Holloway v. Hechler

817 F. Supp. 617, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21307, 1992 WL 457500
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedSeptember 29, 1992
DocketCiv. A. 2:92-0081
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 817 F. Supp. 617 (Holloway v. Hechler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holloway v. Hechler, 817 F. Supp. 617, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21307, 1992 WL 457500 (S.D.W. Va. 1992).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

STAKER, District Judge.

In this action plaintiffs challenged the constitutionality of Senate Bill 1 (S.B. 1), and House Bill 4043 (H.B. 4043), which were respectively enacted by the Legislature of the State of West Virginia (Legislature) on December 3, 1991 and January 13, 1992, and reapportioned the electoral districts for the Senate and the House of Delegates (Delegate) seats of the Legislature, effective beginning with the elections to be had in the State in the year 1992.

This court has jurisdiction hereof pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331,1343(a)(3) and (4), 1367 and 2284. 1

*619 An order was entered by the court notifying the parties that on February 26, 1992, the court would hear all evidence and arguments any of them desired to offer regarding all issues pending herein. All of the parties appeared by counsel thereat and the court there heard all of the evidence and arguments presented by them, following which, on February 26, 1992, the court entered its order in which, for the reasons therein set forth, the injunctive relief prayed for by the plaintiffs was denied and their complaint was dismissed insofar as it averred the uneonsti-tutionality of S.B. 1.

However, as stated in that order, the court then declined to rule upon the issue of the alleged unconstitutionality of H.B. 4043 pending the court’s further consideration thereof, which remains as the only issue to be decided herein.

The reapportionment act enacted next before the enactment of H.B. 4043, was known as “The House of Delegates Apportionment Act of 1982” (1982 Act), and was codified as West Virginia Code (Code), § 1-2-2. H.B. 4043, also codified as Code, § 1-2-2, amended and reenacted the 1982 Act, pursuant to Article 6, section 7, of the Constitution of West Virginia, which requires the State’s Delegate districts (hereinafter, “districts”) to be reapportioned following each decennial census of the United States. H.B. 4043 fixed at 100, as did the 1982 Act, the number of Delegates to be elected from the districts thereby apportioned among the State’s 55 counties. Article 6, section 4, of that Constitution provides that members of the House of Delegates shall be elected every two years.

The Complaint

Plaintiffs allege that they are all citizens, residents and registered voters in West Virginia, one of them respectively being such in each of Ohio, Cabell and Berkeley, two others in Kanawha, and the remaining three in Wood, Counties in West Virginia.

It is not disputed that the named defendants are joined as such in their respective official capacities, as indicated in the above style of this action.

The thirty-one page complaint alleges five causes of action in which plaintiffs assert H.B. 4043 to be unconstitutional pursuant to different provisions of the Constitution of the United States.

The first three causes are interrelated and allege that H.B. 4043 is in violation of the rights guaranteed plaintiffs by the provisions of section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, 2 which plaintiffs claim require that their votes, as well as those of all other citizens of the State, have an equal effect and worth in the electoral processes for the election of Delegates in future State elections. Those causes more specifically allege:

First Cause

This cause alleges, and defendants admit, that the most overpopulated Delegate district created by H.B. 4043 has a relative deviation of 4.97 per cent greater, and the most underpopulated one has a relative deviation of minus 5 per cent less, than the “ideal” populations of them, respectively. 3

It further alleges that the districts in which plaintiffs are registered to vote, as created by H.B. 4043, were respectively de *620 signed by the Legislature to be either unconstitutionally overpopulated or underpopulated vis-a-vis the populations in them respectively and the populations in other districts created thereby, and in the State as a whole, which will cause votes cast by plaintiffs for the elections of Delegates to be diluted, and of unequal effectiveness and worth, as compared with those cast therefor by other voters in the State.

And it alleges that H.B. 4043 unconstitutionally creates two so-called “proviso” districts, both of which are advantageous to incumbent Delegates therein. The specifics of this allegation are more fully stated and discussed below.

Second cause

This cause in substance incorporates the same allegations as those made in the first and third ones, but in addition thereto, it alleges that in enacting H.B. 4043, the Democratic leadership in the Legislature used mul-ti-member districts to maintain their power by fragmenting portions of adjacent counties which were sufficiently large to elect candidates of their choice in single-member districts for the purpose of minimizing the voting strength in those districts.

Third Cause

Here plaintiffs allege that H.B. 4043 apportions 100 Delegate seats among 23 multi-member districts and 33 single-member districts for the purpose of maximizing Democratic, and minimizing Republican, political and electoral strength, which result would have been avoided had H.B. 4043 redistricted the State into 100 single-member districts, and that its enactment constitutes invidious, partisan gerrymandering to discriminate against Republican voters, including the plaintiffs, by diluting, minimizing and canceling out their voting and political strength and that of other Republican voters in given districts as well as in the State as a whole.

Except in the particulars above noted, the defendants’ answers substantially deny the allegations in plaintiffs’ causes.

The Evidence

Aside from maps and related documentary evidence showing the districts created by H.B. 4043, etc., plaintiffs’ evidence consisted of the testimony of seven witnesses, the substance of which was as follows:

John Morgan — a “political demographer”:

The counties in the southern part of the state in which H.B. 4043 created districts containing population less than the “ideal” had lost, and those in the Eastern Panhandle thereof in which it created districts containing population exceeding the “ideal” had gained, population since the 1980 census. He opined, but conceded that he did so with no assurance, that such trend would continue during the 1990’s and that should the 26 incumbent Republican Delegates now serving in the Legislature stand for election in 1992, one-third to one-fourth of them would be replaced by Democrats in consequence of the redistrieting effected by H.B. 4043.

Chris Larsin — Director of Redistrieting Analysis for the Republican National Committee:

The Legislature could have devised, in lieu of H.B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
817 F. Supp. 617, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21307, 1992 WL 457500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holloway-v-hechler-wvsd-1992.