SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-1027-01T5
ANNE M. McNEIL, THOMAS E.
WILLIAMS, ROSEANNA SIEBERT,
PAUL DiGAETANO, and KEVIN
O'TOOLE,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
THE LEGISLATIVE APPORTIONMENT
COMMISSION OF THE STATE OF
NEW JERSEY,
Defendant-Respondent,
and
REGENA L. THOMAS, Secretary of
State of New Jersey, and DAVID
SAMSON, Attorney General of New Jersey,See footnote 11
Defendants.
___________________________________
Argued December 16, 2002 - Decided
January 22, 2003
Before Judges Petrella, Lintner and Parker.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Mercer County, Docket Number
MER-L-1442-01.
Kevin B. Riordan, argued the cause for
appellants (Berry, Sahradnik, Kotzas, Riordan
& Benson, attorneys; Mr. Riordan, of counsel
and on the brief).
Steven Siegel argued the cause for
respondents (Sokol, Behot & Fiorenzo and
Scarinci & Hollenbeck, attorneys; Leon J.
Sokol and Robert E. Levy, of counsel; Mr.
Siegel and Nomi I. Lowy, on the brief).
Donna Kelly, Senior Deputy Attorney General,
argued the cause as amicus curiae (David
Samson, Attorney General, attorney; Michael
J. Haas, Assistant Attorney General, of
counsel; Ms. Kelly, and Loretta E. Lonergan,
Deputy Attorney General, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
PETRELLA, P.J.A.D.
Anne M. McNeil of Jersey City, Thomas E. Williams of Newark,
Roseanna Siebert of the Borough of Bergenfield, Paul DiGaetano of
Nutley, and Kevin O'Toole of the Township of Cedar Grove
(collectively, plaintiffs) appeal from entry of summary judgment
dismissing their complaint that contested the legislative
districting plan certified on April 11, 2001 (the 2001 plan) by
six of the eleven members of the New Jersey Legislative
Apportionment Commission (Commission). Plaintiffs DiGaetano and
O'Toole were incumbent legislators, both of whom won re-election
under the 2001 plan.
The process for creating the 2001 plan began pursuant to
Article IV, section 3, paragraph 1 of the New Jersey State
Constitution (Constitution), which provides for appointment of an
Apportionment Commission consisting of ten members, five from
each of the two major political parties, which shall meet and
apportion the State legislative districts during the year
following the decennial census of the United States. The
districts are to be certified by February 1 in the year after the
census is taken, or within one month of the Governor's receipt of
the census results, whichever is later. If the Commission fails
to meet the deadline, or determines before that date that it will
fail, the Constitution requires the Chief Justice of our Supreme
Court to appoint an eleventh member of the Commission who would
break any tie vote. The districts are to be certified within one
month of that member's appointment. N.J. Const. art. IV, § 3, ¶
2.
A deadlock developed among the ten-member Commission
composed of equal members of the two major political parties.See footnote 22
Pursuant to the Constitution's requirement, the Chief Justice
appointed Larry Bartels, a university professor, as an eleventh
member to the Commission. He was neither registered to vote in
any election in this State nor affiliated with any political
party.
Following the March 27, 2001 appointment of Bartels as the
Commission's eleventh member, the deadlock was broken when the
five Democratic members of the Commission agreed to the version
of the 2001 plan approved by Bartels. Thus, on April 11, 2001, a
six-member majority of the eleven-member Commission voted to
certify the 2001 plan, which was forwarded to the Secretary of
State the next day. On April 17, 2001, those same members of the
Commission submitted to the Secretary of State an amended
certified 2001 plan, correcting certain technical errors to the
plan as it had been submitted.
On May 9, 2001, plaintiffs filed their original four-count
complaint in this matter in the Law Division, Mercer County.
They named as defendants the Commission, the then Secretary of
State of New Jersey and the then Attorney General of New Jersey.
On the same day, they filed an amendment to the complaint,
asserting that the redistricting plan as adopted expressed a bias
against incumbent legislators. Plaintiffs also sought an order
to show cause seeking temporary restraints, which the motion
judge denied. Leave to appeal that denial was also denied.
The Commission filed a motion for summary judgment with
supporting papers. Plaintiffs cross-moved for summary judgment
on counts one and two of their complaint, the counts that
asserted, respectively, that Jersey City and Newark
inappropriately were divided among too many legislative
districts.
By an October 12, 2001 order, the motion judge granted
defendant's motion for summary judgment and denied plaintiffs'
motion for summary judgment. Plaintiffs' claims were dismissed
with prejudice. Plaintiffs filed a timely notice of appeal.
Plaintiffs contend that the judge on the motion hearing
erred in upholding the 2001 plan because the Commission failed to
honor Article IV, section 2, paragraph 3 of the Constitution.
Plaintiffs rely on the specific provision in that paragraph that
"no county or municipality shall be divided among a number of
Assembly districts larger than one plus the whole number obtained
by dividing the number of inhabitants in the county or
municipality by one-fortieth of the total number of inhabitants
of the State." Applying this provision (the "municipality
districting standard") to municipalities, as of the 2000 census,
Newark and Jersey City each should have been divided into only
two legislative districts. However, under the 2001 plan they
were each divided into three districts. Other issues raised in
the complaint were abandoned.
A companion appeal in Charles Steelman et al. v. The
Legislative Apportionment Comm'n, A-182-01T1, was argued the same
date as this appeal and is being separately decided. Among other
issues, the plaintiffs in that appeal challenged Atlantic
County's subdivision among three legislative districts, relying
upon the same constitutional language quoted above as it
pertained to counties (a county districting standard). The
restriction on dividing municipalities was not implicated or
applicable in that matter.
As amended effective December 8, 1966, Article IV, section 2
of the New Jersey Constitution provides as follows:
1. The Senate shall be composed of forty
senators apportioned among Senate districts
as nearly as may be according to the number
of their inhabitants as reported in the last
preceding decennial census of the United
States and according to the method of equal
proportions. Each Senate district shall be
composed, wherever practicable, of one single
county, and, if not so practicable, of two or
more contiguous whole counties.
2. Each senator shall be elected by the
legally qualified voters of the Senate
district, except that if the Senate district
is composed of two or more counties and two
senators are apportioned to the district, one
senator shall be elected by the legally
qualified voters of each Assembly district.
... [omitting provision about when senators'
terms begin and end].
3. The General Assembly shall be composed of
eighty members. Each Senate district to
which only one senator is apportioned shall
constitute an Assembly district. Each of the
remaining Senate districts shall be divided
into Assembly districts equal in number to
the number of senators apportioned to the
Senate district. The Assembly districts
shall be composed of contiguous territory, as
nearly compact and equal in the number of
their inhabitants as possible, and in no
event shall each such district contain less
than eighty per cent nor more than one
hundred twenty per cent of one-fortieth of
the total number of inhabitants of the State
as reported in the last preceding decennial
census of the United States. Unless
necessary to meet the foregoing requirements,
no county or municipality shall be divided
among Assembly districts unless it shall
contain more than one-fortieth of the total
number of inhabitants of the state, and no
county or municipality shall be divided among
a number of Assembly districts larger than
one plus the whole number obtained by
dividing the number of inhabitants in the
county or municipality by one-fortieth of the
total number of inhabitants of the State.
[N.J. Const. Art. 4, § 2, ¶¶ 1 - 3.]
The final sentence of paragraph 3 above contains the municipality
districting standard at issue here.
According to the 2000 census figures, New Jersey's total
population was 8,414,350. One fortieth of that figure was
210,359, which is considered the ideal population or goal for
each of New Jersey's forty legislative districts. Jersey City's
population was 240,055, exceeding the ideal district population
by 29,696. Newark's population was 273,546, exceeding the ideal
district population by 63,187.
As conveyed to the then Secretary of State on April 12, the
2001 plan included a "Plan Components Report" showing a district-
by-district listing of municipalities, the populations of each
municipality, subtotaled by municipality and county within each
district, and subtotaled for the whole district. Next to each
district, county, and municipality population figure is a listing
of the number of individuals purporting to be (1) "NH Blk" (non-
Hispanic Black) and (2) Hispanic origin.See footnote 33 The recertified
corrected pages of the plan included pages showing each
district's population, the ideal district population figure of
210,359, each district's deviation from the ideal, and
percentages of each district's and municipality's members of
minority groups, including component percentages for "non-Hisp
African-American" and Hispanic populations.
The 2001 plan subdivided Jersey City and Newark each into
three legislative districts. Parts of Newark were included in
the 27th, 28th, and 29th Districts. The 27th District included:
Caldwell, Orange, Essex Fells, Fairfield, Livingston, Maplewood,
North Caldwell, Roseland, South Orange, West Caldwell, West
Orange, and Newark's West ward voting districts numbers 27
through 29, 33, 35 through 41, and 45. The district's population
of 206,390 was 3,969 less than the ideal district population.
The Commission calculated that 44.8% of the district's residents
were members of minority groups, including 29.6% (61,110)
African-American and 6.8% (14,239) Hispanic residents. There
were 19,641 Newark residents in the 27th District, including
14,599 African-American and 1,632 Hispanic residents.
The 28th District included: Belleville, Bloomfield,
Irvington, and voting districts from parts of Newark's North,
South, Central and West wards. The district's population of
217,596 was 7,237 more than the ideal district population. The
Commission's figures indicated that 73.5% of the district's
residents were members of minority groups, including 51.1%
(111,386) African-American and 15% (32,645) Hispanic residents.
There were 73,290 Newark residents in the 28th District,
including 55,494 African-American and 12,151 Hispanic residents.
The 29th District included: Hillside (in Union County), and
voting districts from parts of Newark's North, South, Central and
East wards. The district's population of 202,362 was 7,997 less
than the ideal district population. The Commission calculated
that 79.8% of the district's residents were members of minority
groups, including 40.4% (81,951) African-American and 34.5%
(69,992) Hispanic residents. There were 180,615 Newark residents
in the 29th District, including 71,990 African-American and
66,839 Hispanic residents.
Parts of Jersey City were included in the 31st, 32nd, and
33rd Districts. The 31st District included: all of Bayonne, and
in Jersey City, all of the municipal voting districts within ward
A, and parts of wards B, C, E and F. The district's population
of 207,327 was 3,032 less than the ideal district population.
The Commission's figures indicated that 66.0% of the district's
residents were members of minority groups, including 28.1%
(58,417) African-American and 21.7% (45,120) Hispanic residents.
There were 145,485 Jersey City residents in the 31st District,
including 55,319 African-American and 34,105 Hispanic residents.
The 32nd District included: Fairview (in Bergen County),
East Newark, Harrison, Kearny, North Bergen, and Secaucus (in
Hudson County), plus in Jersey City, parts of wards B, C, and D.
The district's population of 208,227 was 2,132 less than the
ideal district population. The Commission's figures indicated
that 57.8% of the district's residents were members of minority
groups, including 4.5% (9,401) African-American and 39.8%
(83,054) Hispanic residents. There were 63,635 Jersey City
residents in the 32nd District, including 6,138 African-American
and 25,392 Hispanic residents.
The 33rd District included: Guttenberg, Hoboken, Union City,
Weehawken, West New York, plus in Jersey City, parts of wards C
and E. The district's population of 206,676 was 3,683 less than
the ideal district population.See footnote 44 The Commission's numbers
indicated that 68.9% of the district's residents were members of
minority groups, including 3% (6,383) African-American and 57.5%
(118,860) Hispanic residents. There were 30,935 Jersey City
residents in the 33rd District, including 2,932 African-American
and 8,455 Hispanic residents.
The corrected 2001 plan indicated the prior legislative
districts to which each municipality in these districts had been
assigned. It also included subtotals of population numbers and
minority percentages for each of the prior districts from which
the new district's residents had been reassigned.
Plaintiffs alleged in their complaint that under the
population pattern of the current census data, the fragmentation
of Jersey City and Newark into three legislative districts each
was neither warranted nor justified by any requirement of federal
or state law, and was in direct contravention of the municipality
districting standard in Article IV, section 2, paragraph 3 of the
Constitution. They also alleged that "[n]umerous alternative
apportionment plans can be, and have been, prepared" that would
meet the federal and state law provisions without unnecessarily
breaking up either Jersey City or Newark into more districts than
are required under our State Constitution's municipality
districting standard. Plaintiffs' brief asserts that they
"submitted to the trial court an apportionment plan that properly
divides the municipalities of Jersey City and Newark" and that
their plan violates neither the Federal nor State Constitutions.See footnote 55
Summaries of the New Jersey legislative districts created
since 1967 indicate that Jersey City and Newark had been divided
into three districts each under plans certified in 1967, 1969,
1981 and 1991. In addition, in 1971 there were two districts for
Jersey City and three for Newark, and in 1973, three districts
for Jersey City and four for Newark.
In an October 1, 2001, opinion, the motion judge held that
plaintiffs failed to show that the 2001 plan included "invidious
discrimination or other constitutional deficiency." The judge
discussed the case law construing Article IV, section 2,
paragraph 3, particularly Scrimminger v. Sherwin,
60 N.J. 483
(1972), and Davenport v. Apportionment Comm'n,
65 N.J. 125 (1974)
(Davenport II), where Senate districting plans were developed
without adhering to the county-line provision of the State
Constitution. The judge extrapolated:
It thus logically follows that the
Scrimminger Court, in abrogating the county-
line provision of Article 4, Section 2,
Paragraph 3, also abrogated the portion of
Paragraph 3 governing the division of larger
municipalities. The very structure and
language of the Scrimminger decision leads to
this conclusion. In the same paragraph in
which the Scrimminger Court enunciated its
holding that "the county cannot now serve as
the basis of districting . . ." the Court
stated, "[t]he boundaries of the larger
municipalities will of course have to be
breached, and in this regard, the Commission
may have to depart from the direction of Art.
4, Section II, Paragraph 3, concerning the
division of a municipality." Scrimminger, 60
N.J. at 498 (emphasis added). This
provision, like the county-line provision,
thus ceases to have any viability in New
Jersey's reapportionment scheme.
The court found nothing in Scrimminger or Davenport to prevent a
reapportionment commission, "in an effort to satisfy the
paramount concern of population equality and the myriad of other
important statutory and constitutional requirements," from
"dividing a larger municipality into more than two districts."
The judge noted that aside from the allegation that Jersey City
and Newark were divided into too many districts, plaintiffs did
not allege or prove any constitutional or other infirmities of
the 2001 plan. The judge felt that the 2001 plan met the
paramount consideration of population equality, satisfied
requirements of contiguity and compactness, adhered to the
boundary lines of smaller municipalities, and was not tainted
with invidious discrimination or other legal infirmities.
The judge noted that in the four legislative districting
plans approved since the New Jersey Constitution's amendment in
1966, Newark and Jersey City had been divided into more than two
legislative districts and those plans were nonetheless approved
despite dividing Newark and Jersey City into more than two
legislative districts. The judge rejected plaintiffs' assertion
that no court had ever specifically addressed the question of
dividing Newark and Jersey City each into more than two
legislative districts. The judge quoted from the decisions in
the Davenport litigation, noting first the Appellate Division
opinion "[t]he Commission followed the Scrimminger directive to
use municipalities as building blocks, with necessary exceptions
in the case of Newark and Jersey City." Davenport v.
Apportionment Comm'n,
124 N.J. Super. 30, 42 (App. Div. 1973),
aff'd,
65 N.J. 125 (1974)). Affirming that districting plan, the
Supreme Court concluded "that the Commission plan adequately
carries out the mandate of Scrimminger and has not been shown to
be in violation of any State or Federal constitutional
standards." Davenport II, supra (65 N.J. at 135). The motion
judge here thus concluded that "[t]his language makes it
abundantly clear that the Court considered the division of Newark
and Jersey City into more than two legislative districts."
The judge indicated that while the courts have held that
Newark and Jersey City were "'necessary exceptions' from the
Article IV, Section 2, Paragraph 3 prohibition on dividing
municipalities into multiple legislative districts, they have
never suggested that the division of smaller municipalities is
appropriate." Accordingly, the judge interpreted those cases "as
abrogating Article IV, Section 2, Paragraph 3 only in reference
to municipalities with populations exceeding one-fortieth of the
State's total number of inhabitants." The judge explained:
Scrimminger does not provide the
reapportionment commission with unbridled
discretion to divide municipalities
regardless of their population, as it
recognized that as a general rule,
municipalities are appropriate "building
blocks" for the creation of legislative
districts. It is only when a municipality's
size makes it a "necessary exception" that
the commission is warranted in dividing the
municipality into more than one legislative
district.
Plaintiffs contend that because the plan violated the
municipality districting standard their challenge to the 2001
plan should not have been dismissed, and the motion judge
erroneously held that the constitutional provision setting forth
that standard had been impermissibly abrogated.
The judge's reasoning that our State Constitution's
municipality districting standard was abrogated does not
withstand scrutiny. As noted, plaintiffs contend that their
challenge to the 2001 plan should not have been dismissed because
the plan violated the municipality districting standard in
Article IV, section 2, paragraph 3 of the Constitution. The
judge observed that the language of the municipality districting
standard would limit dividing Jersey City and Newark into no more
than two legislative districts, so plaintiffs met their burden of
proving that the plan suffered from "constitutional deficiencies"
because it divided each of those cities into three districts.
The judge erred in concluding that the Constitution's
municipality districting standard provision was abrogated. No
case has heretofore addressed the issue of dividing
municipalities contrary to that standard. The Scrimminger
holding, that districting along county lines could not be
accomplished without violating federal population equality
standards, did not compel a conclusion that the municipality
districting standard was abrogated. The Scrimminger dicta that
the Commission "may have to depart from" the municipality
districting standard meant that the standard could be ignored
only when necessary to satisfy a paramount federal constitutional
obligation.
As this matter was decided on summary judgment motions, the
motion judge was required to "consider whether the competent
evidential materials presented, when viewed in the light most
favorable to the non-moving party, [were] sufficient to permit a
rational factfinder to resolve the alleged disputed issue in
favor of the non-moving party." Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co.
of America,
142 N.J. 520, 540 (1995). Our standard of review as
an appellate court mirrors that in the trial court: whether
there is a genuine issue of material fact and, if not, whether
the moving party is entitled to summary judgment as a matter of
law. Kopin v. Orange Products, Inc.,
297 N.J. Super. 353, 366
(App. Div.), certif. denied,
149 N.J. 409 (1997); McClelland v.
Tucker,
273 N.J. Super. 410, 415 (App. Div. 1994).
The judicial role in reviewing the validity of a legislative
districting plan is limited. Davenport II, supra (65 N.J. at
135). "Reapportionment is essentially a political and
legislative process." Ibid. Accordingly, a redistricting plan
"must be accorded a presumption of legality with judicial
intervention warranted only if some positive showing of invidious
discrimination or other constitutional deficiency is made. The
judiciary is not justified in striking down a plan, otherwise
valid, because a 'better' one, in its opinion, could be drawn."
Ibid. (citing Gaffney v. Cummings,
412 U.S. 735,
93 S. Ct. 2321,
37 L. Ed.2d 298 (1973)).
A central concept of the provisions of Article IV, § 2, ¶¶
1-3 of our State Constitution is that "the Senate districts shall
consist of one or more whole counties, whereas the Assembly
districts shall be portions of a Senate district except where
only one Senator is to be elected in the Senate district, in
which event the Senate district and the Assembly district are
coterminous." Davenport v. Apportionment Comm'n,
63 N.J. 433,
435 (1973) (Davenport I). Case law that followed enactment of
the foregoing provisions resulted in significant changes to the
way New Jersey's legislative districts are created using counties
as building blocks. Thus, Jackman v. Bodine,
49 N.J. 406, 414-
415 (1967), held that an alternative proposal that improved
population equality ratios in the State's six southern counties
by about 7% to 10% must be followed, even though that alternative
required Gloucester County to be divided among two districts,
which the county districting standard of Article IV, section 2,
paragraph 3 prohibited unless necessary to meet contiguity,
compactness, or population equality requirements. That decision
also held that "notwithstanding the provisions of our State
Constitution, the 80 Assemblymen must be apportioned among the
Senate districts according to the equal-proportions method and
without reference to the apportionment of the Senators." Id. at
417.
The Court's 1972 Scrimminger opinion was its "eleventh
opinion dealing with apportionment under the one-man, one-vote
doctrine" promulgated by Reynolds v. Sims,
377 U.S. 533,
84 S.
Ct. 1362,
12 L. Ed.2d 506 (1964). Scrimminger, supra (60 N.J.
at 484-485). After reviewing Article IV, section 2's diverse
methods for electing Senators, Scrimminger observed that the
"command for adherence to county lines" generated the issue of
population inequality before it, and that the difficulty arose
because there were twenty-one counties with substantial
differences in population. Id. at 486-487.
In attempting to strike a balance between population
equality and county line mandates, the Commission created a plan
where the ranges of deviations from the ideal district were
28.83% for the Senate districts and 26.20% for the Assembly
districts. Id. at 489. Scrimminger said that deviations of that
magnitude were "invalid notwithstanding the stated purpose of the
apportionment (i.e., to adhere to county lines), and even though
that purpose could not be satisfied by another arrangement
involving lesser deviations." Id. at 493. Accordingly,
Scrimminger held that the plan presented was invalid, and that
"the mandate of our State Constitution with respect to adherence
to county lines" could not be enforced "under the demographic
pattern revealed by the 1970 census." Id. at 495. The Court
added that "[s]ince the county cannot now serve as the basis of
districting and since the multi-member district is contemplated
in the Constitution only as an incident of county
representation," Senate districts had to be single-member
districts. Id. at 497.
However, Scrimminger continued: "[m]unicipal lines should
be observed, if possible, for if they are followed, dividends may
be expected in terms of furthering the relationship of these
political subdivisions and the State and also in terms of
restraining to some extent the opportunities for drawing lines
for partisan advantage." Id. at 497-498. Thus, the Court held:
"[m]unicipalities are thus appropriate building blocks for the
creation of districts. The boundaries of the larger
municipalities will of course have to be breached, and in this
regard, the Commission may have to depart from the direction in
Art. 4, § II, ¶ 3, concerning the division of a municipality."
Id. at 479. The Court added that although the requirements for
contiguity and compactness would remain effective, compactness
"may be of limited utility in the light of the odd configurations
of our State and its municipalities." Ibid. (citing Jackman,
supra (49 N.J. at 419)).
In affirming the judgment and returning the matter to the
Commission for the preparation of a new plan, Scrimminger
emphasized that it could not predict what range of deviation
would be bad per se, writing that "there is no range of deviation
within which a State may maneuver with or without reason. The
constitutional command is to achieve equality, and hence a
deviation may not exceed what an acceptable thesis of
apportionment inevitably requires." Ibid. (citing Jones v.
Falcey,
48 N.J. 25, 37 (1966)). The new plan was the subject of
Davenport I, supra (
63 N.J. 433). As the Supreme Court noted,
the Appellate Division decision had expressed some doubts about
whether Scrimminger's pronouncements had to be followed strictly
in light of the intervening opinion in Mahan v. Howell,
410 U.S. 315,
93 S. Ct. 979,
35 L. Ed.2d 320 (1973), where the United
States Supreme Court had allowed a 16.4% range of deviation where
necessary to achieve important state goals. Davenport I, supra
(63 N.J. at 435, 443-444). Davenport I noted that Scrimminger
had determined that even while exceeding the range of deviation
by more than 26%, New Jersey's stated goal of giving each county
its voice in the Legislature could not be achieved. Id. at 440,
444.
Davenport I determined, therefore, that Scrimminger's
holding was intact, but considered a new concern: even though
the whole county concept plan was not to be followed, did the New
Jersey Constitution require that a districting plan be drawn to
adhere to as many county lines as possible? Id. at 446. The
Court determined that the record was inadequate to address the
question, and permitted the parties to file additional materials.
Id. at 447-448.
Davenport II followed the submission of those additional
materials. In Davenport II, supra (65 N.J. at 130-131), the
Court reviewed the prior cases, including Scrimminger's
conclusion that
decided that the foregoing State
constitutional mandate with respect to using
counties as building blocks could not be
enforced under the demographic pattern,
revealed by the 1970 census. As a result,
the districting structure called for by
present Article IV has been declared to be in
violation of the Federal Constitution under
the one-man, one-vote principle.
[Id. at 132.]
The Court added a footnote to that final sentence: "New
constitutional provisions for our State legislative structure
would seem to be in order." Ibid. n.2. No such constitutional
provisions were approved.
The argument in Davenport II was that the county unit was a
political entity, so as many Senate districts as possible should
be placed within whole counties as the New Jersey Constitution
required. Id. at 132. The Court rejected this argument,
stating:
We find no such meaning in Article IV,
nor do we think valid apportionment policy
requires such result. On the contrary, we
think it clear that attempting to preserve
some semblance of county voting strength
would create a plethora of constitutional
problems. Were dilution of county voting
strength a required consideration in applying
one-man, one-vote, the degree of dilution
would have to be considered and equalized
along with population, a difficult if not
impossible task to perform.
We are satisfied that once the use of
counties as building blocks was declared
unenforceable, as it had to be under the
demographic pattern shown by the 1970 census,
the county concept ceased to have any
viability in the creation of Senate
districts.
[Id. at 133.]
A wide disparity still remains between county populations.
Plaintiffs are correct in asserting that the case law to
date did not expressly address the municipality districting
standard. Scrimminger called municipalities the "appropriate
building blocks for the creation of districts." Hence, any plan
that ignored municipality boundaries would violate the Court's
direction. The Court's statement that the "boundaries of the
larger municipalities will of course have to be breached" was not
a directive to abrogate the Constitution's municipality
districting standard. The constitutional standard has two parts:
it prohibits dividing a municipality among Assembly districts
unless it contains more than one-fortieth of the state's
population, and then it directs that no subdivision shall be
among "a number of Assembly districts larger than one plus the
whole number obtained by dividing the number of inhabitants in
the county or municipality by one-fortieth of the total number of
inhabitants of the State." N.J. Const. Art. IV, § 2, ¶ 3. Thus,
the municipality districting standard applies only to those
municipalities that are larger than the ideal district
population, which presently includes only Newark and Jersey City.
As to each of them, the municipality districting standard
calculation results in a maximum of two districts: for Newark, 1
+ (the whole number resulting from 273,546 . 210,359, which is
1.30), so 1+1=2; for Jersey City, 1 + (the whole number resulting
from 240,055 . 210,359, which is 1.14), so 1+1=2. Nothing could
be clearer or more basic.
The only direction in any case as to the municipality
districting standard was Scrimminger's further statement that "in
this regard, the Commission may have to depart from the direction
in Art. 4, § II, ¶ 3, concerning the division of a municipality."
Scrimminger, supra (60 N.J. at 498). Thus, there is clear merit
to plaintiffs' position that this statement does not constitute
clear direction that the provision has been abrogated.
The Commission's position that because the county
districting standard and the municipality districting standard
were set forth in the same constitutional provision, Scrimminger
and Davenport resulted in abrogation of both standards is
erroneous. Such an argument does not square with the Court's
direction in those cases that although county lines could not be
followed because of the mathematical inequities, the municipality
lines should be, wherever possible, except for cities with
populations above the ideal population by more than a few
percentage points, which are only Jersey City and Newark.
Scrimminger, supra (60 N.J. at 497-498).
The motion judge's conclusion that the municipality
districting standard provision in our Constitution somehow had
been abrogated relied upon the fact that Davenport upheld a
redistricting plan that had divided Newark and Jersey City into
four and three legislative districts, respectively. However, the
reported opinions did not address any variance from the
municipality districting standard. In our earlier decision in
Davenport v. Apportionment Commission, supra (124 N.J. Super. at
42), we had noted that the plan used municipalities "as building
blocks, with necessary exceptions in the case of Newark and
Jersey City" but this did not reflect any recognition or
acceptance of the fact that Newark and Jersey City had been
divided into more districts than the municipality districting
standard would allow or rule on that issue. The Davenport
plaintiffs resided in Union, Morris, and Passaic Counties, and
their complaint challenged the apportionment of their home
municipalities into districts largely comprised of municipalities
in other counties. Id. at 34. Davenport made no mention of the
undue fragmentation of Jersey City and Newark, nor even of the
municipality districting standard; use of the county lines was
the focus. Davenport II, supra (
65 N.J. 125). Thus, there is no
basis for concluding that the Davenport opinions allowed or
affirmed a decision to deviate from our Constitution's
municipality districting standard. The cases simply never
addressed it. In any event, just because constitutional error
was overlooked in the past neither makes the prior error right
nor constitutional.
Thus, plaintiffs have met their burden by (1) showing that
Jersey City and Newark were divided into three districts instead
of two, and (2) drawing a map that apparently divided those
cities into only two districts, and asserting that it complies
with all federal and state districting requirements. Paramount
is the one-person, one-vote principle of population equality.
Jackman, supra (49 N.J. at 418). Summary judgment for defendants
was hardly appropriate on the basis of the record before the
court. See Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
142 N.J. 520,
540 (1995).
No federal law expressly preempts the municipality
districting standard and no State case has abrogated that
standard. The federal Equal Protection Clause precludes basing
districts upon race without regard for traditional redistricting
principles. Robertson, supra (148 F. Supp.
2d at 453). The
State Constitution requires contiguity, Scrimminger, supra (60
N.J. at 498), respect for municipal boundaries, id. at 497-498,
and to a lesser degree, compactness. Davenport II, supra (65
N.J. at 133-134).
Plaintiffs are correct in asserting that the municipality
districting standard remains a part of New Jersey constitutional
law. The Constitution is our basic organic document that all
State officials, including Judges, Legislators and the members of
the Legislative Apportionment Commission take a solemn oath to
uphold. The Constitution is neutral and blind to extraneous
factors, and fully applies here, as it always has since adopted.
The plain and unambiguous language of our State Constitution,
which we are bound to apply, requires us to reverse and remand.
Accordingly, we reverse and remand to the Commission for
preparation of a new redistricting plan in compliance with the
Constitution municipality districting standard. The new plan
would be applied prospectively.See footnote 66
Footnote: 1 1 The complaint named Deforest B. Soaries, Secretary of State of New Jersey, and John Farmer, Attorney General of New Jersey, as defendants. Pursuant to R. 4:34-4, their successors in office have been substituted in the caption above. Footnote: 2 2 From the reported cases it appears that deadlocks are an historical fact of political history in redistricting. Footnote: 3 3 This information was apparently not in the population data from the U.S. Census Bureau reflected in a document in the record titled: "Table 7, Population for the Counties and Municipalities in New Jersey: 1990 and 2000." Footnote: 4 4 For all practical purposes there is no distinction in the use of the word population, which derives from the Latin language, and the word demographics, which derives from the Greek language. Each means the populous or people. Footnote: 5 5 The 2001 plan was the subject of two reported federal court cases, Page v. Bartels, 144 F. Supp.2d 346, 366-369 (D.N.J. 2001), (The 27th, 28th, 29th, and 34th Districts, withstood challenges under the Federal Constitution's Equal Protection Clause and Fifteenth Amendment and the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C.A. §1973 to § 1973p., and Robertson v. Bartels, 148 F. Supp.2d 443, 453-459 (D.N.J. 2001), aff'd, 534 U.S. 1110, 122 S. Ct. 914, 151 L. Ed.2d 881 (2002) (dismissed challenges to new 27th and 34th districts on res judicata grounds following Page, and alternatively found claims of impermissible racial gerrymandering and disparate treatment of incumbent legislators based upon race were meritless). Of course, neither decision is binding on our courts. Dewey v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 121 N.J. 69, 79-80 (1990). Footnote: 6 6 Lonegan v. State, 174 N.J. 354, 355 (2002) and 174 N.J. 435, 503 (2002) (Stein, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).