Hopwood v. State of Tex.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 19, 1996
Docket94-50664
StatusPublished

This text of Hopwood v. State of Tex. (Hopwood v. State of Tex.) 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
Hopwood v. State of Tex., (5th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT _______________

No. 94-50569 _______________

CHERYL J. HOPWOOD, et al.,

Plaintiffs-Appellees,

VERSUS

STATE OF TEXAS, et al.,

Defendants-Appellees,

THURGOOD MARSHALL LEGAL SOCIETY and BLACK PRE-LAW ASSOCIATION,

Movants-Appellants.

****************************************************************** DOUGLAS CARVELL, ET AL.,

THURGOOD MARSHALL LEGAL SOCIETY, AND BLACK PRE-LAW ASSOCIATION,

_______________

No. 94-50664 _______________

CHERYL J. HOPWOOD, et al., Plaintiffs,

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

Defendants-Appellees.

**********************************************

DOUGLAS CARVELL, ET AL.,

Plaintiffs,

DOUGLAS CARVELL,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

_________________________

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas _________________________ March 18, 1996

Before SMITH, WIENER, and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges.

JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:

With the best of intentions, in order to increase the en-

rollment of certain favored classes of minority students, the

University of Texas School of Law ("the law school") discrimi-

nates in favor of those applicants by giving substantial racial

preferences in its admissions program. The beneficiaries of this

2 system are blacks and Mexican Americans, to the detriment of

whites and non-preferred minorities. The question we decide to-

day in No. 94-50664 is whether the Fourteenth Amendment permits

the school to discriminate in this way.

We hold that it does not. The law school has presented no

compelling justification, under the Fourteenth Amendment or Su-

preme Court precedent, that allows it to continue to elevate some

races over others, even for the wholesome purpose of correcting

perceived racial imbalance in the student body. "Racial prefer-

ences appear to 'even the score' . . . only if one embraces the

proposition that our society is appropriately viewed as divided

into races, making it right that an injustice rendered in the

past to a black man should be compensated for by discriminating

against a white." City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co., 488 U.S.

469, 528 (1989) (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment).

As a result of its diligent efforts in this case, the dis-

trict court concluded that the law school may continue to impose

racial preferences. See Hopwood v. Texas, 861 F. Supp. 551 (W.D.

Tex. 1994). In No. 94-50664, we reverse and remand, concluding

that the law school may not use race as a factor in law school

admissions. Further, we instruct the court to reconsider the

issue of damages in accordance with the legal standards we now

explain. In No. 94-50569, regarding the denial of intervention

by two black student groups, we dismiss the appeal for want of

jurisdiction.

3 I.

A.

The University of Texas School of Law is one of the nation's

leading law schools, consistently ranking in the top twenty.

See, e.g., America's Best Graduate Schools, U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT

Mar. 20, 1995, at 84 (national survey ranking of seventeenth).

Accordingly, admission to the law school is fiercely competitive,

with over 4,000 applicants a year competing to be among the ap-

proximately 900 offered admission to achieve an entering class of

about 500 students. Many of these applicants have some of the

highest grades and test scores in the country.

Numbers are therefore paramount for admission. In the early

1990's, the law school largely based its initial admissions deci-

sions upon an applicant's so-called Texas Index ("TI") number, a

composite of undergraduate grade point average ("GPA") and Law

School Aptitude Test ("LSAT") score.1 The law school used this

number as a matter of administrative convenience in order to rank

candidates and to predict, roughly, one's probability of success

in law school. Moreover, the law school relied heavily upon such

numbers to estimate the number of offers of admission it needed

to make in order to fill its first-year class.

1 The formulae were written by the Law School Data Assembly Service according to a prediction derived from the success of first-year students in preceding years. As the LSAT was determined to be a better predictor of success in law school, the formulae for the class entering in 1992 accorded an approximate 60% weight to LSAT scores and 40% to GPA.

The formula for students with a three-digit LSAT, see infra note 5, was calculated as: LSAT + (10)(GPA) = TI. For students with a two-digit LSAT, the formula was: (1.25)LSAT + (10)GPA = TI.

4 Of course, the law school did not rely upon numbers alone.

The admissions office necessarily exercised judgment in inter-

preting the individual scores of applicants, taking into consid-

eration factors such as the strength of a student's undergraduate

education, the difficulty of his major, and significant trends in

his own grades and the undergraduate grades at his respective

college (such as grade inflation). Admissions personnel also

considered what qualities each applicant might bring to his law

school class. Thus, the law school could consider an applicant's

background, life experiences, and outlook. Not surprisingly,

these hard-to-quantify factors were especially significant for

marginal candidates.2

Because of the large number of applicants and potential ad-

missions factors, the TI's administrative usefulness was its

ability to sort candidates. For the class entering in 1992SSthe

admissions group at issue in this caseSSthe law school placed the

typical applicant in one of three categories according to his TI

scores: "presumptive admit," "presumptive deny," or a middle

"discretionary zone." An applicant's TI category determined how

extensive a review his application would receive.

Most, but not all, applicants in the presumptive admit

category received offers of admission with little review.

2 Notably, but of less significance to this appeal, residency also had a strong, if not often determinant, effect. Under Texas law in 1992, the law school was limited to a class of 15% non-residents, and the Board of Regents required an entering class of at least 500 students. The law school therefore had to monitor offers to non-residents carefully, in order not to exceed this quota, while at the same time maintaining an entering class of a manageable size.

5 Professor Stanley Johanson, the Chairman of the Admissions

Committee, or Dean Laquita Hamilton, the Assistant Dean for

Admissions, reviewed these files and downgraded only five to ten

percent to the discretionary zone because of weaknesses in their

applications, generally a non-competitive major or a weak under-

graduate education.

Applicants in the presumptive denial category also received

little consideration. Similarly, these files would be reviewed by

one or two professors, who could upgrade them if they believed that

the TI score did not adequately reflect potential to compete at the

law school. Otherwise, the applicant was rejected.

Applications in the middle range were subjected to the most

extensive scrutiny. For all applicants other than blacks and

Mexican Americans, the files were bundled into stacks of thirty,

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