TRAVIA ET AL. v. LOMENZO, SECRETARY OF STATE OF NEW YORK, ET AL.
No. 1218
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided June 1, 1965.
381 U.S. 431
Simon H. Rifkind and Edward N. Costikyan for appellants.
Louis J. Lefkowitz, Attorney General of New York, Daniel M. Cohen and George D. Zuckerman, Assistant Attorneys General, Donald Zimmerman, Special Assistant Attorney General, and Orrin G. Judd for Lomenzo et al.; and Leonard B. Sand and Max Gross for WMCA, Inc., et al., appellees.
PER CURIAM.
The motion to accelerate the appeal is denied. The application for a stay, addressed to MR. JUSTICE HARLAN as Circuit Justice and referred by him to the Court for consideration under Rule 50 (6), is denied.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting.
An application has been made to me, as Circuit Justice, for a stay pending appeal from an order of a three-judge
“Plan A” was one of four alternative reapportionment plans passed by the New York Legislature under the impact of an order of the District Court, dated July 27, 1964, entered pursuant to this Court‘s decision in WMCA, Inc. v. Lomenzo, 377 U.S. 633 (1964), which held New York‘s then-existing method of legislative apportionment violative of the
In December 1964 the 1964 Legislature, meeting in special session, passed and the Governor signed four alternative reapportionment plans, one of which, “Plan A,” is involved in the matter now before us. On January 26, 1965, the three-judge District Court found that “Plan A” satisfied federal constitutional requirements, but that each of the other plans did not. 238 F. Supp. 916. On April 14, 1965, the New York Court of Appeals held all four plans invalid under the State Constitution, in that each provided for an Assembly of more than 150 members, thus exceeding the membership limit prescribed by the New York Constitution, Art. 3, § 2. In re Orans, 15 N.Y.2d 339, 206 N.E.2d 854 (1965).
Ignoring the New York Court of Appeals’ holding that Plan A violated the State Constitution, a majority of the District Court, on May 18, 1965, ordered the November 1965 state legislative election to proceed under that plan. One judge dissented, considering that a more appropriate, though admittedly not wholly satisfactory, “interim” solution would be to permit the November 1965 election to go forward under the old reapportionment formula, with the legislators thus elected being accorded “weighted votes” in the legislature based on population.
These matters bristle with difficult and important questions that touch the nerve centers of the sound operation of our federal and state judicial and political systems. They involve, among other things, the right of a federal court to order that one house of a state legislature shall temporarily be of greater size than is permitted by the State Constitution. Surely such questions are deserving of plenary consideration and reasoned explication. By denying a stay and refusing to accelerate this appeal, the Court, instead, has in effect decided them not only summarily but also sub silentio. For while the denial of a stay does not technically moot the appeal, it is manifest that such is the practical effect of the Court‘s action, since
Without prejudging the question, the propriety of a federal court‘s ordering a state election to proceed under a plan which the highest court of the State has found to violate the State Constitution in respects not claimed to be violative of the Federal Constitution, when a number of alternatives are available, raises what I consider to be very serious federal questions which this Court should at least hear. All parties have shown themselves willing to argue the case promptly. I would set the case for immediate argument, and would have the Court render its decision on the stay promptly thereafter, with opinions on the merits of the controversy to follow in due course. Compare Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1 (1958).5
I am wholly at a loss to understand the Court‘s casual way of disposing of this matter and I can find no considerations of any kind which justify it. The Court should be willing to face up articulately to these difficult problems which have followed as a not unnatural aftermath of its reapportionment decisions of last Term.
