Euwema v. Todman

323 F. Supp. 167, 8 V.I. 224
CourtDistrict Court, Virgin Islands
DecidedMarch 3, 1971
DocketCivil No. 410-1970
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 323 F. Supp. 167 (Euwema v. Todman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Euwema v. Todman, 323 F. Supp. 167, 8 V.I. 224 (vid 1971).

Opinion

CHRISTIAN, Chief Judge

[227]*227OPINION

The question here presented is not whether as a matter of policy or justice the franchise should be extended to persons eighteen years of age or older. Nor is it, properly stated, whether a blank ballot should be tallied as an affirmative or a negative vote on a given proposition. Precisely at issue is whether under Act No. 2845 of the Eighth Legislature of the Virgin Islands, “An Act to Authorize a Voting Age Referendum at the Time of the 1970 General Election”, the voting age question submitted to the electorate is to be deemed part and parcel of the general elections held on November 3, 1970, or a separate and special election held on the same date.

The basic qualifications for electors in the Virgin Islands are laid down in the Revised Organic Act of the Virgin Islands which in part here pertinent reads:

The franchise shall be vested in residents of the Virgin Islands who are citizens of the United States, twenty-one years of age or over.1

Recognizing the current clamor of those citizens between the ages of eighteen and twenty-one in protest of their disenfranchisement which they claim to be unlawful, unjust and without reasonable basis, and perhaps in acknowledgment of the justice of the cause of this substantial body of youthful citizens, the Congress, with the approval of the President, opened the way for the lowering of the voting-age in the Virgin Islands by amending the Revised Organic Act to provide,

Section 4 of the Revised Organic Act of the Virgin Islands (68 Stat. 497) is amended (1) by inserting “(a)” immediately after “Sec. 4.”; and (2) by adding at the end thereof the following new subsection:
“(b) The legislature shall have authority to enact legislation establishing the voting age for residents of the Virgin Islands at an [228]*228age not lower than eighteen years of age, if a majority of the qualified voters in the Virgin Islands approve in a referendum election held for that purpose.”2

It was to implement this Congressional grant of authority that Act No. 2845, mentioned above, was duly enacted into, law. In its operative sections, the Act reads:

Be it enacted by the Legislature of the Virgin Islands:

SECTION 1. At the general election in the year 1970, there shall be submitted to a referendum election questions to determine the will of the qualified electors of the Virgin Islands with respect to lowering the voting age. The questions shall be in the following form:
1. I am in favor of lowering the Mark one square only voting age in the Virgin Islands to:
Age 18 □
Age 19 □
Age 20 □
2. I am opposed to lowering the voting age in the Virgin Islands □

The questions shall be printed on separate official ballot by the Supervisor of Elections with appropriate instructions. A sufficient number of ballots shall be furnished to each board of elections. Ballots shall be printed in English with a Spanish translation of the English immediately following.

SECTION 3. The votes cast on the question shall be counted by the election officers and returns thereof made by them. This referendum election shall be governed by the Election Laws of the Virgin Islands, except as otherwise provided by this Act, and all penalties provided by said laws shall apply to this election.

SECTION 4. If at the general election in the year 1970, á majority of the electors voting at said election vote in favor of lowering the voting age, the Legislature of the Virgin Islands shall adopt legislation to amend the Election Laws of the Virgin Islands accordingly.

[229]*229The referendum was held at the general election on November 3, 1970. The results thereof, as certified by the Supervisor of Elections, reflect that of a total Virgin Islands electorate of 19,756, those voting at the general election numbered 16,122. Of those voting, 7,469 voted to lower the voting age to 18, 726 opted for age 19, 2,063 for age 20, and 3,158 were opposed to lowering the voting age. Blank ballots were deposited in the various ballot boxes by 2,575 electors and 131 spoiled theirs. On the foregoing results, this Court is called upon to determine which of the several questions put to the voters carried the day.

The language of the amendment to Sec. 4 of the Organic Act leaves no room for doubt or controversy. The grant of authority to the Legislature was to establish the minimum voting age “at an age” (emphasis supplied) approved by “. . . a majority of the qualified voters in the Virgin Islands ... in a referendum election held for that purpose” (emphasis supplied). Clearly, the Congress contemplated, and provided for, a special election in which that issue was to be decided. The vexing problem, with attendant confusion, is spawned by Sec. 4 of the Act of the Virgin Islands Legislature, for that section, in equally unequivocal terms, firmly wedded the special election authorized by the Congress to the 1970 general elections.

Despite one or two holdings to the contrary, it is settled law that a

. . . proposition must receive the majority or other required proportion of all the votes cast at the election, where the Constitution or Statute requires ratification by a majority of the electors of the State or provides for ratification “whenever a majority of the electors voting at a general election shall so determine” ... or, generally, where the requirement is that the proposition submitted at a general election must receive in its favor a majority or other proportion of the votes of the electors voting at such election, or a majority or other proportion of all the votes cast at the election. In other ■ words, the proposition is not carried by a [230]*230majority of the votes cast therefor unless such majority is also a majority of all votes cast at the election.3

Thus measured, the certified returns make clear that none of the three ages below twenty-one received “a majority of the electors voting” at the general election of November 3, 1970. But the general rule stated here has application only where the “Constitution or Statute” requires that the proposition be submitted at a general election.

The broad grant of legislative power given to this territory in its Organic Act is hedged with the restriction that it may pass no law which shall be “. . . inconsistent with this Act or the laws of the United States made applicable to the Virgin Islands .. . .”4 Designedly or unwittingly, this is exactly what Act No. 2845 purports to do. In either event, Sec. 4 of the Virgin Islands statute must give way. I hold, therefore, that in so far as that section of the act of the territorial legislature links the voting age referendum to the 1970 general election and makes the outcome of that referendum dependent on the votes of “. . . a majority of the electors voting at said election”, that section is a nullity.

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323 F. Supp. 167, 8 V.I. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/euwema-v-todman-vid-1971.