Lynch v. Snepp

350 F. Supp. 1134
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedNovember 20, 1972
DocketC-C-72-252
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 350 F. Supp. 1134 (Lynch v. Snepp) 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
Lynch v. Snepp, 350 F. Supp. 1134 (W.D.N.C. 1972).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

McMILLAN, District Judge.

THE FACTS

On October 27, 1972, the defendant Judge Frank W. Snepp, resident North Carolina Superior Court Judge, ex parte and without notice, and based solely upon a one and one-fourth-page petition signed by the district prosecuting attorney, entered an injunction against “John Doe, Richard Roe and all others of like situation.” It forbade disorders and various crimes and misdemeanors on or near any of the public school properties of Mecklenburg County, and it forbade the John Doe defendants, pending further orders of court:

“From going in the buildings or on the grounds of any public school or any administrative offices of the public schools or any property of the Charlotte-Meeklenburg Board of Education within the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School District, or on any street adjacent thereto and from going in the vicinity thereof with the following exceptions to this numbered paragraph :
(a) Students at the said schools who are attending classes or other regularly scheduled activities;
(b) Teachers, principals, staff and employees of the schools while in attendance to their regular and lawful duties;
(c) Those having permission from the school authorities and having business with the public schools;
(d) Law enforcement officers and public officials while in attendance to their regular and lawful duties ;
(e) Parents or guardians of students attending the school while transporting those students to and from those schools.”

The order notified the “defendants” to appear on October 30, 1972, and show cause, if any, why the order should not be continued in effect until final determination of the action.

No action was pending when the injunction was issued; no summons had been issued to anyone and none had been issued when this matter was heard by this court on November 3,1972.

There is no evidence that school authorities sought, encouraged or advised the injunction.

Phyllis Lynch, Kelly M. Alexander, Jr., Robert Steele and Fledora Grier, plaintiffs in this case, appeared before Judge Snepp on October 30, 1972, and became parties and sought to obtain a *1137 reversal of the October 27 order. They were successful in some particulars. The seventy-three elementary schools in the county were eliminated, leaving ten high schools and about twenty junior high schools scattered over a twelve-mile radius still subject to the order. In certain further though minor particulars the order was changed. The prohibition against being in the streets adjacent to the schools was eliminated. However, the prohibition against being on school property without “permission” was kept in effect and the persons authorized to give permission were limited to “administrative officers of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education or [from] school principals.”

Plaintiffs on October 31, 1972, the day the amended order was filed, brought this action seeking injunctive relief against enforcement of the order and a declaration of its unconstitutionality as an illegal prior restraint upon freedom of speech and freedom of assembly under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and as violating the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. Bad faith in the solicitor’s petition and in the injunction and the order was alleged. A hearing after due notice was conducted on November 3, 1972. None of the defendants appeared, but they were represented by Mr. Charles A. Lloyd, Assistant Attorney General of North Carolina.

All the schools involved are in the Charlotte-Meeklenburg school system, whose operations have been and are the subject of continuing litigation in this court. (See Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education, Civil Action No. 1974. See also Givens v. Poe et al., D.C., 346 F.Supp. 202, in which the subject of discipline within the schools has been the subject of extended litigation and in which an order was entered on November 1, 1972, approving a new set of rules providing due process for students involved in disciplinary proceedings.)

FACTS BEARING ON STANDING— THE RIGHT OF THESE PARTICULAR PLAINTIFFS TO CHALLENGE THE INJUNCTION

The only oral testimony at the hearing in this court was the testimony of Kelly Alexander, Jr., age 24, and Robert Steele, two of the plaintiffs. Alexander and Steele are black citizens who are interested in organizing and coordinating activities of the NAACP, both having official positions as coordinators of youth affairs. These coordinators have arrangéments with student monitors in the schools who provide information on instances of violation of due process, racial discrimination and other student rights violations. Because of reports that black students were being discriminated against in the realm of suspensions from bus privileges and other school activities, Alexander and Steele started a “dialogue” with some of the principals. As illustration of this dialogue Alexander on October 13, 1972, wrote a letter to the principal of East High School. In that letter Alexander sought a conference with the principal to discuss among other things the school’s alleged action in denying a student the opportunity to distribute literature at school and in refusing to allow a black students’ club to be formed without advance accumulation of over two hundred signatures and approval by the student congress.

The principal had a conference with Alexander and Steele on October 26, 1972, at 4:00 P.M. It produced no change in the official attitude. It produced, plaintiffs say, comments comparing the plaintiffs’ activities with those of the Ku Klux Klan. Plaintiffs say they were advised that none of their literature could be distributed except through a student club; that literature for the purpose of organizing the club could not be distributed because it was not being distributed by a club; and that NAACP literature could not be distributed unless ordered by the school superintendent or by a court. The principal had, however, allowed a student to *1138 circulate an organization petition, and more than the required two hundred signatures had been accumulated.

The meeting ended in an apparent stalemate; no agreement was reached.

The principal reportedly indicated that there had been some disorder at the school that day (October 26), but “no major disruption”; and there was no disorder while Steele and Alexander were at the school.

Plaintiffs say that they have not visited many schools, but that they would like to be free to talk with students at lunch periods and before and after school and at other free times. They indicated that they desire to inform students about the new due process rules of discipline and about student rights on other matters.

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Bluebook (online)
350 F. Supp. 1134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-snepp-ncwd-1972.