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Citizens' Right to Vote v. Morgan,
916 F.Supp. 601,, (S.D.Miss. 1996)
*601
916 F.Supp. 601
CITIZENS'
RIGHT TO VOTE, an Association, Harold Naylor,
Robert Cummings, A.A. Cervantes, III, Robert
Ledford and Robert A. Nelson, Individually and
as Directors of Citizens' Right to Vote, an
Association, Richard S. Thomson, David N.
Tullos, Joe Venus and Kathryn M. Jones,
Plaintiffs,
v.
J. Ed MORGAN, in
his official capacity as Mayor of the City of
Hattiesburg, Mississippi; Charles Lawrence, President
and member of the Council of the City of Hattiesburg,
Mississippi; John Buckley and Eddie Holloway, in their
official capacities as members of the Council of the
City of Hattiesburg, Mississippi; Clarice Wansley, in
her official capacity as Municipal Clerk of the City of
Hattiesburg, Mississippi; City of Hattiesburg,
Mississippi, a Municipal Corporation; Andy Stetelman, in
his official capacity as Chairman of the Hattiesburg
Convention Commission, the Hattiesburg Convention
Commission, an official Commission of the City of
Hattiesburg, Mississippi, Defendants.
Civil Action No.
2:95-CV-233(P)(S).
United States
District Court,
S.D. Mississippi,
Hattiesburg
Division.
Feb. 12, 1996.
Voters and voting
rights group sued city, mayor, city council members, and
others, for violations of state law, Voting Rights Act,
and constitutional rights. Defendants moved to dismiss
for failure to state claim. The District Court,
Pickering, J., held that: (1) defendants' alleged
actions did not violate Voting Rights Act, and (2)
defendants' alleged actions did not violate Federal
Constitution.
Motion to dismiss
granted.
1. FEDERAL
CIVIL PROCEDURE k1835
170A ----
170AXI Dismissal
170AXI(B)
Involuntary Dismissal
170AXI(B)5
Proceedings
170Ak1827
Determination
170Ak1835 Matters
deemed admitted.
S.D.Miss. 1996.
Allegations of
complaint must be accepted as true when court considers
whether plaintiff has stated cause of action. Fed.Rules
Civ.Proc.Rule 12(b)(6), 28 U.S.C.A.
2. FEDERAL
CIVIL PROCEDURE k1832
170A ----
170AXI Dismissal
170AXI(B)
Involuntary Dismissal
170AXI(B)5
Proceedings
170Ak1827
Determination
170Ak1832 Matters
considered in general.
S.D.Miss. 1996.
Only complaint and
allegations contained therein are to be considered in
reaching decision on defendant's motion to dismiss for
failure to state claim. Fed.Rules Civ.Proc.Rule
12(b)(6), 28 U.S.C.A.
3. FEDERAL
CIVIL PROCEDURE k1773
170A ----
170AXI Dismissal
170AXI(B)
Involuntary Dismissal
170AXI(B)3
Pleading, Defects In, in General
170Ak1773 Clear or
certain nature of insufficiency.
S.D.Miss. 1996.
Complaint should
not be dismissed for failure to state claim unless it
appears beyond doubt that plaintiff can prove no set of
facts in support of his claims which would entitle him
to relief. Fed.Rules Civ.Proc.Rule 12(b)(6), 28 U.S.C.A.
4. FEDERAL
COURTS k1011
170B ----
170BIX District
Courts
170BIX(B)
Three-Judge Courts
170Bk1011
Application for such court and determination.
S.D.Miss. 1996.
Single-judge court
to whom request for three-judge court is made pursuant
to Voting Rights Act has authority to determine if
three-judge court is required. Voting Rights Act of
1965, § 5, as amended, 42 U.S.C.A. § 1973c.
5.
MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS k918(3)
268 ----
268XIII Fiscal
Matters
268XIII(C) Bonds
and Other Securities, and Sinking Funds
268k918 Submission
of Question of Issue of Bonds to Popular Vote
268k918(3)
Application for and notice of election.
S.D.Miss. 1996.
Voting Rights Act
was not violated when mayor, city council members, and
other city employees allegedly engaged in concerted
effort to have people remove their names from petitions
calling for bond election and when city adjudicated that
there was an insufficient number of signatures to
require election; case had nothing to do with race and
nothing to do with discrimination, and defendants'
alleged actions did not constitute "standard practice or
procedure," "enacted or administered" within meaning of
Act. Voting Rights Act of 1965, § 5, as amended, 42
U.S.C.A. § 1973c.
6.
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW k289
92 ----
92XII Due Process
of Law
92k288 Local
Improvements
92k289 In general.
[See headnote text
below]
6.
MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS k918(3)
268 ----
268XIII Fiscal
Matters
268XIII(C) Bonds
and Other Securities, and Sinking Funds
268k918 Submission
of Question of Issue of Bonds to Popular Vote
268k918(3)
Application for and notice of election.
S.D.Miss. 1996.
Voters' federal
substantive and procedural due process rights were not
violated when mayor, city council members, and other
city employees allegedly engaged in concerted effort to
have people remove their names from petitions calling
for bond election and when city adjudicated that there
was an insufficient number of signatures to require
election; state procedures were adequate to satisfy
requirements of due process. U.S.C.A. Const.Amend. 14.
7.
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW k91
92 ----
92V Personal,
Civil and Political Rights
92k91 Right of
assembly and petition.
[See headnote text
below]
7.
MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS k918(3)
268 ----
268XIII Fiscal
Matters
268XIII(C) Bonds
and Other Securities, and Sinking Funds
268k918 Submission
of Question of Issue of Bonds to Popular Vote
268k918(3)
Application for and notice of election.
S.D.Miss. 1996.
Voters' First
Amendment right to petition government was not violated
when mayor, city council members, and other city
employees allegedly engaged in concerted effort to have
people remove their names from petitions for bond
election and when city adjudicated that there was
insufficient number of signatures to require election.
U.S.C.A. Const.Amend. 1.
8. FEDERAL
COURTS k6
170B ----
170BI Jurisdiction
and Powers in General
170BI(A) In
General
170Bk3
Jurisdiction in General; Nature and Source
170Bk6 State or
federal matters.
[See headnote text
below]
8.
MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS k108.1
268 ----
268IV Proceedings
of Council or Other Governing Body
268IV(B)
Ordinances and By-Laws in General
268k108 Initiative
268k108.1 In
general.
S.D.Miss. 1996.
Right to petition
for municipal initiative election and any related
governmental misconduct is properly within purview of
state government and beyond province of federal courts.
9.
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW k206(1)
92 ----
92IX Privileges or
Immunities
92k206 Privileges
and Immunities of Citizens of the United States
92k206(1) In
general.
[See headnote text
below]
9.
MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS k918(3)
268 ----
268XIII Fiscal
Matters
268XIII(C) Bonds
and Other Securities, and Sinking Funds
268k918 Submission
of Question of Issue of Bonds to Popular Vote
268k918(3)
Application for and notice of election.
S.D.Miss. 1996.
Voters' rights
under federal privileges and immunities clause were not
violated when mayor, city council members and other city
employees allegedly engaged in concerted effort to have
people remove their names from petitions for bond
election and when city adjudicated that there was
insufficient number of signatures to require election;
right to petition was rooted in state law rather than
*601 federal law. U.S.C.A. Const.Amend. 14.
*602
Michael C. Barefield, Barefield & Barefield,
Hattiesburg, MS, for Citizens' Right to Vote, Harold
Naylor, Robert Cummings, A.A. Cervantes, III, Robert
Ledford, Robert A. Nelson, Richard S. Thomson, David N.
Tullos, Joe Venus, Kathryn M. Jones.
Jerry A. Evans,
Hattiesburg, MS, for J. Ed Morgan, Charles Lawrence,
John Buckley, Eddie Holloway, Clarice Wansley, City of
Hattiesburg, Mississippi.
Brian A. Montague,
Frank D. Montague, Jr., Montague, Pittman & Varnado,
Hattiesburg, MS, for Andy Stetelman, Hattiesburg
Convention Commission.
MEMORANDUM
OPINION AND ORDER
PICKERING,
District Judge.
This matter is
before the Court on Defendants' Joint Motion to Dismiss
pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) and 12(f). The Court,
having reviewed the briefs of the parties and the
authorities cited, and having heard oral arguments and
being otherwise fully advised in the premises, finds as
follows, to wit:
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND (FN1)
The current
litigation arises out of events relating to the efforts
of the City of Hattiesburg to issue bonds to finance the
construction of a convention center, as well as other
improvements. Plaintiffs and others filed petitions
calling for an election. (FN2) The petitions *603
contained sufficient names to require an election.
Plaintiffs allege that Defendants engaged in a concerted
effort to have people remove their names from the
petitions. After Defendants conducted this campaign to
have names removed from the petitions and after some
names were removed as being ineligible to sign, the City
Defendant adjudicated that there was an insufficient
number of signatures to require an election. Plaintiff
alleges that Defendants violated state law, violated
Section 5 of the voting Rights Act and deprived
Plaintiffs of due process and other constitutional
rights.
As provided by
state law, Plaintiffs appealed the adjudication of the
City to the Circuit Court. Before the bonds can be
issued, the Defendant City will have to initiate an
additional state court proceeding in the Chancery Court
to validate the bonds. Even though filing an appeal to
the Circuit Court, Plaintiffs filed the instant suit.
Consequently, this controversy is now pending before
this Court and also before a state court and
additionally will be presented a third time before the
bonds can be validated.
Defendants filed
this Motion to Dismiss in advance of an answer pursuant
to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(a)(4), contending that Count I of the
Complaint fails as a matter of law to state a claim upon
which relief can be granted. As to Count II, Defendants
allege that it should be stricken under Fed.R.Civ.P.
12(f) as redundant when compared with Count III--which
they also urge this Court to dismiss pursuant to
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
STANDARD OF
REVIEW
[1] [2] [3]
Dismissal pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) is appropriate if a
party fails to state a claim upon which relief can be
granted. The allegations of the Complaint must be
accepted as true when the Court considers whether the
Plaintiff has a stated cause of action. See Cramer v.
Skinner, 931 F.2d 1020 (5th Cir.1991). Only the
Complaint and the allegations contained therein are to
be considered in reaching a decision on a Defendant's
Rule 12(b)(6) Motion to Dismiss. The Complaint should
not be dismissed unless it appears beyond doubt that
Plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his
claims which would entitle him to relief. See Chrissy
F. By Medley v. Mississippi DPW, 925 F.2d 844 (5th
Cir.1991).
Rule 12(f) of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is the appropriate
avenue "for the elimination of redundant, immaterial,
impertinent, or scandalous matter in any pleading....
However, it is neither an authorized nor a proper way to
procure the dismissal of all or a part of a
complaint...." 5A Charles A. Wright and Arthur R.
Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1380 (1990).
I. COUNT 1: VOTING
RIGHTS ACT
Section 5 of the
Voting Rights Act applies to a State or political
subdivision's attempts to enact or administer
"any voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or
standard, practice or procedure with respect to voting
different from that in force or effect on November 1,
1964...." 42 U.S.C. § 1973c (1988). Defendants argue
their alleged misdeeds, if any, do not amount to an
"enactment" or "administration" of changes affecting
voting within the meaning of the Act. They contend that
neither the signature removal campaign, nor the other
acts preceding the May 23, 1995 resolution which
adjudicated that an insufficient number of signatures
were presents to require an election, nor the resolution
itself fall within § 5.
Defendants point
out that this resolution was passed pursuant to
Miss.Code Ann. § 21-33-307 (1972)--precleared in its
present form as of December 8, 1988. Both parties agree
that this statute and judicial precedent allowing a
petitioner to remove his name from such a petition,
Coleman v. Thompson, 216 Miss. 867, 63 So.2d 533
(1953), comply with the Voting Rights Act as the statute
was precleared and the case law was established prior to
the enactment of the Voting Rights Act. Thus the only
question presented to this Court is whether or not the
action of the Defendants in conducting the campaign to
have signatures removed from the petition, the delay and
action on the petition and the final adjudication by
resolution that no election called for under state law
is a change regarding voting that has to be submitted
for preclearance under § 5.
*604 [4]
Actions brought under § 5 of the Voting Rights Act (42
U.S.C. § 1973c) ordinarily requires the convening of a
three judge court. However, "[T]he single-judge court to
whom the request for a three-judge court is made has the
authority to determine if a three-judge court is
required." Montgomery v. Leflore County Republican
Executive Committee, 776 F.Supp. 1142, 1144
(N.D.Miss.1991). In Montgomery the Court went on
to hold:
[A] single
judge has the authority to review a complaint
seeking the convening of a three-judge court in
order to determine whether it states a substantial
claim and one over which the court would have
jurisdiction; the single judge has the authority and
responsibility to ascertain whether the claim is
substantial and one over which the court has
jurisdiction. (citation omitted).
776 F.Supp. at
1145.
The Supreme Court
ruled:
We have long
held that congressional enactments providing for the
convening of three-judge courts must be strictly
construed ... Convening a three-judge court places a
burden on our federal court system, and may often
result in a delay in a matter needing swift
adjudication ... Also, a direct appeal may be taken
from a three-judge court to [the Supreme] Court,
thus depriving us the wise and often crucial
adjudications of the courts of appeals. Thus we have
been reluctant to extend the range of cases
necessitating the convening of three-judge courts.
Allen v. State
Board of Elections, 393 U.S. 544, 561-62, 89 S.Ct.
817, 829-30, 22 L.Ed.2d 1 (1969).
In Montgomery
the Court went further by saying:
"Individuals
must not be allowed to obtain a three-judge court,
with its concomitant burdens, simply by intoning the
catchwords of Section 5. This court has an
obligation to examine the complaint to determine
whether it states a substantial claim."
776 F.Supp. at
1145 (citation omitted).
[5] Exercising the
responsibility imposed upon this Court, this Court
determines that Plaintiffs' complaint does not state a
substantial claim. This case is simply another of those
cases which demonstrates that many citizens have come to
view the federal courts as a potential solution for
whatever problem comes along. I fear federal courts over
the years have fostered such a notion. Government by
court decree is a poor substitute for government by the
people. This case is nothing more than a political
struggle between those who want an election on a
proposed bond issue and those who do not want an
election. It has nothing to do with race and it has
nothing to do with discrimination. As acknowledged at
oral argument, two of the Defendant councilmen voting
for the bond issue are black. The Mayor and the other
councilmen are white. One of the Plaintiffs is black. In
one of its most recent pronouncements on the subject,
the Supreme Court referred to the "intrusive mechanisms"
of the Voting Rights Act. Its application should be
limited to the abuses which it sought to correct.
Although some courts have held that an allegation of
racial discrimination is necessary, other courts have
held to the contrary and some early decisions of the
Supreme Court have indicated that no allegation of
discrimination is indicated, it is without dispute, and
the legislative history clearly indicates that the
Voting Rights Act of 1965 was aimed at discrimination
because of race or color at the voting booth. Not only
does the legislative history indicate such an intent,
but the Act itself gives the district court in the
District of Columbia or the Justice Department
responsibility of determining if any action covered by §
5 discriminates on the basis of race or color. (Even
though the single judge nor a three-judge court is given
authority to make a determination on discrimination,
nevertheless, all actions precleared on the basis that
they do not discriminate on the basis of race or color
are exempt from § 5 preclearance.) Obviously the purpose
of § 5 is to eliminate racial discrimination as it
relates to voting.
Plaintiffs
acknowledge that this is a case of first impression.
This Court
concludes that the conduct of the Defendants both prior
to the adoption of the complained of resolution and in
adopting *605 the resolution adjudicating that an
insufficient number of signatures were presented to
require an election on the bond issue does not
constitute a "standard practice or procedure," "enacted
or administered." This Court declines to hold that it is
necessary for the Plaintiffs to allege discrimination in
order to state a valid claim. However, this Court is of
the opinion that the failure of Plaintiffs to allege any
element of discrimination makes it more difficult for
them to establish that their complaint is covered by §
5. Stated conversely, this Court is of the opinion that
Plaintiffs alleging racial discrimination would have an
easier time in establishing to the satisfaction of the
Court that the conduct complained constituted a
"standard practice or procedure" "enacted or
administered." In this particular case, this Court would
be hard pressed to determine exactly what it is that
Plaintiffs contend should have been submitted to the
Justice Department or to the District Court in Columbia
for preclearance.
Even though not on
all fours with this case, this Court feels that this
case is controlled by United States v. Saint Landry
Parish School Bd., 601 F.2d 859, 860 (5th Cir.1979).
In that case there was an allegation of racial
discrimination. It was alleged that a school board
member and others engaged in a vote-buying scheme to
defeat two black candidates from being elected to the
school board. The Court in that case concluded:
Although the
actions of these poll commissioners could possibly
be viewed as a change in voting procedures within
the meaning of § 5, we conclude that these actions
do not constitute a change that the state has
enacted or sought to administer within the
meaning of that section. This conclusion is
compelled by the language of § 5, the nature of the
approval procedure envisioned by § 5, and the cases
interpreting that section.
. . . . .
But one would
not normally conclude that a state "enacts or
administers" a new voting procedure every time a
state official deviates from the state's required
procedures. The common sense meaning of "shall
enact" indicates that action of a state, as a
body is envisioned, and we thing "shall seek to
... administer" was added to cover situations when
an enactment was not actually passed, but when a
procedure was nonetheless widely administered with
at least the implicit approval of the state
governing authority.
We realize, of
course, that statutory language is not always
interpreted in a common-sense manner.
. . . . .
Although we
can find no case which has interpreted the "shall
seek to ... administer" language, we are certain
that whatever that language may cover, it does not
cover the isolated actions of the three poll
commissioners in this case.
. . . . .
Surely,
Congress did not intend the Attorney General and the
district court for the District of Columbia to waste
their time considering voting procedures that a
state does not wish to enact or administer. But this
would be the result if we required the state to
submit for approval, as a new voting procedure,
those actions of state officials which conflict with
the state's required procedures.
601 F.Supp. at
864.
Plaintiffs argue
that the language employed by the Court in Saint
Landry, "situations when an enactment was not
actually passed" but was administered with "at least the
implicit approval of the state governing authority"
supports their position. Plaintiff ignores the
requirement that such procedure must also be "widely
administered."
This one instance
cannot be considered a procedure "widely administered."
Plaintiff has
taken isolated quotes from various cases and done a
commendable job in trying to put together a brief that
compels the Court to accept Plaintiffs' position. In
spite of this, this Court is not persuaded. This Court
simply does not think that the situation set forth in
Plaintiffs' complaint was intended or is covered by § 5
of the Voting Rights Act. This case is analogous and
controlled by Saint Landry. In Presley,
one of the Supreme Court's most recent pronouncements
*606 in this area, the Court held: "Every decision
taken by government implicates voting ... yet no one
would contend that when Congress enacted the Voting
Rights Act it meant to subject all or even most
decisions of government in covered jurisdictions to
federal supervision." Presley v. Etowah County Com'n,
502 U.S. 491, 503, 112 S.Ct. 820, 829, 117 L.Ed.2d 51,
64 (1992). This is a matter for the state courts.
Federal courts should be no more intrusive than
necessary to discharge their responsibility. This Court
expresses no opinion on the merits of the issues
presented effecting state law. The state courts are in
better positions than this Court to make those
decisions. Put this footnote in appropriate place. (FN3)
II. Counts II and
III: Substantive and Procedural Due Process and Other
Constitutional Issues.
Defendants next
urge the Court to strike Count II of the Complaint
pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(f). In addition, Defendants
also seem to argue that both Counts II and III are
subject to dismissal pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6)
for failure to state a claim. As noted earlier, a motion
under Rule 12(f) is not the proper means by which to
procure dismissal of a complaint. The Court will
consider Defendant's attack on Count II as a motion
under Rule 12(b)(6).
A. Due Process
[6] In Thrasher
v. Board of Supervisors of Alcorn County, 765
F.Supp. 896 (N.D.Miss.1991), Judge Davidson addressed
substantive and procedural due process questions in a
case involving facts almost identical to the facts
presented in the instant case. Although that opinion is
not controlling, the Court finds it very persuasive and
grounded in common sense. Following the holding in
Thrasher, this Court concludes that the Plaintiffs
have not alleged either a substantive or procedural due
process claim. In Thrasher the Court concluded:
"Even if names were 'disallowed improperly' as
Plaintiffs contend, such proof, without more, would not
rise to a constitutional violation." 765 F.Supp. at 899
(fn 3).
The Court
discussed the questions which were presented in that
case relative to whether or not an election should be
called in regard to the proposed bond issue. The Court
declined to resolve these questions holding:
Such inquiries
threaten to lead this court far into the thicket of
local election matters and far afield from the
constitutional violations Section 1983 was intended
to protect. Even when all facts are viewed in a
light most favorable to plaintiff, the questions
posed by this case relate more to the fine "details
of administration of the election" for which state
laws provide adequate remedy. (citation omitted).
765 F.Supp. at
900.
Even if
defendants did improperly eliminate signatures on
the protest petition or view the required number of
signatures too restrictively, these cases show that
the proper avenue for such claims was through
established state election procedures and not the
federal courts.
765 F.Supp. at
901.
Where a state
procedure appears to exist for permitting and
possibly resolving challenges, ... the power to
control the details of such matters is normally
conferred to the states.
765 F.Supp. at
902.
Because the
right to vote on bond matters after a certain number
of petitions have been filed is conferred by state
law, interpretation of that law is appropriately
left to state and local authority.
765 F.Supp. at 903
(fn 11).
The Court
concluded that even if the allegations of the plaintiff
were true "the state procedures cited above appear fully
adequate to satisfy the requirements of due process."
*607 765 F.Supp. at 903. The state procedures
referred to by Judge Davidson are the same procedures
available to Plaintiffs in this case. As to the rights
which Plaintiff in Thrasher sought to protect,
which are the same rights sought to be protected in this
case, the Court concluded, "the rights they seek are
properly resolved by state authorities and state
courts." This Court has reached the same conclusion.
B. Right to
Petition, 14th Amendment Privileges and Immunities
Clause, and Liberty Interests Under Due Process
[7] Respecting
Plaintiff's allegations of deprivation of the right to
petition the government, neither party submitted any
authority to support their position. Plaintiff does cite
several cases recognizing that the First Amendment
rights, including the right to petition, are preferred
under the Constitution. Thomas v. Collins, 323
U.S. 516, 65 S.Ct. 315, 89 L.Ed. 430, reh'g denied,
323 U.S. 819, 65 S.Ct. 557, 89 L.Ed. 650 (1945). He
further points out that these rights are inseparable.
United Mine Workers v. Illinois State Bar Ass'n, 389
U.S. 217, 88 S.Ct. 353, 19 L.Ed.2d 426 (1967).
Plaintiffs contend the actions of City officials during
the signature removal campaign intimidated petitioners
into signing counter petitions and thus amounted to
nothing short of censorship and an impairment of the
right to petition the government for redress of
grievances.
After extensive
research, this Court has located only one case that
purportedly supports Plaintiff's position. The Colorado
case of Mountain States Legal Foundation v. Denver
School District, 459 F.Supp. 357 (D.Colo.1978),
acknowledged the fundamental nature of the First
Amendment rights to freedom of speech and to petition
the government. Id. at 360. The court went on to
find that "[a] use of the power of publicly owned
resources to propagandize against a proposal made and
supported by a significant number of those who were
taxed to pay for such resources is an abridgment of
those fundamental freedoms." However, the court took
great care to point out the proposal at issue was a
citizen-sponsored initiative which sought "fundamentally
to alter the authority of representative government;"
the current litigation does not present the same issue.
Id. at 360-61. Instead, what is at issue today is
the propriety of a local government's efforts to combat
a petition drive for a bond issue--a more mundane issue
in the world of local government politics. Some citizens
are on one side and other citizens are on the other
side. The local government makes its decision which can
be appealed under state law. The local government's
decision further has to be proved in a judicial
validation proceeding. The Federal Constitution,
specifically the due process clause, guarantees no more.
Given the context
of today's dispute, this Court finds the lack of
precedent in support of Plaintiff's position more
persuasive than the single district court case cited
above. Particularly worthy of note is the fact that of
the many other jurisdictions which have adopted Smith
v. Dorsey, 599 So.2d 529 (1992) same prohibition
against public expenditure of government funds for a
favored position on political issues, not one has
grounded its finding on the possibility that such
conduct is an affront to the First Amendment right to
petition the government. See, e.g., Palm Beach County
v. Hudspeth, 540 So.2d 147 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.1989);
Citizens to Protect Public Funds v. Bd. Of Education of
Parsippany-Troy Hills Tp., 13 N.J. 172, 98 A.2d 673
(1953).
[8] Also
persuasive is the district court's opinion in Wright
v. Mahan, 478 F.Supp. 468 (E.D.Va.1979) which
unequivocally recognized the infirmity of Plaintiffs'
claim. Wright involved a municipality's allegedly
improper denial of a properly filed petition for an
initiative. The district court characterized the issue
as "whether a State judge's denial of a properly filed
petition for a municipal initiative election contravenes
the First Amendment guarantees of freedom of expression
and the right to petition the government for redress of
grievances...." Basing its decision on the Supreme Court
precedent of Snowden v. Hughes, 321 U.S. 1, 64
S.Ct. 397, 88 L.Ed. 497 (1943), the court concluded "a
right to petition for, have access to the ballot for,
and vote in a municipal initiative *608.
election, is a wholly State created right, and is not a
right secured by the federal Constitution." Wright,
478 F.Supp. at 474. This Court agrees and accordingly
holds the right to petition for a municipal initiative
election and any related governmental misconduct is
"properly within the purview of State government and
beyond the province of federal courts." Id. at
473-74.
[9] Count III also
asserts a violation of the Fourteen Amendment's
Privileges and Immunities Clause. The privilege
asserted, again, is that of the right to petition the
government for redress of grievances. Snowden v.
Hughes clearly recognizes that "[t]he protection
extended to citizens of the United States by the
privileges and immunities clause includes those rights
and privileges which, under the laws and Constitution of
the United States, are incident to citizenship of the
United States, but does not include rights pertaining
to state citizenship and derived solely from the
relationship of the citizen and his state established by
state law." Snowden, 321 U.S. at 6-7, 64 S.Ct. at
400, 88 L.Ed. at 502. The right to petition for an
election on a bond issue is clearly rooted in state law.
In accordance with the above analysis and consistent
with the Supreme Court's holding in Snowden, this
Court finds that Plaintiffs fail as a matter of law to
state a claim under the Privileges and Immunities
clause.
Finally, Count III
purports to state a claim for a violation of Plaintiff's
liberty interests without due process. The due process
issue has already been decided as set out above.
CONCLUSION
For the above
stated reasons, this Court finds:
Defendants' Joint
Motion to Dismiss is well-taken and should be, and
hereby is, GRANTED. Considering the disposition of this
cause, a discussion of the abstention doctrine is
rendered unnecessary. However, it appears that this
clearly would be a case for abstention, even if
Plaintiffs had stated a cause of action.
IT IS, THEREFORE,
ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that Plaintiff's Complaint is
hereby DISMISSED with prejudice. A separate judgment to
the same effect will be entered pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P.
58.
SO ORDERED AND
ADJUDGED.
FN1. The Court
draws its factual material from the allegations of
Plaintiffs' Complaint and from Plaintiffs' Response and
Brief opposing Defendants' Joint Motion.
FN2. Title 21,
Chapter 33, Section 307 of Miss.Code Ann. (1972)
provides:
Before issuing
any bonds for any of the purposes enumerated in
Section 21-33-301, the governing authority of the
issuing municipality shall adopt a resolution
declaring its intention so to do, stating the amount
of bonds proposed to be issued and the purpose for
which the bonds are to be issued, and the date upon
which the aforesaid authority proposes to direct the
issuance of such bonds. Such resolution shall be
published once a week for at least three (3)
consecutive weeks in at least one (1) newspaper
published in such municipality. * * * If ten percent
(10%) of the qualified electors of the municipality,
or fifteen hundred (1500), whichever is the lesser,
shall file a written protest against the issuance of
such bonds on or before the date specified in such
resolution, then an election on the question of the
bonds shall be called and held as is provided in
Section 21-33-309.
FN3. This
Court recognizes that in Pendleton v. Heard,
824 F.2d 448 (1987), the Fifth Circuit held that the
"practice of noticing, then withdrawing bond issues
rather than calling an election" was subject to § 5
of the Voting Rights Act. This case is clearly
distinguishable in that in that instance, the
governing body of the county did this on seven
different occasions. This Court does not view
Pendleton as justification for extending § 5 of
the Voting Rights Act to the situation here
complained of.
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