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8 Tennessee Attorney General Reports and Opinions 1 (1977-1978)

handle is hein.sag/sagtn0170 and id is 1 raw text is: STATE      OF   TENNESSEE
OFFICE OF THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL
450 JAMES ROBERTSON PARKWAY
NASHVILLE. TENNESSEE 37219
BROOKS McLEMORE
ATTORNEY GENERAL & REPORTER
OPINION NO. 1
TO: County Attorney
DATE: June 16, 1978
RE: Local Government Reorganization
QUESTION
What is the effect of those provisions of Chapter 934, Public Acts of 1978, pertaining to county
legislative districts in the context of the apportionment plan for Marion County.
OPINION
It is the opinion of this office that Chapter 934 does not-establish a statutory requirement that all
county legislative districts within a particular county be equal in population; rather, we are of the
view that Chapter 934 simply requires equality of representation based on population in compliance
with the one man-one vote principle.
ANALYSIS
According to your letter, Marion County currently elects eleven (11) members to its county
legislative body from five (5) districts. Eight (8) members are elected from districts 1, 2, 4 and 5, with
each district electing two members. Three (3) members are elected from District 3, which is a county
town district. The county town district is 50% greater in population than each of the other four dis-
tricts. Specifically, you have inquired as to whether the language in Section 4 of Chapter 934 that
64members of the county legislative body shall represent substantially equal populations establishes
a statutory requirement that all county legislative districts within a particular county be uniform as to
population.
It is a well settled principle of statutory construction that the primary purpose of statutory inter-
pretation is to ascertain and give the effect to legislative intent, and the meaning of a statute is to be
determined from the statute as a whole in light of its general purpose, and not from particular words
in a single sentence or section of the statute. State ex rel. Bastnagel v. City of Memphis, 224 Tenn. 514,
457 S.W.2d 532 (1970). Therefore, at the outset the purpose of the statute (Chapter 934) should be
examined.
The primary purpose of Chapter 934, as stated in the caption and also in the preamble to the
act, is to implement the recently adopted Local Government Amendment to the Tennessee Constitu-
tion. Also, the General Assembly in Section 42 of the act has expressed an intent to effect the imple-
mentation of the requirements of the local government amendment in an orderly manner with a mini-
mum of disruption to the continunity of local government. Therefore, specific provisions of the Act
implementing the changes contemplated by the Local Government Amendment should be construed in
the context of these two general purposes.
With respect to the county legislative body, the local government amendment specifies certain
numerical limitations on the size and composition of the county legislative body, and vests in the Gen-
eral Assembly the power and duty to prescribe by statute the manner of drawing county legislative dis-
tricts. The numerical limitations of the local government amendment restrict the maximum size of the
county legislative body to twenty-five members and that the maximum number of representatives
from any county legislative district to three. However, the local government amendment itself does not
contain a requirement that county legislative districts be of uniform population within a particular
county.

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