Reapplication to stay Court of Appeals' judgment and mandate
affirming District Court's school desegregation order (
see
ante p.
439 U. S. 1360)
is denied. It appears unlikely that four Justices of this Court
would vote to grant certiorari at this time to consider the
liability issues decided below, and, although four Justices might
grant certiorari to consider the scope of the District Court's
authority to grant such a drastic remedy as it did, the case is not
presently at the certiorari stage, and a stay would be too
disruptive, since school is to begin in three days.
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST.
Applicants, seven defendant suburban school districts in the
area of Wilmington, Delaware, have requested that I stay execution
of the judgment and mandate of the Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit in this case pending consideration by this Court of their
petition for certiorari.
*
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN denied the application for a stay one week
ago, on September 1, 1978,
Buchanan v. Evans, ante p.
439 U. S. 1360.
Although earlier this summer I granted a stay in
Columbus Board
of Education v. Penick, ante p.
439 U. S. 1348,
after it had been denied by MR. JUSTICE STEWART, I have decided to
deny this application. Since my reasons are somewhat different from
those expressed by MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN in his opinion, I shall
state them here.
Page 439 U. S. 1376
As MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN noted, the District Court, earlier in
this litigation, found interdistrict violations on the part of
several of the independent school districts located in New Castle
County. It also declared unconstitutional a Delaware statute
granting to the State Board of Education the authority to
reorganize school districts within the State, but exempting from
the operation of the statute the Wilmington School District. The
judgment of the District Court was summarily affirmed without an
opinion by this Court over three dissents.
Buchanan v.
Evans, 423 U. S. 963
(1975). For the reasons expressed in my dissent in that case, I
cannot agree with my Brother BRENNAN that the unexplicated summary
affirmance renders the District Court's finding that "this dual
school system has been perpetuated through constitutional
violations of an interdistrict nature" the law of the case.
Buchanan v. Evans, ante, at
439 U. S.
1363 (BRENNAN, J., in chambers).
The case later came to this Court on a petition for certiorari
from a judgment of the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit that
had concluded that some consolidation of school districts would be
necessary in order to formulate an appropriate decree. Certiorari
was denied by this Court,
Delaware Board of Education v.
Evans, 434 U.S. 880 (1977), with three Justices voting to
grant certiorari, and vacate and remand the case for
reconsideration in light of this Court's opinion in
Dayton
Board of Education v. Brinkman, 433 U.
S. 406 (1977). Were I alone deciding these issues on the
merits, I would probably grant a stay pending the timely filing of
a petition for certiorari.
Cf. New York Times Co. v.
Jascalevich, ante at
439 U. S.
1337 (MARSHALL, J., in chambers). But as MR. JUSTICE
MARSHALL went on to point out in his in-chambers opinion, the
Circuit Justice must be reasonably satisfied that four Justices
would vote to grant certiorari in the case, and while I do not view
any of the prior actions of this Court as dispositive of the merits
of the issues decided by the District Court or the Court of Appeals
for the Third Circuit, neither do I feel that I can, in good
conscience,
Page 439 U. S. 1377
say that four Justices of this Court would vote to grant
certiorari to consider them at this time.
Present in the instant application, however, is an elaborate,
specific plan devised by the District Court to remedy the
violations which it had previously found. That remedy consists in
part of a court-ordered reorganization and consolidation of 11
independent school districts in northern New Castle County. What
had been 11 independent governing boards is, for the present, 1
interim board having supervisory authority over all 11 districts.
The order requires the Delaware State Board of Education to appoint
the five-person governing board. Included within the interim
board's authority is the assignment of students, the levying of
necessary taxes, the hiring of faculty, and the choice of
curriculum.
The second aspect of the remedy is a system of pupil assignment
which the District Court ordered the Board to adopt in the judgment
which the Court of Appeals affirmed in the case now before me. The
modus operandi of that plan is that all students from the
two predominantly black school districts are to be reassigned to
the nine predominantly white districts for nine years of their
elementary and secondary education, and all students in the
predominantly white districts are to be reassigned to the
predominantly black districts for three consecutive years. In
affirming this judgment of the District Court, the Court of Appeals
for the Third Circuit relied in part on this quotation from
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education,
402 U. S. 1,
402 U. S. 15-16
(1971):
"[A] school desegregation case does not differ fundamentally
from other cases involving the framing of equitable remedies to
repair the denial of a constitutional right."
However, the language in
Swann immediately following
the language quoted by the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
states:
"The task is to correct, by a balancing of the individual
Page 439 U. S. 1378
and collective interests, the condition that offends the
Constitution."
"In seeking to define even in broad and general terms how far
this remedial power extends, it is important to remember that
judicial powers may be exercised only on the basis of a
constitutional violation. Remedial judicial authority does not put
judges automatically in the shoes of school authorities, whose
powers are plenary. Judicial authority enters only when local
authority defaults."
Id. at
402 U. S. 16.
In the succeeding cases of
Milliken v. Bradley,
418 U. S. 717
(1974),
Hills v. Gautreaux, 425 U.
S. 284 (1976), and
Dayton Board of Education v.
Brinkman, supra, this Court has, with increasing emphasis,
insisted that the scope of the District Court's authority to
fashion a remedy is limited by the constitutional wrong that is to
be righted. I believe that, before a remedy of this drastic a
nature is finally imposed not merely on 1 school board, but on 11
previously independent school boards, four Justices of this Court
would wish to grant certiorari and consider that question on its
merits. No case from this Court has ever sanctioned a remedy of
this kind, or any remedy remotely like it. The only case in which a
District Court has become this deeply involved in the day-to-day
management of school affairs is
Morgan v. Kerrigan, 530
F.2d 401 (CA1 1976), in which this Court denied certiorari, 426
U.S. 935 (1976). In that case, however, the District Court was
dealing with a single school district, and it does not appear that
the community superintendents appointed to oversee particular
schools by the District Court's order had any authority to levy
taxes. If the Court meant what it said in
Dayton, that
"local autonomy of school districts is a vital national tradition,"
433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 410,
I think it would give plenary consideration to a case where the
District Court has treated a series of independent school districts
which were found to have
Page 439 U. S. 1379
committed constitutional violations much as if they were a
railroad in reorganization.
This case, however, is not presently at the certiorari stage,
and no petition for certiorari has been filed. The applicants seek
only a partial stay of the District Court's order, conceding that
the pressures of time would render inappropriate a complete stay in
view of the fact that the schools in question are scheduled to open
Monday, September 11.
This case was argued to the Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit on May 10, 1978, and that court handed down its opinion on
July 24. No application for stay of the mandate of the Court of
Appeals was presented to MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN until August 18. He
denied the application on September 1, and it was presented to me
late in the day on Tuesday, September 5. In a case of this
magnitude, with a school opening date of September 11 rapidly
approaching, it could be said that applicants might have acted more
quickly than they did in seeking a stay from MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN.
But be that as it may, equitable considerations involving stays do
not necessarily turn on notions of laches. I conclude that, in view
of all the considerations which must be weighed in a matter such as
this, the application for stay should be denied. The consolidated
school system has been subject to the desegregation order, without
interruption, since January, 1978. It would simply be too
disruptive to upset established expectations now. "This
disposition, of course, does not reflect any view on the merits of
the issues presented."
Dayton Board of Education v. Brinkman,
ante at
439 U. S. 1357
(STEWART, J., in chambers).
* The Delaware State Board of Education joined in the
application to MR JUSTICE BRENNAN, but has now advised the Clerk's
Office that, because of the shortness of time, it does not join in
the reapplication to me. It has advised the Clerk, however, that it
does intend to petition for certiorari for review of the judgment
of the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. Intervenor, Alfred
I. duPont School District, also does not join in this
reapplication.