Whether the guarantee of a republican form of government has
been disregarded by the action of the people of a state in amending
its Constitution presents no justiciable controversy, but involves
the exercise by Congress of the authority vested in it by the
Constitution.
Under the referendum amendment of 1912 to the Constitution of
Ohio, the people of that state having disapproved of the state
redistricting law passed after Congress had enacted the
apportionment Act of 1911, and the state court having held that,
under the referendum amendment, the legislative power was reserved
in the people to be expressed by referendum
held that:
The decision of the highest court of the state that, under such
amendment, the legislative power of the state is now vested not
only in the General Assembly, but also in the people by referendum,
and that a law disapproved by the referendum was no law, is
conclusive here.
Nothing in the act of Congress of August 8, 1911, 37 Stat. 13,
apportioning representation among the states, prevents the people
of a state from reserving a right of approval or disapproval by
referendum of a state act redistricting the state for the purpose
of congressional elections.
The facts, which involve the construction and effect of the
referendum amendment of 1912 to the Constitution of the State of
Ohio, are stated in the opinion.
Page 241 U. S. 566
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
By an amendment to the Constitution of Ohio, adopted September
3, 1912, the legislative power was expressly declared to be vested
not only in the senate and house of representatives of the state,
constituting the General Assembly, but in the people, in whom a
right was reserved by way of referendum to approve or disapprove by
popular vote any law enacted by the General Assembly. And, by other
constitutional provisions, the machinery to carry out the
referendum was created. Briefly, they were this: within a certain
time after the enactment of a law by the senate and house of
representatives, and its approval by the Governor, upon petition of
six percentum of the voters, the question of whether the law should
become operative was to be submitted to a vote of the people, and,
if approved, the law should be operative, and, if not approved, it
should have no effect whatever.
In May, 1915, the General Assembly of Ohio passed an act
redistricting the state for the purpose of congressional elections,
by which act twenty-two congressional districts were created, in
some respects differing from the previously established districts,
and this act, after approval by the Governor, was filed in the
office of the Secretary of State. The requisite number of electors
under the referendum provision having petitioned for a submission
of the law to a popular vote, such vote was taken, and the law was
disapproved. Thereupon, in the supreme court of the state, the suit
before us was begun against state election officers for the purpose
of procuring a mandamus directing them to disregard the vote of the
people on the referendum disapproving the law and to proceed to
discharge their duties as such officers in the next congressional
election upon the assumption that the action by way of referendum
was void, and that the law which was disapproved was
Page 241 U. S. 567
subsisting and valid. The right to this relief was based upon
the charge that the referendum vote was not and could not be a part
of the legislative authority of the state, and therefore could have
no influence on the subject of the law creating congressional
districts for the purpose of representation in Congress. Indeed, it
was in substance charged that, both from the point of view of the
state constitution and laws and from that of the Constitution of
the United States, especially § 4 of Article I, providing
that
"the times, places and manner of holding elections for Senators
and Representatives shall be prescribed in each state by the
legislature thereof; but the Congress may at any time by law, make
or alter such regulations, except as to the places of choosing
Senators,"
and also from that of the provisions of the controlling Act of
Congress of August 8, 1911 (c. 5, 37 Stat. 13), apportioning
representation among the states, the attempt to make the referendum
a component part of the legislative authority empowered to deal
with the election of members of Congress was absolutely void. The
court below adversely disposed of these contentions and held that
the provisions as to referendum were a part of the legislative
power of the state, made so by the Constitution, and that nothing
in the Act of Congress of 1911 or in the constitutional provision
operated to the contrary, and that therefore the disapproved law
had no existence, and was not entitled to be enforced by
mandamus.
Without going into the many irrelevant points which are pressed
in the argument and the various inapposite authorities cited,
although we have considered them all, we think it is apparent that
the whole case and every real question in it will be disposed of by
looking at it from three points of view -- the state power, the
power of Congress, and the operation of the provision of the
Constitution of the United States referred to.
1. As to the state power, we pass from its consideration,
Page 241 U. S. 568
since it is obvious that the decision below is conclusive on
that subject, and makes it clear that, so far as the state had the
power to do it, the referendum constituted a part of the state
constitution and laws, and was contained within the legislative
power, and therefore the claim that the law which was disapproved
and was no law under the Constitution and laws of the state was yet
valid and operative is conclusively established to be wanting in
merit.
2. So far as the subject may be influenced by the power of
Congress, that is, to the extent that the will of Congress has been
expressed on the subject, we think the case is equally without
merit. We say this because we think it is clear that Congress, in
1911, in enacting the controlling law concerning the duties of the
states, through their legislative authority, to deal with the
subject of the creation of congressional districts, expressly
modified the phraseology of the previous acts relating to that
subject by inserting a clause plainly intended to provide that
where, by the state constitution and laws, the referendum was
treated as part of the legislative power, the power as thus
constituted should be held and treated to be the state legislative
power for the purpose of creating congressional districts by law.
This is the case since, under the act of Congress dealing with
apportionment, which preceded the Act of 1911, by § 4 it was
commanded that the existing districts in a state should continue in
force "until the legislature of such state, in the manner herein
prescribed, shall redistrict such state" (Act of February 7, 1891,
c. 116, 26 Stat. 735), while in the Act of 1911 there was
substituted a provision that the redistricting should be made by a
state "in the manner provided by the laws thereof." And the
legislative history of this last act leaves no room for doubt that
the prior words were stricken out and the new words inserted for
the express purpose, insofar as Congress had power to do
Page 241 U. S. 569
it, of excluding the possibility of making the contention as to
referendum which is now urged. Cong.Rec. Vol. 47, pp. 3436, 3437,
3507.
3. To the extent that the contention urges that to include the
referendum within state legislative power for the purpose of
apportionment is repugnant to § 4 of Article I of the
Constitution and hence void, even if sanctioned by Congress,
because beyond the constitutional authority of that body, and hence
that it is the duty of the judicial power so to declare, we again
think the contention is plainly without substance for the following
reasons: it must rest upon the assumption that to include the
referendum in the scope of the legislative power is to introduce a
virus which destroys that power, which in effect annihilates
representative government, and causes a state where such condition
exists to be not republican in form, in violation of the guaranty
of the Constitution. Const. § 4, Art. IV. But the proposition
and the argument disregard the settled rule that the question of
whether that guaranty of the Constitution has been disregarded
presents no justiciable controversy, but involves the exercise by
Congress of the authority vested in it by the Constitution.
Pacific states Telephone Co. v. Oregon, 223 U.
S. 118. Insofar as the proposition challenges the power
of Congress, as manifested by the clause in the Act of 1911
treating the referendum as a part of the legislative power for the
purpose of apportionment where so ordained by the state
constitutions and laws, the argument but asserts, on the one hand,
that Congress had no power to do that which, from the point of view
of § 4 of Article I, previously considered, the Constitution
expressly gave the right to do. Insofar as the proposition may be
considered as asserting, on the other hand, that any attempt by
Congress to recognize the referendum as a part of the legislative
authority of a state is obnoxious to a republican form of
government as provided by § 4 of
Page 241 U. S. 570
Article IV, the contention necessarily but reasserts the
proposition on that subject previously adversely disposed of. And
that this is the inevitable result of the contention is plainly
manifest, since, at best, the proposition comes to the assertion
that, because Congress, upon whom the Constitution has conferred
the exclusive authority to uphold the guaranty of a republican form
of government, has done something which it is deemed is repugnant
to that guaranty, therefore there was automatically created
judicial authority to go beyond the limits of judicial power, and,
in doing so, to usurp congressional power, on the ground that
Congress had mistakenly dealt with a subject which was within its
exclusive control, free from judicial interference.
It is apparent from these reasons that there must either be a
dismissal for want of jurisdiction, because there is no power to
reexamine the state questions foreclosed by the decision below, and
because of the want of merit in the federal questions relied upon,
or a judgment of affirmance, it being absolutely indifferent, as to
the result, which of the two be applied. In view, however, of the
subject matter of the controversy and the federal characteristics
which inhere in it, we are of opinion, applying the rule laid down
in
Swafford v. Templeton, 185 U.
S. 487, the decree proper to be rendered is one of
affirmance, and such a decree is therefore ordered.
Affirmed.