Evans v. Buchanan

152 F. Supp. 886, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3490
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJuly 15, 1957
DocketCiv. A. 1816-1822
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 152 F. Supp. 886 (Evans v. Buchanan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. Buchanan, 152 F. Supp. 886, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3490 (D. Del. 1957).

Opinion

LEAHY, Chief Judge.

1. Among the several motions before the Court are plaintiffs’ motion for consolidation of C.A. Nos. 1816 through 1822, inclusive under Fed.Rules Civ. Proc. § 42(a), 28 U.S.C., and plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment against the Members of the State Board of Education and the State Superintendent of Public Instruction under FR 56(a).

2. This Court disposed of a previous motion of plaintiffs for summary judgment with respect to C.A. No. 1816, 1 as to which an appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals for this Circuit but not legally prosecuted by the Local Board, in accordance with law and the Rules of said Court of Appeals. The time for filing a plan as to this particular school district, as provided for in the order entered by the Delaware District Court was continued, pending the appeal, until further order of this Court. The present order will be operative as to this Local Board for its failure to perfect its appeal.

8. Answers of defendant State Board and State Superintendent in all the Civil Actions pending are, in substance, similar. I find as to plaintiffs and other Negro children similarly situated, these answers acknowledge the existence of racial segregation in the public schools of Delaware; 2 and this is a deprivation of rights guaranteed under the Federal Constitution and so declared inviolate by the Supreme Court. 3

4. The State Board of Education adopted in the summer of 1954 regulations requiring the local school Boards to submit to the State Board plans for racial desegregation in the public schools. These regulations, especially as they affected the local Boards, had binding force throughout the State of Delaware. 4 This initiated a policy then regarded feasible. But, it is also manifest the local Boards, in Kent and Sussex Counties, in general, have not begun to comply with these regulations. The regulations of the State Board cannot be permitted to be wielded as an administrative weapon to produce interminable delay. In the interplay of forces resulting in continuing violation of plaintiffs’ constitutional rights, these rights of Negro children must retain their vitality. They are, indeed, paramount. 5 The *888 State Board, though not solely responsible for a solution of administrative procedures in this sociological-legal problem, must, in the final analysis, be held answerable.

5. The State Board of Education, from its past performance, blandly asserts it must await initial local action because the State Board “is not and can not be as conversant with local school problems as the local school Boards.” The factual data contained in its Reports to the Governor of the State of Delaware refutes this. This Court readily understands the State Board, as to the problem of integration, is not as conversant with local problems as the local Boards, but the Court is in disagreement whether the State Board cannot be, or, when measured by its record of inaction in failing to negotiate a prompt and reasonable start toward full compliance, it has tried to be.

6. Clearly, it is best, in the abstract, to permit local conditions to be handled in the first instance by Local Boards for integration, as commanded by the Supreme Court of the United States. But, it is also recognized joint and not independent action is called for by all parties concerned. The first mandate of the Supreme Court fixed the law on this problem over three years ago, the second mandate, over two years ago. Since that time no appreciable steps have been taken 6 in the State of Delaware to effect full compliance with the law.

In conclusion, it is recognized, under the law as fixed by the Supreme Court of the United States, the right of plaintiffs to public education unmarred by racial segregation is immutable; that each state faces problems indigenous to its own circumstances; that circumstances in Delaware require racial desegregation to become a reality simultaneously throughout all communities; that the State Board exercises general control and supervision over all public schools in Delaware, including the Local Boards, and has knowledge of the status of racial desegregation in those schools; that the State Board’s admissions of continued racial segregation in the public schools washes away all dispute as to this issue, as raised by the Local Boards; and, that any order by this Court directed to the State Board is, a fortiori, directed to any Local Board over which it, in turn, has authority.

It is hereby

Ordered and Decreed By This Court:

1. The motion of plaintiffs to consolidate the following causes, C.A. 1816 through C.A.1822, inclusive, be and the same is hereby granted and all pending causes in this Court are hereby consolidated for judicial decision.

2. The plaintiffs’ motions for summary judgment in C.A.1816 through C.A.1822, inclusive, as against the Members of the State Board of Education and the State Superintendent of Public Instruction be and the same are hereby granted.

8. The minor plaintiffs in the respective cases and all other Negro children *889 similarly situated are entitled to admittance, enrollment and education, on a racially nondiseriminatory basis, in the public schools of Clayton School District No. 119, Milford Special School District, Greenwood School District No. 91, Milton School District No. 8, Laurel Special School District, Seaford Special School District and John M. Clayton School District No. 97, respectively, no later than the beginning of or sometime early in the Fall Term of 1957.

4. In accordance therewith defendants are permanently enjoined and restrained from refusing admission, on account of race, color or ancestry, of respective minor Negro plaintiffs and all other children similarly situated to the public schools maintained in the respective above-mentioned school districts.

5. To further obtain and effectuate admittance, enrollment and education of said minor plaintiffs and all other children similarly situated to the public schools maintained in the respective above-mentioned school districts, on a racially nondiseriminatory basis, defendant Members of the State Board of Education, having general control and supervision of the public schools of the State of Delaware and having the duty to maintain a uniform, equal and effective system of public schools throughout the State of Delaware, and defendant George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, shall submit to this Court within 60 days from the date of this order a plan of desegregation providing for the admittance, enrollment and education on a racially nondiscriminatory basis, for the Fall Term of 1957, of pupils in all public school districts of the State of Delaware which heretofore have not admitted pupils under a plan of desegregation approved by the State Board of Education.

6.

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Related

Evans v. Buchanan
416 F. Supp. 328 (D. Delaware, 1976)
Mary Ann Evans, an Infant, by Helen Evans, Her Guardian Ad Litem v. Jane Ennis, Vincent A. Theisen, Marvel O. Watson, Roy A. Wentz, Ralph Grapperhaus, Harold B. English, Members of the State Board of Education, George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Richard W. Comegys, Harry W. Moor, G. Francis Downs, Mary W. Jarrell, Members of the Board of Trustees of Clayton School District No. 119. Eugene Harris, an Infant, by Thomas Harris, His Guardian Ad Litem v. Jane Ennis, Vincent A. Theisen, Marvel O. Watson, Roy A. Wentz, Ralph Grapperhaus, Harold B. English, Members of the State Board of Education, George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Max R. Corder, E. Crerar Bennet, Jr., Ernest C. MacKlin George A. Robbins, Members of the Board of Education of the Milford Special School District. Julie Coverdale, an Infant, by Annie E. Coverdale, Her Guardian Ad Litem v. Jane Ennis, Vincent A. Theisen, Marvel O. Watson, Roy A. Wentz, Ralph Grapperhaus, Harold B. English, Members of the State Board of Education, George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Wilbur C. Root, Norman C. Hamsted, Harry Webb, Majorie Baker, Members of the Board of Trustees of Greenwood School District No. 91. Eyvonne Holloman, an Infant, by Flossie Holloman, Her Guardian Ad Litem v. Jane Ennis, Vincent A. Theisen, Marvel O. Watson, Roy A. Wentz, Ralph Grapperhaus, Harold B. English, Members of the State Board of Education, George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Howard T. West, John T. Fisher, Norman Clifton, Albert Lank, Members of the Board of Trustees of Milton School District No. 8. David Creighton, an Infant, by Josephine Creighton, His Guardian Ad Litem v. Jane Ennis, Vincent A. Theisen, Marvel O. Waston, Roy A. Wentz, Ralph Grapperhaus, Harold B. English, Members of the State Board of Education, George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Ford M. Warrington, Otis P. Carmine, Clarence J. Evans, Homer L. Disharoon, Jr., Members of the Board of Education of the Laurel Special School District. Marvin Denson, an Infant, by Clarence Denson, His Guardian Ad Litem v. Jane Ennis, Vincent A. Theisen, Marvel O. Watson, Roy A. Wentz, Ralph Grapperhaus, Harold B. English, Members of the State Board of Education, George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Robert H. Stamm, Irene F. Larrimore, Oscar W. Allen, Jr., John C. Rawlins, Members of the Board of Education of the Seaford Special School District. Thomas J. Oliver, Jr., an Infant, by Thomas J. Oliver, His Guardian Ad Litem v. Jane Ennis, Vincent A. Theisen, Marvel O. Watson, Roy A. Wentz, Ralph Grapperhaus, Harold B. English, Members of the State Board of Education, George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Raymond Townsend, George H. Bunting, William B. Chandler, Jr., Roland v. Cobb, Members of the Board of Trustees of John M. Clayton School
281 F.2d 385 (Third Circuit, 1960)
Evans v. Ennis
281 F.2d 385 (Third Circuit, 1960)
Brenda Evans, an Infant, by Charles Evans, Her Guardian Ad Litem v. Madeline Buchanan, Members of the State Board of Education, and George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Richard W. Comegys, Members of the Board of Trustees of Clayton School District No. 119. Madeline Staten, an Infant, by Her Guardian Ad Litem Eleanora M. Staten v. Madeline Buchanan, Members of the State Board of Education, and George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Max Corder, Members of the Board of Education of the Milford Special School District. Julie Coverdale, an Infant, by Annie E. Coverdale, Her Guardian Ad Litem v. Madeline Buchanan, Members of the State Board of Education, and George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Marjorie Baker, Members of the Board of Trustees of Greewood School District No. 91. Eyvonne Holloman, an Infant, by Her Guardian Ad Litem, Flossie Holloman of the Board of Trustees of Greenwood v. Madeline Buchanan, Members of the States Board of Education, and George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and James L. Brooks, Members of the Board of Trustees of Milton School District No. 8. David Creighton, an Infant, by His Guardian Ad Litem, Joseph Creighton v. Madeline Buchanan, Members of the State Board of Education and George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and William E. Prettyman, Members of the Board of Education of the Laurel Special School District. Marvin Denson, an Infant, by His Guardian Ad Litem, Clarence Denson v. Madeline Buchanan, Members of the State Board of Education, and George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Jacob H. Moore, Members of the Board of Education of the Seaford Special School District. Thomas J. Oliver, Jr., an Infant, by His Guardian Ad Litem, Thomas J. Oliver v. Madeline Buchanan, Members of the State Board of Education, and George R. Miller, Jr., State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Raymond E. Townsend, Members of the Board of Trustees of John M. Clayton School District No. 97
256 F.2d 688 (Third Circuit, 1958)
Evans v. Buchanan
256 F.2d 688 (Third Circuit, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
152 F. Supp. 886, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-buchanan-ded-1957.