Baker v. Carr
Rhyne played a central role in the landmark
Baker v. Carr case, which transformed American electoral law. In the late 1950s, a group of urban voters in
Tennessee challenged the state’s failure to redraw its legislative
districts. The electoral boundaries of the districts had not changed since 1901 despite significant
population growth in cities. Rhyne, then general counsel to the National Institute of Municipal Law Officers, agreed to represent them in their case against
Tennessee Secretary of State Joseph Carr. Arguing that the outdated
apportionment diluted urban votes and violated the
Fourteenth Amendment’s equal protection clause, Rhyne persuaded the
Supreme Court to hear the case in 1961. On 26 March 1962, the Court ruled 6–2 in favor of the plaintiffs, establishing that federal courts had jurisdiction over redistricting disputes. This decision led to widespread redrawing of electoral maps in the United States. The then Chief Justice
Earl Warren described the decision as one of the most significant of his tenure. == Later life and death ==