George Robert Boykins, Etc., United States of America, Plaintiff-Intervenor v. Fairfield Board of Education

492 F.2d 697, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9183
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 1974
Docket73-1089
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 492 F.2d 697 (George Robert Boykins, Etc., United States of America, Plaintiff-Intervenor v. Fairfield Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George Robert Boykins, Etc., United States of America, Plaintiff-Intervenor v. Fairfield Board of Education, 492 F.2d 697, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9183 (5th Cir. 1974).

Opinions

GEE, Circuit Judge;

As the Fairfield, Alabama, school case comes before us for the seventh time,1 the great issúes of segregation and integration which were, for our circuit, largely fought out on this very field2 have departed like the Captains and the Kings, to be replaced by the petulance which this record reveals and the spectre of resegregation by white flight from the school system. As the trial court observed:

The Court has had many hearings in the Fairfield School Case. When the hearings began there was a white majority in the school system. There is now a black majority and this majority is growing with every term and with every court order. The number of students in the System is dropping every year with the consequent loss of revenue. The cooperation between the races apparently has disappeared. Pi-[699]*699cayunish claims are being made on the one hand and vigorously contested on the other. If this System is to survive this continued litigation must come to an end. Many of the black students appear to have overlooked the point that the object of attending Fairfield High is to obtain an education and not merely to maintain a point of which an issue may be made.

Appellants are Negro school children who are members of the class who brought this suit originally. They complain of the process by which nine Negro students were punished for misconduct, of the severity of the punishment which some received, and of the refusal of the district court to order the school authorities to grant various demands which the Negro students had sought to enforce by the boycott which led indirectly to their expulsion. We affirm.

Following the most recent remand of this case to the district court, a final plan for the desegregation of the Fair-field schools was put into effect. When school next commenced, however, Negro students conducted a boycott of the school, seeking to enforce demands such as that the School Board:

1. Prohibit the practice of requiring spring pre-registration of classes although, as the court below found, all students, Negro and white, were required to pre-register and no discrimination was shown.

2. Prohibit school authorities from allowing white students to leave campus for lunch since it was generally more convenient for them to go home for lunch than for Negro students.

3. Prohibit the school from serving inferior food to Negro students, although all students eat in the same two cafeterias.

4. Increase the time for lunch, and the time between classes.

5. Order that more Negro students become cheerleaders and members of the band, even though the present selection process was found by the district court to involve no racial discrimination.

6. Order more Negro students to become members of the Pep Club even though membership is open to all students.

7. Require a Negro History Week, and a Black Studies curriculum.

8. Require “sock hops” and school proms.

9. Change the school disciplinary policy which makes it a school offense to be late for class an excessive number of times.

10. Require the school to open the school doors before 7:30 each morning.

11. Order teachers at the Fairfield School System to refrain from using profanity.

12. Allow Negro students to attend dancing class without paying the fee required of other students.

13. Require the school officials to distribute textbooks which are in better condition.

This boycott, commenced in late October and carried over into early November, resulted in the suspension of over 100 students, all but three of them Negro, from school. A series of motions by counsel for plaintiffs followed, seeking enforcement of such demands as the above and reinstatement of the suspended students. On November 9, 1972, the court below entered its order requiring the readmission of the suspended students and setting a hearing on the motion seeking review of the demands upon which the boycott had been based. The ordered readmission was contingent upon termination of the boycott, return to class by all students, and an end of disruptive activities.

Most students returned to class the next day. Almost immediately, however, the same sort of difficulties which had plagued the school term recommenced. Clarence Young, one of the students who was later expelled, intervened in a trivial incident and undertook to instruct a Negro faculty member as to the proprieties of his behavior. An altercation between them followed. Young berated [700]*700the instructor, using such epithets as “Uncle Tom” and “half whitey.” He was taken to the principal’s office, and word of the incident immediately spread through the school. Various students, including the other expellees, left class without permission. Some, urging others to join them, went from classroom to classroom calling for students to leave classes to participate in a meeting to discuss what should be done to rescue Clarence Young. Many students left class, the police were called, and attempts were made to persuade the students to return to class without much success. School was therefore closed in the middle of the morning and all students sent home.

Twenty-one students were subsequently sent notices of suspension from school for their participation in the disruptions of November 10 and were also informed that individual hearings would later be held by the Board of Education to decide whether they should be reinstated. These hearings were held on November 25, 1972. As a result of the hearings, four of the students were immediately readmitted, eight were readmitted after a week’s further suspension, one was suspended for the remainder of the semester, and eight were expelled. The record indicates that, as a result of the expulsion, difficulty was later encountered by the expelled students in obtaining entrance to other public schools. As of a hearing held by the district court in March of 1973, none of these students had reapplied to the Fairfield School Board, so that what the consequences of such a reapplication would have been are unknown. However, at oral argument the court was advised by counsel for plaintiffs that all but one of these students were attending school somewhere as of that time.

The procedures which were followed in the hearing, and of which complaint is here made, were outlined by counsel for the Board as follows:

Let me ask you if this procedure will be agreeable. We will call each student from outside into the conference room with his parent or guardian. We will explain to the child what he has been charged with, and ask him if it is clear in his mind what school rules he has violated. If he has no questions, we will then present the evidence against the child to support the accusations. Having done that, we will ask the student if he has anything to say to contradict the charges that have been made against him, or the evidence to support charges that have been made against him. After that we will — I think the Board should ask the School Administrator that is presenting the evidence any — ■ and the child — any questions that you think are relevant in order to resolve any conflict. We’re going to accord Mr. Newton the privilege of cross-examination. It is not a right that he can insist on, but we are showing him that courtesy.

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492 F.2d 697, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-robert-boykins-etc-united-states-of-america-plaintiff-intervenor-ca5-1974.