Holmes v. Farmer

475 A.2d 976, 1984 R.I. LEXIS 489
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 10, 1984
Docket83-149-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 475 A.2d 976 (Holmes v. Farmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. Farmer, 475 A.2d 976, 1984 R.I. LEXIS 489 (R.I. 1984).

Opinions

OPINION

SHEA, Justice.

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs1 from a judgment of the Superior Court dismissing their complaint challenging the constitutionality of the legislation reapportioning "and redistricting the Rhode Island Legislature, specifically the House of Representatives.

The plaintiffs claimed that the reapportionment plans violated the Rhode Island Constitution’s requirement of compactness; that the plans violated the equal-protection clauses of the United States’ and Rhode Island’s Constitutions because of population inequality among the districts; that certain defendant legislators engaged in an unlawful civil conspiracy to deprive voters of their right to.equal protection; that the plans were gerrymandered to serve political purposes and to dilute the voting strength of women and various racial, ethnic, religious, and political groups; and that the plans violated the Rhode Island constitutional requirement of partial compliance with the municipal-representation apportionment formulae. The plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment, injunctive relief, and a court-ordered redistricting plan.

The case was originally consolidated with Licht v. Quattrocchi (No. 82-1494 R.I. Superior Court — a suit challenging the redistricting of the Senate), concerned with the validity of the Senate redistricting. The issues concerning the redistricting of the House of Representatives (House plan) were specifically severed. The trial court ruled that the Senate plan was unconstitutional, and this court upheld that judgment. Licht v. Quattrocchi, R.I., 449 A.2d 887 (1982).2 This appeal involves only the validity of the House plan.

[979]*979The claims against the individual House defendant legislators were dismissed prior to trial because of their immunity from civil suit. The plaintiffs made various other motions for summary judgment and dismissal, but the court declined to rule on these during trial.

Evidence described as highly technical by the trial justice was presented by experts throughout the three-week trial along with approximately forty exhibits. During trial plaintiffs called the consultant to the General Assembly’s Reapportionment Commission and various state legislators to testify concerning the formation of the House plan. The trial justice ruled this testimony inadmissible on the grounds of privilege and relevance.

On the basis of evidence presented, which the trial justice found credible, the following facts were found.

According to the 1980 census, the population of the State of Rhode Island was 947,-154; therefore, the ideal district population for each of the 100 House districts was 9,472.

The cities of Providence and Newport contained, under the 1974 House district-ing, districts or portions of districts that comprised population in numbers that exceeded the number of seats to which these cities would now be entitled if their populations were divided by the ideal district population. Between the 1970 and the 1980 censuses, Newport lost 15.3 percent of its population, the adjoining town of Middle-town lost 41.2 percent of its population, and the town of Jamestown grew 38.8 percent in population, all of which changes necessitated substantial alterations in district lines.

Prior to the 1982 Reapportionment Act, one House district, No. 45, was overrepresented by 64 percent and another district, No. 58, was underrepresented by 69 percent. In the House plan enacted, the total maximum deviation, which is the sum of the percentage deviations of the most underrepresented and the most overrepresented districts, is 11.5 percent, or 1,090 people. The major reason for this particular deviation is a population disparity in the plan between district 24, which is overrepresented by 5.827 percent, and district 25, which is underrepresented by 5.679 percent. This particular disparity, evidence established, resulted from a mathematical error in drawing the boundary lines between districts 24 and 25. Without this error, the total maximum deviation of the House plan, excluding the two districts, would be 5.4 percent, or 518 people. The average deviation overall in the House plan is 1.9 percent, or 180 people, and the median deviation in the plan is 2.1 percent, or 199 people. If one excludes districts 24 and 25, the formation of which, as we have said, resulted from a mathematical error, no district in the plan deviates more than 2.7 percent from the ideal. Forty-five of the districts have deviations of less than 2 percent, and nineteen of the districts in the plan have deviations of less than 1 percent.

Between the 1970 census and the 1980 census, the population of Rhode Island decreased by .3 percent, or 2,569 people. Also, 129,980 people shifted from district to district within the state between the time that the then-existing House district lines were created in 1974 and the time the 1980 census was conducted. When the General [980]*980Assembly was reapportioned in 1982, 76.8 percent of the population within the State carried over within the same districts.

The number of crossings of municipal boundaries involved in the House plan is seventy-four. The plaintiffs’ proposed reapportionment plan would have contained sixty-eight municipal boundary crossings.

The evidence established that there are twenty-five recognized neighborhoods within the city of Providence. Consequently, the division of Providence into eighteen representative districts or parts of districts necessitated a substantial number of crossings of neighborhood lines. The court also found that there are approximately twenty recognized neighborhoods within the city of Newport.

The court found that district 98 in the House plan enacted comprises the island of Jamestown and part of the city of Newport, which are contiguous on a shore-to-shore basis by virtue of the Newport Bridge.

The percentage of black population in the Providence districts remained substantially unchanged in the 1982 reapportionment. The districts in the 1982 House plan contain districts that range in black population from 9.62 percent to 44.47 percent. The court ruled that the evidence did not demonstrate minority-voter dilution but rather that the plan preserves the political strength of minorities in Providence and Newport. This ruling has not been appealed by plaintiffs.

The trial justice dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint and upheld the validity of the House reapportionment plan.

The plaintiffs raise five issues, three of which we deal with here:

1.Whether the trial justice correctly upheld the legislators’ and their aide’s invocation of the privilege contained in the speech in debate clause.
2. Whether the House plan violates the Rhode Island constitutional requirement that districts be as compact as possible.
3. Whether there is a violation of the federal and state equal-protection clause.

We need not deal with the issues of the relevancy of the excluded testimony, nor need we deal with the trial justice’s refusal to declare the reapportionment commission’s consultant an adverse witness because our ruling on the first issue is dispos-itive of those matters.

I

LEGISLATIVE PRIVILEGE

On numerous occasions during trial, plaintiffs attempted to introduce evidence from Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
475 A.2d 976, 1984 R.I. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-farmer-ri-1984.