Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1971(c), the Attorney General
brought this action against appellants, the State of Louisiana, the
three members of the State Registration Board, and the Board's
Director-Secretary, charging a longstanding plan to deprive
Louisiana Negroes of voting rights in violation of §1971(a)
and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. The complaint alleged
and the District Court held that the discriminatory scheme began
with the adoption of a "grandfather clause" in the Louisiana
Constitution of 1898, when about 44% of the State's registered
voters were Negroes. Upon this Court's invalidation of a similar
clause, Louisiana, in 1921, substituted a new "interpretation
test," which required an applicant to interpret a section of the
State or Federal Constitution to the satisfaction of the registrar.
From that time to 1944, the proportion of registered voters who
were Negroes did not exceed 1%, mainly because the white primary
system kept Negroes from participating in the Democratic primary,
the only politically significant election in the State. When after
this Court, in 1944, invalidated racial discrimination in primary
elections, and many registrars still failed to apply the
interpretation test, the percentage of voters who were Negroes
increased to 15%, a situation which, along with increased
segregationist sentiment following this Court's school
desegregation decision, led the legislature to create a
"Segregation Committee." That committee cooperated with Citizens
Councils to instruct registrars to promote white political control
and to begin wholesale purges of Negroes from the voting rolls. At
least 21 parishes in the mid-1950's began applying the
interpretation test, to which was added in 1960 a comprehension
requirement, applicable to all persons, which the State
Registration Board ordered rigidly enforced. The District Court, in
view of the virtually unlimited discretion given voting registrars
by the Louisiana laws and because the 21 parish registrars had used
the interpretation test to keep Negroes from voting, held that
test, on its face and as applied, invalid under the Fourteenth and
Fifteenth Amendments and 42 U.S.C. § 1971(a), and enjoined its
future use in the State: with respect to the 21 parishes where the
test was
Page 380 U. S. 146
found to have been applied, it also enjoined use of a new
"citizenship" test absent a reregistration of voters, so that the
new test will apply to all or none, and required monthly
registration reports to be made for those parishes.
Held:
1. The Attorney General has power to sue a State and its
officials to protect Negroes' voting rights guaranteed by 42 U.S.C.
§1971(a) and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.
United States v. Mississippi, ante, p.
380 U. S. 128,
followed. P.
380 U. S.
151.
2. The evidence amply supported the District Court's finding
that Louisiana's interpretation test, as written and applied so as
to give registrars unbridled discretion without any objective
standards to determine voting qualifications, was part of a
successful plan unlawfully to deprive Louisiana Negroes of their
voting rights.
Schnell v. Davis, 336 U.S. 933,
affirming 81 F. Supp.
872 (D.C.S.D. Ala.), followed. Pp.
380 U. S.
151-153.
3. The decree was well within the District Court's discretion to
eliminate past voting discrimination against Negroes in Louisiana,
and to bar like discrimination in the future. Pp.
380 U. S.
154-156.
(a) The decree properly enjoined further use of the
interpretation test. P.
380 U. S.
154.
(b) Since a large proportion of Negroes in the 21 parishes had
been kept from registering by the discriminatory interpretation
test, under which virtually all white applicants were allowed to
register, the decree properly barred application of the new
"citizenship" test, which the State claims is objective, absent a
complete reregistration of all voters in those parishes. Pp.
380 U. S.
154-155.
(c) The requirement for monthly registration reports for the 21
parishes was proper to inform the court as to whether the old
discriminatory practices had been eliminated. Pp.
380 U. S.
155-156.
225 F.
Supp. 353, affirmed.
Page 380 U. S. 147
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
Pursuant to authority granted in 42 U.S.C. § 1971(c) (1958
ed., Supp. V), the Attorney General brought this action on behalf
of the United States in the United States District Court for the
Eastern District of Louisiana against the State of Louisiana, the
three members of the State Board of Registration, and the
Director-Secretary of the Board. The complaint charged that the
defendants, by following and enforcing unconstitutional state laws,
had been denying and, unless restrained by the court, would
continue to deny, Negro citizens of Louisiana the right to vote, in
violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1971(a) (1958 ed.) [
Footnote 1] and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution. The case was tried,
and, after submission of evidence, [
Footnote 2] the three-judge District Court, convened
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2281 (1958 ed.), gave judgment for the
United States.
225 F.
Supp. 353. The State and the other defendants appealed, and we
noted probable jurisdiction. 377 U.S. 987.
The complaint alleged, and the District Court found, that,
beginning with the adoption of the Louisiana Constitution of 1898,
when approximately 44% of all the registered voters in the State
were Negroes, the State had put into effect a successful policy of
denying Negro citizens the right to vote because of their race. The
1898
Page 380 U. S. 148
constitution adopted what was known as a "grandfather clause,"
which imposed burdensome requirements for registration thereafter,
but exempted from these future requirements any person who had been
entitled to vote before January 1, 1867, or who was the son or
grandson of such a person. [
Footnote 3] Such a transparent expedient for
disfranchising Negroes whose ancestors had been slaves until 1863
and not entitled to vote in Louisiana before 1867 [
Footnote 4] was held unconstitutional in 1915
as a violation of the Fifteenth Amendment in a case involving a
similar Oklahoma constitutional provision.
Guinn v. United
States, 238 U. S. 347.
Soon after that decision, Louisiana, in 1921, adopted a new
constitution replacing the repudiated "grandfather clause" with
what the complaint calls an "interpretation test," which required
that an applicant for registration be able to "give a reasonable
interpretation" of any clause in the Louisiana Constitution or the
Constitution of the United States. [
Footnote 5] From the adoption of the 1921 interpretation
test until 1944, the District Court's opinion stated, the
percentage of registered voters in Louisiana who were Negroes never
exceeded one percent. Prior to 1944, Negro interest in voting in
Louisiana had been slight, largely because the State's white
primary law kept Negroes from voting in the Democratic Party
primary election, the only election that mattered in the political
climate of that State. In 1944, however, this Court invalidated the
substantially identical white primary law of Texas, [
Footnote 6] and, with the explicit statutory
bar to their voting in the primary removed, and because of a
generally heightened political interest, Negroes in increasing
Page 380 U. S. 149
numbers began to register in Louisiana. The white primary system
had been so effective in barring Negroes from voting that the
"interpretation test," as a disfranching devise, had been ignored
over the years. Many registrars continued to ignore it after 1944,
and, in the next dozen years, the proportion of registered votes
who were Negroes rose from two-tenths of one percent to
approximately 15% by March, 1956. This fact, coupled with this
Court's 1954 invalidation of laws requiring school segregation,
[
Footnote 7] prompted the State
to try new devices to keep the white citizens in control. The
Louisiana Legislature created a committee, which became known as
the "Segregation Committee," to seek means of accomplishing this
goal. The chairman of this committee also helped to organize a
semi-private group called the Association of Citizens Councils,
which thereafter acted in close cooperation with the legislative
committee to preserve white supremacy. The legislative committee
and the Citizens Councils set up programs, which parish voting
registrars were required to attend, to instruct the registrars on
how to promote white political control. The committee and the
Citizens Councils also began a wholesale challenging of Negro names
already on the voting rolls, with the result that thousands of
Negroes, but virtually no whites, were purged from the rolls of
voters. Beginning in the middle 1950's, registrars of at least 21
parishes began to apply the interpretation test. In 1960, the State
Constitution was amended to require every applicant thereafter to
"be able to understand," as well as "give a reasonable
interpretation" of, any section of the State or Federal
Constitution "when read to him by the registrar." [
Footnote 8] The State Board
Page 380 U. S. 150
of Registration in cooperation with the Segregation Committee
issued orders that all parish registrars must strictly comply with
the new provisions.
The interpretation test, the court found, vested in the voting
registrars a virtually uncontrolled discretion as to who should
vote and who should not. Under the State's statutes and
constitutional provisions, the registrars, without any objective
standard to guide them, determine the manner in which the
interpretation test is to be given, whether it is to be oral or
written, the length and complexity of the sections of the State or
Federal Constitution to be understood and interpreted, and what
interpretation is to be considered correct. There was ample
evidence to support the District Court's finding that registrars in
the 21 parishes where the test was found to have been used had
exercised their broad powers to deprive otherwise qualified Negro
citizens of their right to vote; and that the existence of the test
as a hurdle to voter qualification has, in itself, deterred, and
will continue to deter, Negroes from attempting to register in
Louisiana.
Because of the virtually unlimited discretion vested by the
Louisiana laws in the registrars of voters, and because in the 21
parishes where the interpretation test was applied that discretion
had been exercised to keep Negroes from voting because of their
race, the District Court held the interpretation test invalid on
its face and as applied, as a violation of the Fourteenth and
Fifteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and of 42
U.S.C. § 1971(a). [
Footnote
9] The District Court enjoined future use of the test in the
State, and, with respect to the 21 parishes where the invalid
interpretation test was found to have
Page 380 U. S. 151
been applied, the District Court also enjoined use of a newly
enacted "citizenship" test, which did not repeal the interpretation
test and the validity of which was not challenged in this suit,
unless a reregistration of all voters in those parishes is ordered,
so that there would be no voters in those parishes who had not
passed the same test.
I
We have held this day in
United States v. Mississippi,
ante, o,
380 U. S. 128,
that the Attorney General has power to bring suit against a State
and its officials to protect the voting rights of Negroes
guaranteed by 42 U.S.C. § 1971(a) and the Fourteenth and
Fifteenth Amendments. [
Footnote
10] There can be no doubt from the evidence in this case that
the District Court was amply justified in finding that Louisiana's
interpretation test, as written and as applied, was part of a
successful plan to deprive Louisiana Negroes of their right to
vote. This device for accomplishing unconstitutional discrimination
has been little, if any, less successful than was the "grandfather
clause" invalidated by this Court's decision in
Guinn v. United
States, supra, 50
Page 380 U. S. 152
years ago, which, when that clause was adopted in 1898, had
seemed to the leaders of Louisiana a much preferable way of
assuring white political supremacy. The Governor of Louisiana
stated in 1898 that he believed that the "grandfather clause"
solved the problem of keeping Negroes from voting "in a much more
upright and manly fashion" [
Footnote 11] than the method adopted previously by the
States of Mississippi and South Carolina, which left the
qualification of applicants to vote "largely to the arbitrary
discretion of the officers administering the law." [
Footnote 12] A delegate to the 1898
Louisiana Constitutional Convention also criticized an
interpretation test because the
"arbitrary power, lodged with the registration officer,
practically places his decision beyond the pale of judicial review,
and he can enfranchise or disfranchise voters at his own sweet will
and pleasure without let or hindrance. [
Footnote 13]"
But Louisianans of a later generation did place just such
arbitrary power in the hands of election officers who have used it
with phenomenal success to keep Negroes from voting in the State.
The State admits that the statutes and provisions of the state
constitution establishing the interpretation test "vest discretion
in the registrars of voters to determine the qualifications of
applicants for registration," while imposing "no definite and
objective standards upon registrars of voters for the
administration of the interpretation test." And the District Court
found that
"Louisiana . . . provides no effective method whereby arbitrary
and capricious action by registrars of voters may be prevented or
redressed. [
Footnote
14]"
The applicant facing a
Page 380 U. S. 153
registrar in Louisiana thus has been compelled to leave his
voting fate to that official's uncontrolled power to determine
whether the applicant's understanding of the Federal or State
Constitution is satisfactory. As the evidence showed, colored
people, even some with the most advanced education and scholarship,
were declared by voting registrars with less education to have an
unsatisfactory understanding of the Constitution of Louisiana or of
the United States. This is not a test, but a trap, sufficient to
stop even the most brilliant man on his way to the voting booth.
The cherished right of people in a country like ours to vote cannot
be obliterated by the use of laws like this, which leave the voting
fate of a citizen to the passing whim or impulse of an individual
registrar. Many of our cases have pointed out the invalidity of
laws so completely devoid of standards and restraints.
See,
e.g., United States v. L. Cohen Grocery Co., 255 U. S.
81. Squarely in point is
Schnell v. Davis, 336
U.S. 933,
affirming 81 F. Supp.
872 (D.C.S.D.Ala.), in which we affirmed a district court
judgment striking down as a violation of the Fourteenth and
Fifteenth Amendments an Alabama constitutional provision
restricting the right to vote in that State to persons who could
"understand and explain any article of the Constitution of the
United States" to the satisfaction of voting registrars. We
likewise affirm here the District Court's holding that the
provisions of the Louisiana Constitution and statutes which require
voters to satisfy registrars of their ability to "understand and
give a reasonable interpretation of any section" of the Federal or
Louisiana Constitution violate the Constitution. And we agree with
the District Court that it specifically conflicts with the
prohibitions against discrimination in voting because of race found
both in the Fifteenth Amendment and 42 U.S.C. § 1971(a) to
subject citizens to such an arbitrary power as Louisiana has given
its registrars under these laws.
Page 380 U. S. 154
II
This leaves for consideration the District Court's decree. We
bear in mind that the court has not merely the power, but the duty,
to render a decree which will, so far as possible, eliminate the
discriminatory effects of the past as well as bar like
discrimination in the future. Little if any objection is raised to
the propriety of the injunction against further use of the
interpretation test as it stood at the time this action was begun,
and, without further discussion, we affirm that part of the
decree.
Appellants' chief argument against the decree concerns the
effect which should be given the new voter qualification test
adopted by the Board of Registration in August, 1962, pursuant to
statute [
Footnote 15] and
subsequent constitutional amendment [
Footnote 16] after this suit had been filed. The new
test, says the State, is a uniform, objective, standardized
"citizenship" test administered to all prospective voters alike.
Under it, according to the State, an applicant is
"required to indiscriminately draw one of ten cards. Each card
has six multiple choice questions, four of which the applicant must
answer correctly."
Confining itself to the allegations of the complaint, the
District Court did not pass upon the validity of the new test, but
did take it into consideration in formulating the decree. [
Footnote 17] The court found that
past discrimination against Negro
Page 380 U. S. 155
applicants in the 21 parishes where the interpretation test had
been applied had greatly reduced the proportion of potential Negro
voters who were registered as compared with the proportion of
whites. Most if not all of those white voters had been permitted to
register on far less rigorous terms than colored applicants whose
applications were rejected. Since the new "citizenship" test does
not provide for a reregistration of voters already accepted by the
registrars, it would affect only applicants not already registered,
and would not disturb the eligibility of the white voters who had
been allowed to register while discriminatory practices kept
Negroes from doing so. In these 21 parishes, while the registration
of white persons was increasing, the number of Negroes registered
decreased from 25,361 to 10,351. Under these circumstances, we
think that the court was quite right to decree that, as to persons
who met age and residence requirements during the years in which
the interpretation test was used, use of the new "citizenship" test
should be postponed in those 21 parishes where registrars used the
old interpretation test until those parishes have ordered a
complete reregistration of voters, so that the new test will apply
alike to all or to none.
Cf. United States v. Duke, 332
F.2d 759, 769-770 (C.A.5th Cir.).
It also was certainly an appropriate exercise of the District
Court's discretion to order reports to be made every month
concerning the registration of voters in these 21
Page 380 U. S. 156
parishes in order that the court might be informed as to whether
the old discriminatory practices really had been abandoned in good
faith. The need to eradicate past evil effects and to prevent the
continuation or repetition in the future of the discriminatory
practices shown to be so deeply engrained in the laws, policies,
and traditions of the State of Louisiana completely justified the
District Court in entering the decree it did and in retaining
jurisdiction of the entire case to hear any evidence of
discrimination in other parishes, and to enter such orders as
justice from time to time might require.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN considers that the constitutional conclusions
reached in this opinion can properly be based only on the
provisions of the Fifteenth Amendment. In all other respects, he
fully subscribes to this opinion.
[
Footnote 1]
"All citizens of the United States who are otherwise qualified
by law to vote at any election by the people in any State,
Territory, district, county, city, parish, township, school
district, municipality, or other territorial subdivision, shall be
entitled and allowed to vote at all such elections, without
distinction of race, color, or previous condition of servitude; any
constitution, law, custom, usage, or regulation of any State or
Territory, or by or under its authority, to the contrary
notwithstanding."
16 Stat. 140, 42 U.S.C. § 1971(a) (1958 ed.).
[
Footnote 2]
The appellants did not present any evidence. By stipulation, all
the Government's evidence was presented in written form.
[
Footnote 3]
La.Const.1898, Art. 197, § 5.
See generally Eaton,
The Suffrage Clause in the New Constitution of Louisiana, 13
Harv.L.Rev. 279.
[
Footnote 4]
The Louisiana Constitution of 1868, for the first time,
permitted Negroes to vote. La.Const.1868, Art. 98.
[
Footnote 5]
La.Const. 1921, Art. VIII, §§ 1(c), 1(d).
[
Footnote 6]
Smith v. Allwright, 321 U. S. 649.
[
Footnote 7]
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.
S. 483.
[
Footnote 8]
La.Acts 1960, No. 613, amending La.Const. Art. VIII, §
1(d), previously implemented in LSA-Rev.Stat. § 18:36. Under
the 1921 constitution, the requirement that an applicant be able
"to understand" a section "read to him by the registrar" applied
only to illiterates. La.Const.1921, Art. VIII, § 1(d);
compare id., § 1(c).
[
Footnote 9]
"Although the vote-abridging purpose and effect of the
[interpretation] test render it
per se invalid under the
Fifteenth Amendment, it is also
per se invalid under the
Fourteenth Amendment. The vices cannot be cured by an injunction
enjoining its unfair application."
225 F. Supp. at 391-392.
[
Footnote 10]
It is argued that the members of the State Board of Registration
were not properly made defendants, because they were "mere
conduits," without authority to enforce state registration
requirements. The Board has the power and duty to supervise
administration of the interpretation test and prescribe rules and
regulations for the registrars to follow in applying it.
LSA-Rev.Stat. § 18:191, subd. A; La.Const. Art. VIII, §
18. The Board also is, by statute, directed to fashion and
administer the new "citizenship" test. LSA-Rev.Stat. § 18:191,
subd. A; La.Const. Art. VIII, § 18. And the Board has power to
remove any registrar from office "at will." La.Const. Art. VIII,
§ 18. In these circumstances, the Board members were properly
made defendants.
Compare United States v. Mississippi,
ante, at
380 U. S.
141-142.
There is also no merit in the argument that the registrars, who
were not defendants in this suit, were indispensable parties. The
registrars have no personal interest in the outcome of this case,
and are bound to follow the directions of the State Board of
Registration.
[
Footnote 11]
Louisiana Senate Journal, 1898, p. 33.
[
Footnote 12]
Ibid.
[
Footnote 13]
Kernan, The Constitutional Convention of 1898 and its Work,
Proceedings of the Louisiana Bar Association for 1898-1899, pp.
59-60.
[
Footnote 14]
225 F. Supp. at 384.
[
Footnote 15]
La.Acts 1962, No. 62, amending LSA-Rev.Stat. 18:191, subd.
A.
[
Footnote 16]
La.Acts 1962, No. 539, amending La.Const. Art. VIII, §
18.
[
Footnote 17]
Like the District Court, we express no opinion as to the
constitutionality of the new "citizenship" test. Any question as to
that point is specifically reserved. That test was never challenged
in the complaint or any other pleading. The District Court said,
"we repeat that this decision does not touch upon the
constitutionality of the citizenship test as a state qualification
for voting." 225 F. Supp. at 397. The Solicitor General did not
challenge the validity of the new test in this Court either in
briefs or in oral argument, but instead recognized specifically
that that issue was not before us in this case. And, at oral
argument in this Court, the attorney for the United States stated
that the Government has pending in a lower court a new suit
challenging registration procedures in Louisiana "under the new
regime,"
i.e., employed subsequent to the invalidation of
the interpretation test in this case. The new "citizenship" test,
he said, "is simply not an issue in this proceeding, and was not
invalidated in the lower court, and we are not here challenging
it."