Page v. Bartels

248 F.3d 175, 2001 WL 417146
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 23, 2001
Docket01-1943
StatusUnknown
Cited by6 cases

This text of 248 F.3d 175 (Page v. Bartels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Page v. Bartels, 248 F.3d 175, 2001 WL 417146 (3d Cir. 2001).

Opinion

*180 OPINION OF THE COURT

BECKER, Chief Judge.

This appeal, considered on an extremely expedited basis, arises out of a challenge to New Jersey’s recently-adopted state legislative reapportionment plan. On April 11, 2001, the New Jersey Apportionment Commission, charged under the state constitution with the task of apportioning voters among the legislative districts following each decennial census, adopted a districting plan supported by the Commission’s five Democratic members as well as the Commission’s neutral “eleventh member.” The adoption of this plan came just before the April 19, 2001 filing deadline for candidates for the upcoming state legislative election. The primary election is (as of the time of this opinion) scheduled to occur on June 5, 2001, with the general election to follow in November.

On April 12, 2001, the day after the Apportionment Commission’s adoption of the districting plan, Plaintiffs (Appellants in the current appeal) filed a complaint in the District Court for the District of New Jersey, alleging that the Commission’s plan violated § 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution. We set forth the relevant text in the margin. 1 Named in the complaint as Plaintiffs are: (1) several African-American registered voters and residents of Essex County; (2) several Hispanic registered voters and residents of Essex or Hudson County; and (3) the Republican members of the New Jersey Senate and General Assembly. We have, and will hereinafter, refer to these individuals collectively as “Plaintiffs.” Named as Defendants are: (1) the Apportionment Commission; (2) the Commission’s five Democratic members; (3) the Commission’s “eleventh member,” Professor Larry Bartels; (4) New Jersey’s Secretary of State; and (5) New Jersey’s Attorney General. We will hereinafter refer to these parties collectively as “Defendants.”

The gravamen of Plaintiffs’ complaint is one of vote dilution. More specifically, Plaintiffs contend that New Jersey’s new apportionment scheme deprives African-American voters in Essex County of their ability to have the representatives of their choice elected to the New Jersey legislature. For support, Plaintiffs rely primarily on the fact that, under New Jersey’s old apportionment plan, three districts located principally in Essex County had populations that were majority African-American, while under New Jersey’s newly-adopted apportionment plan, the African-American population in two of these districts drops below fifty percent, and in the third, stands at 51.2% of the total population. Plaintiffs contend that this elimination and weakening of formerly majority-African-American state legislative districts was a deliberate act on the part of Defendants, intended to dilute (and having the *181 effect of diluting) the vote of the African-American population in the Essex County region of New Jersey.

Upon filing this complaint, Plaintiffs sought and received from the District Court a temporary restraining order preventing Defendants from putting the new apportionment plan into effect. Four days later, on April 16, 2001, the District Court conducted a hearing concerning Plaintiffs’ application for further relief, in connection with which both sides presented declarations from experts concerning, inter alia, voting patterns in Essex County, New Jersey. Plaintiffs’ submissions, based upon analysis of recent elections, and buttressed by a letter from Martin Luther King III, head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, maintained that the reapportionment plan would reverse significant electoral and political gains that African-American voters have secured and threatened to frustrate future opportunities for the vigorous participation of African-Anerican voices in the political marketplace.

Defendants countered that the newly-adopted apportionment plan did not dilute African-American voting strength, but rather enhanced it. According to Defendants, because of the existence of significant racial cross-over voting between African-Americans, whites, and Hispanics in New Jersey generally and in Essex County specifically, an African-American group need not constitute a numerical majority in any single legislative district in or der to possess the effective ability to elect prer ferred representatives. In a submission similarly based upon analysis of recent election trends, Defendants contended that the retention of the three majority-Afri-ean-American districts advocated by Plaintiffs actually impedes the ability-of African-Americans to elect the representatives of their choice, as it “packs” unnecessarily large numbers of African-American voters in the same legislative district, preventing them from exerting electoral influence in other parts of the state.

After hearing these presentations, the District Court issued a bench opinion denying Plaintiffs’ application for relief. Plaintiffs timely appealed from that denial, and we agreed to hear that appeal on an extremely expedited basis. This appeal largely concerns the events that transpired at the April 16, 2001 hearing, and the precise nature of the District Court’s disposition of Plaintiffs’ application for relief on that date.

Crucial to our resolution of this appeal is the existence of a special procedural mechanism for constitutional challenges to statewide legislative apportionment schemes. That mechanism, codified at 28 U.S.C. § 2284, requires that a district court of three judges, rather than a single judge, hear “action[s] ... filed challenging the constitutionality of ... the apportionment of any statewide legislative body.” Although a single district judge has certain limited powers, including the power to issue temporary restraining orders, until the convening of a three-judge court, a single judge does not have the power to entertain applications for preliminary injunctive relief. See 28 U.S.C. § 2284(b)(3). In this case, the District Court did not request the convening of a three-judge court, nor did it determine whether such a request was necessary in light of Plaintiffs’ claims. Accordingly, we must decide whether the District Court’s disposition of Plaintiffs’ relief application, given the requirements imposed by § 2284, was error.

We conclude that it was, and remand to the District Court so that a three-judge court can be convened to hear the Plaintiffs’ Voting Rights Act and constitutional claims. In addition, we decline to grant *182 Plaintiffs’ request that we provide for interim relief pending action in the lower courts because of our belief that under the present circumstances, we should avoid undue disruption of New Jersey’s impending legislative elections. Moreover, as we explain below, we have no jurisdiction to grant interim injunctive relief in this case.

I.

A.

The New Jersey Legislature comprises a State Senate consisting of 40 members and a General Assembly consisting of 80 members.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 F.3d 175, 2001 WL 417146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-bartels-ca3-2001.