1. In the light of principles announced by the highest court of
Texas relative to the rights and privileges of political parties
under the laws of that State, the denial of a ballot to a negro for
voting in a primary election, pursuant to a resolution adopted by
the state convention restricting membership in the party to white
persons cannot be deemed state action inhibited by the Fourteenth
or Fifteenth Amendment. P.
295 U. S. 49.
2. Analysis of the decisions of the Supreme Court of Texas in
the cases of
Bell v. Hill and
Love v. Wilcox
lends no support to the claim that §§ 2 and 27 of the
Bill of Rights of Texas violate the Federal Constitution. P.
295 U. S.
53.
3. The provisions of Art. 3167 of the Revised Civil Statutes of
Texas, 1925, prescribing the times when state conventions of
political parties are to be held and regulating the method of
choosing delegates, do not warrant the conclusion that the state
convention is a mere creature of the State. P.
295 U. S.
53.
4. That, in Texas, nomination by the Democratic party is
equivalent to election, and exclusion from the primary virtually
disfranchises the voter, does not, without more, make out a
forbidden discrimination in this case. P.
295 U. S.
54.
5. That the Democratic national organization has not declared a
policy to exclude negroes from membership gives no support to
Page 295 U. S. 46
the claim of one who was thus excluded pursuant to a resolution
of a state convention of the party in Texas that he was
discriminated against by the State in violation of the Federal
Constitution. P.
295 U. S.
55.
Affirmed.
Certiorari, 294 U.S. 699, to review a judgment dismissing an
action for ten dollars damages, brought by Grovey, in a justice's
court, against Townsend, a county clerk, based on the latter's
refusal to issue to the former an absentee ballot for voting in a
primary election. Under the state law, the judgment, because of the
small amount involved, was not reviewable in any higher court of
the State.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner, by complaint filed in the justice court of
Harris county, Texas, alleged that, although he is a citizen of the
United States and of the state and county, and a member of and
believer in the tenets of the Democratic Party, the respondent, the
county clerk, a state officer, having as such only public functions
to perform, refused him a ballot for a Democratic Party primary
election because he is of the negro race. He demanded ten dollars
damages. The pleading quotes articles of the Revised Civil Statutes
of Texas which require the nomination of candidates at primary
elections by any organized political party whose nominees received
100,000 votes or more at the preceding general election, and
recites that, agreeably to these enactments, a Democratic primary
election was held on July 28, 1934, at which petitioner had the
right to vote. Referring to statutes
Page 295 U. S. 47
which regulate absentee voting at primary elections, the
complaint states the petitioner expected to be absent from the
county on the date of the primary election, and demanded of the
respondent an absentee ballot, which was refused him in virtue of a
resolution of the state Democratic Convention of Texas, adopted May
24, 1932, which is:
"Be it resolved that all white citizens of the Texas who are
qualified to vote under the Constitution and laws of the state
shall be eligible to membership in the Democratic party and as such
entitled to participate in its deliberations."
The complaint charges that the respondent acted without legal
excuse, and his wrongful and unlawful acts constituted a violation
of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the Federal
Constitution.
A demurrer, assigning as reasons that the complaint was
insufficient in law and stated no cause of action, was sustained,
and a motion for a new trial, reasserting violation of the federal
rights mentioned in the complaint, was overruled. We granted
certiorari [
Footnote 1] because
of the importance of the federal question presented, which has not
been determined by this Court. [
Footnote 2] Our jurisdiction is clear, as the justice
court is the highest state court in which a decision may be had,
[
Footnote 3] and the validity
of the Constitution and statutes of the state was drawn in question
on the ground of their being repugnant to the Constitution of the
United States. [
Footnote 4]
Page 295 U. S. 48
The charge is that respondent, a state officer, in refusing to
furnish petitioner a ballot, obeyed the law of Texas, and the
consequent denial of petitioner's right to vote in the primary
election because of his race and color was state action forbidden
by the Federal Constitution, and it is claimed that former
decisions require us so to hold. The cited cases are, however, not
in point. In
Nixon v. Herndon, 273 U.
S. 536, a statute which enacted that "in no event shall
a negro be eligible to participate in a Democratic party primary
election held in the Texas," was pronounced offensive to the
Fourteenth Amendment. In
Nixon v. Condon, 286 U. S.
73, a statute was drawn in question which provided
that
"every political party in this State through its State Executive
Committee shall have the power to prescribe the qualifications of
its own members and shall in its own way determine who shall be
qualified to vote or otherwise participate in such political
party."
We held this was a delegation of state power to the state
executive committee, and made its determination conclusive
irrespective of any expression of the party's will by its
convention, and therefore the committee's action barring negroes
from the party primaries was state action prohibited by the
Fourteenth Amendment. Here, the qualifications of citizens to
participate in party counsels and to vote at party primaries have
been declared by the representatives of the party in convention
assembled, and this action upon its face is not state action. The
question whether, under the Constitution and laws of Texas, such a
declaration as to party membership amounts to state action was
expressly reserved in
Nixon v. Condon, supra, pp.
286 U. S.
84-85,. Petitioner insists that, for various reasons,
the resolution of the state convention limiting membership in the
Democratic Party in Texas to white voters does not relieve the
exclusion of negroes from participation in Democratic primary
elections of its true nature as the act of the state.
Page 295 U. S. 49
First. An argument pressed upon us in
Nixon v.
Condon, supra, which we found it unnecessary to consider, is
again presented. It is that the primary election was held under
statutory compulsion; is wholly statutory in origin and incidents;
those charged with its management have been deprived by statute and
judicial decision of all power to establish qualifications for
participation therein inconsistent with those laid down by the laws
of the state, save only that the managers of such elections have
been given the power to deny negroes the vote. It is further urged
that, while the election is designated that of the Democratic
Party, the statutes not only require this method of selecting party
nominees, but define the powers and duties of the party's
representatives and of those who are to conduct the election so
completely, and make them so thoroughly officers of the state that
any action taken by them in connection with the qualifications of
members of the party is in fact state action, and not party
action.
In support of this view, petitioner refers to Title 50 of the
Revised Civil Statutes of Texas of 1925, [
Footnote 5] which, by Article 3101, requires that any
party whose members cast more than 100,000 ballots at the previous
election shall nominate candidates through primaries, and fixes the
date at which they are to be held; by Article 2939, requires
primary election officials to be qualified voters; by Article 2955,
declares the same qualifications for voting in such an election as
in the general elections; by Article 2956, permits absentee voting
as in a general election; by Article 2978, requires that only an
official ballot shall be used, as in a general election; by
Articles 2980, 2981, specifies the form of ballot and how it shall
be marked, as other sections do for general elections; by Article
2984, fixes the number of ballots to be provided, as another
article does
Page 295 U. S. 50
for general elections; by Articles 2986, 2987, and 2990 permits
the use of voting booths, guard rails, and ballot boxes which by
other statutes are provided for general elections; by Articles 2998
and 3104, requires the officials of primary elections to take the
same oath as officials at the general elections; by Article 3002,
defines the powers of judges at primary elections; by Articles
3003-3025, provides elaborately for the purity of the ballot box;
by Article 3028, commands that the sealed ballot boxes be delivered
to the county clerk after the election, as is provided by another
article for the general election, and by Article 3041, confers
jurisdiction of election contests upon district courts, as is done
by another article with respect to general elections. A perusal of
these provisions, so it is said, will convince that the state has
prescribed and regulated party primaries as fully as general
elections, and has made those who manage the primaries state
officers subject to state direction and control.
While it is true that Texas has, by its laws, elaborately
provided for the expression of party preference as to nominees, has
required that preference to be expressed in a certain form of
voting, and has attempted in minute detail to protect the suffrage
of the members of the organization against fraud, it is equally
true that the primary is a party primary; the expenses of it are
not borne by the state, but by members of the party seeking
nomination (Arts. 3108, 3116); the ballots are furnished not by the
state, but by the agencies of the party (Arts. 3109, 3119); the
votes are counted and the returns made by instrumentalities created
by the party (Arts. 3123-3124-5, 3127), and the state recognizes
the state convention as the organ of the party for the declaration
of principles and the formulation of policies (Arts. 3136,
3139).
We are told that, in
Love v. Wilcox, 119 Tex. 256, 28
S.W.2d 515, 522, the Supreme Court of Texas held the state was
within its province in prohibiting a party from
Page 295 U. S. 51
establishing past party affiliations or membership in
nonpolitical organizations as qualifications or tests for
participation in primary elections, and in consequence issued its
writ of mandamus against the members of the state executive
committee of the Democratic Party on the ground that they were
public functionaries fulfilling duties imposed on them by law. But,
in that case, it was said (p. 272):
"We are not called upon to determine whether a political party
has power, beyond statutory control, to prescribe what persons
shall participate as voters or candidates in its conventions or
primaries. We have no such state of facts before us."
After referring to Article 3107, which limits the power of the
state executive committee of a party to determine who shall be
qualified to vote at primary elections, the court said:
"The committee's discretionary power is further restricted by
the statute directing that a single, uniform pledge be required of
the primary participants. The effect of the statutes is to decline
to give recognition to the lodgment of power in a State Executive
Committee, to be exercised at its discretion."
Although it did not pass upon the constitutionality of §
3107, as we did in
Nixon v. Condon, supra, the Court thus
recognized the fact upon which our decision turned, that the effort
was to vest in the state executive committee the power to bind the
party by its decision as to who might be admitted to
membership.
In
Bell v. Hill, 74 S.W.2d 113, the same court, in a
mandamus proceeding instituted after the adoption by the state
convention of the resolution of May 24, 1932, restricting
eligibility for membership in the Democratic Party to white
persons, held the resolution valid and effective. After a full
consideration of the nature of political parties in the United
States, the court concluded that
Page 295 U. S. 52
such parties in the State of Texas arise from the exercise of
the free will and liberty of the citizens composing them; that they
are voluntary associations for political action, and are not the
creatures of the state, and further decided that §§ 2 and
27 of Article 1 of the State Constitution guaranteed to citizens
the liberty of forming political associations, and the only
limitation upon this right to be found in that instrument is the
clause which requires the maintenance of a republican form of
government. The statutes regulating the nomination of candidates by
primaries were related by the court to the police power, but were
held not to extend to the denial of the right of citizens to form a
political party and to determine who might associate with them as
members thereof. The court declared that a proper view of the
election laws of Texas, and their history, required the conclusion
that the Democratic Party in that state is a voluntary political
association, and, by its representatives assembled in convention,
has the power to determine who shall be eligible for membership
and, as such, eligible to participate in the party's primaries.
We cannot, as petitioner urges, give weight to earlier
expressions of the state courts said to be inconsistent with this
declaration of the law. The Supreme Court of the state has decided,
in a case definitely involving the point, that the Legislature of
Texas has not essayed to interfere, and indeed may not interfere,
with the constitutional liberty of citizens to organize a party and
to determine the qualifications of its members. If, in the past,
the legislature has attempted to infringe that right and such
infringement has not been gainsaid by the courts, the fact
constitutes no reason for our disregarding the considered decision
of the state's highest court. The legislative assembly of the
state, so far as we are advised, has never attempted to prescribe
or to limit the membership of a
Page 295 U. S. 53
political party, and it is now settled that it has no power so
to do. The state, as its highest tribunal holds, though it has
guaranteed the liberty to organize political parties, may legislate
for their governance when formed, and for the method whereby they
may nominate candidates, but must do so with full recognition of
the right of the party to exist, to define its membership, and to
adopt such policies as to it shall seem wise. In the light of the
principles so announced, we are unable to characterize the managers
of the primary election as state officers in such sense that any
action taken by them in obedience to the mandate of the state
convention respecting eligibility to participate in the
organization's deliberations is state action.
Second. We are told that §§ 2 and 27 of the
Bill of Rights of the Constitution of Texas, as construed in
Bell v. Hill, supra, violate the Federal Constitution for
the reason that, so construed, they fail to forbid a classification
based upon race and color, whereas, in
Love v. Wilcox,
supra, they were not held to forbid classifications based upon
party affiliations and membership or nonmembership in organizations
other than political parties, which classifications were by Article
3107 of Revised Civil Statutes, 1925, as amended, prohibited. But,
as above said, in
Love v. Wilcox, the court did not
construe or apply any constitutional provision, and expressly
reserved the question as to the power of a party in convention
assembled to specify the qualifications for membership therein.
Third. An alternative contention of petitioner is that
the state Democratic Convention, which adopted the resolution here
involved, was a mere creature of the state, and could not lawfully
do what the Federal Constitution prohibits to its creator. The
argument is based upon the fact that Article 3167 of the Revised
Civil Statutes of Texas, 1925, requires a political party desiring
to elect
Page 295 U. S. 54
delegates to a national convention to hold a state convention on
the fourth Tuesday of May, 1928, and every four years thereafter,
and provides for the election of delegates to that convention at
primary conventions, the procedure of which is regulated by law. In
Bell v. Hill, supra, the Supreme Court of Texas held that
article 3167 does not prohibit declarations of policy by a state
Democratic Convention called for the purpose of electing delegates
to a national convention. While it may be, as petitioner contends,
that we are not bound by the state court's decision on the point,
it is entitled to the highest respect, and petitioner points to
nothing which in any wise impugns its accuracy. If, as seems to be
conceded, the Democratic Party in Texas held conventions many years
before the adoption of Article 3167, nothing is shown to indicate
that the regulation of the method of choosing delegates or fixing
the times of their meetings was intended to take away the plenary
power of conventions in respect of matters as to which they would
normally announce the party's will.
Compare Nixon v. Condon,
supra, p.
286 U. S. 84. We
are not prepared to hold that, in Texas, the state convention of a
party has become a mere instrumentality or agency for expressing
the voice or will of the state.
Fourth. The complaint states that candidates for the
offices of Senator and Representative in Congress were to be
nominated at the primary election of July 9, 1934, and that, in
Texas, nomination by the Democratic Party is equivalent to
election. These facts (the truth of which the demurrer assumes) the
petitioner insists, without more, make out a forbidden
discrimination. A similar situation may exist in other states where
one or another party includes a great majority of the qualified
electors. The argument is that, as a negro may not be denied a
Page 295 U. S. 55
ballot at a general election on account of his race or color, if
exclusion from the primary renders his vote at the general election
insignificant and useless, the result is to deny him the suffrage
altogether. So to say is to confuse the privilege of membership in
a party with the right to vote for one who is to hold a public
office. With the former, the state need have no concern; with the
latter, it is bound to concern itself, for the general election is
a function of the state government, and discrimination by the state
as respects participation by negroes on account of their race or
color is prohibited by the Federal Constitution.
Fifth. The complaint charges that the Democratic Party
has never declared a purpose to exclude negroes. The premise upon
which this conclusion rests is that the party is not a state body,
but a national organization, whose representative is the national
Democratic Convention. No such convention, so it is said, has
resolved to exclude negroes from membership. We have no occasion to
determine the correctness of the position, since, even if true, it
does not tend to prove that the petitioner was discriminated
against or denied any right to vote by the state of Texas. Indeed,
the contention contradicts any such conclusion, for it assumes
merely that a state convention, the representative and agent of a
state association, has usurped the rightful authority of a national
convention which represents a larger and superior country-wide
association.
We find no ground for holding that the respondent has, in
obedience to the mandate of the law of Texas, discriminated against
the petitioner or denied him any right guaranteed by the Fourteenth
and Fifteenth Amendments.
Judgment affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
294 U.S. 699.
[
Footnote 2]
Rule 38, subd. 5(a).
[
Footnote 3]
Downham v.
Alexandria, 9 Wall. 659;
Tinsley v.
Anderson, 171 U. S. 101;
Constitution of Texas, art. 5, §§ 3, 6, 8, 16, and 19;
Revised Civil Statutes of Texas of 1925, arts.1906-1911, 2385-2387,
2454, 2460;
Gulf, C. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. Rawlins, 80
Tex. 579, 16 S.W. 430;
Hudson v. Smith, 63 Tex.Civ.App.
412, 133 S.W. 486;
Arrington v. People's Supply Co., 52
S.W.2d 678.
[
Footnote 4]
U.S.C. Tit. 28, § 344(b).
[
Footnote 5]
Vernon's Annotated Revised Civil and Criminal Statutes, vol. 9,
p. 3
et seq.; id., January 1935 Cumulative Supplement, pp.
117, 118.