Butler v. Democratic State Committee

160 S.W.2d 494, 204 Ark. 14, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 6, 1942
Docket4-6782
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 160 S.W.2d 494 (Butler v. Democratic State Committee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butler v. Democratic State Committee, 160 S.W.2d 494, 204 Ark. 14, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 1 (Ark. 1942).

Opinions

Smith, J.

At the general election held in 1936, Amendment to the Constitution, now bearing the number 23, was adopted. It reads as follows:

“Section 1. A Board to be known as ‘The Board of Apportionment,’ consisting of the Governor (who shall be chairman), the Secretary of State and the Attorney General, is hereby created, and it shall be its imperative duty to make apportionment of representatives and senators in accordance with the provisions hereof; the action of a majority in each instance shall be deemed the action of said Board.
“Section 2. The House of Representatives shall consist of one hundred members and each county existing at the time of any apportionment shall have at least one representative; the remaining members shall be equally distributed (as nearly as practicable) among the more populous counties of the staté, in accordance with. a ratio to b,e determined by the population of said counties as shown by the federal census next preceding any apportionment hereunder.
“Section 3. The Senate shall consist of thirty-five members. Senatorial districts shall at all times consist of contiguous territory, and no county shall be divided in the formation of such districts. ‘The Board of Apportionment’ hereby created shall, from time to time, divide the state into convenient senatorial districts in such manner as that the Senate shall be based upon the inhabitants of the state, each senator representing, as nearly as practicable, an equal number thereof; each district shall have at least one senator.
“Section 4. The Board shall make the first apportionment hereunder within ninety days from January 1, 1937; thereafter, on or before February 1 immediately following each federal census, said Board shall reapportion the state for both representatives and senators, and in each instance said Board shall file its report with the Secretary of State, setting forth: (a) the basis of population adopted for representatives; (b) the basis for senators; (c) the number of representatives assigned to each county; (d) the counties comprising each senatorial district and the number of senators assigned to each, whereupon, after thirty days from such filing date, the apportionment thus made shall become effective unless proceedings for revision be instituted in the Supreme Court within said period.
“ Section 5. Original jurisdiction (to be exercised on application of any citizen and taxpayer) is hereby vested in the Supreme Court of the state: (a) to compel by mandamus or otherwise the Board to perform its duties as here directed, and (b) to revise any arbitrary action of or abuse of discretion by the Board in making any such apportionment; provided, any such application for revision shall be filed with said court within thirty days after the filing of the report of apportionment by said Board with the Secretary of State; if revised by the court, a certified copy of its judgment shall be by the clerk thereof forthwith transmitted to the Secretary of State, and thereupon be and become a substitute for the apportionment made by the Board.
“ Section 6. At the next general election for state and county officers ensuing after any such apportionment, senators and representatives shall be elected in accordance therewith and their respective terms of office shall begin on January 1 next following. At the first regular session succeeding any apportionment so made, the Senate shall be divided into two classes by lot, eighteen of whom shall serve for a period of two years and the remaining seventeen for four years, after which all shall be elected for four years until the next reapportionment hereunder.”'

Appellant, Butler, filed in the Pulaski circuit court a suit against the members of the Democratic State Committee in their collective capacity, which, reads as follows:

“Petition for a Writ of Mandamus.
“The petitioner respectfully shows to the court that he is a member of the Democratic Party in the state of Arkansas and is a qualified elector of St. Francis county.
“On March 30, 1937, the Board of Apportionment of the state of Arkansas submitted its report to the Secretary of State in compliance with the requirements of Amendment No. 23 to the Constitution of Arkansas, a certified copy of which report is attached hereto as a part hereof.
“On January 4, 1941, the federal bureau of the census promulgated the final population figures of the 1940 census in Arkansas by counties’.
“On January 21, 1941, the Board of Apportionment submitted its report to the Secretary of State in compliance with Amendment No. 23 based on the census of 1940, a certified copy of which is attached hereto as a part hereof.
“The petitioner is an elector in senatorial district No. 33 as described in the report of the Board of Apportionment of January 21, 1941.
“W. L. Ward was duly elected senator from the senatorial district composed of St. Francis and Lee counties at the general election held in November, 1940, and the defendants-claim that he will be a member of the Senate in 1943 by virtue of such election.
“The first general election for state and county officers following the new apportionment will be held in November of this year. The Democratic Party will hold a primary election on the 28th day of July, 1942, to select party candidates to run in such general election. The petitioner proposes to run in the primary election as a candidate for the office of state senator, and to this end he tendered his party loyalty pledge to the Democratic State Committee in compliance with § 37 of the rules of the party. The committee wrongfully rejected liis pledge and refused to permit Mm to file it. The petitioner is without remedy except by mandamus.
“Wherefore the petitioner prays for a writ of mandamus directed to the Democratic State Committee commanding it to accept and file his party loyalty pledge as the rules of the Democratic Party require.”

The relief prayed was denied, from which order and judgment is this appeal.

This suit is predicated upon the assumption and allegation that the Board of Apportionment, created by the amendment, performed the duties imposed upon it by the amendment, by making an apportionment of representation in both the House of Representatives and the Senate in 1937, but that the Board failed to discharge its duties in this behalf after the 1940 census had been taken.

An intervention has been filed by a citizen of Wood-ruff county, in which it was prayed that mandamus be granted compelling the Board of Apportionment to function and to perform the duties imposed upon it by the amendment by redistricting the state for senatorial representation.

Construction of the amendment is, of course, required to dispose of these contentions; and we proceed with its construction.

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Related

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826 S.W.2d 236 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1992)
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Opinion of the Justices
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 S.W.2d 494, 204 Ark. 14, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-democratic-state-committee-ark-1942.