United States v. Choctaw County Board Of Education

417 F.2d 838, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11736
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 26, 1969
Docket27297_1
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 417 F.2d 838 (United States v. Choctaw County 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
United States v. Choctaw County Board Of Education, 417 F.2d 838, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11736 (5th Cir. 1969).

Opinion

417 F.2d 838

UNITED STATES of America, by John MITCHELL, Attorney
General, Plaintiff-Appellant, Danita Hampton, by
her Mother and Next Friend, Yvonne
Hampton, et al.,
Plaintiffs-
Intervenors-
Appellants,
v.
CHOCTAW COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION et al., Defendant-Appellees.

No. 27297.

United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit.

June 26, 1969.

Frankie L. Fields, Vernon Z. Crawford, Vernol R. Jansen, Jr., U.S. Atty., Mobile, Ala., Gary J. Greenberg, Kenneth L. Johnson, Merle W. Loper, Attys., U.S. Dept. of Justice, Civil Rights Div., Washington, D.C., Jack Greenberg, Franklin E. White, Lowell Johnston, New York City, for appellant.

J. Edward Thornton, Mobile, Ala., John Y. Christopher, Butler, Ala., for appellees.

Before WISDOM, Circuit Judge, and CARSWELL and ROBERTS, District judges.

WISDOM, Circuit Judge:

This school desegregation case is one of a number of recent cases1 raising the question whether school boards should resort to zoning and pairing of schools rather than adhere to freedom of choice as prescribed in Jefferson.2

Some day in the not-far-distant future this Court should be able to say to a school board, 'You have met the standards implicit in the Constitution and explicit in our judicial mandates; go about your business of educating children'. In Jefferson we hoped to accelerate that day by establishing specific but not necessarily inflexible standards that everyone could understand. We based the model decree on three principles:

(1) School boards 'have the affirmative duty under the Fourteenth Amendment to bring about an integrated, unitary school system in which there are no Negro schools and no white schools-- just schools'.3 (2) The dual system must be liquidated 'lock, stock, and barrel'-- students, teachers, staff, faculties, transportation, and school activities.4 (3) The test is an objective one: 'The only school desegregation plan that meets constitutional standards is one that works';5 freedom of choice 'is a means to an end'6 that must yield to other means, unless the end is attained.7

Jefferson rested on the assumption that school boards would realize that their duty to take affirmative action to dismantle the dual system is not discharged simply by opening the doors of white schools to Negro applicants. The boards' duty is not discharged until all-Negro schools in the system are done away with and faculties are so integrated 'that the pattern of teacher assignment to any particular school (is) not identifiable as tailored for a heavy concentration of either Negro or white pupils in the schools'.8 Every judge in this circuit knows that the school administrators, almost without exception, have shown good faith and diligence in permitting free transfers. For that reason in many school systems there has been substantial desegregation of white schools. But every judge in this circuit also knows that there has been no progress in any school district toward desegregation of Negro schools.9 The happy day when courts retire from the business of scrutinizing schools is wholly dependent on school boards' facing up to the necessity of doing away with all-Negro schools and effectively integrating faculties. That is true, no matter whether school boards use freedom of choice, zoning, or a combination of the two plans. Meantime, if freedom of choice, now so stoutly defended by school boards, is not successful, alternatives must be adopted that give promise of working now.

Green v. County Board of New Kent County, Virginia, 1968, 391 U.S. 430, 441, 442, 88 S.Ct. 1689, 1696, 20 L.Ed.2d 716, supplies content to the concept of 'workability'.10

First, the Court noted that the existence of an all-Negro school is, as a matter of law, evidence of the failure of the desegregation plan. Second, statistics indicating that 85 per cent of the Negro children still attend the all-Negro school show that 'the school system remains a dual system.' Third, in determining whether the Board met the 'commands' in Brown,11 'it is relevant that the first step did not come until some 11 years after Brown I and 10 years after Brown II directed the making of a 'prompt and reasonable start". Fourth, the Court emphasized that the burden of dismantling the dual system was on the school boards, not the school children and their parents. When a plan is not working, the Board 'must be required to formulate a new plan'. Finally, the Court made two specific suggestions: zoning (where there is no residential segregation) and pairing or consolidation of schools. 'These are two suggestions the District Court should take into account on remand, along with any other proposed alternatives and in light of considerations respecting other aspects of the school system such as the matter of faculty and staff desegregation remanded to the Court by the Court of Appeals.'

Shortly after Green was decided, this Court reviewed freedom of choice plans in use in over thirty school systems. Adams v. Mathews, 5 Cir. 1968, 403 F.2d 181. We interpreted Green as holding that:

'If in a school district there are still all-Negro schools or only a small fraction of Negroes enrolled in white schools, or no substantial integration of faculties and school activities then, as a matter of law, the existing plan fails to meet constitutional standards as established in Green.' 403 F.2d at 188.

I.

Choctaw County is a small rural county in Alabama. Slightly more than half of the county's 4800 public school pupils are Negroes. Five of its eight public schools are traditionally white, three traditionally Negro.

On August 30, 1966, twelve years after the Supreme Court decided Brown I, the United States filed this action to desegregate the Choctaw County public schools. September 15, 1967, the district court entered the Jefferson decree.

Not long after the Supreme Court decided Green, the United States and the intervenors12 filed motions for supplemental relief based on Green. These motions alleged that zoning and pairing of schools would be more likely to achieve a unitary system than a freedom of choice plan, and requested the court to order the School Board to submit a new plan consistent with Green. At the hearing on July 23, 1968, the Superintendent of Schools for Choctaw County testified that Negroes and whites reside in all areas of the county; that Negroes were bussed past white schools and whites bussed past Negro schools.

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417 F.2d 838, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-choctaw-county-board-of-education-ca5-1969.