Case Name: Edward E. Merrill vs. County Commissioners of Essex
Court: Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
Jurisdiction: Massachusetts
Decision Date: 1926-10-13
Citations: 257 Mass. 184
Docket Number: 
Parties: Edward E. Merrill vs. County Commissioners of Essex.
Judges: 
Reporter: Massachusetts Reports
Volume: 257
Pages: 184–188

Head Matter:
Edward E. Merrill vs. County Commissioners of Essex.
Essex.
September 17, 1926.
October 13, 1926.
Present: Crosby, Pierce, Carroll, & Sanderson, JJ.
The case was submitted on briefs.
R. W. Hill, E. L. Howie, & R. E. Blake, for the petitioner.
S. Parsons, A. G. Wadleigh, & P. F. Crowley, for the respondents.

Opinion:
Pierce, J.
This is a petition for a writ of mandamus brought by a legal voter of "Ward Two in the city of Salem" and county of Essex against the county commissioners of the county of Essex, praying that the division of said county and apportionment of representatives made by the said commissioners, while purporting to act in accordance with art. 21 of the Amendments to the Constitution and St. 1926, c. 372, should be declared null and void because the action of the commissioners violates that part of art. 21 of the Amendments to the Constitution which reads, "the county commissioners in each county . . . shall, on the first Tuesday of August next after each assignment of representatives to each county, assemble at a shire town of their respective counties, and proceed, as soon as may be, to divide the same into representative districts . so as to apportion the representation assigned to each county equally, as nearly as may be, according to the relative number of legal voters in the several districts of each county." The petition was referred to an auditor. A justice of this court found the facts to be as stated by the auditor, and reported the case for the determination by the full court.
The pertinent facts thus found in substance are as follows: The number of legal voters in said county of Essex, as appears by the decennial census of the Commonwealth taken in the year 1925, was one hundred seventy-nine thousand four hundred and thirty-nine. The county of Essex is entitled, by virtue of said census and by St. 1926, c. 372, § 4, to thirty-one representatives to the General Court. The average number of voters for each representative in such districts is five thousand seven hundred and eighty-eight. With the exception of objections made as to two of the districts in the city of Salem, designated as districts numbered 15 and 18, and the request that the town of Saugus be made a single district, no objection was made by any person to the districts as apportioned by the respondents.
District 12 has one representative for four thousand, six hundred and eighty-two legal voters. District 16 has one representative for four thousand one hundred and thirty-five legal voters. Districts 12, 13 and 14 contain in the aggregate forty-one thousand four hundred and eighteen legal voters to which eight representatives are assigned or one for every five thousand one hundred and seventy-seven legal voters. Districts 15, 17 and 18, the three Salem districts, contain in the aggregate twenty thousand and eleven legal voters, to which three representatives are assigned or one for about every six thousand six hundred and seventy legal voters. In districts 3, 4, 12, 13, 14, and 16 the voters are entitled to vote for a representative for a much less number of legal voters than five thousand seven hundred and eighty-eight, to wit, an average of four thousand nine hundred and thirty-eight. Comparing district 18, with one representative to eight thousand, two hundred and fifty-six legal voters, with district 12, with one representative to four thousand six hundred and eighty-two legal voters, with district 16 with one representative to four thousand one hundred thirty-five legal voters, with districts 12, 13, and 14, with one representative to five thousand one hundred and seventy-nine legal voters, with districts 15, 17 and 18, with one representative to six thousand six hundred and seventy legal voters and districts 3, 4, 12, 13, 14 and 16, with one representative to an average of four thousand nine hundred and thirty-eight legal voters, it is at once obvious that the mathematical ratio of apportionment adopted by the commissioners is grossly unequal and discriminating as applied to the several districts; and it is readily perceived that their redistricting of the county does not apportion the representatives assigned to the county of Essex equally as nearly as may be according to the relative number of legal voters in the several districts of that county.
This great inequality, while recognized by the respondents, is defended on the ground that "The commissioners in the exercise of their honest judgment, adopted the apportionment complained of as the least objectionable solution of a difficult problem"; and on the further ground that the "commissioners, acting in good faith and exercising their best judgment, made what they believed to be the best apportionment of Essex County into representative districts."
Of course the question for decision is not whether the commissioners acted in good or bad faith, or whether the result reached by them is the "best apportionment of Essex County into representative districts," but is, Does the apportionment made approximate as nearly as reasonably may be to exactness in the number of legal voters in any district, when compared with the legal voters in other districts? If the apportionment does not thus approximate, the action of the commissioners is a nullity, because it transgresses the commands of the Constitution. Donovan v. Suffolk County Apportionment Commissioners, 225 Mass. 55. The commissioners were bound to observe the limitations on their action prescribed by the Constitution and could not justifiably or legally make an unequal apportionment in representation because no legal voter appeared to protest against the apportionment or to suggest a better one. Nor were they excused from the performance of their duty by the fact found by the auditor that any change in the apportionment of districts would be against the wishes of the representatives of the affected municipalities, or by the fact of the variant characteristics of voters in the contiguous communities for the purpose of representation. The finding of the auditor, that "It is possible to divide and apportion Essex County so that the numerical excess and shortage of the several districts complained of . . . would be materially lessened," is justified by the reported facts; and the reasons given for or in explanation of the action of the commissioners fail to show that they could not have apportioned the representation in a way which would result in an equality in the county, as nearly as may be, according to the relative number of legal voters in the several districts in each county.
Let the entry be in substance, that the present division and apportionment of the county of Essex into representative districts, made and filed by the commissioners, is void as not in conformity to the Constitution, and that the commissioners proceed "as soon as may be" to divide the county of Essex into representative districts so as to apportion the number of representatives assigned to that county "equally, as nearly as may be, according to the relative number of legal voters" in the several districts, and otherwise in conformity to the Constitution and to art. 21 of the Amend-' ments to the Constitution, and to make due report thereof as required by said article of amendment.
So ordered.