This suit by appellants to enjoin appellees from alleged
violations of the Fourteenth Amendment in refusing to admit Negroes
to the University of Tennessee must be dismissed as moot, since
appellants' requests for admission to the University have been
granted, and there is no suggestion that any person "similarly
situated" will not be afforded similar treatment. Pp.
342 U. S.
517-518.
100 F.
Supp. 113;
97 F.
Supp. 463, judgments vacated with directions to dismiss the
action on the ground that the cause is moot.
PER CURIAM.
Appellants, on behalf of themselves and other Negroes "similarly
situated," sued in the District Court to enjoin appellees from
alleged violations of the Fourteenth Amendment in refusing to admit
Negroes to the University
Page 342 U. S. 518
of Tennessee. A three-judge court, convened at appellants'
request, held that this case was not within the jurisdiction of a
three-judge court under 28 U.S.C. (Supp. IV) § 2281, and
ordered that the case proceed before a single district judge.
100 F.
Supp. 113. The single judge held that appellants were entitled
to relief, but did not enter an order.
97 F.
Supp. 463.
Appellants contend that only a court of three judges has
jurisdiction over the cause. No. 120 is an appeal from the order
dissolving the three-judge court brought directly to this Court
under 28 U.S.C. (Supp. IV) § 1253. We set the appeal down for
argument, postponing consideration of jurisdictional questions. In
No. 159 Misc., appellants asked, in the alternative, that we issue
a writ of mandamus to vacate the order dissolving the three-judge
court. We issued a rule to show cause why the petition for mandamus
should not be granted, 342 U.S. 846, and, upon the filing of a
response to the rule, set the petition down for argument with the
appeal.
At the argument, counsel for appellees stated that appellants
would be admitted to the University of Tennessee as requested.
Thereafter, appellants filed a motion stating that appellant Gray
has been admitted to the University, and that the other appellants
were, because of changed circumstances, unable to avail themselves
of the opportunity at present. Appellants moved this Court to
vacate the order dissolving the three-judge court and to remand the
case to that court for further proceedings. Since appellants'
requests for admission to the University of Tennessee have been
granted, and since there is no suggestion that any person
"similarly situated" will not be afforded similar treatment,
appellants' motion is denied, and the judgments below are vacated
and the District Court is directed to dismiss the action upon the
ground that the cause is moot.
It is so ordered.