DocketNumber: 70-21
Citation Numbers: 32 L. Ed. 2d 317, 92 S. Ct. 1716, 406 U.S. 583, 1972 U.S. LEXIS 143, 63 Ohio Op. 2d 68
Judges: Rehnquist, Burger, Stewart, White, Blackmun, Powell, Douglas, Brennan, Marshall
Filed Date: 5/30/1972
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellant Socialist Labor Party has engaged in a prolonged legal battle to invalidate various Ohio laws restricting minority party access to the ballot. Concluding that “the totality of the Ohio restrictive laws taken as a whole” violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, this Court struck down those laws in Socialist Labor Party v. Rhodes, 393 U. S. 23, 34 (1968) ,
The Socialist Labor Party, its officers, and members joined as plaintiffs in requesting a three-judge District Court to invalidate on constitutional grounds various sections of the revised election laws of Ohio. The plaintiffs specifically challenged provisions of the Ohio election laws requiring that a party either receive a certain percentage of the vote cast in the last preceding election or else file petitions of qualified electors corresponding to the same percentage; provisions relating to the organizational structure of a party; provisions requiring that a political party elect a specified number of delegates and alternates to a state convention; and provisions requiring a party to be part of a national political party that holds national conventions at which delegates elected in state primaries nominate presidential and vice-
The case was decided on cross-motions for summary judgment, the three-judge District Court having before it the complaint and answer of the respective parties, and affidavits filed pursuant to Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 56. The court ruled on the merits in favor of all of appellants’ constitutional challenges to the Ohio election laws except that involving the oath requirement, with respect to which it ruled in favor of the appellees. Both sides appealed to this Court, and we noted probable jurisdiction. 401 U. S. 991 (1971).
Since then, the posture of this litigation has undergone a significant change. On December 23, 1971, the Ohio Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 460, which embodied an extensive revision of the state election code. Both sides now agree that the passage of this Act renders moot all but one of the issues decided below. The one challenged provision that remains unamended is the State’s requirement that a political party execute the above-described affidavit under oath in order to obtain a position on the ballot.
Appellants’ 1970 complaint represented a broadside attack against interrelated and allegedly overly restrictive provisions of the Ohio election laws. The three-judge District Court, in its ruling for the appellants on the issues that have now become moot, stated:
“The 1969 amendments to the election laws merely perpetuate the restrictive laws enacted between 1948 and 1952. The overall effect of these laws*586 is still to deny to plaintiffs their constitutional right of political association.” 318 F. Supp. 1262, 1269-1270 (footnote omitted).
Thus appellants, at the time they filed their 1970 action, were fenced out of the political process by a series of restrictive provisions that prevented them from making any progress toward a position on the ballot as a designated political party. Their challenge was necessarily of a somewhat abstract character, since under their allegations they were able to comply with very few of the provisions regulating access to the ballot. Now, however, with the enactment of a revised election code, the abstract character of the single remaining challenge to the Ohio election procedures stands out all the more.
Appellants did not in their action that came here in 1968 challenge the loyalty oath. Their 1970 complaint respecting the loyalty oath is singularly sparse in its factual allegations. There is no suggestion in it that the Socialist Labor Party has ever refused in the past, or will now refuse, to sign the required oath. There is no allegation of injury that the party has suffered or will suffer because of the existence of the oath requirement.
It is fairly inferable that the absence of such allegations is not merely an oversight in the drafting of a pleading. The requirement of the affidavit under oath was enacted in 1941, 119 Ohio Laws 586, and has remained continuously in force since that date. The Socialist Labor Party has appeared on the state ballot since the law’s passage, and, unless the state officials have ignored what appear to be mandatory oath provisions, it is reasonable to conclude that the party has in the past executed the required affidavit.
It is axiomatic that the federal courts do not decide abstract questions posed by parties who lack “a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy.” Baker v.
In the usual case in which this Court has passed on the validity of similar oath provisions, the party challenging constitutionality was either unable or unwilling to execute the required oath and, in the circumstances of the particular case, sustained, or faced the immediate prospect of sustaining, some direct injury as a result of the penalty provisions associated with the oath. See, e. g., Cole v. Richardson, 405 U. S. 676 (1972); Keyishian v. Board of Regents, 385 U. S. 589 (1967); Wieman v. Updegraff, 344 U. S. 183 (1952).
In Cramp v. Board of Public Instruction, 368 U. S. 278, 283-285 (1961), the appellants were public school teachers who had been threatened with discharge for their refusal to execute the required oath. The Court held that even though appellants might be able to sign the
The long and the short of the matter is that we know very little more about the operation of the Ohio affidavit procedure as a result of this lawsuit than we would if a prospective plaintiff who had never set foot in Ohio had simply picked this section of the Ohio election laws out of the statute books and filed a complaint in the District Court setting forth the allegedly offending provisions and requesting an injunction against their enforcement. These plaintiffs may well meet the technical requirement of standing, and they may be parties to a case or controversy, but their case has not given any particularity to the effect on them of Ohio’s affidavit requirement.
This Court has recognized in the past that even when jurisdiction exists it should not be exercised unless the case “tenders the underlying constitutional issues in clean-cut and concrete form.” Rescue Army v. Municipal Court, 331 U. S. 549, 584 (1947). Problems of prematurity and abstractness may well present “insuperable obstacles” to the exercise of the Court’s jurisdiction, even though that jurisdiction is technically present. Id., at 574.
It is so ordered.
Mr. Justice Douglas, with whom Mr. Justice Brennan and Mr. Justice Marshall concur, dissenting.
The oath required of appellants for political recognition in Ohio is plainly unconstitutional as a denial of
In order to “be recognized or be given a place on the ballot in any primary or general election,” Ohio requires that members of political parties file a loyalty oath with the Secretary of State. Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 3517.07 (1960) (see appendix to this opinion). I need not consider the vagueness or overbreadth of the Ohio oath, for my views on that subject have been stated over and over again.
An exception from the oath requirement is made for “any political party or group which has had a place on the ballot in each national and gubernatorial election since the year 1900.” Ibid. It is conceded that this exemption applies only to the Democratic and Republican Parties (see Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment), and we may properly treat it as if it were written in precisely those terms. See Lane v. Wilson, 307 U. S. 268 (1939); Guinn v. United States, 238 U. S. 347 (1915). This exception is thus part of the broader pattern of Ohio’s discriminatory preference for the two established political parties. We considered this discrimination before in Williams v. Rhodes, 393 U. S. 23, 31 (1968), and said:
“No extended discussion is required to establish that the Ohio laws before us give the two old,*591 established parties a decided advantage over any new parties struggling for existence and thus place substantially unequal burdens on both the right to vote and the right to associate. The right to form a party for the advancement of political goals means little if a party can be kept off the election ballot and thus denied an equal opportunity to win votes. So also, the right to vote is heavily burdened if that vote may be cast only for one of two parties at a time when other parties are clamoring for a place on the ballot. In determining whether the State has power to place such unequal burdens on minority groups where rights of this kind are at stake, the decisions of this Court have consistently held that ‘only a compelling state interest in the regulation of a subject within the State’s constitutional power to regulate can justify limiting First Amendment freedoms.’ ”
In a separate opinion, I noted, “The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment permits the States to make classifications and does not require them to treat different groups uniformly. Nevertheless, it bans any ‘invidious discrimination.’ ” Id., at 39. Classifications based upon political or religious associations, beliefs, or philosophy are such “invidious” classifications. As Mr. Justice Black said in Cox v. Louisiana, 379 U. S. 559, 581:
“[B]y specifically permitting picketing for the publication of labor union views, Louisiana is attempting to pick and choose among the views it is willing to have discussed on its streets. It thus is trying to prescribe by law what matters of public interest people whom it allows to assemble on its streets may and may not discuss. This seems to me to be censorship in a most odious form, un*592 constitutional under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. And to deny this appellant and his group use of the streets because of their views against racial discrimination, while allowing other groups to use the streets to voice opinions on other subjects, also amounts, I think, to an invidious discrimination forbidden by the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
"While I doubt that any state interest can be so compelling as to justify an impairment of associational freedoms in the area of philosophy — political or otherwise,” Lippitt v. Cipollone, 404 U. S. 1032, 1033-1034 (Douglas, J., dissenting); see also Williams v. Rhodes, supra, at 39-40 (separate opinion of Douglas, J.), the ap-pellees have not even offered a colorable explanation for the disparate treatment of the separate political parties. I conclude, therefore, that the unequal burden placed upon appellants is unconstitutional.
The Court does not reach appellants’ challenge to the loyalty oath, however, because it concludes that “they do not allege any particulars that make the [oath] requirement other than a hypothetical burden.” Ante, at 587. In sharp contrast to the decision in Rescue Army v. Municipal Court, 331 U. S. 549 (1947), the only case upon which it relies,
Appellants argue that the oath is facially invalid for the invidious classification it creates, for its overbreadth
Evers v. Dwyer, 358 U. S. 202 (1958), is relevant here. The appellant in that case was a black who sought a declaratory judgment that a state statute requiring the segregation of the races on municipal buses was unconstitutional. In dismissing the complaint, the District Court took the approach this Court takes today and reasoned that appellant “ha[d] not been injured at all” because “he was not a regular or even an occasional user of bus transportation.” We summarily reversed that decision, saying that an individual “subjected by statute to special disabilities necessarily has, we think, a substantial, immediate, and real interest in the validity of the statute which imposes the disability.” 358 U. S., at 204. And see Gooding v. Wilson, 405 U. S. 518.
In Evers, we did not base our decision on any consideration of whether the seats blacks were required to take were better or worse than those available to whites. Rather, we held that members of a disfavored minority could challenge unconstitutional statutory classifications which set them apart. That was the “disability” to which we referred. Appellants are members of an unfavored political minority in Ohio and they too should be able to challenge invidious classifications which set them apart from the favored majority.
Since 1946, appellants and other minority political parties in Ohio have been repressed by legislation enacted by the two dominant parties. In the last four years, they have sought relief from these shackles so that their voices could be heard in the political arena
The modern remedy of declaratory judgments should be used to simplify, not multiply, litigation.
I would reverse the judgment below.
That case was decided together with Williams v. Rhodes, 393 U. S. 23 (1968).
Despite the contrary implication in the dissent, see post, at 592-593, n. 3, the holding of Rescue Army has been applied by this Court to numerous appeals in which no statutory or constitutional impediment to jurisdiction was present. See, e. g., Cowgill v. California, 396 U. S. 371 (1970) (Harlan, J., concurring); Atlanta Newspapers, Inc. v. Grimes, 364 U. S. 290 (1960); Teamsters v. Denver Milk Pro
E. g., Cole v. Richardson, 405 U. S. 676, 687 (1972) (dissenting opinion); W. E. B. DuBois Clubs v. Clark, 389 U. S. 309, 313 (1967) (dissenting opinion); Elfbrandt v. Russell, 384 U. S. 11 (1966); Nostrand v. Little, 362 U. S. 474, 476 (1960) (dissenting opinion) ; First Unitarian Church v. Los Angeles, 357 U. S. 545, 547 (1958) (concurring opinion); Speiser v. Randall, 357 U. S. 513, 532 (1958) (concurring opinion).
While the District Court acknowledged that one of appellants’ challenges to the oath was that it “violates the Equal Protection Clause by excepting the Democratic and Republican Parties from its ambit,” 318 F. Supp. 1262, 1270, the court inexplicably did not address this argument.
Rescue Army came on appeal from the Supreme Court of California and involved a complex state statutory scheme.
The present case, by contrast, comes from a United States District Court where our appellate jurisdiction is founded upon 28 U. S. C. § 1253. It is, I think, an undue extension of Rescue Army to apply it to an appeal from a federal court which properly heard
The cases cited by the majority, ante, at 588-589, n. 2, do not support today’s treatment of an appeal from an Art. Ill court. In United States v. Fruehauf, 365 U. S. 146 (1961), the District Court dismissed an indictment and we reversed and remanded holding that the provable facts might bring the case within the statute. In United States v. CIO, 335 U. S. 106 (1948), we affirmed the judgment of the District Court which had dismissed an indictment, because the facts alleged did not state an offense; and we did not therefore reach the constitutional issue relied upon by the District Court. Finally, Albertson v. Millard, 345 U. S. 242 (1953), was an abstention case in which we vacated the judgment of the District Court and remanded with directions to hold the case until the state law questions had been resolved. None of these cases, therefore, stands for the proposition that we may dismiss a perfected appeal from a properly entered judgment of an Art. Ill court.
The suggestion that “appellants have apparently signed the oath at previous times,” ante, at 588, and thus somehow have waived their right to object to the oath, is unsupported by the record. Appellants include not only the Socialist Labor Party but also its named officers and members who would be required to execute the oath. Whatever relevance there may be to the fact that the Socialist Labor Party was on the ballot in Ohio in 1946, that fact has no bearing with regard to the individual appellants.
As to Cramp, it is suggested that “the record there indicated that [Cramp] would still be subject to possible hazards of a perjury conviction by reason of the vagueness of the oath’s language.” Ante, at 588. In our opinion in Cramp, however, we noted that Cramp alleged in his complaint “that he ‘is a loyal American and does not decline to execute or subscribe to the aforesaid oath for fear of the penalties provided by law for a false oath,’ ” 368 U. S., at 281. In any event, Ohio also subjects oath takers to the “possible hazards of a perjury conviction,” see Ohio Rev. Code Ann. §§ 3599.36, 2917.25 (1960), so Cramp is not distinguishable.
See, e. g., Liypitt v. Cipollone, 404 U. S. 1032 (1972), aff’g 337 P. Supp. 1405 (ND Ohio 1971); Brockington v. Rhodes, 396 U. S. 41 (1969); Williams v. Rhodes, 393 U. S. 23 (1968), aff’g sub nom.