continent. They were sent to the United States so that Zim could obtain their depositions here. The fact that now both parties may be in a position to use the depositions is no reason for declining to tax their travel expenses. Moreover, the costs involved are certainly not excessive. A/S Ocean‘s attorneys’ fees, disbursements and expenses related to the collision litigation have thus far exceeded $190,000.00 and there has been still no decision on the merits.
(4) That Zim pay all costs taxable under the
Upon the above terms and conditions Zim‘s motion to discontinue without prejudice is hereby granted.
So ordered.
Requiring Zim to pay costs including $2,485.05 in travel expenses is not contrary to the national policy of minimizing the cost of litigation, see Farmer v. Arabian-American Oil Co., supra at 233-236, 85 S.Ct. 411, in the context of this case. Moreover, if the transportation expenses be deemed sought pursuant to
Paul W. Preisler, St. Louis, Mo., for plaintiffs.
Norman H. Anderson Atty. Gen., Jefferson City, Mo., J. Gordon Siddens, Asst. Atty. Gen., Jefferson City, Mo., Thomas J. Downey, Asst. Atty. Gen., Jefferson City, Mo., for defendants.
This Congressional reapportionment case is a sequel to Preisler v. Secretary of State of Missouri, W.D.Mo.1965, 238 F. Supp. 187, decided January 4, 1965. Preisler I pended as consolidated cases Nos. 923 and 924. In those consolidated cases plaintiffs sought and obtained a declaration that the 1961 Congressional Redistricting Act of Missouri was unconstitutional. In this case, No. 1064, the same plaintiffs contest the constitutional validity of Missouri‘s 1965 Congressional Redistricting Act.1
The point of beginning in this case, as it was in Preisler I, must be the 1964 decision of the Supreme Court in Wesberry v. Sanders, 376 U.S. 1, 84 S.Ct. 526, 11 L.Ed.2d 481 (1964). In Preisler I the present defendants conceded that the constitutional principles enunciated in Wesberry controlled the disposition of that case “unless the Supreme Court overrules or modifies such decision” (238 F.Supp. at 189). Defendants, as they must, make the same concession in this case. The Supreme Court has not modified or overruled Wesberry v. Sanders. Wesberry v. Sanders controlled Preisler I; it controls Preisler II.
In Preisler I this Court held that ”Wesberry v. Sanders, supra, teaches that apportionment is void when it appears from the scheme thereof there has been inadequate consideration to equality in population as between districts in the same State” (238 F.Supp. at 190). We emphasized that Wesberry v. Sanders determined that “the command of
In Preisler I this Court stayed its hand “until the Legislature of the State of Missouri has once more had an opportunity to deal with the problem” (238 F.Supp. at 191). We refused to presume that “the Legislature of the State of Missouri will refuse to take all necessary action to comply with its duty under the Federal [Constitution], as well as its own State[,] Constitution.”2
The Seventy-third General Assembly of Missouri enacted the legislation now before this Court in 1965 after our decision in Preisler I. The 1965 Act, Sections 128.202 to 128.305, constituting Chapter 128 of Title IX of the Missouri Statutes, as amended (September, 1965 Pamphlet V.A.M.S., pages 76-77), originated as Senate Bill No. 320 and was introduced on March 4, 1965. After various changes and substitutions, that bill, as amended, was passed by the 1965 Missouri General Assembly on the final day of its session and was later approved by the Governor on August 5, 1965.3
Particular Changes Made by the 1965 Act in regard to the Redistricting Provided in the 1961 Act
The changes made in the 1961 redistricting by the 1965 Act are illustrated in Table I below. The “deviation” columns in that table represent the difference between the population allocated to a particular district by the 1961 Act and by the 1965 Act, respectively, and the population that would have been included in each of Missouri‘s ten congressional districts if absolute mathematical precision was practicable.
An ideal average district would have included 431,981.3 population (4,319,813 total population / 10 districts) in each of the ten districts. We recognize, as did Wesberry v. Sanders, that “it may not be possible to draw congressional districts with mathematical precision” (376 U.S. at 18, 84 S.Ct. at 535). But recognition of that fact may not be converted into an “excuse for ignoring our Constitution‘s plain objective of making equal representation for equal numbers of people the fundamental goal for the House of Representatives” (376 U.S. at 18, 84 S.Ct. at 535).
TABLE I
Changes in 1961 Redistricting Made by 1965 Act
| DIST. NO. | 1961 Act POPULATION | 1965 Act POPULATION | Changes made by 1965 Act | TOTAL POPULATION SHIFT | 1961 DEVIATION | 1965 DEVIATION |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 466,482 | 474,895 | Shifts of St. Louis County Townships and one St. Louis city ward between First, Third and Ninth Districts. | + 8,413 | +34,500.7 | +42,913.7 |
| 2 | 506,854 | 460,501 | Shift of St. Louis County Townships and one St. Louis ward between First and Second Districts | -46,353 | +74,872.7 | +28,519.7 |
| 3 | 480,222 | 469,888 | Shift of two St. Louis wards between First Second and Third Districts | -10,334 | +48,240.7 | +37,906.7 |
| 4 | 418,981 | 402,813 | Shift of four Kansas City wards to Fifth District. Shift of Barton County from Seventh District | -16,168 | -13,000.3 | -29,168.3 |
| 5 | 378,499 | 405,780 | Shift of four Kansas City wards from Fourth District | +27,281 | -53,482.3 | -26,201.3 |
| 6 | 388,486 | 394,236 | Shift of Mercer County from the Ninth District | + 5,750 | -43,495.3 | -37,745.3 |
| 7 | 436,933 | 425,820 | Shift of Barton County to the Fourth District | -11,113 | + 4,951.7 | - 6,161.3 |
| 8 | 452,385 | 443,747 | Shift of Wayne County to Tenth District | - 8,638 | +20,404.7 | +11,765.7 |
| 9 | 409,369 | 451,893 | Shift of Mercer County to Sixth District. Shift of St. Louis County townships from First District | +42,524 | -22,612.3 | +19,911.7 |
| 10 | 381,602 | 390,240 | Shift of Wayne County from the Eighth District | + 8,638 | -50,379.3 | -41,741.3 |
TABLE II
Comparison of District Populations Under 1961 Act and 1965 Act
| DIST. NO. | POPULATION | Differs from Population of Third District | Differs from Population of Second District | Differs from Population of First District | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1961 Act | 1965 Act | 1961 | 1965 | 1961 | 1965 | 1961 | 1965 | |
| 1 | 466,482 | 474,895 | - 13,740 | + 5,007 | - 40,372 | +14,394 | ||
| 2 | 506,854 | 460,501 | + 26,632 | - 9,387 | +40,372 | -14,394 | ||
| 3 | 480,222 | 469,888 | - 26,632 | + 9,387 | +13,740 | - 5,007 | ||
| 4 | 418,981 | 402,813 | - 61,241 | - 67,075 | - 87,873 | -57,688 | -47,501 | -72,082 |
| 5 | 378,499 | 405,780 | -101,723 | - 64,108 | -128,355 | -54,721 | -87,983 | -69,115 |
| 6 | 388,486 | 394,236 | - 91,736 | - 75,652 | -118,368 | -66,265 | -77,996 | -80,659 |
| 7 | 436,933 | 425,820 | - 43,289 | - 44,068 | - 69,921 | -34,681 | -29,549 | -49,075 |
| 8 | 452,385 | 443,747 | - 27,837 | - 26,141 | - 54,469 | -16,754 | -14,097 | -31,148 |
| 9 | 409,369 | 451,893 | - 70,853 | - 17,995 | - 97,485 | - 8,608 | -57,113 | -23,002 |
| 10 | 381,602 | 390,240 | - 98,620 | - 79,648 | -125,252 | -70,261 | -84,880 | -84,655 |
The 1965 Act not only increased the 1961 disparity in regard to the rural Seventh District; it shifted that rural district of declining population on the side of overweighting the votes of the population as contrasted to the 1961 Act that allocated 436,933 population to that district, only 4,951 population in excess of the ideal average.
Slight improvements in the extent of deviation were produced in the other seven districts but the fact remains that in all except one district, the deviations exceeded 10,000 population; that eight out of the ten districts deviate from the ideal average by 19,911 to 42,913; and that four of the districts have deviations of more than 35,000 population. Deviations of that extent can not fairly be described as “minor” deviations.
Examination of Table I and Table II demonstrates that the overall pattern of malapportionment under the 1961 Act and under the 1965 Act was the same. Under both Acts the population deviations from the ideal average district exceeded approximately 20,000 population except for two districts. Both have the same pattern of overvaluation and overweight of the votes in the rural geographical areas, as contrasted with the votes in the two metropolitan areas of the State. The facts in regard to the St. Louis metropolitan area are stated in footnote 4.
The Kansas City metropolitan area presents a slightly different factual situation. Under the 1961 Act, several heavily populated wards from within the city limits of Kansas City were included in both the Fourth and the Sixth Districts in order to increase the deficient population of those two essentially rural districts. Under the 1965 Act some of those wards were shifted to the Fifth District but, again, the City of Kansas City was split between three separate Congressional districts, the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth. The population of the City of Kansas City under the 1965 Act continued to be utilized to increase the deficient population of two essentially rural districts in order that the geographical area allotted to those rural districts would be permitted to cover essentially the same geographical areas allotted to them by the constitutionally impermissible 1961 Act.5
The legislative history of Senate Bill No. 320, of which we take judicial notice, makes clear that the 1965 Missouri General Assembly understood how the State of Missouri could have been divided into ten congressional districts in which, as nearly as practicable, one man‘s vote in a congressional election would have been worth the same as another‘s. It is most significant to note that Senate Bill No. 320, after it had been amended, and as it was finally passed and approved, reflected the slighest degree of correction of the constitutionally void 1961 Act of any of the versions of that bill that were before the Seventy-third General Assembly as it considered congressional redistricting in 1965.
Introductory and Caveats in regard to Discussion of Particular Legislative Alternatives and Population Figures
Before discussing the legislative history of Senate Bill No. 320, we make clear that such discussion is not to be construed by a future Missouri General Assembly as any intimation by this Court that, had the Senate Committee Substitute for Senate Bill No. 320, for example, become the law of Missouri, the redistricting plan there proposed would have been held to be not unconstitutional by this Court. The purpose of our discussion is not to discuss the constitutionality of the available alternatives the 1965 General Assembly refused to enact; we discuss the alternatives rejected by the 1965 Missouri General Assembly to illustrate the fact that no practical reason existed to prevent the 1965 General Assembly from discharging its constitutional duties in regard to congressional redistricting imposed by both the 1945 Constitution of Missouri and by
The duty of establishing constitutional congressional districts for Missouri rests primarily upon the General Assembly of Missouri. Both the State and Federal Constitutions so provide. We reiterate that our discussion of the rejected proposals is not to be construed in any way as an implied recommendation of any particular plan or as an approval or recommendation that the only way congressional district lines should be drawn is for a future General Assembly to follow county lines except where forced by a distribution of population to do otherwise. We refrain totally from invading the legislative province of the General Assembly of Missouri. It is quite enough for this Court to discharge its duty of determining whether the 1965 Missouri Act is or is not unconstitutional.
Senate Bill No. 320 As Originally Introduced
Table III below illustrates the Congressional districting originally proposed by Senate Bill No. 320 when it was introduced on March 4, 1965. The first column sets forth the population allocations made by the constitutionally void 1961 Act. The second column sets forth the population proposed by the original version of Senate Bill No. 320 as calculated from the 1960 census figures in evidence. The third column sets forth the particular counties, townships, and wards that Senate Bill No. 320 proposed to be included in each particular congressional district. The last two columns afford a comparison of the deviations eventually created by the 1965 Act as it was ultimately passed, with the deviations that would have been created had the 1965 General Assembly passed Senate Bill No. 320 as it was originally introduced.
TABLE III
SENATE BILL NO. 320 AS ORIGINALLY INTRODUCED
Comparison of Changes Proposed with Final Enactment
| DIST. NO. | POPULATION | COMPOSITION OF DISTRICTS UNDER ORIGINAL S.B. 320 | DEVIATION | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UNDER 1961 ACT | PROPOSED POPULATION | UNDER 1965 ACT | UNDER PROPOSAL | ||
| 1 | 466,482 | 443,399 | Florissant, St. Ferdinand, Normandy and Washington Townships in St. Louis County; Wards 1 to 5 and 19 to 23, St. Louis City | +42,913 | +11,418 |
| 2 | 506,854 | 444,934 | Airport, Midland, Creve Coeur, Clayton, Hadley, Jefferson, Lincoln, Gravois, Bonhomme, Meramec, Concord and Lemay Townships in St. Louis County | +28,519 | +12,953 |
| 3 | 480,222 | 460,828 | Wards 6 to 18 and 24 to 28 in St. Louis City | +37,906 | +28,847 |
| 4 | 418,981 | 426,995 | Wards 14, 17, 23 and part of 24 in Kansas City, remainder of Jackson County and Counties of Cass, Bates, Vernon, Lafayette, Johnson, Henry and Pettis | -13,000 | -4,986 |
| 5 | 378,499 | 426,608 | Wards 1 to 16, 18 to 22 and part of 24 in Kansas City and a portion of Jackson County | -26,201 | -5,373 |
| 6 | 388,486 | 406,456 | Counties of Atchison, Holt, Nodaway, Andrew, Buchanan, Platte, Worth, Gentry, De Kalb, Clinton, Clay, Harrison, Daviess, Caldwell, Ray, Mercer, Grundy, Livingston, Carroll, Chariton and Linn | -37,745 | -25,525 |
| 7 | 436,933 | 422,750 | Counties of Barton, Jasper, Newton, McDonald, Cedar, Dade, Lawrence, Barry, St. Clair, Benton, Hickory, Polk, Greene, Christian, Stone, Taney, Dallas, Webster, Douglas and Ozark | -6,161 | -9,231 |
| 8 | 452,385 | 434,381 | Counties of Cooper, Morgan, Moniteau, Miller, Camden, Saline, Howard, Boone, Cole, Maries, Pulaski, Phelps, Laclede, Texas, Shannon, Dent, Reynolds, Carter, Iron, Crawford, Washington and Jefferson | +11,765 | +2,400 |
| 9 | 409,369 | 439,673 | Counties of Putnam, Sullivan, Schuyler, Scotland, Clark, Adair, Knox, Lewis, Macon, Shelby, Marion, Randolph, Monroe, Ralls, Audrain, Pike, Callaway, Montgomery, Lincoln, Warren, St. Charles, Gasconade, Franklin and Osage | +19,911 | + 7,692 |
| 10 | 381,602 | 413,789 | Counties of St. Francois, Ste. Genevieve, Perry, Cape Girardeau, Bollinger, Madison, Wayne, Stoddard, Scott, Mississippi, New Madrid, Pemiscot, Dunklin, Butler, Ripley, Oregon, Wright and Howell | +41,741 | -18,192 |
| TOTALS | 4,319,813 | 4,319,813 | |||
It should, of course, be noted that the same general pattern of undervaluation and underweighting the votes in the areas of urban population was apparent in original Senate Bill No. 320. But it is also obvious that the extent of overvaluation and overweight given the votes in the areas of rural population was far less drastic in Senate Bill No. 320 as originally introduced than that which resulted from the 1965 General Assembly‘s final action.6
Senate Committee Substitute for Senate Bill No. 320
On March 11, 1965, the Senate Committee to which original Senate Bill No. 320 had been referred adopted and recommended the passage of a Senate Committee Substitute for Senate Bill No. 320.
Table IV reflects the action proposed by that Senate Committee Substitute. There is not sufficient data in the record to calculate the exact population allotted to the First, Second, or Third Districts in St. Louis or in the adjoining Ninth District because the Senate Committee‘s Substitute bill split wards and townships by assigning particular precincts to each of those four districts. The census figures in evidence are not broken down on a precinct basis. Total populations are therefore combined.
The population figures for the Fourth and Fifth Districts are also combined, because new and additional wards were created in Kansas City subsequent to the 1960 census, and the current population figures for those wards are not in evidence.
TABLE IV
SENATE COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR SENATE BILL NO. 320
Comparison of Changes Proposed with Final Enactment
| DIST. NO. | POPULATION | COMPOSITION OF DISTRICTS UNDER S.C.S. FOR S.B. 320 | DEVIATION | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UNDER 1961 ACT | PROPOSED POPULATION | UNDER 1965 ACT | UNDER PROPOSAL | ||
| 1 | 466,482 | 435,3831 | Normandy, St. Ferdinand, Washington Townships and particular precincts in Airport Township in St. Louis County. Wards 1 through 5, inclusive, 20 through 22, inclusive, and 27 in St. Louis City | +42,913 | + 3,4022 |
| 2 | 506,854 | Creve Coeur, Hadley, Lincoln, Jefferson, Clayton, Gravois, Concord, Lemay Townships and particular precincts in Bonhomme Township in St. Louis County. Ward 12 and part of precincts 16 through 36, inclusive, Ward 23 in St. Louis City | +28,519 | + 3,4022 | |
| 3 | 480,222 | Wards 6 through 11, inclusive, 13 through 19, inclusive, 24 through 26, inclusive, 28, and particular precincts in Ward 23 in St. Louis City | +39,906 | + 3,4022 | |
| 4 | 418,981 | 421,0813 | Wards 23 and 24 in Kansas City and Washington, Blue, Brooking, Fort Osage, Van Buren, Prairie and Sni-A-Bar Townships in Jackson County, and Counties of Lafayette, Cass, Johnson, Pettis, Henry, Bates, Vernon, St. Clair, Saline and Barton | -29,168 | -10,9004 |
| 5 | 378,499 | Wards 1 through 20, inclusive, and Ward 22 in Kansas City | -26,201 | -10,9004 | |
| 6 | 388,486 | 442,253 | Counties of Atchison, Holt, Nodaway, Andrew, Buchanan, Platte, Worth, Gentry, DeKalb, Clinton, Clay, Harrison, Daviess, Caldwell, Ray, Mercer, Grundy, Livingston, Carroll, Chariton, Linn, Sullivan, Randolph and Putnam | -37,745 | +10,272 |
| 7 | 436,933 | 417,399 | Counties of Jasper, Newton, McDonald, Cedar, Dade, Lawrence, Barry, Benton, Hickory, Polk, Greene, Christian, Stone, Taney, Dallas, Webster, Wright, Douglas and Ozark | - 6,161 | -14,582 |
| 8 | 452,385 | 438,253 | Counties of Howard, Cooper, Morgan, Camden, Laclede, Boone, Moniteau, Cole, Miller, Pulaski, Texas, Osage, Maries, Phelps, Gasconade, Crawford, Dent, Franklin and Jefferson | +11,765 | + 6,272 |
| 9 | 409,369 | 435,3831 | Counties of Schuyler, Adair, Macon, Scotland, Knox, Shelby, Monroe, Audrain, Callaway, Clark, Lewis, Marion, Ralls, Pike, Lincoln, Montgomery, Warren, St. Charles, and Florissant, Meramec, Midland and particular precincts in Airport and Bonhomme Townships in St. Louis County. | +19,911 | + 3,4022 |
| 10 | 381,602 | 438,214 | Counties of Howell, Shannon, Oregon, Washington, Iron, Reynolds, Carter, Ripley, St. Francois, Madison, Wayne, Butler, Ste. Genevieve, Perry, Bollinger, Stoddard, Dunklin, Cape Girardeau, Scott, Mississippi, New Madrid and Pemiscot | -41,741 | + 6,233 |
| TOTALS | 4,319,813 | 4,319,813 |
1 The total population of the geographical area included in the First, Second, Third and Ninth Districts is 1,741,532. One-fourth is assigned each district.
2 One-fourth of total deviation between four ideal districts (1,727,924) and actual population (1,741,532) of area covered by the four districts.
3 One-half of total population assigned Fourth and Fifth Districts.
4 One-half of total deviation between two ideal districts of 863,962 and actual population of 842,162.
Summary of Remaining Legislative History in regard to Senate Bill No. 320
On March 18, 1965, House Bill No. 710 was introduced and read for the first time in the Missouri House of Representatives. That bill proposed only minor changes in regard to only the Second and Ninth Districts. House Bill No. 710 proposed only to shift some of the 1961 excess 74,872 population of the Second District to the Ninth District.
The Missouri Senate perfected its Senate Committee Substitute for Senate Bill No. 320 on May 11, 1965 and on May 19, 1965, the Senate adopted that bill. On the same day, the House received that bill from the Senate and had it read for the first time. On May 25, 1965, the House referred the adopted Senate bill to the House Committee on Congressional Redistricting. The House passed its own bill on June 23, 1965, and Conference Committees were therefore appointed by both the House and the Senate on June 28, 1965.
Two days later, on June 30, 1965, and on the last day of the regular session, the conference committee reported a Conference Committee Substitute for House Committee Substitute for Senate Committee Substitute for Senate Bill No. 320. The bill recommended by the Conference, despite constitutional objections that day filed, was passed just before the midnight mandatory adjournment deadline of the Seventy-third General Assembly‘s 1965 session.
On July 15, 1965, the presiding officers of both houses, again despite the filing of constitutional objections, signed the bill that became the law of Missouri when signed and approved by the Governor on August 5, 1965.
Detail of Constitutional Objections Filed Before Passage of C.C.S. H.C.S. S.C.S. S.B. 320
The House Journal of the 1965 Missouri General Assembly shows that when the report of the Conference Committee was presented to the House, five Representatives offered constitutional objections to the Conference Committee Substitute for House Committee Substitute for Senate Committee Substitute for Senate Bill No. 320. The constitutional objections read as follows:
We, the undersigned Representatives, hereby offer the following constitutional objections to CCS for HCS for SCS for Senate Bill 320 as adopted and passed:
(1) The districts set up therein are not within the population limitations set out in the federal court order requiring redistricting.
(2) The difference in population between the largest and smallest district is 84,709—the largest district being 21.7% larger than the smallest district.
(3) The first district is 9.9% above the mean of 431,981 and the ten [sic] district is 9.7% below the mean. Three other districts are more than eight percent off from the mean.
(4) The districts are not as compact and nearly equal in population as possible. The chairman of the House Redistricting Committee stated that the policy was established to stay within an arbitrary figure of 10% above and below the mean.
The only constitutionally permissible policy that could have been followed by the 1965 Missouri General Assembly is that set forth in
We turn now to the legal contentions of the parties.
Plaintiffs’ Legal Contentions
Plaintiffs contend that
Defendants’ Legal Contentions
Defendants concede that Wesberry v. Sanders and Preisler I “set forth the law of this case” but they attempt to sustain the constitutionality of the 1965 Act by reliance upon cases determining the validity or invalidity of State reapportionments attacked under the Equal Protection Clause of the fourteenth amendment and by reliance upon particular three-judge congressional apportionment cases that apply the rules of decision applicable to State apportionment cases. Defendants argue that the rules of decision announced in these cases have established “specific guide lines or yardsticks” that are applicable to a congressional districting case. Defendants elaborate their argument by presenting a variety of mathematical formulae relating to (a) the percentage variation of the districts from an average or ideal district; (b) to the ratio between the most populous district and the least populous district; and (c) to the mathematical fraction or percentage of congressional district population to the State population. Mathematical tables are included in defendants’ brief in which the actual population variances are stated in smaller mathematical percentages or ratios.
In their conclusion defendants again concede that “the issue before the court is whether the Missouri congressional districts are apportioned so that one man‘s vote for representatives in Congress is as nearly as practicable worth as much as another man‘s vote.” Defendants also concede, as they must, that inequality of population does in fact exist in Missouri‘s 1965 redistricting plan. Defendants, however, argue that only “substantial” equality of population is constitutionally required and that such equality may be established by an application of the various mathematical computations set forth in their brief. Further and most importantly, defendants make the firm admission in their brief that “population alone was [not] the only factor considered by the legislature in the congressional apportionment.”
The reason defendants conceded in their written brief that factors in addition to population had in fact influenced the establishment of the districts created under the 1965 Act was made apparent at oral argument. The Assistant Attorney General representing defendants stated that “if you were looking at population as being the sole factor, the only
When asked whether he “read the Wesberry case as saying that other factors than population are to be considered in congressional redistricting,” defendants’ counsel stated: “That is my understanding of the Wesberry case.”
In response to a comment from the Bench that “you have stated very flatly that should this court rule as a matter of law that population is the single factor, you concede that the redistricting would be void,” the Assistant Attorney General stated:
I would concede that, yes, Judge; that if population is the sole factor, then I think that this plan with deviations approximating ten percent up and down would be void.”
It is therefore apparent that defendants’ basic contention rests upon the validity of their argument that Wesberry v. Sanders permits State legislative bodies to consider factors other than population alone in discharge of the constitutional command of
Intervenors’ Legal Contentions
Intervenors attempt to escape the controlling effect of Wesberry v. Sanders in an apparently different manner. In substance, however, the argument is the same as that presented by defendants. Intervenors argue that the Supreme Court “appraised its holding in Wesberry” when it stated on page 559 of 377 U.S. on page 1380 of 84 S.Ct. 12 L.Ed.2d 506 of Reynolds v. Sims, that “We determined [in Wesberry v. Sanders] that the constitutional test for the validity of congressional districting schemes was one of substantial equality of population among the various districts * * *” (Emphasis the intervenors‘.)
The words “substantial equality” are lifted from the quoted sentence of Reynolds v. Sims and utilized by the intervenors to form the major premise of their basic argument. Intervenors rely upon the same line of State apportionment cases that defendants rely on and, in turn, present their share of mathematical computations in support.
Intervenors’ effort to convert the words “substantial equality” from the single sentence in Reynolds v. Sims into a talisman that would negate the controlling impact of Wesberry v. Sanders is defeated by decisive language in Reynolds v. Sims itself. On page 560 of 377 U.S., on page 1381 of 84 S.Ct., Mr. Chief Justice Warren pointed out neither Gray v. Sanders, 372 U.S. 368, 83 S.Ct. 801, 9 L.Ed.2d 821 (1963), nor Wesberry v. Sanders were either “dispositive of or directly controlling on our decision in these cases involving state legislative apportionment controversies“. Further, the Chief Justice stated that “those decisions * * * held that, in statewide and in congressional elections, one person‘s vote7
Wesberry v. Sanders was again specifically and definitely referred to in Reynolds v. Sims in section VI of that opinion which commenced on page 577 of 377 U.S., on page 1389 of 84 S.Ct. Again, describing what had been determined in Wesberry v. Sanders, the Supreme Court held:
In Wesberry v. Sanders, supra, the Court stated that congressional representation must be based on population as nearly as is practicable. In implementing the basic constitutional principle of representative government as enunciated by the Court in Wesberry—equality of population among districts—some distinctions may well be made between congressional and state legislative representation. (377 U.S. at 577-578, 84 S.Ct. at 1390).
After noting that almost invariably a larger number of seats are distributed for State legislative bodies than for congressional seats, the Supreme Court added that “[s]omewhat more flexibility may therefore be constitutionally permissible with respect to state legislative apportionment than in congressional districting.” 377 U.S. at 578, 84 S.Ct. at 1390.
Intervenors, of course, do not spell out the necessary steps that must be taken to reach the conclusion that the rules of decision applicable to the State apportionment cases be applied to this congressional districting case. At oral argument intervenors indicated their disagreement with and rejection of defendants’ argument that Wesberry v. Sanders did not hold what it does in fact hold.
In that regard intervenors’ counsel stated that he did “not agree with the Attorney General in two respects.”
Intervenors’ counsel added that “the way I read the Wesberry case; population is the only thing that can be considered * * * population is the only factor.”8
The intervenors and the defendants were equally disinterested in what factors other than population were taken into account by the 1965 Missouri General Assembly. Counsel did not attempt to suggest any reason why it was not practicable to avoid variances, for example, of something over 84,500 between the First and the Tenth Districts. When asked for some explanation as to “why there was not a closer approximation to the ideal,” counsel for the intervenors stated that he knew of none other than that intimated by the Assistant Attorney General—that the scheme “was the best that could be gotten under the practical political circumstances.” Counsel added that “I haven‘t examined any records of the legislature. I don‘t know that there are any to examine. I haven‘t inquired.”
We turn now to the detailed answers to the basic arguments presented by both the defendants and the intervenors.
The Constitutional Standard of Art. I, § 2 Applicable to Congressional Representation Is Population Alone
In Wesberry v. Sanders the Supreme Court noted that for over thirty years there had never been any question about the power and the duty of a federal court to exercise jurisdiction in cases involving Congressional redistricting.9
The constitutional standard against which Missouri‘s 1965 Congressional Redistricting Act must be measured was definitively established by Wesberry v. Sanders. The Supreme Court there stated: “We hold that, construed in its historical context, the command of
It would defeat the principle solemnly embodied in the Great Compromise—equal representation in the House for equal numbers of people—for us to hold that, within the States, legislatures may draw the lines of congressional districts in such a way as to give some voters a greater value in choosing a Congressman than others.
In Bush v. Martin, S.D.Tex.1963, 224 F.Supp. 499, decided before Wesberry v. Sanders, Judge John R. Brown contrasted “the problem [of congressional redistricting] with that of the composition of State Legislatures” (224 F.Supp. at 511). Reasoning from Gray v. Sanders, 372 U.S. 368, 83 S.Ct. 801, 9 L.Ed. 2d 821 (1963), and Scholle v. Hare, 369 U.S. 429, 82 S.Ct. 910, 8 L.Ed.2d 1 (1962), Judge Brown suggested that “[t]he present indications are that considerable leeway must be allowed the States in the diffusion of its political initiative” (224 F.Supp. at 511). As to the different question of congressional representation, and with specific reliance upon
But here we deal with a legislative assembly which, by the Constitution and because of the Great Compromise giving rise to that Constitution, is to bear a direct relation to population, and, at least as between the States, population only. * * * The simple constitutional fact is that so far as (a) the standard of composition of the Congress is concerned, as distinguished perhaps from (b) the standard governing the time and circumstance permitting or requiring judicial intervention, Members of Congress are to be elected on the basis of population and nothing else.
The validity of Judge Brown‘s definitive holding that the standard of congressional districting was population alone was sharply contested by Judge James L. Noel, Jr., in his dissenting opinion. See page 519 of 224 F.Supp. Judge Noel there italicized that portion of Judge Brown‘s opinion that stated “Members of Congress are to be elected on the basis of population and nothing else” in order that precise attention be focused upon the point of judicial disagreement.
Judge Brown was affirmed and Judge Noel‘s dissent was rejected by the Supreme Court‘s affirmance of Martin v. Bush, on March 2, 1964 by per curiam opinion reported in 376 U.S. 222, 84 S.Ct. 709, 11 L.Ed.2d 656, on the authority of Wesberry v. Sanders, which had been decided two weeks earlier on February 17, 1964.
On the same day that Wesberry v. Sanders was decided, the Supreme Court also decided Wright v. Rockefeller, 376 U.S. 52, 84 S.Ct. 603, 11 L.Ed.2d 512 (1964), where an attack was made on the congressional districting of the State of New York under the Equal Protection Clause of the fourteenth amendment. Mr. Justice Black, also the author of Wesberry v. Sanders, affirmed the district court‘s finding that the Equal Protection Clause had not been violated, and, noting the same basic distinction that Judge Brown had noted in Bush v. Martin, further stated:
We do not pass on the question * * * not presented here, that is, whether the state apportionment is constitutionally invalid because it may fail in its objective to create districts based as nearly as practicable on equal population. See Wesberry v. Sanders, 376 U.S. 1, 84 S.Ct. 526. Since no such challenge has been urged here, the issues have not been formulated to bring it into focus, and the evidence has not been offered or appraised to decide it, our holding has no bearing on that wholly separate question. 376 U.S. at 58, 84 S.Ct. at 606. (emphasis ours).
That the question presented by an attack under
We do not share the surprise some commentators have noted that the Supreme Court applied
Mr. Justice Stone added over a quarter of a century ago in United States v. Classic, 313 U.S. 299, at 314, 61 S.Ct. 1031, at 1037, 85 L.Ed. 1368 (1941) that “Section 2 of Article I commands that Congressmen shall be chosen by the people of the several states“. He noted on page 315, 61 S.Ct. on page 1037: that “[w]hile, in a loose sense, the right to vote for representatives in Congress is sometimes spoken of as a right derived from the states * * * this statement is true only in the sense that the states are authorized by the Constitution, to legislate on the subject as provided by
Most important for our present discussion, Mr. Justice Stone emphasized in Classic that the protection of a citizen‘s right to vote in a federal election was entirely separate from the protection of his right to vote in a State election. The separate rights are protected by entirely different constitutional provisions. “[S]ince the constitutional command [of
Plaintiffs in this case seek to protect their rights as conferred by
Both Ex parte Yarbrough and Classic were cited and relied upon by Mr. Justice Black both in his dissent in Colegrove v. Green, 328 U.S. 549 at 570, 66 S.Ct. 1198, at 1211, 90 L.Ed. 1432 (1946), and in his opinion in Wesberry v. Sanders, 376 U.S. at 17, 84 S.Ct. 526, 11 L.Ed.2d 481 (1964). In his Colegrove dissent he stated that “Article I provides that Congressmen ‘shall be chosen * * * by the People of the several States‘“, and, specifically in re-
liance upon Ex parte Yarbrough, held thatAlmost twenty years before Wesberry v. Sanders was decided, Mr. Justice Black precisely stated in his dissent in Colegrove that
The words “so far as feasible” and the words “practically feasible” in Mr. Justice Black‘s Colegrove dissent expressed the same idea that became the supreme law of the Land when Wesberry v. Sanders held that
After Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 82 S.Ct. 691, 7 L.Ed.2d 663 (1962), had been decided we do not believe anyone should have been surprised that the dissents in earlier apportionment cases, both congressional and State, would be adopted as the rule of the Supreme Court in cases decided after that landmark case.11
Various courts other than the Supreme Court have stated the basic constitutional principle of equal representation applicable to congressional districting in words as unequivocal as those used repeatedly in Wesberry v. Sanders.
For example, Calkins v. Hare, E.D. Mich.1964, 228 F.Supp. 824 at 829, in which it was held that “[o]ne factor and one alone is controlling, the factor of population.” Meeks v. Anderson, D. Kan.1964, 229 F.Supp. 271 at 273, held that “one factor, and only one, may be taken into account in apportioning and establishing the congressional districts among the people of a state and that factor is population.” And Bush v. Martin, supra, subsequently affirmed by the Supreme Court, in addition to what has already been quoted, stated the applicable constitutional principle still another way: “Members of Congress are to be elected on the basis of population and nothing else” (224 F.Supp. at 511).
Rejection of Mathematical Arguments
The concept that population and population alone is the sole standard for congressional representation requires that acceptance of invitations to examine population deviations and variations in terms of stated mathematical formulae be limited to discussion of such matters only as they may tend to illuminate the factual situation presented in a particular case.
When legal arguments are based on the theory that a particular congressional districting scheme is only slightly unconstitutional and should be sustained
“We do not propose,” to use the words of Judge Talbot Smith in Calkins v. Hare, “to be drawn into a sterile controversy over averages and percentages, whether 9%, 15% or other” (228 F.Supp. at 828). Judge Smith added that the “as nearly as is practicable” words of Wesberry v. Sanders can not be utilized as “an escape hatch for the reluctant” (228 F.Supp. at 829).
We believe that Calkins v. Hare correctly put its finger on the reason why a numbers game cannot be played in ruling the legal questions presented in a congressional redistricting case. That case held:
We do not measure constitutional rights in these terms. They set up wholly false standards. That the average man gets due process in our courts does not justify railroading some luckless scoundrel every now and then. Nor is it an answer to a charge of unconstitutional disfranchisement that only 10,000 people are deprived of their right to vote, this being but a small percentage of the entire voting population. These 10,000 have a right to vote equally with others, no matter what percentage of the total they comprise. We take this to be as clear as the proposition that none of our people can be denied their free right of worship no matter how small the sect, and that none of our people shall be deprived of their right of free speech, no matter how obnoxious to most of us their doctrines (228 F.Supp. at 828).
“The short of the matter,” to borrow further the words of Calkins v. Hare, “is that a citizen can either vote equally with his peers or he cannot.” “If he cannot,” that case continued, “and we find he cannot with respect to congressional elections in Michigan, his constitutional rights have been abridged” and the statute must be held to be unconstitutional. 228 F.Supp. at 828.
We make the same finding and holding with respect to congressional elections in Missouri under the 1965 Act. We refuse to hold that the constitutional right of equal representation may be but slightly, and therefore permissibly, abridged on the theory that percentage figures and ratio numbers make unexplained and substantial population deviations and variances look smaller.
Any possible doubt that population and population alone is the sole standard for congressional redistricting was removed by recent Supreme Court cases dealing with North Carolina and Maryland congressional redistricting.
North Carolina Congressional Redistricting Litigation
Two cases, both of which provide close parallels to Preisler I and Preisler II in this Court, were involved in the North Carolina congressional litigation. The first case, Drum v. Seawell, M.D.N.C.1965, 249 F.Supp. 877, as did the second, involved the constitutional validity of both the North Carolina legislative reapportionment and the congressional districts of that State. Both schemes of representation were held to be constitutionally impermissible on November 30, 1965. We focus attention only on the congressional redistricting portion of both cases.
The population figures set forth in the appendix of Drum I on page 882 of 249 F.Supp., demonstrate that the three-judge North Carolina court considered a factual situation quite like that presented this Court in Preisler I.12
That
Most significantly, that court held that “[n]o valid explanation is offered to justify these glaring discrepancies, if indeed they could be justified” (249 F.Supp. at 880). It also held that “[t]he plaintiff having proven his charge of discrimination on the basis of population by evidence to which the parties have stipulated, the burden was placed upon the defendants to justify the variations from this standard which were shown to exist. The defendants have failed to meet this burden and we are forced to the conclusion that the plaintiff and those in his class are entitled to relief” (249 F.Supp. at 881). That court enjoined the holding of congressional elections under the constitutionally void redistricting plan.
Rehearing was denied by the North Carolina three-judge court on March 8, 1966. An immediate appeal was taken to the Supreme Court. On April 4, 1966, less than a month after the denial of rehearing, the Supreme Court decided Drum v. Seawell, 383 U.S. 831, 86 S.Ct. 1237, 16 L.Ed.2d 298. The complete opinion read:
The motion to advance and expedite consideration is granted. The judgment is affirmed.
The North Carolina Legislature met in special session and passed new schemes of representation for its own legislature and for congressional districts for the United States House of Representatives. In Drum II the validity of the new scheme of State representation was again attacked under the
Judge J. Spencer Bell, again writing for the same unanimous three-judge court that decided Drum I, noted in Drum II, as we note in Preisler II, that Reynolds v. Sims points out that “stricter adherence to equality of population between districts may more logically be required in congressional than in state legislative representation” (250 F.Supp. at 924). That court, as does this Court, took note of the fact that the 1965 North Carolina Legislature had rejected the recommendation of a Joint Select Committee of the 1965 North Carolina Legislature that had proposed a somewhat better plan than that eventually adopted.
That court determined that the 1965 North Carolina Legislature had been in fact influenced by “presumed minimum mathematical percentages” and that it also had been influenced by a “motive to retain incumbent congressmen” in their old districts (250 F.Supp. at 925).
That court, however, much as has this Court, found that “[i]t is not necessary to a decision of this case to determine
It is of greatest interest to note that the 1965 State legislative reapportionment plan was approved in Drum II at the same time the 1965 congressional redistricting was held to be constitutionally void.
The State reapportionment was approved in spite of the fact the population variances were greater than those involved in the congressional redistricting. In so doing, Judge Bell made clear that the criteria of judgment was different; that the constitutional standards applicable to two different types of cases were not the same; and that while particular “deviations and disparities render the [State] apportionment scheme of the two houses * * * ‘constitutionally suspect‘, we cannot say that they constitute invidious discrimination” (250 F.Supp. at 924). The congressional redistricting, on the other hand, was held to abridge the
We follow Drum II, not because the deviations involved in the 1965 Missouri Act are greater than those involved in the 1965 North Carolina Act, but because the rationale of Drum II is based upon the legal premise that population alone is the constitutional standard and that any variation above that permitted by a fair application of the doctrine of de minimis, factually supported, must be held to be an abridgment of rights guaranteed by
It is, of course, apparent that if the standards applicable to an
Maryland Congressional Redistricting
Difficulties with congressional redistricting in Maryland antedated the first of three reported federal court decisions in that State. In Maryland Citizens Committee for Fair Cong. Redist. Inc. v. Tawes, D.Md.1964, 226 F.Supp. 80, a three-judge court composed of Chief Circuit Judge Sobeloff, Chief District Judge Thomsen and District Judge Northrup accepted jurisdiction of the case on February 3, 1964. The per curiam opinion in that case held:
In our view the burden rests initially on the plaintiffs to show unconstitutionality, but when the mathematical imbalance between districts is of sufficient magnitude the burden shifts to the defendants to justify the disparity. Where the vote of a citizen in one district counts for significantly less than a vote in another district, as is manifestly now the case in Maryland, the disproportion rebuts the presumption of the constitutionality of the statute and requires the State to show that there is a rational basis for the disproportion. (Emphasis ours.)
Jurisdiction was retained to permit constitutional action by the Maryland Legislature. On March 21, 1964, the same court in another per curiam opinion reported in 228 F.Supp. 956 at 958,
The Maryland General Assembly did not even attempt to comply with its constitutional duty. The three-judge court was forced to act on May 3, 1966, after the April 6, 1966 adjournment of a special session of the Maryland General Assembly that failed to pass any new redistricting bill at all.14
In its third opinion in the same case, reported 253 F.Supp. 731, Chief Judge Sobeloff, for a unanimous court, on May 3, 1966, held:
Chapter 371 of the Acts of 1965, in our opinion, deviates too widely from the constitutional norm of ‘one man, one vote’ to be tolerated.
In reliance upon Drum II, the Maryland three-judge court held:
Even if a district plan initially comports with the one-to-one formula, discrepancies may be expected to arise with changing conditions. Such discrepancies are unavoidable and must be tolerated for a time, till the next census, but in initial districting the aim should be to come as closely as possible to a one-to-one ratio. There is no showing in this case that the difference of one-third is unavoidable or justified upon any legally acceptable ground. We must therefore declare Chapter 371 of the Acts of 1965 invalid and forbid its submission in the referendum set for the fall elections of 1966. (Emphasis ours.)
The Maryland three-judge court laid out temporary congressional districts for the 1966 congressional elections.15 The maximum deviation from an ideal average district under the Maryland court‘s
The appeal from the Maryland three-judge court was docketed in the Supreme Court on May 23, 1966 and on May 31, 1966, under the name of Alton v. Tawes, 384 U.S. 315, 86 S.Ct. 1590, 16 L.Ed.2d 586, the Supreme Court wrote an opinion that was shorter than its opinion in the North Carolina case. It held (34 Law Week 3406):
The motion to advance is granted. The judgment is affirmed.
It is obvious that we agree with plaintiffs’ and intervenors’ reading of Wesberry v. Sanders, and that we reject defendants’ reading as untenable. We turn briefly to defendants’ and intervenors’ effort to have us apply the rules of decision stated in Reynolds v. Sims to a case controlled by Wesberry v. Sanders.
Discussion of Rationale of Congressional Cases Relied Upon by Defendants and Intervenors
Most of the cases involving congressional apportionments have relied solely upon Wesberry v. Sanders. Such cases have made but brief, if any, reference to Reynolds v. Sims. Counsel direct our attention to three federal three-judge congressional cases where the rule of Reynolds v. Sims was applied rather than the rule of Wesberry v. Sanders. Attention is also directed to several State court cases in which the same thing was done. It is obvious that we do not agree with the rationale of those cases.
Bush v. Martin, S.D.Tex.1966, 251 F.Supp. 484, is relied upon by both the defendants and intervenors. That case, of course, is distinguishable. The 1965 Texas Congressional Redistricting Act was held by a single judge only to be “valid at this time” (251 F.Supp. at 488); “for the time being” (251 F.Supp. at 498); and “for the present” (251 F.Supp. 502). Indeed, Judge Brown stated that “we have * * * emphasized the present” (251 F.Supp. at 515); emphasized that “our approval is limited in duration;” and held that jurisdiction was retained “to enable the 60th Legislature, convening in January of 1967 and any special sessions convened through July 1967, to take further action” (251 F.Supp. at 517).
Judge Ingraham concurred in the result and in the portion of Judge Brown‘s opinion and the decree that retained jurisdiction “to enable the Texas Legislature * * * to reconsider and revise as necessary” the legislation held valid for the 1966 congressional elections alone.
We respectfully state that we do not agree with the foundation premise upon which the principal opinion of Bush v. Martin, II, is based. That opinion assumed, without any supporting authority, that “the term ‘as nearly as is practicable’ in Wesberry seems to be the
Bush v. Martin II was the only case to which our attention was directed in which a particular court stated the manner in which it extrapolated the rule of decision of Reynolds v. Sims to a congressional districting case. The other three-judge federal cases and the State court cases upon which defendants and intervenors rely simply do just that without any real explanation. What we have said in regard to the basic rationale of Bush v. Martin II is applicable to the other cases.
Again, for the sake of clarity, we state our express disagreement with the rationale of Moore v. Moore, S.D.Ala.1965, 246 F.Supp. 578,18 and Grills v. Branigin, 255 F.Supp. 155, S.D.Ind., decided February 18, 1966, but not yet reported.
Reynolds v. Sims, itself, at page 580 of 377 U.S., at page 1391 of 84 S.Ct., 12 L.Ed.2d 506, in commenting on the less stringent standards applicable to a State reapportionment case, held that “[c]onsiderations of area alone provide an insufficient justification for deviations from the equal-population principle * * * people, not land or trees or pastures, vote.” That case further held that “neither history alone, nor economic or other sorts of group interests, are permissible factors in attempting to justify disparities from population-based representation.” It added that “[c]itizens, not history or economic interests, cast votes” (377 U.S. at 579-580, 84 S.Ct. at 1391). It is precisely those factors, plus what the defendants call “political stability,” that we are urged to approve as legitimate legislative considerations in this case.20
We do not know what can be said in Preisler II to uphold the constitutionality of the 1965 Missouri Act when all that the Seventy-third General Assembly did in regard to the 1961 Act held constitutionally impermissible in Preisler I was to move three small counties from one district to another and to shift a few wards from one district to another in both metropolitan areas. The undisputed and unexplained facts establish that the votes of citizens living in five of the 1965 districts are overweighted and overvalued when the votes of those districts are compared with the weight and value given the votes of the citizens who live in the other five 1965 districts. The differences in population simply will not go away. And, under
For the reasons we have stated in detail we find and determine that the 1965 Missouri Congressional Redistricting Act does not comply with the command of
Remedy
Except for the action taken during the pretrial proceedings of this case, the problem of remedy would be indeed troublesome. Under the procedures there established, however, plaintiffs withdrew any attack on the 1965 Act in regard to the 1966 Congressional election. We do not believe that action, taken almost contemporaneously with and without knowledge of Swann v. Adams, supra, footnote 15, should be set aside.
We recognize that the Supreme Court indicated in that case in no uncertain terms that, as a general and almost universal rule, the lower federal courts are not permitted to authorize further interim elections under constitutionally void apportionment schemes in cases in which State legislatures have been given full and fair opportunity to act in accordance with constitutional commands. We do not, however, read Swann v. Adams as a direction that district courts are not to exercise their judicial discretion in the formulation of an appropriate remedy in a particular apportionment case.
Several factors have caused us to conclude that plaintiffs’ decision at pretrial should not be disturbed and that the 1966 congressional elections in Missouri should be held under the districts provided in the 1965 Act.
The next regular session of the General Assembly of Missouri, to be elected after the reapportionment of that body which followed the decision of another three-judge panel of this District Court in Jonas v. Hearnes, W.D.Mo.1964, 236 F.Supp. 699, will convene in January, 1967.21 History teaches that the State of Missouri accepts the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States as the supreme law of the Land. See, for example, Cummings v. State of Missouri, 71 U.S. 277, 18 L.Ed. 356 (1866), involving the Test Oath in the 1865 Missouri Constitution, which, for the time being, involved another highly emotional public issue.
Missouri, not unlike her Sister States, sometimes has to be told twice; but Preisler I and Preisler II will have performed that function. One thing is certain; there will be members of the 1967 Missouri General Assembly who are familiar with the fact Missouri had the painful experience in 1932 of electing Congressmen at large after the decision of State ex rel. Carroll v. Becker, Secretary of State, (1932), 329 Mo. 501, 45 S.W.2d 533, affirmed 285 U.S. 380, 52 S.Ct. 402, 76 L.Ed. 807 (1932), on the authority of its companion case, Smiley v. Holm, 285 U.S. 355, 52 S.Ct. 397, 76 L.Ed. 795 (1932), decided the same day.
Missouri was advised in the latter case over thirty years ago that a Missouri General Assembly‘s failure to reapportion congressional districts in accordance with law required that “unless and until new districts are created, all Representatives allocated to the state must be elected by the state at large” (285 U.S. at 374-375, 52 S.Ct. at 402). Such, of course, is the command of
For the second time, we respectfully direct the attention of the General Assembly of Missouri that will convene in January, 1967 to that legal consequence. It could be, of course, that the 1967 Missouri General Assembly might, in the exercise of its exclusive legislative prerogative, determine that the people of Missouri should elect all their congressmen at large. Power, of course, to make such a decision is constitutionally vested in the Missouri General Assembly. But if the 1967 General Assembly decides that the people of Missouri want their Congressmen elected from districts, that decision must be made in light of and implemented by the enactment of legislation that complies
Primary responsibility for the discharge of that dual constitutional duty rests on the 1967 General Assembly of Missouri. Should it fail for the third time to discharge its constitutional duties, it, and it alone, will be responsible for the inevitable and totally predictable result that will follow: the election of Missouri‘s ten congressmen at large in the 1968 election and all subsequent congressional elections until some future Missouri General Assembly enacts a constitutional congressional redistricting act.
In order that an immediate appeal may be perfected so that final judgment may be rendered by the Supreme Court before January, 1967, we enter a decree that will permit the 1966 Congressional elections to be held under the present law but in which the 1965 Missouri Congressional Redistricting Act is held to be constitutionally null and void. We shall retain jurisdiction of this case for the purpose of reviewing any new congressional redistricting plan that may be enacted by a future General Assembly of Missouri and signed by the Governor.
If we find that such new legislation is consistent with the constitutional command of
If we should find otherwise, the congressional elections for Missouri will be ordered conducted at large until new and constitutional districts are created.
Pursuant to Rule 52(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure this opinion shall serve as our findings of fact and conclusions of law.
MATTHES, Circuit Judge (concurring).
Initially, I entertained the view that the 1965 Missouri Congressional Redistricting Act conformed to the mandate of
We have emphasized that the responsibility for enacting a constitutionally permissible redistricting plan rests on the Legislature of Missouri. Although the task may be fraught with difficulties, certainly it is not an impossible one. We are convinced that a conscientious effort, motivated by a desire to satisfy the requirements of the federal and State constitutions, will result in the formulation of congressional districts which will comport with the demands of the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of Missouri.
APPENDIX A
ILLUSTRATION OF CHANGES MADE BY 1965 ACT IN 1961 REDISTRICTING PLAN
This map shows the ten congressional districts of Missouri under the 1965 Act. The 1961 districts may be easily visualized by noting the five changes above circled that were made in the 1961 districts by the 1965 Act:
- Mercer County (pop. 5,750) shifted from Ninth to Sixth District.
- Several Kansas City wards (total pop. 27,281) shifted from Fourth to Fifth District.
- Several St. Louis wards and St. Louis County townships shifted among First, Second, Third and Ninth Districts.
- Barton County (pop. 11,113) shifted from Seventh to Fourth Districts.
- Wayne County (pop. 8,638) shifted from the Eighth to the Tenth District.
APPENDIX B
Plaintiffs’ Exhibit No. 4
(From the Official Manual, State of Missouri, 1961-1962; page 1470)
JUDGMENT AND DECREE
PER CURIAM.
This cause having come on for trial, at which all parties, including Intervenors, were present by counsel, and the Court, having considered the pleadings, evidence, and argument of counsel, and being of the view that a decree should be entered in accordance with the opinion of the Court, which also constitutes the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law under Rule 52(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and is incorporated herein by this reference, it is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that:
First: The 1965 Missouri Congressional Redistricting Act,
Second: Plaintiffs’ prayer that defendants be permanently enjoined from performing any and all duties prescribed
Third: In accordance with plaintiffs’ prayer and in the exercise of our judicial discretion, the 1966 congressional elections in Missouri may be held under existing law and shall not be in any way affected by this judgment and decree.
Fourth: The Court retains jurisdiction of this cause for such other and further orders as may be appropriate and required.
Fifth: This judgment and decree is final; jurisdiction being retained solely for the purpose of enabling the Court to reopen this case on appropriate motion by any party for the purpose of presenting for the Court‘s future consideration the constitutionality of any subsequently enacted legislation relating to Congressional Redistricting for the State of Missouri that may in the future become the law of Missouri.
It is so ordered.
