Bradley v. School Board of City of Richmond, Virginia

317 F. Supp. 555, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10540
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedAugust 17, 1970
DocketCiv. A. 3353
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 317 F. Supp. 555 (Bradley v. School Board of City of Richmond, Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley v. School Board of City of Richmond, Virginia, 317 F. Supp. 555, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10540 (E.D. Va. 1970).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

MERHIGE, District Judge.

This class action, a school desegregation ease, has been before the Court in one posture or another for about nine years.

It was commenced approximately seven years after the historic Brown decision, Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483, 74 S.Ct. 686, 98 L.Ed. 873 (1954), and reached what was then hopefully considered the end of the road by virtue of a Court approved plan for the desegregation of the Richmond City school system by utilization of “freedom of choice.”

*558 In the interim, as in many similar suits, the matter had gone to and from the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and the United States Supreme Court.

On March 10, 1970, the plaintiffs filed a motion for further relief, based upon the mandates of our appellate courts requiring school boards to put into effect school plans which would promptly and realistically convert public school systems into ones which were unitary, nonracial systems, removing all vestiges of racial segregation.

On March 12, 1970, the Court ordered the defendants to “ * * * within ten days from this date, advise the Court if it is their position that the public schools of the City of Richmond, Virginia, are being operated in accordance with the constitutional requirements to operate unitary schools as enunciated by the United States Supreme Court.”

On March 19, 1970, defendants filed a statement to the effect that “they had been advised that the public schools of the City of Richmond are not being operated as unitary schools in accordance with the most recent enunciations of the Supreme Court of the United States,” and further that they had “requested the Department of Health, Education and Welfare to make a study and recommendation as to a plan which would ensure the operation of a unitary school system in compliance with decisions of the United States Supreme Court,” said plan to be ready by May 1, 1970.

A pre-trial conference was held in open court on March 31, 1970, at which time the Court having some doubt as to the effect or intent of the defendants’ statement of March 19, 1970, “that they had been advised that the public schools of the City of Richmond are not being operated as unitary schools in accordance with the most recent enunciations of the Supreme Court of the United States,” inquired as to whether defendants were desirous of an evidentiary hearing as to the plan they were then operating under, i. e. freedom of choice.

The defendant school board, by counsel, advised the Court that such a hearing would not be necessary and admitted that their freedom of choice plan, although operating in accord with this Court’s order of March 30, 1966, was operating in a manner contrary to constitutional requirements.

As a consequence thereof, the Court on April 1, 1970, entered a formal order vacating its previous order of March 30, 1966, and mandatorily enjoining the defendants to disestablish the existing dual system of schools and to replace same with a unitary system, the components of which are not identifiable as either “white” or “Negro” schools.

The defendant school board was directed to file its proposed plan by May 11, 1970. Plaintiffs were to file exceptions by June 8, 1970, and hearings were set for June 19, 1970.

On or about June 4, 1970, the first of the eventual intervenors moved to intervene.

In the interim, the school board had filed its proposed plan, which had been prepared by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.

The Court heard and considered the motions to intervene and permitted all who so moved to intervene, pursuant to Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. rule 24(b), 28 U.S.C.

The intervenors were as follows:

1. Bellevue-Ginter Area Civic Association, described as a non-profit corporation composed of “residents of the City of Richmond, most of whom have children in the Richmond public school system and all of whom are deeply and sincerely interested in maintaining the finest possible public school system, in maintaining the ‘Northside’ area of Richmond as a desirable area to live and raise children of school age and in preventing ‘tipping the neighborhood’ by causing responsible residents to leave the area.” The area in which these intervenors reside is generally considered an integrated one.

*559 2. Robert Douglas Bain, an infant, et al. and Sherwood Park Civic Association. The individuals are white residents of the Northside of the City, as are the members of the Civic Association, all of whose interest coincides with the interest of the first named intervenors, Bellevue-Ginter Area Civic Association.

3. Noel Austin, et al. described as residents of the City of Richmond (both infant and adult) residing in that area of the city recently annexed from the contiguous County of Chesterfield. (The area described as being recently annexed is predominantly white.)

4. Westover Hills Parent-Teachers Association, described as an association of teachers and parents of children assigned to and attending Westover Hills Elementary School. (A predominantly white school — 99.43% under freedom of choice — located on the Southside of the City.)

Exceptions to the H.E.W. plan were filed by the plaintiffs and those intervenors described as Northside residents.

The Westover Hills P.T.A., while not filing any formal exceptions, did in its pleading upon its application to intervene address itself to the H.E.W. proposal to eliminate the 7th Grade level at Westover Hills Elementary School.

On June 11, 1970, one week prior to the original hearing on the H.E.W. plan, and approximately three months after the defendant school board stated it had been advised its freedom of choice plan had not brought about a unitary system, the Northside intervenors in a pleading styled “Bellevue-Ginter Area Civic Association Amended Pleading and Pleading on Behalf of Other Intervenors,” requested the Court to vacate its order of April 1, 1970, (this order, in essence, recited the school board’s admission that its system did not conform to the Constitutional requirements and ordered the submission of a plan other than freedom of choice) or to require the taking of evidence to rule upon the constitutionality of said plan in its entirety or in part.

It should be noted here that the Court had permitted intervention upon the conditions that the intervention would in no manner delay the ease and that the intervenors take the case in the posture it was at the time of intervention.

The Court, as will be pointed out in more detail in this memorandum, is satisfied that the defendant school board’s admission in reference to this issue was demonstrably justified.

In any event, no evidence was received in support of any theory that the school board’s court-approved freedom of choice plan had worked.

The Northside intervenors and plaintiffs filed proposed plans of their own.

Intervenors’ plan was confined as to specifics to approximately ten schools and included a suggestion that “Free transfer

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Bluebook (online)
317 F. Supp. 555, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-school-board-of-city-of-richmond-virginia-vaed-1970.