Stout v. Jefferson Cty Bd Ed

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedSeptember 3, 2021
Docket2:65-cv-00396
StatusUnknown

This text of Stout v. Jefferson Cty Bd Ed (Stout v. Jefferson Cty Bd Ed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stout v. Jefferson Cty Bd Ed, (N.D. Ala. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION

LINDA STOUT, SANDRA RAY, ) LONNEL AND ALFORNIA CARTER, ) RICKY AND ALENA REEVES, and ) CARTRENA CARTER, on behalf of ) themselves and others similarly situated, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) ) Civil Action Number Plaintiff-Intervenor, ) 2:65-cv-00396-MHH ) v. ) ) JEFFERSON COUNTY BOARD OF ) EDUCATION, ) ) Defendant, ) ) GARDENDALE BOARD OF ) EDUCATION, ) ) Defendant-Intervenor. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The private plaintiffs have moved to join the City of Gardendale as a defendant in this public school desegregation case for the limited purpose of collecting the $870,913.83 attorney fee award that the Court assessed against the Gardendale Board of Education. (Docs. 1267, 1285). The Court entered judgment on the fee award in May of 2020. (Doc. 1283). To date, the private plaintiffs have recovered only $21,040.00 of the award, (Doc. 1301), leaving a principal balance of just under $850,000.00.

To satisfy the outstanding $849,873.83 judgment, the Gardendale Board of Education must ask the City of Gardendale to appropriate funds to the Board; the Board has no independent source of funding. Since the Court entered the judgment

for fees, the Board has not asked the City to appropriate fees to satisfy the judgment because every member of the Board has resigned. The City is obligated, by state statute and municipal ordinance, to fill every vacancy on the Board, but the City has declined to act, allowing the ghost board to avoid the fee award. On a related note,

the attorneys for the Gardendale Board of Education have filed a motion to withdraw because they say they have no one to represent. (Doc. 1277).1 This opinion addresses this state of affairs.

Because the current obstacle to the private plaintiffs’ effort to collect their fee award did not arise in a vacuum, this opinion begins with a summary of the legal and factual context for the private plaintiffs’ motion for joinder. Against that backdrop, we will turn to the award itself to explain why the City’s failure to act

exacerbates the bad faith conduct that the fee award addresses. Next, we will consider whether the Court has available to it a tool that may enable the Court to

1 The Board has no employees, officers, or agents because all have resigned. (Doc. 1259, p. 1, ¶ 2). remove the obstacle to enforcement of the fee judgment. Finally, we will discuss the private plaintiffs’ request for additional fees. We will weave into our

examination of these issues the Board’s attorneys’ efforts to withdraw from this case. I. The Gardendale City Council established the Gardendale City School System

and created the Gardendale Board of Education pursuant to Alabama Code § 16-11- 2. (Doc. 1129-1, pp. 1–3). Alabama Code § 16-11-2(b) provides: “The general administration and supervision of the public schools and educational interest of each city shall be vested in a city board of education, to be composed of five members

who shall be residents of the city, and who shall not be members of the city council or commission.”2 Alabama law mandates staggered five-year terms for municipal school board members and states that, “[i]n the event of a vacancy in the membership

of the city board of education by resignation or otherwise, the fact shall be reported to the city council or commission by the board, and the council or commission shall elect a person to fill the vacancy for the unexpired term.” ALA. CODE § 16-11-3. In other words, when a city exercises its statutory authority to create a municipal school

system operated by a municipal board of education, Alabama law requires the city

2 For purposes of § 16-11-2, a “city” is an incorporated municipality “of 5,000 or more inhabitants.” ALA. CODE § 16-11-1 (1975). to keep all five seats on the Board filled.3 The municipal ordinance pursuant to which Gardendale’s City Council created the Gardendale municipal public school

system and the Gardendale Board of Education, Gardendale Ordinance 2014-007, mirrors the language of Alabama Code § 16-11-3, (Doc. 1129-1, p. 2, Section 3), making the obligation to fill vacancies on the Gardendale Board of Education

mandatory under both state and municipal law. When the Gardendale City Council created the Gardendale Board of Education on March 3, 2014, the City Council immediately filled the five seats on the Board. (Doc. 1129-1, p. 2). From the Board’s inception, its members appeared

devoted to extricating the municipal public school system not only from the Jefferson County Board of Education that had been running the four public schools within Gardendale’s municipal boundaries but also from the federal desegregation

order that has governed the Jefferson County system and the municipal districts that have separated from the county system since the desegregation order was entered in 1971. (Doc. 226). The effort to escape the requirements of the desegregation order

3 As the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals recently reiterated, “‘must,’ like ‘shall,’ is a mandatory term that connotes a requirement.” United States v. Watkins, No. 18-14336, 2021 WL 3700295, *2 (11th Cir. Aug. 20, 2021) (quoting Burban v. City of Neptune Beach, 920 F.3d 1274, 1279 (11th Cir. 2019)). Thus, the word “shall” in § 16-11-3 means that a city council is required by state statute to fill vacancies on a municipal board of education. was consistent with the sentiment that drove the formation of the Gardendale school district in the first place.4

In 2012, several Gardendale residents began “a grassroots movement” and “used social media to discuss the changing racial demographics of their schools as they campaigned for the creation of a city school board and new taxes to support the

proposed school system.” Stout by Stout v. Jefferson Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 882 F.3d 988, 991 (11th Cir. 2018). “[S]ecession leaders expressed ‘a desire to control the racial demographics of the four public schools in the City of Gardendale and the racial demographics of the city itself.’” Stout, 882 F.3d at 1007 (quoting Doc.

1141, p. 138); (see, e.g., Doc. 1141, pp. 81–82). In the eyes of the separation supporters, a municipal school system would allow the City of Gardendale to shed “the desegregation from decades ago [] that should have already been changed.”

(Doc. 1141, pp. 82–83 (quoting Doc. 1132-2, p. 183, Sept. 13, 2012, 1:41 p.m.); Doc. 1124, pp. 170–71, 186, 191–92; Doc. 1131-44, pp. 9–10, tpp. 34–40). Secession organizers “put the mayor and the council in a head lock until they came to their own conclusions that the school system had to happen.” Stout, 882 F.3d at

997.5

4 Much of the information that follows is well-developed in Stout by Stout v. Jefferson Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 882 F.3d 988 (11th Cir. 2018) and in Doc. 1141. In this opinion, we highlight the events that are most pertinent to the pending motions concerning the vacant Gardendale Board.

5 The four schools within Gardendale’s municipal boundaries included a brand new $ 51 million high school. The City of Gardendale had explored the possibility of separating from the Jefferson In anticipation of separation, in September of 2013, the Gardendale City Council approved a 5-mill ad valorem tax to “be used for public school purposes,”

(Doc. 1298-1) (Gardendale Ordinance No. 2013-11), and voters in Gardendale approved a second 5-mill ad valorem tax in November of that year to “be used for public school purposes,” (Doc.

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Stout v. Jefferson Cty Bd Ed, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stout-v-jefferson-cty-bd-ed-alnd-2021.