This case involves the issue of the constitutionality of a
federal court-ordered reapportionment of the North Dakota
Legislative Assembly. Following protracted state and federal
litigation challenging various apportionment plans, statutes, and
state constitutional provisions, including a federal action in
which a three-judge District Court in 1965 approved a
reapportionment plan that included five multi-member senatorial
districts, appellants brought the present federal action against
appellee, the Secretary of State, alleging that substantial
population shifts had occurred and that the 1965 plan no longer met
equal protection requirements, and requesting the court to order
apportionment based on the 1970 census figures, to provide for
single member districts, to declare the 1965 plan invalid, and to
restrain appellee from administering the election laws under that
plan. A three-judge District Court, holding that such plan failed
to meet constitutional standards, approved another plan that called
for five multi-member senatorial districts and that contained a 20%
population variance between the largest and smallest senatorial
districts.
Held:
1. This Court has jurisdiction of the appeal under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1253. Although the challenged reapportionment plan was
court-ordered,
Page 420 U. S. 2
its enforcement is based on the State's Constitution and
statutes, its effectuation directly depends on the state election
law machinery, and the plan itself is a court-imposed replacement
of state constitutional provisions and reapportionment statutes.
Pp.
420 U. S.
13-14.
2. Absent persuasive justification, a federal district court, in
ordering state legislative reapportionment, should refrain from
imposing multi-member districts upon a State. Here, the District
Court has failed to articulate a significant state interest
supporting its departure from the general preference for single
member districts in court-ordered reapportionment plans that this
Court recognized in
Connor v. Johnson, 402 U.
S. 690, and unless the District Court can articulate
such a "singular combination of unique factors" as was found to
exist in
Mahan v. Howell, 410 U.
S. 315,
410 U. S. 333,
or unless the 1975 Legislative Assembly appropriately acts, the
court should proceed expeditiously to reinstate single member
senatorial districts. Pp.
420 U. S.
121.
3. A population deviation of such magnitude in a court-ordered
reapportionment plan as the 20% variance involved here is
constitutionally impermissible absent significant state policies or
other acceptable considerations requiring its adoption. The burden
is on the District Court to elucidate the reasons necessitating any
departure from approximate population equality and to articulate
clearly the relationship between the variance and the state policy
furthered. Here, the District Court's allowance of the 20% variance
is not justified, as the court claimed, by the absence of
"electorally victimized minorities," by the sparseness of North
Dakota's population, by the division of the State caused by the
Missouri River, or by the asserted state policy of observing
geographical boundaries and existing political subdivisions,
especially when it appears that other, less statistically
offensive, reapportionment plans already devised are feasible. Pp.
420 U. S.
21-26.
372 F.
Supp. 371, reversed and remanded.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Page 420 U. S. 3
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents the issue of the constitutionality of a
federal court-ordered reapportionment of the North Dakota
Legislature, called in that State the Legislative Assembly. That
State, like many others, has struggled to satisfy constitutional
requirements for legislative apportionment delineated in
Baker
v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186
(1962);
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.
S. 533 (1964);
WMCA, Inc. v. Lomenzo,
377 U. S. 633
(1964);
Maryland Committee v. Tawes, 377 U.
S. 656 (1964);
Davis v. Mann, 377 U.
S. 678 (1964);
Roman v. Sincock, 377 U.
S. 695 (1964);
Lucas v. Colorado General
Assembly, 377 U. S. 713
(1964), and other cases. This litigation is the culmination of that
struggle, totally ineffectual on the legislative side, during the
past decade.
I
The State's Constitution and Its Statutes
North Dakota's original Constitution, adopted at the State's
admission into the Union in 1889, is still in effect. It has been
amended, of course, from time to time. Since 1918, § 25
thereof has read: "The legislative power of this state shall be
vested in a legislature consisting of a senate and a house of
representatives." N.D.Const. Art. II, § 25. That legislative
power for 70 years has been subject to the initiative and the
referendum.
Ibid. The Constitution has further provided
that the State's senate "shall be composed of forty-nine members,"
§ 26, elected for a four-year term, § 27, with one-half
thereof elected every two years, § 30, and that no one shall
be a senator unless he is a qualified elector of the senatorial
district, has attained the age of 25 years, and has been a
Page 420 U. S. 4
resident of the State for the two years next preceding the
election, § 28. Since 1960, § 29 has read:
"Each existing senatorial district as provided by law at the
effective date of this amendment shall permanently constitute a
senatorial district. Each senatorial district shall be represented
by one senator and no more. [
Footnote 1]"
1 Laws 1959, c. 438; Laws 1961, c.405.
The document also states that the house of representatives
"shall be composed of not less than sixty, nor more than one
hundred forty members," § 32, elected for a two-year term,
§ 33, and that no one shall be a representative unless he is a
qualified elector of the district, has attained the age of 21
years, and has been a resident of the State for the two years next
preceding the election, § 34. Section 35 provides for at least
one representative for each senatorial district and for as many
representatives as there are counties in the district; states that
the Legislative Assembly, after each federal decennial census,
shall apportion "the balance of the members of the House of
Representatives," and, if the Legislative Assembly fails in its
apportionment duty, places the task of apportioning the house in a
designated group of officials of the state. [
Footnote 2]
Page 420 U. S. 5
There have been complementary statutory provisions. An
apportionment effected by Laws 1931, c. 7, N.D.Cent.Code §
503-01 (1960), was in effect for over 30 years despite the mandate
of § 35 of the Constitution that apportionment be effected
after each federal census.
II
Prior Litigation
A. Things began to stir in North Dakota even prior to this
Court's decision in
Baker v. Carr in 1962. The State's
Legislative Assembly of 1961 had failed to apportion the house
following the 1960 census. After
Baker
Page 420 U. S. 6
had been decided at the District Court level,
179 F.
Supp. 824 (MD Tenn.1959), and between the argument and
reargument of the case here, the Supreme Court of North Dakota
dismissed an original action for a prerogative writ to enjoin its
Chief Justice from issuing the apportionment proclamation which
would have announced the conclusions of the statutorily designated
"apportionment group" that were then anticipated. The petition
asserted that the group's plan would apportion the house in an
unconstitutional manner and not according to population. The
Supreme Court ruled that the function of the group was legislative;
that it had not yet completed its work; that it was performing a
function the Legislative Assembly should have performed; and that,
until the proclamation was issued, the group's action was not
subject to challenge in the courts.
State ex rel. Aamoth v.
Sathre, 110 N.W.2d
228 (1961).
B. Citizens of North Dakota then sought declaratory and
injunctive relief in federal court under the Civil Rights Acts, 42
U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1988. By this time, the State's Chief
Justice had issued the proclamation. A three-judge District Court
held that the presence of the proclamation eliminated the aspect of
prematurity that had characterized the earlier challenge in the
state court. But the "basic issues," the court concluded with one
dissent, had not been presented to the Supreme Court of North
Dakota. "We believe that court should have the opportunity of
passing on all questions herein." The court, accordingly, abstained
from passing upon those issues; it stayed further proceedings
before it, but did not dismiss the action.
Lein v.
Sathre, 201 F.
Supp. 535,
542 (ND
1962).
C. The plaintiffs in the federal case promptly took to the
Supreme Court of North Dakota their attack upon the plan adopted by
the apportionment group. That
Page 420 U. S. 7
court assumed jurisdiction.
State ex rel. Lein v.
Sathre, 113 N.W.2d
679, 681 (1962). It noted that no question arising under the
United States Constitution was presented,
id. at 681-682,
and that it was not concerned with the validity of the allotment of
one representative to each senatorial district, as prescribed by
the first sentence of § 35 of the Constitution,
id.
at 683. The court recognized that there was inherent in a
constitutional direction to apportion according to population "a
limited discretion to make the apportionment that will approach, as
nearly as is reasonably possible, a mathematical equality."
Id. at 685. It then went on to hold that the apportionment
made by the group "violates the constitutional mandate of
apportionment according to the population of the several districts
and is void,"
id. at 687, and that the apportionment
effected by the 1931 statute continued to be the law until
superseded by an apportionment valid under § 35 or under a
further amendment of the Constitution.
Id. at 687-688.
D. The same plaintiffs then turned again to the federal court.
The three-judge court, with one judge dissenting, denied the
request for injunctive relief on the ground that the only challenge
before it was to the apportionment group's plan, and that the 1931
apportionment was not challenged.
Lein v.
Sathre, 205 F.
Supp. 536 (ND 1962). It noted that the Legislative Assembly
would meet the following January, that it had "the mandatory duty"
to apportion the house, and that the court would not presume that
it would not perform that duty. Jurisdiction was retained, with the
observation that, if the Legislative Assembly failed to act, the
plaintiffs, upon appropriate amendment of their complaint, might
further petition the court for relief.
Id. at 540.
E. The 1963 Legislative Assembly did reapportion. Laws 1963, c.
345.
Page 420 U. S. 8
F.
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533, and
its companion cases were decided in June, 1964. A new suit then was
instituted in federal court to invalidate North Dakota's entire
apportionment system on federal constitutional grounds. Sections
26, 29, and 35 of the Constitution and the 1963 statute were
challenged. The three-judge court held that these constitutional
and statutory provisions were violative of the Equal Protection
Clause.
Paulson v. Meier, 232 F.
Supp. 183 (ND 1964). It went on to hold that the 1931
apportionment, being "the last valid apportionment," as described
by the North Dakota Supreme Court, and by which the 1963
legislators had been elected, was also invalid. Thus, "there is no
constitutionally valid legislative apportionment law in existence
in the State of North Dakota at this time."
Id. at 187.
The court encountered difficulty as to an appropriate remedy. It
concluded, one judge dissenting, that adequate time was not
available within which to formulate a proper plan for the then
forthcoming 1964 elections,
id. at 188; that the 1965
Legislative Assembly would have a
de facto status; and
that that Assembly should promptly devise a constitutional system.
Injunctive relief was denied.
Id. at 190
G. The 1965 Legislative Assembly produced a reapportionment act,
although it was not approved or disapproved by the Governor. Laws
1965, c. 338.
H. The North Dakota Secretary of State, defendant in the federal
court, then moved to dismiss the federal action on the ground that
the 1965 act met constitutional requirements. The three-judge
court, however, ruled otherwise.
Paulson v.
Meier, 246 F. Supp.
36, 43 (ND 1965). It turned to the question of remedy and
concluded that the Legislative Assembly had had its opportunity and
that the court now had the duty itself to take affirmative action.
Id. at 43-44. It considered
Page 420 U. S. 9
several plans that had been introduced in the Assembly and
centered its attention on the Smith plan. Although the court found
the plan "not perfect" (five multi-member senatorial districts,
[
Footnote 3] and county lines
violated in 12 instances), it concluded that the plan, if
"slightly" modified, would meet constitutional standards
("impressive mathematical exactness," namely, 25 of 39 districts
within 5% of the average population, four slightly over 5%, and
only two exceeding 9%).
Id. at 44-45. The "slight"
modification was made and reapportionment, really the first to be
finally effected since 1931, was therefore accomplished in North
Dakota by federal court intervention.
I. Still another original proceeding in the State's Supreme
Court was instituted. This one challenged the right of senators
from the multi-member districts to hold office. It was claimed that
this multiple membership violated § 29 of the North Dakota
Constitution, which provided that each senatorial district "shall
be represented by one senator and no more." The state court held
that the 1965 judgment of the federal court was not
res
judicata as to the then plaintiffs; that the initial or
"freezing" portion of § 29 was clearly invalid; that the
concluding portion, restricting representation of a district to one
senator, would not have been desired by the people without the
"balance" of the freezing portion; and that § 29 as a unit
must fall as violative of equal protection.
State ex rel.
Stockman v. Anderson, 184 N.W.2d
53 (1971). The result was that multi-member senatorial
districts were not held illegal by the state court.
Page 420 U. S. 10
III
The Present litigation
The 1970 federal census was taken in due course. The 1971
Legislative Assembly failed to reapportion. The present federal
action was instituted the following November. The plaintiffs
alleged that substantial shifts in population had taken place, and
that the court-ordered plan of 1965 no longer complied with the
requirements of the Equal Protection Clause. The relief requested
was that the court order apportionment upon the 1970 census figures
and also provide for single member districts; that the 1965 plan be
declared invalid; and that the Secretary of State be restrained
from administering the election laws under that plan.
On May 22, 1972, the three-judge court entered an order to the
effect that the existing North Dakota apportionment failed to meet
federal constitutional standards and that the court would attempt
to reapportion. Jurisdictional Statement A-54. It appointed a
commission to formulate and present a plan within 30 days, and it
submitted guidelines to the commission. With respect to
multi-member districts, the order provided:
"We have considered the matter of 'multi-member' districts, and
conclude there is insufficient time prior to the 1972 elections to
fully explore and resolve the issues involved. The matter of
'multi-member' districts will be studied in depth by the
Commission, and the results of that study be made available to
us."
Id. at A-55.
An opinion was filed on June 30.
372 F.
Supp. 363 (ND). This recited that the commission had presented
eight separate plans to the court; that shifts in population since
1960 had resulted in constitutionally impermissible population
variations among existing districts;
Page 420 U. S. 11
that a plan submitted by Commissioner Dobson substantially
reduced the disproportionate representation, although it decreased
the number of districts by one and increased the number of senators
by two and the number of representatives by four. [
Footnote 4] "[C]ertain weaknesses" in the
plan were recognized, including "some variance in population . . .
which, in a few instances, seems substantial," and a continuation
of multi-member districts.
Id. at 366. These districts
included the State's five largest cities. The court noted that the
districts had been created not by enactment of the Legislative
Assembly, but by the federal court in the 1965
Paulson
decision, and observed,
ibid.:
"In light of subsequent [United States] Supreme Court
pronouncements, we believe it would be improper for this Court to
permit their continuation in a court-fashioned plan."
Connor v. Johnson, 402 U. S. 690
(1971), and
Connor v. Williams, 404 U.
S. 549,
404 U. S. 551
(1972), were cited. The court, however, felt
"constrained to permit multi-member districts to continue during
the 1972 elections . . . to avoid extreme disruptions in the
elective processes. . . . We feel that the electorate will be
better served by minimizing the confusion surrounding the impending
elections than it would be by the abolition of multi-member
districts at this eleventh hour."
372 F. Supp. at 366. The Dobson plan was therefore approved "for
the 1972 election only."
Id. at 367. An alternative, the
Ostenson plan, was commended to the commission for "further study,"
with a direction to modify it "so as to eliminate the existing
multi-member senate districts."
Id. at 367-368. Chief
District Judge Benson dissented as to the limitation of the Dobson
plan to the 1972 election; for
Page 420 U. S. 12
him, the
Connor litigation was distinguishable on
racial grounds, and the desirability of multi-member districts was
a question for the Legislative Assembly, and not for the court.
Id. at 368-369. Jurisdiction was retained.
On November 8, 1972, immediately after the election that year,
the three-judge court suspended its June 30 order until further
notice and directed the State's Attorney General promptly to report
any action taken by the 1973 Legislative Assembly.
That Assembly not only passed an apportionment Act but overrode
its veto by the Governor. [
Footnote
5] Laws 1973, C. 411, and Note, at 1178. The Act provided for
37 legislative districts, each having one senator and two
representatives, except for five multi-member senatorial districts.
Section 3 thereof specifically recited the population of each
district and the population variance (plus 3.3% to minus 3.5%, a
total of 6.8%; or plus 408 persons to minus 432 persons, a total of
840 persons) from the average of 12,355 per senator.
The effectiveness of the legislative plan, however, promptly was
suspended by a referendum petition.
See Laws 1973, p.
1549. By a companion initiative petition, an amendment to the
State's Constitution was proposed; this would have created a
commission to reapportion the State and, in addition, would have
mandated single-member senatorial districts. A special election on
these took place December 4, 1973. Both were defeated. The
Legislative Assembly's work to reapportion was thus nullified by
the people. It could be suggested, and apparently was, that the
people also reacted against the elimination of the five
multi-member districts. In any
Page 420 U. S. 13
event, the defendant thereupon moved the federal court to
readopt the plan temporarily approved by its order of June, 1972.
The plaintiffs resisted.
The three-judge District Court, with Circuit Judge Bright
dissenting, then made "permanent" the 1972 Dobson plan, with its
five multi-member districts providing 18 senators out of a
state-wide total of 51.
372 F.
Supp. 371, 379 (ND 1974). We noted probable jurisdiction. 416
U.S. 966 (1974).
IV
Jurisdiction
We are met at the threshold with a mild question of jurisdiction
not pressed by the parties. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1253 [
Footnote 6] only
if a three-judge court was required by 28 U.S.C. § 2281.
[
Footnote 7]
It might be suggested that the three-judge court here did not
restrain the enforcement of a statute, but, instead, the
enforcement of the court-ordered plan of 1965 which had become
unconstitutional in the circumstances of 1972, and, hence, that the
provisions of § 2281 were not satisfied. The argument is less
than persuasive, and we
Page 420 U. S. 14
conclude that it is without merit. Although the reapportionment
now under attack was indeed court-ordered, its enforcement is
doubly based on the State's Constitution and statutes. Its
effectuation directly depends on the state election law machinery
and, in addition, the plan itself is a court-imposed replacement of
the North Dakota constitutional provisions and the 1931, 1963, and
1965 reapportionment statutes. It is these that are, and have been,
the primary objects of attack. It would be highly anomalous if
jurisdiction were not here, for then it would follow that a single
judge could invalidate a reapportionment plan that had been evolved
or approved, and was required so to be, by a three-judge court some
time before. Subject matter of this kind is regular grist for the
three-judge court, and that route typically has been employed under
conditions similar to those present here.
See, e.g., Skolnick
v. State Electoral Board of Illinois, 336 F.
Supp. 839 (ND Ill 1971). We think this is correct procedure,
and we conclude that we have jurisdiction.
V
The Multi-member Districts
From the above review of the North Dakota constitutional and
statutory provisions and of the litigation of the past 12 years,
two significant facts emerge: the first is that some
multi-membership on the house side of the Legislative Assembly
traditionally has existed. This plainly qualifies as established
state policy. [
Footnote 8] The
second is that, in contrast, multi-membership on the senate side,
even as to the five districts, has never existed except as imposed
(a) by the three-judge federal court by its 1965
Paulson
decision; (b) by a majority of the three-judge
Page 420 U. S. 15
court as a temporary expedient for the 1972 election only; (c)
by the provisions of the 1973 act immediately nullified by
referendum; and (d) by a different majority of the three-judge
court as a "permanent" solution in the judgment under review. Thus,
only once has the Legislative Assembly provided for multi-member
senate representation, and that effort was promptly aborted. Every
other such provision in North Dakota's history has been
court-imposed. Multi-member senate representation, therefore,
obviously does not qualify as established state policy.
This Court has refrained from holding that multi-member
districts in apportionment plans adopted by States for their
legislatures are
per se unconstitutional.
White v.
Regester, 412 U. S. 755,
412 U. S. 765
(1973), and cases cited therein. On the contrary, the Court has
upheld numerous state-initiated apportionment schemes utilizing
multi-member districts.
See, e.g., Kilgarlin v. Hill,
386 U. S. 120
(1967);
Burns v. Richardson, 384 U. S.
73 (1966);
Fortson v. Dorsey, 379 U.
S. 433 (1965). And, beginning with
Reynolds v.
Sims, 377 U.S. at
377 U.S.
577, the Court has indicated that a State might devise an
apportionment plan for a bicameral legislature with one body
composed of at least some multi-member districts, as long as
substantial equality of population per representative is
maintained.
Notwithstanding this past acceptance of multi-member districting
plans, we recognize that there are practical weaknesses inherent in
such schemes. First, as the number of legislative seats within the
district increases, the difficulty for the voter in making
intelligent choices among candidates also increases.
See Lucas
v. Colorado General Assembly, 377 U.S. at
377 U. S. 731.
Ballots tend to become unwieldy, confusing, and too lengthy to
allow thoughtful consideration. Second, when candidates are
Page 420 U. S. 16
elected at large, residents of particular areas within the
district may feel that they have no representative specially
responsible to them.
Ibid. Third, [
Footnote 9] it is possible that bloc voting by
delegates from a multi-member district may result in undue
representation of residents of these districts relative to voters
in single member districts. This possibility, however, was
rejected, absent concrete proof, in
Whitcomb v. Chavis,
403 U. S. 124,
403 U. S. 147
(1971). Criticism of multi-member districts has been frequent and
widespread.
Id. at
403 U. S.
157-160, [
Footnote
10] and articles cited therein.
See generally
Carpeneti, Legislative Apportionment: Multi-member Districts and
Fair Representation, 120 U.Pa.L.Rev. 666 (1972); Banzhaf,
Multi-member Electoral Districts -- Do They Violate the "One Man,
One Vote" Principle, 75 Yale L.J. 1309 (1966).
Page 420 U. S. 17
In
Fortson v. Dorsey, supra, we held that the mere
assertion of such possible weaknesses in a legislature's
multi-member districting plan was insufficient to establish a
denial of equal protection. Rather, it must be shown that
"designedly or otherwise, a multi-member constituency
apportionment scheme, under the circumstances of a particular case,
would operate to minimize or cancel out the voting strength of
racial or political elements of the voting population."
379 U.S. at
379 U. S. 439.
Further, there must be more evidence than a simple
disproportionality between the voting potential and the legislative
seats won by a racial or political group. There must be evidence
that the group has been denied access to the political process
equal to the access of other groups.
White v. Regester,
412 U.S. at
412 U. S.
765-766. Such evidence may be more easily developed
where the multi-member districts compose a large part of the
legislature, where both bodies in a bicameral legislature utilize
multi-member districts, or where the members' residences are
concentrated in one part of the district.
Burns v.
Richardson, 384 U.S. at
384 U. S. 88.
[
Footnote 11] Whether such
factors are present or not, proof of lessening or cancellation of
voting strength must be offered.
This requirement that one challenging a multi-member districting
plan must prove that the plan minimizes or cancels out the voting
power of a racial or political group has been applied in cases
involving apportionment schemes adopted by state legislatures. In
Connor v. Johnson, 402 U. S. 690
(1971), however, which came to
Page 420 U. S. 18
us on. an application for a stay, we were presented with a
court-ordered reapportionment scheme having some multi-member
districts in both bodies of the state legislature. We stated
explicitly that,
"when district courts are forced to fashion apportionment plans,
single member districts are preferable to large multi-member
districts as a general matter."
Id. at
402 U. S. 692.
Exercising our supervisory power, we directed the District Court to
devise a single member districting plan, "absent insurmountable
difficulties."
Ibid. This preference for and emphasis upon
single member districts in court-ordered plans was reaffirmed in
Connor v. Wlliams, 404 U.S. at
404 U. S. 551,
and again in
Mahan v. Howell, 410 U.
S. 315,
410 U. S. 333
(1973). In the latter case, a District Court was held to have acted
within its discretion in forming a multi-member district as an
interim remedy in order to alleviate substantial
underrepresentation of military personnel in an impending election.
[
Footnote 12]
The standards for evaluating the use of multi-member districts
thus clearly differ depending on whether a federal court or a state
legislature has initiated the use. The
Page 420 U. S. 19
practical simultaneity of decision in
Connor v. Johnson
and in
Whitcomb v. Chavis, supra, so demonstrates. When
the plan is court-ordered, there often is no state policy of
multi-member districting which might deserve respect or deference.
Indeed, if the court is imposing multi-member districts upon a
State which always has employed single member districts, there is
special reason to follow the
Connor rule favoring the
latter type of districting.
Appellants do not contend that any racial or political group
[
Footnote 13] has been
discriminated against by the multi-member districting ordered by
the District Court. They only suggest that the District Court has
not followed our mandate in
Connor v. Johnson, and that
the court has failed to articulate any reasons for this departure.
We agree. Absent particularly pressing features calling for
multi-member districts, a United States district court should
refrain from imposing them upon a State.
The District Court cannot avoid the multi-member issue by
labeling it,
see 372 F. Supp. at 377, a political issue to
be resolved by the State. The District Court itself created
multi-member districting in North Dakota, and it might be said to
be disingenuous to suggest that the judicial creation became a
political question simply by the passage of nine years. The
District Court's treatment of this issue directly conflicts with
its prior opinion in this case, where it allowed continuation of
the multi-member districts first established in the
Paulson decision in 1965 only as an interim remedy. 372 F.
Supp. at 367. The court there noted that, in the largest
multi-member district, a voter would be asked to evaluate the
qualifications of at least 30 candidates for the state
Page 420 U. S. 20
legislature, a "most formidable" task.
Id. at 366.
Taking note of
Connor v. Johnson, the court held in 1972
that it would be improper to permit multi-member districts to
remain permanently, and allowed continued use only for the
impending election because of the great confusion that otherwise
would result. The court appears now to have abandoned that
position, with no suggestion of reasons for the abrupt change. It
is especially anomalous that the court would continue with the
multi-member districting plan when the Special Master who initially
proposed it has disavowed use of permanent multi-member districts.
Dobson, Reapportionment Problems, 48 N.D.L.Rev. 281, 289
(1972).
In contrast, the dissent in the District Court suggests a wide
range of attributes of single member districts. 372 F. Supp. at
391. One advantage is obvious: confusion engendered by multiple
offices will be removed. Other advantages perhaps are more
speculative: single member districts may prevent domination of an
entire slate by a narrow majority, may ease direct communication
with one's senator, may reduce campaign costs, and may avoid bloc
voting. Of course, these are general virtues of single member
districts, and there is no guarantee that any particular feature
will be found in a specific plan. Neither the District Court
majority nor appellee, however, has provided us with any suggestion
of a legitimate state interest supporting the abandonment of the
general preference for single member districts in court-ordered
plans which we recognized in
Connor v. Johnson. [
Footnote 14] The fact that no
allegation of minority group discrimination is raised by appellants
here does not make
Connor inapplicable.
Page 420 U. S. 21
It is true that, in 1973, the voters of North Dakota voted down
a proposed constitutional amendment which would have reestablished
the State's tradition of single-member senatorial districts. At the
same time, the voters also rejected by referendum the Legislative
Assembly's 1973 Act which would have continued the multi-member
format for five districts. We are unable to infer from these
simultaneous actions of the electorate any particular attitude
toward multi-member districts. It simply appears that North
Dakota's voters have not been satisfied with any reapportionment
proposal, and that they are frustrated by the years of confusion
since the obviously impermissible apportionment provisions of the
State's Constitution were invalidated.
We are confident that the District Court, with perhaps the aid
of its Special Masters, will be able to reinstitute the use of
single member districts while also attaining the necessary goal of
substantial population equality. Special Master Ostenson had
indicated that it "
would not be terribly difficult to adopt
single member districts.'" See 372 F. Supp. at 392.
[Footnote 15] Unless the
District Court can articulate such a "singular combination of
unique factors" as was found to exist in Mahan v. Howell,
410 U.S. at 410 U. S. 333,
or unless the 1975 Legislative Assembly appropriately acts, the
court should proceed expeditiously to reinstate single member
senatorial districts in North Dakota.
VI
The Population Variance
The second aspect of the court-ordered reapportionment plan that
is challenged by the appellants is the population divergence in the
various senatorial districts. Since the population of the State
under the 1970 census
Page 420 U. S. 22
was 617,761, and the number of senators provided for by the
court's plan was 51, each senatorial district would contain 12,112
persons if population equality were achieved. In fact, however, one
district under the plan has 13,176 persons, and thus is
underrepresented by 8.71%, while another district has 10,728
persons, and is overrepresented by 11.43%. The total variance
between the largest and smallest districts consequently is 20.14%,
and the ratio of the population of the largest to the smallest is
1.23 to 1.
Reynolds v. Sims, supra, established that both houses
of a state legislature must be apportioned so that districts are
"as nearly of equal population as is practicable." 377 U.S. at
377 U.S. 577. While
"[m]athematical exactness or precision" is not required, there must
be substantial compliance with the goal of population equality.
Ibid. Reynolds v. Sims, of course, involved gross
population disparity among districts.
Since
Reynolds, we have had the opportunity to observe
attempts in many state legislative reapportionment plans to achieve
the goal of population equality. Although each case must be
evaluated on its own facts, and a particular population deviation
from the ideal may be permissible in some cases but not in others,
Swann v. Adams, 385 U. S. 440,
385 U. S. 445
(1967), certain guidelines have been developed for determining
compliance with the basic goal of one person, one vote. In
Swann, we held that a variance of 25.65% in one house and
33.55% in the other was impermissible absent "a satisfactory
explanation grounded on acceptable state policy."
Id. at
385 U. S. 444.
See also Kilgarlin v. Hill, 386 U.S. at
386 U. S.
123-124. In
Swann, no justification of the
divergences had been attempted. Possible justifications, each
requiring adequate proof, were suggested by the Court. Among these
were
"such state policy considerations as the integrity
Page 420 U. S. 23
of political subdivisions, the maintenance of compactness and
contiguity in legislative districts or the recognition of natural
or historical boundary lines."
385 U.S. at
385 U. S. 444.
See also Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. at
377 U.S. 578-581.
On the other hand, we have acknowledged that some leeway in the
equal population requirement should be afforded States in devising
their legislative reapportionment plans. As contrasted with
congressional districting, where population equality appears now to
be the preeminent, if not the sole, criterion on which to adjudge
constitutionality,
Wesberry v. Sanders, 376 U. S.
1 (1964);
Kirkpatrick v. Preisler, 394 U.
S. 526 (1969);
Wells v. Rockefeller,
394 U. S. 542
(1969);
White v. Weiser, 412 U. S. 783
(1973), when state legislative districts are at issue we have held
that minor population deviations do not establish a
prima
facie constitutional violation. For example, in
Gaffney v.
Cummings, 412 U. S. 735
(1973), we permitted a deviation of 7.83% with no showing of
invidious discrimination. In
White v. Regester, supra, a
variation of 9.9% was likewise permitted.
The treatment of the reapportionment plan in
Mahan v.
Howell, supra, is illustrative of our approach in this area.
There, the Virginia Legislature had fashioned a plan providing a
total population variance of 16.4% among house districts. This
disparity was of sufficient magnitude to require an analysis of the
state policies asserted in justification. We found that the
deviations from the average were caused by the attempt of the
legislature to fulfill the rational state policy of refraining from
splitting political subdivisions between house districts, and we
accepted the policy as legitimate notwithstanding the fact that
subdivision splits were permitted in senatorial districts. Since
the population divergences
Page 420 U. S. 24
in the Virginia plan were "based on legitimate considerations
incident to the effectuation of a rational state policy,"
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. at
377 U.S. 579, we held that the plan met
constitutional standards.
It is to be observed that this measure of acceptable deviation
from population equality has been developed in cases that concerned
apportionment plans enacted by state legislatures. In the present
North Dakota case, however, the 20% variance is in the plan
formulated by the federal court. We believe that a population
deviation of that magnitude in a court-ordered plan is
constitutionally impermissible in the absence of significant state
policies or other acceptable considerations that require adoption
of a plan with so great a variance. The burden is on the District
Court to elucidate the reasons necessitating any departure from the
goal of population equality, and to articulate clearly the
relationship between the variance and the state policy
furthered.
The basis for the District Court's allowance of the 20 variance
is claimed to lie in the absence of "electorally victimized
minorities," in the fact that North Dakota is sparsely populated,
in the division of the State caused by the Missouri River, and in
the goal of observing geographical boundaries and existing
political subdivisions. We find none of these factors persuasive
here, and none of them has been explicitly shown to necessitate the
substantial population deviation embraced by the plan.
First, a variance of this degree cannot be justified simply
because there is no particular racial or political group whose
voting power is minimized or canceled. All citizens are affected
when an apportionment plan provides disproportionate voting
strength, and citizens in districts that are underrepresented lose
something even if they do not belong to a specific minority
group.
Second, sparse population is not a legitimate basis for a
departure from the goal of equality. A State with a
Page 420 U. S. 25
sparse population may face problems different from those faced
by one with a concentrated population, but that, without more, does
not permit a substantial deviation from the average. Indeed, in a
State with a small population, each individual vote may be more
important to the result of an election than in a highly populated
State. Thus, particular emphasis should be placed on establishing
districts with as exact population equality as possible. The
District Court's bare statement that North Dakota's sparse
population permitted or perhaps caused the 20% deviation is
inadequate justification. [
Footnote 16]
Third, the suggestion that the division of the State caused by
the Missouri River and the asserted state policy of observing
existing geographical and political subdivision boundaries warrant
departure from population equality is also not persuasive. It is
far from apparent that North Dakota policy currently requires or
favors strict adherence to political lines. As the dissenting judge
in this case noted, appellee's counsel acknowledged that
reapportionment proposed by the Legislative Assembly broke county
lines, 372 F. Supp. at 393 n. 22, and the District Court indicated
as long as a decade ago that the legislature had abandoned the
strict policy.
Paulson v. Meier, 246 F. Supp. at 42-43.
Furthermore, a plan devised by Special Master Ostenson demonstrates
that neither the Missouri River nor the policy of maintaining
township lines prevents attaining a significantly lower population
variance. [
Footnote 17] We
do not imply that the
Page 420 U. S. 26
Ostenson.plan should be adopted by the District Court, or that
its 5.95% population variance necessarily would be permissible in a
court-ordered plan. What we intend by our reference to the Ostenson
plan is to show that the factors cited by the District Court cannot
be viewed as controlling and persuasive when other, less
statistically offensive, plans already devised are feasible.
[
Footnote 18] The District
Court has provided no rationale for its rejection of the Ostenson
plan.
Examination of the asserted justifications of the court-ordered
plan thus plainly demonstrates that it fails to meet the standards
established for evaluating variances in plans formulated by State
legislatures or other state bodies. The plan, hence, would fail
even under the criteria enunciated in
Mahan v. Howell and
Swann v. Adams. A court-ordered plan, however, must be
held to higher standards than a State's own plan. With a court
plan, any deviation from approximate population equality must be
supported by enunciation of historically significant state policy
or unique features. We have felt it necessary in this case to
clarify the greater responsibility of the District Court, when
devising its own reapportionment plan, because of the severe
problems occasioned for the citizens of North Dakota during the
several years of redistricting confusion.
VII
We hold today that, unless there are persuasive justifications,
a court-ordered reapportionment plan of a state
Page 420 U. S. 27
legislature must avoid use of multi-member districts, and, as
well, must ordinarily achieve the goal of population equality with
little more than
de minimis variation. [
Footnote 19] Where important and
significant state considerations rationally mandate departure from
these standards, it is the reapportioning court's responsibility to
articulate precisely why a plan of single member districts with
minimal population variance cannot be adopted.
We say once again what has been said on many occasions:
reapportionment is primarily the duty and responsibility of the
State through its legislature or other body, rather than of a
federal court.
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. at
377 U.S. 586;
Maryland Committee v.
Tawes, 377 U.S. at
377 U. S. 676.
It is to be hoped that the 1975 North Dakota Legislative Assembly
will perform that duty and enact a constitutionally acceptable
plan. If it fails in that task, the responsibility falls on the
District Court, and it should proceed with dispatch to resolve this
seemingly interminable problem.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed, and the case is
remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Prior to the 1960 amendment, § 29 read:
"The legislative assembly shall fix the number of senators, and
divide the state into as many senatorial districts as there are
senators, which districts, as nearly as may be, shall be equal to
each other in the number of inhabitants entitled to representation.
Each district shall be entitled to one senator and no more, and
shall be composed of compact and contiguous territory; and no
portion of any county shall be attached to any other county, or
part thereof, so as to form a district. The districts as thus
ascertained and determined shall continue until changed by
law."
[
Footnote 2]
Section 35 reads in full as follows:
"Each senatorial district shall be represented in the House of
Representatives by at least one representative except that any
senatorial district comprised of more than one county shall be
represented in the House of Representatives by at least as many
representatives as there are counties in such senatorial district.
In addition the Legislative Assembly shall, at the first regular
session after each federal decennial census, proceed to apportion
the balance of the members of the House of Representatives to be
elected from the several senatorial districts, within the limits
prescribed by this Constitution, according to the population of the
several senatorial districts. If any Legislative Assembly whose
duty it is to make in apportionment shall fail to make the same as
herein provided it shall be the duty of the chief justice of the
supreme court, attorney general, secretary of state, and the
majority and minority leaders of the House of Representatives
within ninety days after the adjournment of the legislature to make
such apportionment and when so made a proclamation shall be issued
by the chief justice announcing such apportionment which shall have
the same force and effect as though made by the Legislative
Assembly."
Prior to the 1960 amendment, § 35 called for the
Legislative Assembly (seemingly at least every 10 years) "to fix by
law" the number of senators and the number of representatives
"within the limits prescribed by this constitution" and to
"proceed to reapportion the state into senatorial districts as
prescribed by this constitution, and to fix the number of members
of the house of representatives to be elected from the several
senatorial districts,"
with the proviso that at any regular session "the legislative
assembly may . . . redistrict the state into senatorial districts,
and apportion the senators and representatives respectively."
[
Footnote 3]
This feature was later described as "a radical departure from
state precedent."
Chapman v. Meier, 372 F.
Supp. 371, 382 (ND 1974) (dissenting opinion).
[
Footnote 4]
Cf. Minnesota State Senate v. Beens, 406 U.
S. 187 (1972).
[
Footnote 5]
The Governor's principal objection, as announced in his veto
message, was the failure of the Legislative Assembly to eliminate
the multimember senatorial districts. Return to and Compliance with
Order, filed March 30, 1973.
[
Footnote 6]
28 U.S.C. § 1253:
"Except as otherwise provided by law, any party may appeal to
the Supreme Court from an order granting or denying, after notice
and hearing, an interlocutory or permanent injunction in any civil
action, suit or proceeding required by any Act of Congress to be
heard and determined by a district court of three judges."
[
Footnote 7]
28 U.S.C. § 2281:
"An interlocutory or permanent injunction restraining the
enforcement, operation or execution of any State statute by
restraining the action of any officer of such State in the
enforcement or execution of such statute . . . shall not be granted
by any district court or judge thereof upon the ground of the
unconstitutionality of such statute unless the application thereof
is heard and determined by a district court of three judges under
section 2284 of this title."
[
Footnote 8]
Indeed, at oral argument, the appellants did not oppose the
allocation of two house members to each senatorial district. Tr. of
Oral Arg. 117.
[
Footnote 9]
Cf., however,
Fortson v. Dorsey, 379 U.
S. 433,
379 U. S. 438
(1965), for the suggestion that the at-large representative serves
all residents in the subdistricts. Furthermore, while we mentioned
these potential weaknesses of multi-member districts in
Lucas
v. Colorado General Assembly, 377 U.S. at
377 U. S. 731
n. 21, we noted that we
"do not intimate that apportionment schemes which provide for
the at-large election of a number of legislators from a county, or
any political subdivision, are constitutionally defective. Rather,
we merely point out that there are certain aspects . . . that might
well make the adoption of such a scheme undesirable to many voters
residing in multi-member counties."
[
Footnote 10]
In
Whitcomb v. Chavis, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
158-159, we acknowledged that
"[c]riticism [of multi-member districts] is rooted in their
winner-take-all aspects, their tendency to submerge minorities and
to overrepresent the winning party as compared with the party's
state-wide electoral position, a general preference for
legislatures reflecting community interests as closely as possible
and disenchantment with political parties and elections as devices
to settle policy differences between contending interests."
Such criticism did not amount to a showing that the use of
multi-member districts was "inherently invidious" or violative of
the Fourteenth Amendment.
Id. at 160.
[
Footnote 11]
These factors have been criticized as not being particularly
helpful.
See Carpeneti, Legislative Apportionment:
Multi-member Districts and Fair Representation, 120 U.Pa.L.Rev.
666, 69695 (1972).
[
Footnote 12]
In
Mahan v. Howell, 410 U.S. at
410 U. S. 333,
we stated that the District Court
"was confronted with plausible evidence of substantial
malapportionment with respect to military personnel, the mandate of
this Court that voting discrimination against military personnel is
constitutionally impermissible,
Davis v.
Mann, [
377 U.S.
678,]
377 U. S. 691-692 [(1964)],
and the fear that too much delay would have seriously disrupted the
fall, 1971, elections. Facing as it did this singular combination
of unique factors, we cannot say that the District Court abused its
discretion in fashioning the interim remedy of combining the three
districts into one multi-member district."
North Dakota, too, has its military personnel apportionment
problem with respect to the bases near Grand Forks and Minot. The
appellants recognize the existence of that problem, and acknowledge
that, conceivably, it could result in some type of multi-member
districting. Tr. of Oral Arg. 10.
[
Footnote 13]
The only minority group of significant size in North Dakota is
Indians, and the court-ordered reapportionment plan affects them no
differently from any other group.
[
Footnote 14]
For an example of a conceivable rationale supporting
multi-member districts,
see Carpeneti,
supra,
n 11, at 695-696, where it
is suggested that multi-member districts may insure that certain
interests such as city- or region-wide views are represented.
[
Footnote 15]
See also the views of the late Special Master Smith,
372 F. Supp. at 392.
[
Footnote 16]
As early as
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.
S. 533 (1964), the Court indicated that suggestions that
population deviation was necessary
"to insure effective representation for sparsely settled areas
and to prevent legislative districts from becoming so large
[geographically] that the availability of access of citizens to
their representatives is impaired"
were unconvincing.
Id. at
377 U.S. 580.
[
Footnote 17]
See Appendix B to memorandum opinion and order of June
30, 1972, by Judges Bright and Van Sickle (the Ostenson plan), App.
12-22. The Ostenson plan would allow a total population deviation
of only 5.95%.
[
Footnote 18]
Another plan appearing to be more acceptable with respect to
population variance than that adopted by the District Court is the
one suggested by the State's Special Committee on Reapportionment,
referred to in Judge Bright's dissenting opinion, 372 F. Supp. at
394 n. 23.
[
Footnote 19]
This is not to say, however, that court-ordered reapportionment
of a state legislature must attain the mathematical preciseness
required for congressional redistricting under
Wesberry v.
Sanders, 376 U. S. 1 (1964);
Kirkpatrick v. Preisler, 394 U. S. 526
(1969);
Wells v. Rockefeller, 394 U.
S. 542 (1969); and
White v. Weiser,
412 U. S. 783
(1973).