An application for a stay, pending appeal, of the California
Supreme Court's judgment -- which held that a statewide referendum
petition had effectively suspended the operation of California
statutes redistricting congressional districts after the 1980
census, but that the June 8, 1962, primary election nonetheless
should be conducted in accordance with the districts established by
those statutes -- is denied. Even assuming that the California
Supreme Court wrongly interpreted the effect of pertinent federal
statute, that court's judgment appears to be based on adequate and
independent state grounds, and this Court has no jurisdiction to
review decisions based on such grounds.
JUSTICE REHNQUIST, Circuit Justice.
Applicants ask that I stay, pending their appeal therefrom, the
judgment of the Supreme Court of California entered on January 28,
1982, in mandate proceeding S.F. No. 24354. That proceeding
concerns certain redistricting statutes enacted by the California
Legislature in response to the 1980 decennial census, which
allotted California two additional congressional seats, the effect
upon such statutes of a petition calling for their review in a
statewide referendum, and the congressional districts to be used by
the State in the interim. The California Supreme Court held that
the referendum petition effectively suspended the operation of the
redistricting statutes, but that the June 8, 1982, primary election
nonetheless should be conducted in accordance with the district
boundaries set forth in those statutes.
Assembly of State
of
Page 455 U. S. 1302
California v. Deukmejian, 30 Cal. 3d
638, 639 P.2d 939 (1982).
Applicants argue that the June election should be conducted
according to district boundaries in effect prior to the 1980
census, with the two new seats to be filled by at-large elections.
They contend that the California Supreme Court erred when it held
that 2 U.S.C. § 2c, which requires that each Representative be
elected from a separate district, superseded 2 U.S.C. §
2a(c)(2), which requires that newly allotted seats be filled by
at-large elections if the State has not completed redistricting.
Applicants assert that this holding merits review by this Court,
and they present such arguments in a jurisdictional statement filed
simultaneously with this application.
Even if the applicants are correct in their contention that the
California Supreme Court wrongly interpreted the effect of §
2c -- a question on which I express no opinion -- I think it is
highly unlikely that this Court will give plenary consideration to
their appeal. In addition to construing provisions of the United
States Code, the decision of the California Supreme Court recites
several state law reasons for its holding that the boundaries of
the new redistricting scheme should be followed in the June
election.
* Thus, the
judgment appears to be based on adequate and independent state
grounds. Of course, this Court has no jurisdiction to review
decisions based on adequate, nonfederal grounds.
Zacchini v.
Scripps-Howard Broadcasting Co., 433 U.
S. 562,
433 U. S. 568
(1977);
Cramp v. Board of Public Instruction, 368 U.
S. 278,
368 U. S. 281
(1961). Accordingly, the application for a stay of the judgment is
denied, and the application for expedited oral argument is referred
to the full Court.
* It does not appear that a contrary holding on the federal
statutory question would alter the validity of the state grounds,
for 2 U.S.C. § 2a(c)(2), by its terms, applies only "[u]ntil a
State is redistricted
in the manner provided by the law
thereof." (Emphasis added.)