73 Misc. 2d 245 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1973
This court, by memorandum decisión dated September 8,1971, denied a motion by the defendants to dismiss the complaint Which sought a judgment directing that the County Legislature of the County of Albany reapportion itself and, further, directed that the Legislature “ submit to. it, within a reasonable time after the 1970 census figures are available, a plan of reapportionment drawn in accordance with said figures ”. An order to that effect was signed on November 5, 1971 and entered in the office of the Clerk of the County of Albany on November 9,1971.
On February 9,1973 the plaintiffs moved for summary judgment and submitted a proposed plan of reapportionment to be considered by the court. The matter was referred to the undersigned and on February 28, 1973 oral arguments were heard wherein counsel for the plaintiffs urged that its proposed plan be accepted since the defendant legislative body had done nothing to comply with the afore-described order of November 5, 1971. The defendants responded with the argument that the official 1970 census figures, in block form, had not been avail
On the .evening of February 27,1973, the Committee on Alternate Forms of County Government of the Albany County Legislature convened and had presented to it three proposed reapportionment plans drawn as a result of field work performed
From all of the above the court concludes that while the defendant county might have presented its proposed plan to the court for approval at an earlier time had it acted with a greater degree of alacrity when the 1970 census figures became available, it does not find that its failure to act more promptly constitutes a forfeiture of its right to act at all. It is the court’s view that the People of Albany County are better served by having a plan proposed for approval that has been passed upon by their elected representatives, particularly when there is sufficient time for the court to constitutionally test the legislative plan and impose the same, if found valid, in time for the forthcoming general election.
The plaintiffs ’ motion for summary judgment is denied.
The denial of the plaintiffs’ motion also removes from the court’s consideration their proposed plan of reapportionment. The court does not have to weigh contending plans and determine if one is superior to the other. Rather, the court sees its function as judicially determining the constitutionality of the plan proposed by the legislative body charged with that duty, Reynolds v. Sims (377 U. S. 533). Judge Jasen of the Court of Appeals stated this view more succinctly in the case entitled Matter of Schneider v. Rockefeller (31 N Y 2d 420, 427) as follows: “While petitioners urge several alternate plans which they claim approach mathelnatical exactness and'.minimize or eliminate violations of county lines, we would emphasize that it is not our function to determine whether a plan can be worked out that is superior to that set up by chapter 11. Our duty is, rather, to determine whether the legislative plan substantially complies with the Federal and State Constitutions.”
The court must determine whether the plan, as adopted by the Albany County Legislature, meets the constitutional tests of the “ one man-one vote ” principle as enunciated by the United States Supreme Court in Reynolds v. Sims (377 U. S. 533, supra) (Abate v. Mundt, 25 N Y 2d 309, 314). In doing so it
However, it must be noted that counsel for plaintiffs has only agreed that the variant from the mean in each district is mathematically acceptable, He does not agree that proposed Plan “ A ” is acceptable because of that mathematical exactness. Rather, it is his position that since the City of Albany had a reduction in population in the decade of the sixties equivalent to 11.4% that the allocation of 16 districts to the city, based on any arbitrary mean, is constitutionally impermissible and violative of the State Constitution’s anti-gerrymander provisions (N. Y. Const., art. III-, §§ 4, 5). Next, it is his contention that since Plan “ A ” allocates 16 legislative districts to the City of Albany, which showed an 11.4% drop in population between i960 and 1970 [a reduction of 3 districts] and only 9 full districts
First, attention must be focused on the fact that the people óf the County of Albany, in 1966, when the total county population was 272,926, approved in a referendum a reapportion
Pragmatically, and the court does not operate in a vacuum, the real challenge to Plan “A” is that the total number of districts is too large and that the allocation of districts to the City of Albany, and to the Town of Colonie is disproportionate to a degree that maximizes the political “ clout ” of one of the major parties within the city while minimizing or at least diluting the “counterpunch” of the opposite party in the Town of Colonie. However pertinent that allegation may be it still is a fact that the 1970 population of the City of Albany is approximately 114,000 people which represents approximately 40% of the total county population of about 285,000. It follows that 40% of 39 districts equals a rounded off sum of 16 districts. In like manner the total population of the Town and Village of Colonie is 77,000 residents which is approximately 27% of the total county population and 27% of 39 districts is about 10.5 districts which is almost exactly the allocation of Plan “ A ” of districts to both the Town and Village of-CoIonie.
The People of the County of Albany have heretofore indicated that they approve of a Legislature comprised of 39 districts
In my view, it is not the duty of the court to police the political effect of legislatively proposed plans of reapportionment. If such plans meet the requisite constitutional standards, in that 'they are not patently invidious in proposing a political scheme of gerrymandering, they are entitled to approval. It is the People themselves, either by changing their political representation at the ballot box or by .striking down a plan in a referendum, that should determine political issues, not the courts.
Plan “ A ” is approved and is hereby imposed as a temporary plan of reapportionment for the general election of 1973.
Lest the court appear to be acting in haste in approving the defendants’ proposed Plan “ A ” as to its constitutionality and, further, in imposing the plan as a temporary measure for the conduct of the 1973 general election, subject to becoming the permanent plan after the expiration of the necessary time for the passage of a local law and after voter approval in a referendum, should one be required by petition pursuant to section 10 (subd. 1, par. [ii]) of the Municipal Home Rule Law, it should be noted that legislation has passed both the State Assembly and Senate and has been signed into law by the Governor which would foreclose to the electorate their right to participate in the selection of nominees for the office of county legislator by eliminating a primary election in any county in which a plan of reapportionment is not in effect on March 12, 1973. In my view, it is more equitable and just for the court to impose a temporary plan that complies with the constitutional standards set forth in Reynolds v. Sims (377 U. S. 533, supra); Abate v. Mundt (25 N Y 2d 309, supra) and in the recent United States Supreme Court decision entitled Mahan v. Howell (410 U. S. 315, supra) than to permit March 12, 1973 to pass without Albany County being reapportioned and thereby foreclose to the People of Albany County their most fundamental right, that of selecting their political nominees.
Therefore, it is the direction of the court that an order be presented for signing and entering no later than 12:00 (noon) on Monday, March 12,1973, providing (a) that reapportionment Plan “ A ” is constitutional; (b) that Plan “A” is judicially imposed as a temporary plan for the conduct of the 1973 general election in November of that year; (c) that should JPlan
. 17,18,24, 25,26, 27, 28, 29, 30th legislative districts.
. 19 and/20th legislative districts.
. The only exception is in the Town of New Scotland,