Chambers v. Hendersonville City Board of Education

245 F. Supp. 759, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7270
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 30, 1965
DocketCiv. 2388
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 245 F. Supp. 759 (Chambers v. Hendersonville City Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chambers v. Hendersonville City Board of Education, 245 F. Supp. 759, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7270 (W.D.N.C. 1965).

Opinion

CRAVEN, Chief Judge.

This is a class action brought by three Negro teachers and the North Carolina *760 Teachers Association 1 against the Hen-dersonville City Board of Education. The teachers and the Association seek to invoke the equitable jurisdiction of the court, and allege that the School Board has denied reemployment as teachers to the individual plaintiffs and other Negro teachers, because of their being members of the Negro race, in violation of the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

Plaintiffs seek an injunction restraining the School Board from refusing to consider reemployment of individual plaintiffs and other Negro teachers and professional school personnel for the 1965-66 school year and subsequent school years because of race. Plaintiffs further seek an injunction to prevent the maintenance of a bi-racial system of hiring, assigning, reemploying and dismissing plaintiffs and other teachers and to affirmatively require the School Board to initiate a plan of unitary, non-racial future employment, reemployment and assignment.

A preliminary injunction was not sought, but, instead, plaintiffs prayed the court to advance the cause on the docket.

The complaint was filed on June 28, 1965. Because of the alleged constitutional basis of the litigation and the importance of the matter to the teachers and the School Board, the case was given special consideration by the court, and counsel were requested to complete discovery procedures and pleadings so that it could be finally heard at the earliest possible date. The case was tried on August 18 and 19, 1965, at Asheville, North Carolina. 2

Thereafter, on my own motion, a rehearing was ordered for September 22, 1965, at which time both sides offered additional evidence and the record was supplemented.

Counsel for the teachers and the Teachers Association stated to the court in oral argument that the controversy is largely one of the proper inferences to be drawn from substantially undisputed subsidiary facts. Even so, it is thought desirable to find the facts in some detail.

Until September 1964 the defendant operated a completely segregated school system consisting of four schools. Three of these, namely Bruce Drysdale, Rose Edwards and Hendersonville High School, were exclusively for white pupils and had an exclusively white faculty. Ninth Avenue School, covering grades one through twelve, was exclusively for Negro students of the Hendersonville district and, in addition, accommodated migratory Negro pupils coming from Henderson, Transylvania and Polk Counties. It was staffed entirely by Negro teachers.

For the school year 1964-65 the Board adopted a freedom of choice plan of desegregation. The four schools continued to be operated much as they had been before.

For the school year 1965-66 the Board abandoned its freedom of choice plan and completely integrated all pupils into its four school buildings, with Bruce Drysdale accommodating grades one through three, Rose Edwards four through five, Junior High (formerly Ninth Avenue) six through eight, and Hendersonville High nine through twelve. All pupils — regardless of race— are now attending the appropriate school.

The Board has discontinued its former practice of accepting Negro students who reside outside of the district in Henderson County and the neighboring counties of Polk and Transylvania. These Negro pupils have been returned to their respective and appropriate school districts and will not attend school in *761 the Hendersonville system. As a result, the number of students to be taught in the Hendersonville system for 1965-66 is diminished approximately 217 as compared with the prior year. The Negro pupil enrollment for the school year 1964-65 was 498, and for the year 1965-66 is 281. Likewise, the number of teacher jobs in the Hendersonville system has diminished by five. 3 What was formerly Ninth Avenue School has become Hendersonville Junior High School —attended by all eligible pupils without regard to race.

Former Ninth Avenue School has been abolished. The nature, purpose, scope, racial composition, and even the name have been changed. Last year twenty-four Negro teachers taught in the Ninth Avenue School and none in the other three schools. This year eight 4 Negro teachers will teach in all of the schools in the system.

Why are sixteen fewer Negro teachers employed this year than last? The three Negro plaintiffs and the Teachers Association insist that the answer is obvious: racial discrimination. Although an oversimplification, it is not unfair to suggest that plaintiffs’ case rests almost entirely upon this one ultimate fact: twenty-four Negro teachers one year and eight the next. 5

Plaintiffs’ argument comes to this: that it is impossible that sixteen out of twenty-four Negro applicants (two-thirds) should be found inferior to white applicants with respect to qualifications for teaching. The argument is a novel one. It has no support in law, 6 nor, as far as I know, in human experience.

The decimation of Negro teachers is not inexplicable. Until the current school year 1965-66 Negro teacher applicants did not compete with white teacher applicants. With respect to teachers, there was a tight compartmen-tation of the schools. Nor does failure to reemploy these sixteen teachers mean that the Board decided that every white teacher had qualifications superior to these applicants. This is so because teachers compete against each other only in their respective classifications. For example, an English teacher does not compete against a music teacher, but only against other English teachers; an elementary teacher does not compete against high school teachers.

The plaintiffs have the burden of proof (persuasion) to satisfy the court from the evidence and by its greater weight that the Negro teachers or one or more of them failed reemployment by reason of his race. 7

The startling decimation of Negro teachers — twenty-four one year and eight the next — became less startling as the evidence was presented. A group *762 of six out of the class of sixteen for ■whom the suit is brought were not reemployed for perfectly plain and objective reasons having nothing whatsoever to do with race or even with their general qualifications for teaching. Teacher Cunningham simply retired. Teacher Roberts did not wish to teach in an integrated school, preferring to teach only members of her own race, and declined to be considered for reemployment. 8 Teacher Young’s bricklaying class (the only subject he taught in the prior year) was discontinued, and his job simply abolished. Teacher Weight, 9

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Related

Adam Baker v. City of St. Petersburg
400 F.2d 294 (Fifth Circuit, 1968)
Wall v. Stanly County Board of Education
259 F. Supp. 238 (M.D. North Carolina, 1966)
Smith v. Board of Education
365 F.2d 770 (Eighth Circuit, 1966)
Baker v. City of St. Petersburg
252 F. Supp. 397 (M.D. Florida, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 F. Supp. 759, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chambers-v-hendersonville-city-board-of-education-ncwd-1965.