Evers v. State Board of Election Commissioners

327 F. Supp. 640, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13568
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedApril 27, 1971
DocketCiv. A. 4805
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 327 F. Supp. 640 (Evers v. State Board of Election Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evers v. State Board of Election Commissioners, 327 F. Supp. 640, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13568 (S.D. Miss. 1971).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Plaintiffs bring the present class action suit for declaratory and injunctive relief against the enforcement of newly enacted legislation to alter and amend Mississippi laws governing the qualification of candidates for elective office, the conduct of political campaigns and other procedures for holding elections. The laws enacted are claimed to be violative of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (42 U.S.C.A. § 1973c), Article I, Sections 2 and 4; Article II, Section 1, and the First, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. Two applicants have moved the Court for leave to intervene to assert additional objections based upon Article 1, Section 3 and the Seventeenth Amendment to the Constitution and 2 U.S.C.A. Sections 1 and 7.

Mississippi is an “off-year” election state which has historically held its general elections for all offices from Constable in each county beat to Governor, during the summer and fall of the year preceding Presidential election years. The deadlines for qualification by candidates under existing Mississippi election law procedures fall in the early part of June, 1971, hence we have expedited the hearing and disposition of this cause.

If we were free to perform our judicial duties according to our ability and agreeably to our understanding of the Constitution of the United States we would, to a man, concur with Mr. Justice Black’s views that Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 is clearly unconstitutional. *641 1 This Section 5 imposes a prior restraint upon certain of the sovereign States by enjoining the enforcement of statutes they may enact until they can convince federal judges of a district foreign to their soil that these presumptively valid acts of their duly elected legislature pass Constitutional muster, or until their chief legal officer has submitted such statutes to a political appointee of the Executive Department of the central government for his review and tacit approval. Unfortunately the Constitutional principle created, which ostensibly extends only to States of the former Confederacy in voting matters, will endure to haunt all of the union whenever the cause of the moment — be it water rights in California or pollution in New York — finds disfavor with majority national opinion. 2

In the case at bar, the application of the vicious “conquered province” theory embodied in this section is uniquely opprobrious because the State of Mississippi’s humiliation in bringing its laws to Washington for bureaucratic approval has been met with an obtuse, patronizing failure by the federal government official to discharge the duties Congress placed upon him. The unhappy result is that additional coals of discord are heaped upon the head of an already strained federalism.

However, as members of an inferior court, we are bound to follow the precedent set by the majority of the Supreme Court and to apply Section 5 to the same extent as if we considered it to have pristine authority.

In Perkins v. Matthews, 400 U.S. 379, 91 S.Ct. 431, 27 L.Ed.2d 476 (1971), the Supreme Court instructed a three-judge court considering a challenge to changes in locations of polling places and other elementary mechanics of a county election to limit its function first to a determination of whether the particular State requirements presented to it are covered by Section 5, then second, if covered, to a finding of whether the requirements have been “subjected to the required federal scrutiny.” See also Allen v. State Board of Elections, 393 U.S. 544, 89 S.Ct. 817, 22 L.Ed.2d 1 (1969).

*642 Obviously, if an ordinance moving the location of a voting box from Mrs. Jones’s front porch to Brown’s grocery is presumptively void until a Washington, D. C. court or official scrutinizes it, then the statewide enactments changing the basic manner in which political elections are to be held which are challenged here, are covered by the act. Certainly the State thought so, for it submitted its two laws in question for such examination by the Attorney General of the United States.

The second question then confronts us —have these enactments been “subjected to the required federal scrutiny”? Since they have never been considered by the District Court of the District of Columbia, the question is whether the Attorney General of the United States has given them the examination demanded by the act.

Set into the context of the present dispute, the rule of Section 5 may be paraphrased as follows. When the State of Mississippi shall enact a voting procedure different from the procedures in effect in 1964, the State shall not give effect to the law unless it shall institute an action in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia and receive a declaratory judgment from the court that such procedure does not have the purpose and will not have the effect of denying or abridging the right to vote on account of race. Provided, the new law may be put into effect without such court proceedings, if the law has been submitted to the Attorney General of the United States and he has not interposed an objection within 60 days after the law was submitted.

The issue which Section 5 requires be presented in a court declaratory judgment action is explicit — does the law have the purpose or effect of denying or abridging the right to vote on account of race? Although implicit, we hold that the duty imposed upon the Attorney General of the United States is the same. To make sense, Section 5 must be construed to contemplate that the Attorney General will make a determination of whether a covered change submitted to him has the purpose or effect of denying or abridging the right to vote on account of race. The Supreme Court precisely equated this judicial and executive responsibility in its decision in Perkins v. Matthews, supra, in these words: “What is foreclosed to such district court is what Congress expressly reserved for consideration by the District Court of the District of Columbia or the Attorney General — the determination whether a covered change does or does not have the purpose or effect ‘of denying or abridging the right to vote on account of race or color.’ ”

The problem for Mississippi in the case at bar is that having done what Congress humbled her to do, she did not receive a letter of approval, or a disapproval or a mere failure to interpose an objection within the statutory time. Rather, she received a lengthy, Pilate-like response in which the Attorney General recognized he had the very duty we declare the statute imposed upon him, bemoaned Congress’s failure to accept his predecessor’s suggestion to leave the matter to the courts, declared that he was not prepared to make the determinations required by the act, but made no literal objection. The full text of that letter is as follows:

“This is in response to your submission of House Bills 362 and 363 (The “Open Primary” Law) which you submitted on July 28, 1970, to the Attorney General pursuant to Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

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Related

Beer v. United States
374 F. Supp. 363 (District of Columbia, 1974)
Harper v. Kleindienst
362 F. Supp. 742 (District of Columbia, 1973)
Graves v. Barnes
343 F. Supp. 704 (W.D. Texas, 1972)
Moore v. Leflore County Board of Election Commissioners
351 F. Supp. 848 (N.D. Mississippi, 1971)
Ferguson v. Williams
330 F. Supp. 1012 (N.D. Mississippi, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
327 F. Supp. 640, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evers-v-state-board-of-election-commissioners-mssd-1971.