Ajamian v. Montgomery County

639 A.2d 157, 99 Md. App. 665, 1994 Md. App. LEXIS 55
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 4, 1994
Docket88, September Term, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 639 A.2d 157 (Ajamian v. Montgomery County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ajamian v. Montgomery County, 639 A.2d 157, 99 Md. App. 665, 1994 Md. App. LEXIS 55 (Md. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

MOTZ, Judge.

This case involves challenges by certain Montgomery County voters to the councilmanic redistricting plan that was enacted by the Montgomery County Council following the 1990 census and to the process and procedures employed in enacting this plan. After a bench trial, the Circuit Court for Montgomery County (Ferretti, J.) rejected all of these challenges. The voters appealed and, upon the parties’ joint motion, we agreed to expedite consideration of the appeal.

(i)

The Montgomery County Council is composed of nine members, five of whom are elected from councilmanic districts and four from the County at large. The County Charter requires that the councilmanic districts be “reestablished” every ten years. Montgomery County Charter art. 1, § 104. The Charter further provides that the “County shall be divided into five Councilmanic districts for the purpose of nominating and electing five members of the Council. Each district shall be compact in form and be composed of adjoining territory. Populations of the Councilmanic districts shall be substantially equal.” Id. art. 1, § 103. The following procedure is to be followed in formulating a new redistricting plan:

Whenever district boundaries are to be reestablished the Council shall appoint, not later than February 1 of the year prior to the year in which redistricting is to be effective, a commission on redistricting, composed of three members from each political party chosen from a list of five names *670 submitted by the central committee of each political party which polled at least fifteen percent of the total vote cast for all candidates for the Council in the last preceding regular election. The Council shall appoint one additional member of the Commission. The Commission shall, at its. first meeting, select one of its members to serve as chairman. No person who holds any elected office shall be eligible for appointment to the Commission.
By November 15 of the year prior to the year in which redistricting is to be effective, the Commission shall prepare a plan of Councilmanic districts and shall present that plan, together with a report explaining it, to the Council. Within thirty days after receiving the plan of the Commission, the Council shall hold a public hearing on the plan. If within ninety days following presentation of the Commission’s plan no other law reestablishing the boundaries of the Council-manic districts has been enacted, then the plan, as submitted, shall become law.

Id. art. 1, § 104.

In 1991, only the Democratic and Republican parties “polled at least fifteen percent of the total vote cast for all [Council] candidates” and so each of their central committees nominated five persons to serve on the Redistricting Commission; from these nominees, six persons were appointed to the Commission. The Council appointed Marie Garber, the former State Administrator of Elections, as the Commission’s seventh member. Ms. Garber was selected to serve as Chair of the Commission. On November 1, 1991, after holding numerous public meetings throughout the County, the Commission submitted to the County Council a redistricting plan and explanatory report, which had been approved by a majority of the Commission’s members. Two other plans, which had been prepared by the minority (Republican) members of the Commission, accompanied the majority-approved plan and report submitted to the Council.

On November 5, 1991, at a non-legislative Council meeting, Councilmember Isiah Leggett (then the President of the *671 County Council) announced his intention to propose an amendment to the Commission’s plan involving the County’s Darnestown precincts, i.e., precincts 6-1 and 6-5. At a special legislative session of the Council held two days later (on November 7, 1991), the Council’s two Republican members (Councilmembers Nancy Dacek and Betty Ann Krahnke, each of whom represents a particular pre-existing councilmanic district) introduced two bills, Nos. 56-91 and 57-91, embodying the plans favored by the minority members of the Redistricting Commission. On that same day, Councilmember William Hanna requested in a memorandum to a council attorney that Bill No. 56-91 be amended by eliminating everything after its title and substituting the boundaries of the Commission’s redistricting plan, except for an amendment moving precincts 9-22 and 9-23 from District II to District III. At this same November 7 meeting, Councilmember Leggett proposed that the Darnestown change, which he had described two days before, also be incorporated into a redistricting plan by amending “the bills [56-91 and 57-91] introduced today.”

On November 24, 1991, at least five of the Democratic members of the County Council attended a meeting called by the local Democratic Central Committee (DCC). The DCC invited all of its members and all Democratic elected officials in Montgomery County to this meeting. As was the general rule in all of its meetings, the DCC did not open this meeting to the public. A variety of topics were discussed at the meeting, including party financial issues and party organization; redistricting at the federal, state, and local levels was also discussed. Council President Leggett was asked to brief those at the meeting on the various councilmanic redistricting plans before the County Council. When this briefing was ended, there was discussion of how the plans met the objectives of the DCC, ie., creating an up-county district, keeping communities intact, and not dividing the County’s minority populations. Apart from the introductory briefing by Council President Leggett, there was no evidence that any member of the Council joined in this discussion. The DCC then voted to support adoption of the Commission plan. There was unre *672 butted testimony that the decision to vote on this issue was made spontaneously during the meeting and that the meeting had not been called for the purpose of informing councilmembers of the DCC’s views on redistricting or for the purpose of taking any vote on a redistricting plan. There was no evidence that any councilmember participated in the vote on the redistricting proposal.

On November 26, 1991 a public hearing was held on the Commission’s redistricting plan. Prior to the hearing, it was advertised in a local newspaper on several occasions. One notice published in advance of the public hearing stated:

[t]he Council will conduct a hearing on the proposed plan Report of the Commission on Redistricting, submitted under Section 104 of the County Charter, which recommends new boundaries for councilmanic districts. The Council by legislation may adopt boundaries different from those recommended by the Commission. Persons who wish to suggest modifications to the boundaries proposed by the Commission should do so at this hearing.

Another notice, also published in advance of the public hearing, stated:

Bills 56-91 and 57-91, Councilmanic Districts, propose new boundaries for the five councilmanic districts required under the County Charter. These bills are alternatives to the Plan offered by the Commission on Redistricting. The Council may consider other boundaries than those proposed in Bills 56-91 and 57-91.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Boitnott v. Mayor of Baltimore
738 A.2d 881 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
639 A.2d 157, 99 Md. App. 665, 1994 Md. App. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ajamian-v-montgomery-county-mdctspecapp-1994.