MARTHAANN E.
PITTS, et al., Plaintiffs, v. ROBERT S.
BLACK, et al., etc., Defendants
No. 84 Civ. 5270 (MJL)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
608 F. Supp. 696;
1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22938
October 9, 1984
COUNSEL:
[**1]
Robert M. Buschman, Esq., Ogden N. Lewis, Esq., Catherine V. Curry, Esq.,
Deborah S. Guyol, Esq., New York, New York, Robert M. Hayes, Esq., Coalition
for the Homeless, New York, New York, for Plaintiffs.
Susan Rosenberg, Esq., Antonia Levine, Esq., Michael C. Harwood, Esq.,
Assistant Corporation Counsel, Corporation Counsel of the City of New York, New
York, New York, for Defendant City of New York.
Marion Buchbinder, Esq., Judith A. Gordon, Esq., Assistant Attorney General,
Attorney General's Office, State of New York, New York, New York, for Defendant
State of New York.
JUDGES: Mary Johnson Lowe, D.J.
OPINIONBY: LOWE
OPINION:
[*697] MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
MARY JOHNSON LOWE, D.J.
Who are to be the electors . . .? Not the rich more than the poor, not the
learned, more than the ignorant, not the haughty heirs of distinguished names,
more than the humble sons of obscure and unpropitious fortune. The electors are
to be the great body of the people of the United States.
The Federalist No. 57 (J. Madison)
The plaintiff class seeks a permanent injunction and a declaratory judgment
prohibiting the present practice of the New York City Board of
Elections ("City Board"),
[**2] acting with the advice and support of the New York State Board of
Elections ("State Board") from applying the New York State
Election Law ("Election Law") in such a manner as to completely disenfranchise the plaintiff class.
Plaintiffs allege that they are
"homeless" persons in that they do not have traditional residences. They further allege
that they reside in the State of New York and but for the fact that they do not
live in traditional residences they meet the statutory requirements for
eligibility to
register to vote in all other respects.
Plaintiffs claim that the defendants' application of the
Election Law in such a manner as to disenfranchise plaintiffs' class, violates the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States
Constitution. n1
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n1 In this Court's Opinion and Order granting plaintiffs' application for a
preliminary injunction, dated September 25, 1984, this Court dismissed
plaintiffs' second claim asserting that defendants' application to plaintiffs
of the
Election Law contravenes the New York State
Election Law and plaintiffs' third claim that defendants' conduct violates provisions of
the New York State Constitution. In
Pennhurst, et al. v. Halderman, et al., 465 U.S. 89, 104 S. Ct. 900, 79 L. Ed. 2d 67 (1984) the Supreme Court held that the Eleventh Amendment to the United States
Constitution prohibited a federal district court from ordering state officials
to conform their conduct with state law.
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[**3]
[*698] Federal jurisdiction is alleged pursuant to
28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343, and
42 U.S.C. ¤ 1983. The issue for determination in this lawsuit is the constitutionally
permissible definition of the term
"residence" used in Section 1-104(22) of the
Election Law. n2 The term
"residence" is defined in that Section as,
"that place where a person maintains a fixed, permanent and principal home and
to which he, wherever temporarily located, always
intends to return." n3
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n2 In addition to Section 1-104(22), Section 5-102 of the
Election Law sets forth three requirements for
registration: Citizenship (United States), age (eighteen years or over), and duration of
residence in New York State and in the county, city or village in which
registration is sought (thirty days).
n3 The term
"residence" has been interpreted by the New York courts to be equivalent to
"domicile", and is
"dependent upon the applicant's expressed intent, his conduct and 'all attendant
surrounding circumstances '".
Palla v. Suffolk Co. Bd. of Elections, 31 N.Y.2d 36, 334 N.Y.S. 2d 860, 286 N.E.2d 247 (1972) (citation omitted).
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[**4]
Plaintiffs view the term residence as the act of being in one geographical
locale, where one performs the usual functions of sleeping, eating and living
in accordance with one's life style, and a place to which one,
"wherever temporarily located" always
intends to return. The named plaintiff, Dyer, testified at trial:
Q: Mr. Dyer, you said that you live in St. Gabriel [sic]
Park, is that correct?
A: Yes.
Q: And St. Gabriel [sic]
Park is approximately one block square, is that correct?
A: Yes, it is.
Q: And you
sleep in the
park on any one of six benches located around the baseball diamond, is that right?
A: Yes. n4
THE COURT: Mr. Dyer, when you spoke, of these places where you have slept, n5 .
. . for I think you said a couple of nights, I am asking you about your intent
now, did you
intend that those places that you slept were your home?
THE WITNESS: No, I've always sort of considered St. Gabriel [sic]
Park as my home
park or my home base. n6
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n4 Transcript of trial dated October 4, 1984, hereinafter ("Tr.") pp. 54-55. References to the preliminary injunction hearing transcript are
indicated by the page number,
e.g., Preliminary Injunction
"Tr." References to deposition testimony admitted into evidence are indicated by
witness and deposition page number
e.g.,
"Tannenbaum 25". Plaintiffs' exhibits are indicated by
"Pl. Ex.", and defendants' exhibits by
"Def. Ex." Individual pleadings are separately designated,
e.g.,
"Complaint". The Memorandum Opinion and Order dated September 25, 1984 is indicated by
"Memorandum Opinion".
[**5]
n5 Dyer testified that in the cold months he slept in Grand Central Station.
During the year he would also
sleep for one or two nights in a
shelter or at a friend's house.
n6 Tr. 72-73.
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Defendants maintain that the term
"residence" necessarily implies the occupancy of a fixed premises. Mr. Thomas Wallace,
Executive Director of the New York State Board of
Elections testified, n7
Q. Mr. Wallace, do you believe that an individual who gives a
park bench as his address would be a resident of the State of New York entitled to
register to vote?
A. In my own opinion, I do not believe he could qualify under the statutory
provisions defining residency.
Q. Can you tell us why, please?
A. The statute requires a fixed, permanent home and whenever temporarily
absent, the person
intends to return. I see that definition as carrying with it a requirement that the
person have a right to the physical location to the property.
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n7 Tr. p. 192.
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[**6]
Betty Dolen, Executive Director of the New York City Board of
Elections testified, n8
Q. Mrs. Dolen, one general question.
Is it the position of the City Board of
Elections
presently that the
homeless who do not live in
shelters or welfare
hotels may not
register to vote?
A. That is the position the Board has taken.
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n8 Tr. p. 185.
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[*699] DISCUSSION
Limitations on the exercise of the franchise must be subjected to strict
judicial scrutiny and the burden of justification for
restrictive measures must be borne by those who would impose such limitations.
Dunn v. Blumstein, 405 U.S. 330, 31 L. Ed. 2d 274, 92 S. Ct. 995 (1972). Although substantial and compelling interests may be alleged, a state may not
choose the way of greater interference when less onerous alternatives are
available.
"If it acts at all, it must choose less drastic means."
Id. at 343.
Defendants' definition of the term
"residence" excludes an entire group of otherwise eligible
voters. Defendants assert that such exclusion
[**7] is necessary in order to protect valid state interests:
First, in ensuring that the
voter has a verifiable nexus to the community from which he or she votes;
Second, protection of the integrity of the ballot by preventing fraudulent
voting practices; and
Third, administrative feasibility.
When an equal protection challenge is made to the constitutionality of a
statute, as applied to a particular class, it is necessary to define the class
so that the Court may review the character of the classification, the
individual interests effected by the classification, and the governmental
interests asserted in support of the classification.
A.
Who Are The
Homeless
At trial plaintiffs called Mr. Kim Hopper to testify. The Court accepted Mr.
Hopper as an expert witness on the subject of the
homeless in the City of New York. n9 Mr. Hopper testified that fifteen years ago it
would have been relatively simple to define the
homeless population because they were a rather homogeneous group of white males in the
mid to late fifties, a third of whom had severe drinking problems and who
generally resided on the Bowery
"as a sort of cheap, degrading retirement." About a third of this
[**8] population occasionally worked, the balance subsisted on pensions, handouts
and the municipal
shelters. n10
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n9 Mr. Hopper testified that he serves on the Governor's Task Force on
Homelessness, as an advisor to the American Psychiatric Association's Task
Force on Homelessness, as an advisor to the National Institutes of Mental
Health (Community Support-Program Planning Session), and as a consultant to the
New York State Department of Social Services recent study of the
homeless.
n10 Tr. 84.
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In the late 1960's and early 1970's as a result of the destruction of cheap
housing stock n11 due to urban renewal projects, the character of the
homeless population changed. By the mid-1970's, in New York City, the
homeless were primarily black males who were jobless and by the end of the decade,
forty percent of those seeking public
shelter stated the lack of a job as the primary reason for their impoverishment.
Another addition to this group were women and families, ninety percent of whom
by 1973, were rehoused in public
[**9] housing or welfare
hotels. In sum, Mr. Hopper testified that a census of the
homeless in New York City would show:
Men and women of all ages, they are predominantly minority, many of them have
worked. Usually some dislocating event occurred, loss of a job as in Mr. Dyer's
instance, n12 almost invariably a number of intermediate arrangements are
tried, being put up with friends or family is the most common one, but as I
[*700] think, the City's most recent survey showed, the precipitating event leading
to homelessness is eviction, formal or informal in most of the cases. n13
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n11 Mr. Hopper testified that since the early 1970's something like eighty-two
percent of SRO (Single Room Occupancy) housing has been lost in New York City.
The
homeless population was also increased during this period by the policy of
"deinstitutionalization" of those with mental disabilities from the psychiatric institutions.
n12 Plaintiff Dyer testified at the preliminary injunction hearing that he
worked from 1971 to 1981 for the American Indian Community House in various
capacities, the last, as Special Projects Coordinator. He lost his job because
of program funding cuts. In August, 1981 he left his apartment because he could
no longer afford the rent and has since lived in St. Gabriels
Park.
[**10]
n13 Tr. 83.
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Mr. Hopper testified that the demand for
shelter over the last five years has increased for men almost thirty percent per year
and for women sixty percent per year. He stated that,
The City projects an increase of twenty-five percent in
shelter demand by the peak of this winter, but I have been told the figures are being
revised, I expect upwards. n14
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n14 Tr. 94.
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Not only will the City be unable to meet the demand for
shelter, but many of the
homeless who live on the
streets, approximately eighty to eighty-five percent, have had some experience in City
shelters, which caused them to choose not to return. Again, Mr. Hopper:
In our research the reasons usually given included personal threat of injury,
particularly amongst the elderly or more disabled, the threat of lice
infestation in particular, the threat of robbery, clothes can still be a scarce
item on the
street, good clothes, and people
[**11] in the flops that I visited and slept in tended to
sleep in their clothes both for reasons of warmth and to make sure they had them
when they woke up, and simply for some people they elect to preserve whatever
threads of dignity and self-respect are left them rather than submit to what
they found to be often a degrading and humiliating experience in the offer of
shelter.
* * * *
But I think fear and self-respect, both of which I found to be justified
concerns, were the dominant reasons for the rejection of the public
shelters and the
election of one's own best efforts. n15
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n15 Tr. 95-96.
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B.
Nexus to the Community
Defendants contend that they have a compelling interest, recognized by the
Courts, n16 in assuring that
voters have a verifiable connection with the locality from which they vote. The
requirement of a fixed premises, defendants argue, is the only way to ascertain
the
bona fides of a person's identification with a given community. Mr. Wallace testified
that a fixed residence:
[**12]
. . . places a
voter in a given location . . . The significance of that, of course, is, for
voting purposes, an interest in the
election. Most of our
elections are under the representative form of government, from the committeemen . . .
up through the legislature through Congress whereby a given representative
represents the people residing in that particular locality. He takes care of
those. So therefore, you are giving the persons the
right to vote for that person who will represent them. n17
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n16 In
Dunn v. Blumstein, supra, the Court pointed out:
We have in the past noted approvingly that the States have the power to require
that
voters be
bona fide residents of the relevant political subdivision . . . An appropriately defined
and uniformly applied requirement of
bona fide residence may be necessary to preserve the basic conception of a political
community, and therefore could withstand close constitutional scrutiny.
330 U.S. at 343-344 (citations and footnotes omitted).
n17 Tr. 194-195.
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[**13]
In order to assure this connection to the community, Mr. Wallace testified that
a fixed location is imperative if criminal sanctions for violations of the
Election Law are to be effective. Mr. Wallace asserted that in the case of the
homeless, such sanctions would be meaningless because the law defines residence in terms
of a place to which one
intends to return. He explained that a
homeless person may claim a
park bench as his
voting residence but may not have visited it for several years. If such person
claimed an intent to return to that bench,
[*701] Mr. Wallace questioned, how could that possibly be disproved? n18
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n18 Mr. Wallace distinguished the
homeless from those with multiple homes by explaining that a person may have more than
one home but only one
voting
domicile which is readily ascertainable by checking, the time spent in a particular
location, utility bills, etc.
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Plaintiffs called Curtis B. Gans, as an expert witness n19 on
voting practices. Mr. Gans discussed the plans now in place in Washington,
[**14] D.C. and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania which permit the
homeless to vote. He explained that the Washington plan permits the
homeless person to use as his
voting address the place where he
sleeps, whether it is a
park bench or any other non-traditional accommodation. The Philadelphia plan
requires that a
homeless person
designate a particular
shelter, regardless of where he
sleeps, as a
voting address. Thus, under the Washington plan the location of the
park bench would
designate the
election district, while under the Philadelphia plan the location of the
shelter would
designate the
election district. Mr. Gans testified that he preferred the Philadelphia plan because it also
provides for a
mail check at the
shelter.
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n19 Mr. Gans is Vice President and Executive Director of the Committee for the
Study of the American Electorate with offices in Washington, D.C. The
Committee is a non-partisan, non-profit, tax exempt research corporation
concerned with
voter participation in
elections.
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Mr. Gans further testified that,
[**15] in his opinion, a variant of the Philadelphia plan could be adopted in New
York n20 by having the
homeless person
designate a
shelter (in which he would not be required to live) for receipt of
mail and
voting. He explained that these requirements would provide a verifiable nexus for the
homeless person to a given locale. The witness also explained that he believed a system which
permitted a
homeless person to
designate his non-traditional home (park bench) and provide a mailing address would be administratively feasible. Under
such a plan, the concern of the defendants, that a
voter have a tie to the community, would be met. n21
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n20 Tr. 28.
n21 Tr. 33-34, 42, Mr. Gans also recommended as an alternative means of
voter registration the issuance of
voter identification cards containing the
voter's picture and residence. Tr. 41.
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This Court finds that Mr. Gans' testimony was responsive to the central concern
raised by Mr. Wallace,
viz how could a
homeless person's
"residence" be disproved if it were based
[**16] solely upon his intent to make a particular place his home? Mr. Gans further
explained that he would not demand any specialized interest of the
voter in the community as a predicate to the exercise of the franchise. His concern
is rather that a citizen who has an inherent right to vote do so. Mr. Gans
observed, that even in the area of
election law, the presumption is that people will not commit fraud. He testified:
What I am suggesting is that the state has an interest in seeing to it that the
voting population of the community is identified and stabilized and there cannot be
late, last minute influxes of transients and people.
In order to do that, my sense was that the Philadelphia plan, by establishing a
locus within each [election district] or ward or whatever, by which the
homeless could
register, serves as a protection for those people who want to achieve a stabilized
voting list and a
voting list whose integrity is preserved. n22
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n22 Tr. 47.
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Mr. Hopper also endorsed the proposal that a
[**17]
homeless person
designate both his non-traditional residence and a place for the receipt of
non-forwardable
mail. This Mr. Hopper believed was a satisfactory indicia of connection with a
particular community. He testified, that the experience of outreach teams, and
his own experience as a researcher had demonstrated that
homeless persons
"can be found once you know the territory in which they live. . . ." n23
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n23 Tr. 98.
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[*702] C.
Voter Fraud
Witnesses Paul Asofsky, n24 Wallace, Hopper and Gans each addressed the issue
of fraud in the
election process. Each of them agreed that the status of homelessness raised no
presumption that
homeless persons are more prone to commit
voter fraud than any other group or class. Clearly then, the
disenfranchisement of the
homeless must be justified on some other ground.
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n24 Mr. Asofsky is a tax lawyer who has been actively engaged for sixteen years
in cases involving
election law matters. For ten years he served as the co-chairman of the
election law committee of the New Democratic Coalition. Mr. Asofsky has been an Adjunct
Professor at the Cardozo Law School at which he taught a course in
election law.
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[**18]
Defendants' expert Asofsky testified that if the
homeless were permitted to vote, the door would be open to the possibility that
unscrupulous persons might attempt to
register fictitious
voters whose identities could not be verified. He used as an example the Presentment
of the Kings County Grand Jury n25 in which the Grand Jury found multiple
abuses and fraudulent practices in primary
elections in Kings County from 1968 to 1982.
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n25
In the Matter of Confidential Investigation, No. R84-11 (Sup. Ct., Kings County).
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The Court notes that in the State of New York,
candidates for public office from the same party, compete for the party nomination by
circulating nominating petitions in the locality they wish to represent. These
petitions may only be signed by duly qualified
voters of the party who are registered in the area.
Candidates who receive the required number of valid
signatures are placed on the party ballot and
voters then select the party nominee at a primary
election. Every
candidate for elective office
[**19] is well aware that his or her petition may be subject to challenge. It is
therefore in the
candidate's interest, to obtain
signatures from
voters who are readily available to testify in support of the petition.
It is unlikely that any
candidate would seek the
signature of a
homeless
voter who may not be at his
park bench when the process server pays a call. The risk of a possible court
challenge mandates caution in the solicitation of
signatures. In any event, the failure of the
homeless person to be immediately available to testify in court in support of a
candidate's position does not constitutionally justify
disenfranchisement of the
homeless
voter. Further, the Kings County Grand Jury Presentment did not deal in any manner
with the
homeless but instead dealt with
presently qualified
voters.
D.
Administrative Feasibility
Mrs. Dolen testified, that in her opinion it would not be administratively
feasible to permit
registration for the
homeless. She cited
New York Election Law 4-100(1) which provides:
The State of New York shall be divided into
election districts which shall be the basic political subdivision for purposes of
registration and
voting as provided
[**20] in this chapter.
Mrs. Dolen explained that the City Board of
Elections uses maps which divide the county of New York into assembly districts ("A.D.") drawn by the State Legislature. Within the assembly districts, Mrs. Dolen and
her employees enter the addresses of all buildings in the confines thereof and
then subdivides the assembly districts into
election districts ("E.D.") with roughly equivalent populations.
When a person
registers to vote and gives his residential address, n26 the Board
designates from its maps the
election district in which the given building is located. The Board then sends the
voter, by nonforwardable first class
mail, an identification
[*703] card notifying the
voter of the polling place from which he or she may vote.
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n26 The new
registrant fills out a
voter registration card (commonly referred to as a
"buff card"). The front of the card contains spaces for the
voter's name, address, physical description,
voting history, citizenship party enrollment and a space for entry of the
registrant's
election and assembly district. In addition, the card contains an affirmation, which
the applicant signs under penalty of perjury, that the information is true.
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[**21]
Mrs. Dolen testified that since
parks have no building numbers, there is no
presently existing way to identify the
election district for a
park resident. Mrs. Dolen further testified that she did not know whether it would
be practical or feasible to incorporate
homeless persons in this scheme, but she should be willing to try. n27
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n27 Tr. 157.
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This Court has examined the maps for New York County and observes that each
park, and other places where the
homeless congregate, with a few exceptions like Central
Park and Riverside
Park, are contained within their own
election district. For example:
| Place | Election | Assembly |
| District | District |
| St. Gabriels Park | 61 | 63 |
| Washington Square Park | 27 | 61 |
| Columbus Park | 70 | 61 |
| Battery Park | 83 | 61 |
| City Hall Park | 1 | 61 |
| Union Bus Terminal/ | 7 | 64 |
| Port Authority Bus Terminal |
| Pennsylvania Station/ | 2 | 64 |
| Madison Square Garden |
| Union Square Park | 34 | 64 |
| Madison Square Park | 35 | 64 |
| Bryant Park | 30 | 64 |
| Morningside Park | 14 | 69 |
| Fort Tryron Park | 44 | 72 |
| Baker Field | 60 | 72 |
[**22]
The few
parks which are not within a single
election district have easily determinable lines drawn along
streets. For example, Central
Park above the 96th
Street crosstown is the 81st E.D. of the 68th A.D; between the 96th
Street crosstown and the 86th
Street crosstown it is the 87th E.D. of the 69th A.D. Therefore, the
homeless person would need only know between which two crosstown
streets he lived.
While it is true that Riverside
Park, for example, includes several E.D.'s of several A.D.'s, these E.D.'s may also
be delineated by
streets. Moreover, the City Board could, if it chooses to, make Riverside
Park into one E.D. for each part of the
park within an A.D.
This Court believes that the difficulty expressed at trial, namely having a
voter specifically
designate his
park bench by meets and bounds, with reference to another fixed location, is a
non-issue. If, as plaintiff Dyer claims, he lives in St. Gabriels
Park, that
park is located entirely within the 61st. E.D. of the 63rd A.D. Therefore it would
be unnecessary to either change the
election maps in order to place location numbers on
park benches or make any other costly alteration to present administrative
procedures.
[**23]
In addition to designating a
park as the place of residence, credible witnesses have testified that the
homeless applicant could, in addition,
designate a post office box,
shelter or other co-operating local organization as the place to which he could
receive
non-forwardable
mail. At recipient of
non-forwardable
election
mail is
presently under no duty to return such undelivered
mail to the Board of
Elections. In response to this concern this Court suggests for example, that it is
feasible to enter into binding agreements with such organizations for that
specific purpose. n28
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n28 The Board of
Elections pursuant to
Election Law 3-300 has the authority to appoint clerks and other employees, prescribe their
duties, and fix their titles and salaries.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Defendants have already stipulated that
homeless persons residing in
shelters or
hotels, which by definition are temporary accommodations, may be allowed to vote.
There is
presently an inadequate number of
shelters to house the plaintiff class, therefore, other solutions
[**24] must be considered in the search for less onerous alternatives to
disenfranchisement of this class. That such alternatives are available is evidenced by the plans
adopted in Philadelphia and Washington, and by the testimony at trial.
This Court is of the opinion that the administration of the
election laws should
[*704] be left to the discretion of the Executive Branch. However, when that
discretion has been exercised so as to disenfranchise
homeless
voters as a class, and when less onerous alternatives have been shown in this record
to be both available and feasible, this Court must find that defendants have
not met their burden of justification by a fair preponderance of the credible
evidence.
FINDINGS OF FACT
JURISDICTION
This Court therefore finds the following:
1. This Court has jurisdiction under
28 U.S.C. ¤ 1343 and
42 U.S.C. ¤ 1983 to redress deprivations under color of state law, custom and practice of
rights, privileges and immunities reserved to plaintiffs by the Constitution
and laws of the United States.
2. Jurisdiction is further conferred on this Court by
28 U.S.C. ¤ 1331, as a civil action arising under the Constitution and laws of the United
States.
[**25]
3. Venue is properly laid in the United States District Court for the Southern
District of New York, the district in which plaintiffs' claims arose, as
specified in
28 U.S.C. §§ 1391 and 1392.
PARTIES
4. Plaintiff Peter Dyer n29 is a citizen of the United States and a resident of
the City and State of New York over 18 years of age. He is not ineligible to
vote because of any felony conviction, nor has he been adjudged incompetent. He
has never accepted money to vote or refrain from
voting. (Complaint paras. 18, 28; Preliminary Injunction Tr. Dyer 58-59; Memorandum
Opinion at 7, 15).
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n29 At the hearing on the preliminary injunction, counsel for plaintiffs and
defendants stipulated on the record, and the court entered judgment thereon
that all
homeless individuals in New York who reside in
shelters and
hotels, such as plaintiffs Pitts and Carter, may
register to vote provided that they otherwise satisfy the requirements of
eligibility under the
New York Election Law. This lawsuit therefore continues solely with respect to
homeless persons such as plaintiffs Dyer and Hines who live in the
street and other public places (Memorandum Opinion at 2). A Motion for a Stay and
Severance as to Plaintiff Ruben Hines has been
"So Ordered" this day. Accordingly, these findings of fact will only address the facts as
they pertain to Mr. Dyer.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[**26]
5. Defendant Robert S. Black is sued in his official capacity as President of
the New York City Board of
Elections. He presides over the Board of
Elections of the City of New York, which administers and enforces the
New York Election Law and regulates the electoral process in New York City. Specifically, defendant
Black has the power and duty to ensure that the rules and regulations
implementing the provisions of
Election Law
§§ 5-102 and 5-104 are enforced, including challenges to and cancellation of
voter registration for lack of any statutory qualifications. (Complaint para. 20; Preliminary
Injunction Tr. 3-4; Black 7-10).
6. Defendant Joyce D. Tannenbaum is sued in her official capacity as Chief
Clerk of the Manhattan Borough Office of the New York Board of
Elections. As Chief Clerk, Ms. Tannenbaum has authority to deny individual applications
for
registration as a
voter, and did deny the applications of plaintiffs to
register, on the ground that plaintiffs lack the requisite
"residence" under the
New York Election Law. (Complaint para. 21; Preliminary Injunction Tr. 4; Tannenbaum 30-36).
7. Defendant Betty Dolen is sued in her official capacity as Executive Director
of the
[**27] New York City Board of
Elections. She has publicly stated that the
New York Election Law does not permit
homeless persons to
register to vote, and that the New York City Board of
Elections will refuse their applications to
register. (Complaint para. 22; Preliminary Injunction Tr. 4; Tr. Dolen 185; Dolen 25-28,
60-63, 66-67, 79-81).
8. Defendant George D. Salerno is sued in his official capacity as the Chairman
of the New York State Board of
Elections, which gives advisory opinions to local Boards, administers and enforces the
New
[*705] York Election Law. Mr. Salerno, as Chairman of the Board, is responsible for the administration
of the
New York Election Law and for the issuance and enforcement of rules and regulations which regulate
the electoral process in the State of New York. Specifically, the Chairman has
the power and the duty to ensure that the laws implementing
Election Law
§§ 5-102 and 5-104 are enforced. (Complaint para. 23; Preliminary Injunction Tr.
4; Salerno 9-11).
BACKGROUND OF THE CASE
9. For reasons that are self-evident, it is almost impossible to make an
accurate count of the number of
homeless persons living in the State of New York. According to the needs
[**28] assessment of the New York State Department of Social Services, the number of
homeless persons living in New York State is estimated to be between 40,000 and 50,000.
It is believed that at least 38,000 of those live in New York City (Tr. Hopper
77-78). The number of
homeless in New York City who pass through public
shelters and/or
hotels for the
homeless each year is estimated to be 60,000 by Governor Mario Cuomo. Mr. Cuomo,
A Report to the National Governors' Association Task Force on the
Homeless 16 (1983).
10. There are 18 public
shelters in New York City which, on any given night, can accommodate approximately
5,500 men and 840 women. In addition, private
shelters in New York City provide approximately 1,000 beds (Tr. Hopper 92, 94, 109-10).
In addition to those
homeless who regularly stay in
shelters which are almost nightly filled to or beyond capacity, there are the uncounted
homeless who do not make regular use of
shelters, but who live in public places like
streets, public
parks and transportation terminals. According to plaintiffs' expert, the number of
such
homeless persons is estimated to be 20,000 in New York City. (Tr. Hopper 81-82).
12. According to plaintiffs'
[**29] expert, there are approximately 100 soup kitchens in New York City which
provide meals for the
homeless. In addition, there are drop-in centers and outreach teams which provide
services for and have regular contact with many
homeless persons and who tend to know with some degree of precision and reliability
those
homeless persons they see on a regular basis and where they can be found. These
institutions also provide sleeping space for the
homeless in such facilities as church basements (Tr. Hopper 96-97).
13. Many
homeless persons can and do receive
mail at the residences of family or friends, at post office boxes, through General
Delivery, or at
shelters, soup kitchens, drop-in centers or churches providing services to the
homeless. (Tr. Hopper 90).
14. Like any cross-section of the community, the
homeless population is made up of persons of varying backgrounds, styles and
personalities. Nevertheless, plaintiff Dyer's experience and life-style are
typical of many
homeless persons who do not reside in
shelters. In fact, this Court has found that he is a fair and adequate representative of
the class of
homeless persons living in public places or other locations not traditionally
[**30] considered a
"home". n30 (Tr. Hopper 88-89; Tr. 117.)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n30 This Court issued an opinion and order dated October 5, 1984 certifying
plaintiff's class and the named plaintiff, Dyer, as an adequate class
representative.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
15. Outreach teams and the experience of expert researchers indicate that a
great many
homeless persons can be located with regularity because safe haven, once found, is
unlikely to be abandoned, and once a
homeless person becomes familiar with the services providing food, clothing and other
necessities, in a given territory, he or she tends to make use of them rather
than move on and find new sources from night to night (Tr. Hopper 89).
16. For ten years, Mr. Dyer worked for the American Indian Community House in
various capacities, most recently as Special Projects Coordinator. In 1981, he
lost that job because of program funding cuts and in August 1981 he was forced
to leave his apartment because he could no longer afford
[*706] to pay the rent (Complaint paras. 28-29; Memorandum Order
[**31] at 3).
17. Mr. Dyer is a
homeless New Yorker. During the past year, Mr. Dyer has lived in St. Gabriels
Park on 35th
Street and First Avenue in New York City. He considers St. Gabriels
Park his home,
i.e., the place where he generally
intends to return. Except for occasional overnight stays in
shelters, at a friend's house, in other
parks, or locations out of the rain in midtown Manhattan, and use of Grand Central
Terminal for
shelter in winter months, he regularly
sleeps in St. Gabriels
Park (Preliminary Injunction Tr. Dyer 52; Memorandum Opinion at 7, 15).
18. Mr. Dyer has arranged to have
mail delivered to him at a friend's apartment and at the Coalition for the
Homeless. (Preliminary Injunction Tr. Dyer 52-5; Tr. Dyer 59-60).
19. In February 1984 and June 1984, Mr. Dyer applied to the New York City Board
of
Elections to
register to vote. (Complaint para. 29; Preliminary Injunction Tr. Dyer 53-58; Memorandum Opinion
at 7).
20. Mr. Dyer's applications to vote were rejected by the New York City Board of
Elections. (Complaint para. 29; Preliminary Injunction Tr. Dyer 53-58; Memorandum Opinion
at 7).
21. Defendants refused to permit Mr. Dyer to
register to vote based solely
[**32] on the fact that he is
homeless. (Memorandum Opinion at 7, 15; Black 30-31; Tannenbaum 14, 16-17, Pl. Ex. 5;
Tr. Dolen 185).
22. The policy and practice of the New York City Board of
Elections is to reject the
registration applications of all
homeless New Yorkers on the ground that they do not have a residence and are therefore
not entitled to vote. (Preliminary Injunction Tr. 28-29; Tannenbaum 14, 16-17;
Pl. Ex. 13).
23. The policy of the New York State Board of
Elections is that
homeless New Yorkers do not have a residence and are therefore not qualified to vote.
(Preliminary Injunction Tr. 28-29; Tr. Salerno 29, 34-35, 57-59; Pl. Ex. 13).
24. The defendants maintain that they have adopted the position that the
homeless are not allowed to vote to protect against
voter fraud. While it cannot be disputed that the prevention of
voter fraud is a compelling and legitimate State goal, procedures designated to
eliminate
voter fraud are already in existence and less
restrictive alternatives to the total
disenfranchisement of the
homeless are available.
PROCEDURES DESIGNATED TO PROTECT AGAINST
VOTER FRAUD
25. The procedures governing the New York
registration and
voting process already
[**33] provide significant measures to safeguard against
voter fraud. (Tr. Dolen 179-81, 183-85; Tannenbaum 17-29; Salerno 40-48; Wallace
27-30; Dolen 29-30, 47-53, 83-84;
See, e.g., N.Y. Elec. Law
¤ 3-107 (conferring on the State Board of
Elections powers and duties with respect to crimes against the elective franchise,
including the power to procure warrants of arrest and to issue subpoenas);
¤ 3-218 (conferring on the City and County Boards of
Elections the power to issue subpoenas and hold hearings relating to violations of the
elective franchise);
¤ 5-400 (providing for the cancellation of
voter registration for lack of any statutory qualifications);
§§ 5-700, 5-702, 5-704, 5-708, 5-710 and 5-712 (providing for checks on
registration and continued
eligibility for
registration);
§§ 8-502 and 8-504 (providing procedures for challenging the
right to vote of any person whom the Board knows
or suspects is not entitled to vote);
¤ 5-106(1) (excluding from qualification to vote any person who has received,
accepted or offered any money or other compensation for
voting or registering to vote or refraining from either);
§§ 17-100 to -170 (relating to violations of the elective franchise
[**34] and providing, in
§§ 17-104 and 17-132, that false
registration and illegal
voting are felonies).
26. One method used by the New York City Board of
Elections to eliminate possible
voter fraud is a procedure commonly
[*707] referred to as a
mail check. Each summer, the Board of
Elections sends a
non-forwardable notice to each registered
voter. If the notice is returned to the Board of
Elections because the
registrant has moved from that address, the
registrant's name is eliminated from the list of registered
voters, subject to reinstatement upon satisfactory proof of residence being presented
to the Board. (N.Y. Elec. Law
¤ 5-712; Tr. Dolen 170-73; Tannenbaum 18-19, 28-29; Salerno 40; Dolen 50-52.)
27. Another method used by the New York City Board of
Elections to eliminate possible
voter fraud is a
signature verification procedure used at the time of
voting. At the polling place, the
voting inspector has custody of the
voter's
registration card which was signed by the
voter at the time of
registration. Prior to
voting, the
voter once again signs this card and the inspector compares the two
signatures. If the
signatures do not match, the inspector can challenge the identity
[**35] of the
voter, subject to reinstatement upon satisfactory proof of identity being presented
to the Board. (Tr. Dolen 179-80; Tannenbaum 24-25; Salerno 45-47; Dolen 47-49,
50).
28. A third procedure available to the Board of
Elections is a physical search for the
registrant to ensure that he or she resides at the residence indicated on the
registration application. This procedure is rarely used. In the experience of the City's
Chief Clerk, it has been used only twice in the last two years or so. It is not
a significant method of preventing
voter fraud. (Tr. Dolen 184-85; Tannenbaum 19-20; 1 46).
29. The wide availability of criminal sanctions, both on the State and Federal
level, also assist the Board of
Elections in preventing and eliminating
voter fraud. (Dolen Tr. 180); Tr. Gans 29-30; Dolen 29-30, 53, 83-84; Salerno 46).
In addition, the New York
registration application form has the force of an affidavit. (Tr. Dolen 180).
30. It is important to note that, despite the procedures designed to prevent
voter fraud, personal integrity and honesty are the foundation of the electoral
process (Tr. Gans 20). Other than the procedures outlined above, the
registration and
voting process
[**36] in New York requires no proof of
eligibility for
registration other than the
registrant's own word as to his identity, his age, his citizenship and his residence.
(Tannenbaum at 18-19; Salerno at 45-48). This data is taken without
verification from those who claim a traditional home and the potential for
voter fraud is the same for them as it is for the
homeless. (Salerno at 46-48; Tr. Gans 31).
LESS
RESTRICTIVE ALTERNATIVES
31. No proof (other than speculation) was adduced before the Court that the
homeless are more likely to commit fraud than other individuals. (Tr. Gans 31).
Indeed, defendants' proof of instances of
voter fraud pointedly did
not involve the
homeless or misuse of residence, but rather use of fictitious names at real residences.
(Tr. Asofsky 125-26, 145).
32. One of the purposes of the
New York Election Law, and a duty imposed on the defendants, is to encourage the widest possible
voter registration (Tr. Wallace 209; N.Y.
Election Law 5-200 (1), (3)).
33. Alternatives exist that are less
restrictive than defendants' current policy of total
disenfranchisement of the
homeless.
34. The District of Columbia Board of
Elections and Ethics recently decided to permit
[**37]
registration by
homeless persons who can identify a specific location in the District at which they
have a present intention to remain. (Pl. Ex. 2 at 6). The Board found that the
same controls applicable to all
registrants can be applied to
homeless applicants and that challenges to
eligibility on such matters as whether they continue to be located at their designated
places and criminal sanctions for fraud are part of the statutory framework.
(Pl. Ex. 1 at 2). The D.C. Board adopted regulations amending the D.C. Code to
permit
homeless persons to
register by specifying (1) a fixed residence location in the District, precisely
identified, and (2) if
mail is not deliverable to such
[*708] residence address, a designated mailing address. Under these regulations,
failure to provide such designated mailing address results in the rejection of
the
registration application by the Board. Any applicant designating a mailing address for
official communications is required to submit a signed statement, on a form
provided by the Board, specifying that the
registration address listed on the application constitutes the
voter's fixed residence in the District. (Pl. Ex. 3; Tr. Gans 19-21). In
[**38] addition, the D.C. Board has instituted an annual canvass of all registered
voters in the District during which the Board will
mail a
non-forwardable notification to the
voter's
registration address and, in any instance where this notification is returned by the U.S.
Postal Service, the Board will initiate removal procedures pursuant to the D.C.
Code
¤ 1-1311(f)(3). (Pl. Ex. 3).
35. On September 14, 1984, an order was entered in
Committee for the Dignity and Fairness for the
Homeless v. Tartaglione, No. 84-3447 (E.D.PA. September 14, 1984) (Lord, J.), to the effect that for
purposes of
voter registration in the City of Philadelphia, any applicant who is
homeless shall be deemed to have satisfied the residency requirements set forth in the
Pennsylvania
Election Code, 25 P.S.
§§ 623-1
et seq., as amended, by declaring on the
Voter Registration Application the address of a
shelter with which the applicant has an established relationship, and which will
accept first-class
non-forwardable
mail for the applicant. Under the Philadelphia decree, only public and private
non-profit
shelters which operate residential programs for the
homeless, accept first-class
non-forwardable
mail
[**39] for the
homeless and agree that
homeless individuals may establish sufficient relationships with those
shelters qualify as residential addresses. The court in
Tartaglione further ordered that the authority of the City Commissioners under the
Pennsylvania
Election Code to conduct investigations or other inquiries into the continuing
eligibility of all registered electors within the City was in no way limited by the court
order. (Pl. Ex. 4; Tr. Gans 21-23).
36. While defendants testified to theoretical problems raised by permitting the
homeless to
register to vote, these problems are at best administrative (Tr. Dolen 158-59, Wallace 195-200,
211). They conceded that there is no principled reason why New York cannot have
plans similar to Washington's or Philadelphia's. (Salerno Tr. 77-78; Tr.
Wallace 210-12).
II.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
Based on the foregoing findings of fact, this Court makes the following
conclusions of law.
1. Plaintiffs are entitled to a Declaratory Judgment declaring that defendants'
application of
New York Election Law Sections 1-104(22), 5-102 and 5-104, to the extent that this application
effectively disenfranchises
homeless individuals, violates the equal
[**40] protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution and
42 U.S.C. ¤ 1983; and are further entitled to a permanent injunction enjoining defendants from
refusing to allow
homeless individuals to vote, solely on the ground that the residency requirement of
the
New York Election Law cannot be met by those who inhabit a non-traditional residence.
2. The exercise of the
right to vote is a fundamental right, which is preservative of all other rights in a
democracy, and deserves the strictest constitutional protection.
See
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533, 562, 12 L. Ed. 2d 506, 84 S. Ct. 1362 (1964);
Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.S. 356, 370, 30 L. Ed. 220, 6 S. Ct. 1064 (1886).
3. Each citizen has
"a constitutionally protected right to participate in
elections on an equal basis with other citizens in the jurisdiction".
Dunn v. Blumstein, 405 U.S. 330, 336, 31 L. Ed. 2d 274, 92 S. Ct. 995 (1972) (citing
Evans v. Cornman, 398 U.S. 419, 421-22, 426, 26 L. Ed. 2d 370, 90 S. Ct. 1752 (1970);
Kramer v. Union Free School District No. 15, 395 U.S. 621, 626, 23 L. Ed. 2d 583, 89 S. Ct. 1886
[*709] (1969);
Cipriano v. City of Houma, 395 U.S. 701,
[**41] 706, 23 L. Ed. 2d 647, 89 S. Ct. 1897 (1969);
Harper v. Virginia Board of Elections, 383 U.S. 663, 665, 16 L. Ed. 2d 169, 86 S. Ct. 1079 (1966);
Carrington v. Rash, 380 U.S. 89, 93-94, 13 L. Ed. 2d 675, 85 S. Ct. 775 (1965);
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. at 562.
4. State statutes, such as
New York Election Law
§§ 5-102, 1-104(11) and 5-104, as applied by defendants, which effectively
disenfranchise one class of
voters, while granting the
right to vote to another class of
voters, are constitutionally invalid as applied, unless the exclusions are
"
necessary to promote a
compelling state interest".
Kramer v. Union Free School District No. 15, 395 U.S. at 627 (emphasis added).
See also
Manhattan State Citizens' Group, Inc. v. Bass, 524 F. Supp. 1270 at 1274 (S.D.N.Y. 1981).
5. Where a compelling interest exists, statutory restrictions on
voting must be narrowly tailored to the articulated State interest and the State must
show that the interest cannot be served by a means less
restrictive of the
right to vote.
See
Dunn v. Blumstein, 405 U.S. at 350-54;
Kramer v. Union Free School District No. 15, 395 U.S. at 632-33;
Carrington v. Rash, 380 U.S. at
[**42] 95;
Alevy v. Downstate Medical Center, 39 N.Y.2d 326, 332, 384 N.Y.S.2d 82, 87, 348 N.E.2d 537, 543 (1976). n31
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n31 This Court notes that Municipal defendants' reliance in their Trial
Memorandum of Law on
New York City Unemployment and Welfare Council v. Brezenoff, 742 F.2d 718 (2d Cir. 1984) is totally misplaced. The issue in
Brezenoff was whether the First Amendment guarantees an organization of welfare
recipients the right to solicit contributions in lobbies of welfare offices. In
affirming the trial court's ban on solicitations, the Second Circuit considered
"whether the solicitation prohibition is no broader than necessary to serve the
HRA's interest, and whether its implementation would leave open adequate
alternative channels of communication."
Id. at 721. Noting that the government may impose reasonable time, place or manner
restrictions, the Court found that
"there are ample
alternative forums for the Council to solicit dues," including on the sidewalks outside of the welfare agencies.
Id. at 723 (emphasis added). Thus, the restrictions at issue in
Brezenoff stands in stark contrast to the total
disenfranchisement in the instant case of all
homeless New Yorkers who do not live in
shelters or welfare
hotels.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[**43]
6. The statewide
disenfranchisement of
homeless individuals is not necessary to promote any compelling state interest, and
defendants' interpretation and application of the
New York Election Law residency requirement is unjustified.
7. Defendants have failed to establish that the significant state interests
underlying
voter residency requirements, which include (1) prevention of
voter fraud and protection of the integrity of the electoral system,
see
Dunn v. Blumstein, 405 U.S. at 345;
Auerbach v. Kinley, 499 F. Supp. 1329, 1337, 1342 (N.D.N.Y. 1980); (2) identifying an electorate that has a stake in the community;
see
Evans v. Cornman, 398 U.S. at 422;
Kramer v. Union Free School District No. 15, 395 U.S. at 631; and (3) administrative workability,
see In re Applications for
Voter Registration of Willie R. Jenkins, Decision at 3 (D.C. Board of
Elections and Ethics, June 7, 1984) (Pl. Ex. 4), cannot be achieved by a means
restrictive of plaintiffs'
right to vote.
8. At least two other jurisdictions have devised alternative residency
requirement procedures which are less
restrictive of
voting rights than the procedure utilized in New York.
See Pl. Ex. 1, 2
[**44] and 4.
9. In determining whether an individual has a
"residence" the key objective is to ascertain
"the place which is the center of an individual's life, . . . the locus of his
primary concern",
Ramey v. Rockefeller, 348 F. Supp. 780, 788 (E.D.N.Y. 1972), and the place the individual
presently
intends to remain.
Martinez v. Bynum, 461 U.S. 321, 103 S. Ct. 1838, 1844 n. 13, 75 L. Ed. 2d 879 (1983). These factors are not unlike those required to establish
"domicile" in other legal contexts.
See, e.g.,
Martinez v. Bynum, 461 U.S. at 330, 103
[*710] S. Ct. at 1844;
Vlandis v. Kline, 412 U.S. 441, 454, 37 L. Ed. 2d 63, 93 S. Ct. 2230 (1973). The test for
domicile is generally more stringent than the test for mere residence, since a person
may have several residences but can only have one
domicile.
See
In re Woolley, 108 N.Y.S.2d 165, 168 (Sup. Ct. Lewis County 1951).
Berman v. Weinstein, 64 A.D.2d 940, 941, 408 N.Y.S.2d 143, 144 (2d Dept. 1978).
10.
Homeless individuals identifying a specific location within a political community which
they consider their
"home base", to which they return regularly, manifest an intent to remain for the present,
and a
[**45] place from which they can receive messages and be contacted, satisfy the more
stringent
domicile standard and should not be disenfranchised solely because they lack a
non-traditional residence.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, this Court enters a judgment declaring defendants'
application of
New York Election Law Section 1-104(22), and 5-102 and 5-104 in violation of the equal protection
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and
42 U.S.C. ¤ 1983; permanently enjoining defendants from refusing to allow
homeless individuals to
register to vote on the ground that they fail to inhabit traditional residences.
It