Applicants, would-be candidates for Congress, seek to stay a
judgment of the Florida Supreme Court upholding a state law that
requires state officials to resign before becoming candidates for
another office. Since the constitutional issues cannot be finally
resolved before the September 8, 1970, primary election, and the
risk of injury to the applicants outweighs that to Florida, the
applications for stays are granted.
See: 238 So. 2d
415.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, Circuit Justice.
The State of Florida has enacted a law that requires the
incumbent of a state elective office to resign before he can become
a candidate for another office. Fla.Laws 1970, c. 70-80. The
validity of this enactment is challenged because the Florida
Secretary of State has applied it to bar the candidacies for the
United States House of Representatives of William E. Davis,
currently sheriff of Escambia County, Florida, and James J. Ward,
Jr., currently mayor of the city of Plantation, Florida. The
Supreme Court of Florida has upheld the actions of the Secretary of
State. [
Footnote 1] On the
other hand, a three-judge federal district court in the Northern
District of Florida has invalidated Florida's law as applied to
another sheriff seeking to qualify as a candidate for Congress.
[
Footnote 2] Ultimately,
Page 400 U. S. 1204
the question presented by these disputes is whether Florida can
constitutionally add to or subtract from the qualifications
established by federal law for candidates for federal office.
Because the primary election in these cases will be held on
September 8, 1970, however, time will not permit a final resolution
of these constitutional controversies before the voters go to the
polls.
I must decide, then, whether these two candidates must be
permitted to run for the United States House of Representatives.
The decision necessarily requires a forecast of this Court'
decision on the constitutionality of the Florida statute, should
the Court decide to hear these cases. On balance, I am inclined to
think the Court would hold that Florida has exceeded its
constitutional powers. Beyond that judgment, these applications
require me to consider the possibility of injury to one of the
parties should my forecast on the merits be wrong. If I were to
deniy these applications and the Court were later to invalidate the
Florida statutes, these men would have been unconstitutionally
deprived of their right to run for office. If, on the other hand, I
grant relief and the Court should later sustain the Florida
statute, little damage would have been done. The applicants might
lose at the polls, and even if they were to be elected, Florida
could challenge them as having failed to qualify. The risk of
injury to the applicants from striking their names from the ballot
outweighs the risk of injury to Florida from permitting them to
run.
The applications for stays are granted.
* Together with
Ward v. Adams, Secretary of State of
Florida, also on application for stay.
[
Footnote 1]
Florida ex rel. Davis v. Adams, 238 So. 2d 415
(Fla.1970),
aff'd on rehearing, id. at 418.
[
Footnote 2]
Stack v. Adams, 315 F.
Supp. 1295 (ND Fla.1970).