After being denied admission to a state-operated law school,
petitioner brought this suit on behalf of himself alone for
injunctive relief, claiming that the school's admissions policy
racially discriminated against him in violation of the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The trial court
agreed and ordered the school to admit him in the fall of 1971. The
Washington Supreme Court reversed, holding that the school's
admissions policy was not unconstitutional. MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, as
Circuit Justice, stayed that judgment pending this Court's final
disposition of the case, with the result that petitioner was in his
final school year when this Court considered his petition for
certiorari. After oral argument, the Court was informed that
petitioner had registered for his final quarter. Respondents have
assured the Court that this registration is fully effective
regardless of the ultimate disposition of the case.
Held: Because petitioner will complete law school at
the end of the term for which he has registered regardless of any
decision this Court might reach on the merits, the Court cannot,
consistently with the limitations of Art. III of the Constitution,
consider the substantive constitutional issues, and the case is
moot.
(a) Mootness here does not depend upon a "voluntary cessation"
of the school's admissions practices, but upon the simple fact that
petitioner is in his final term, and the school's fixed policy to
permit him to complete the term.
(b) The case presents no question that is "capable of
repetition, yet evading review," since petitioner will never again
have to go through the school's admissions process, and since it
does not follow that the issue petitioner raises will in the future
evade review merely because this case did not reach the Court until
the eve of petitioner's graduation.
82 Wash. 2d 11, 507 P.2d 1169, vacated and remanded.
Page 416 U. S. 314
PER CURIAM.
In 1971, the petitioner Marco DeFunis, Jr., [
Footnote 1] applied for admission as a first-year
student at the University of Washington Law School, a
state-operated institution. The size of the incoming first-year
class was to be limited to 150 persons, and the Law School received
some 1,600 applications for these 150 places. DeFunis was
eventually notified that he had been denied admission. He thereupon
commenced this suit in a Washington trial court, contending that
the procedures and criteria employed by the Law School Admissions
Committee invidiously discriminated against him on account of his
race in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the United States Constitution.
DeFunis brought the suit on behalf of himself alone, and not as
the representative of any class, against the various respondents,
who are officers, faculty members, and members of the Board of
Regents of the University of Washington. He asked the trial court
to issue a mandatory injunction commanding the respondents to admit
him as a member of the first-year class entering in September,
1971, on the ground that the Law School admissions policy had
resulted in the unconstitutional denial of his application for
admission. The trial court agreed with his claim and granted the
requested relief.
Page 416 U. S. 315
DeFunis was, accordingly, admitted to the Law School and began
his legal studies there in the fall of 1971. On appeal, the
Washington Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the trial court
and held that the Law School admissions policy did not violate the
Constitution. By this time, DeFunis was in his second year at the
Law School.
He then petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari, and MR.
JUSTICE DOUGLAS, as Circuit Justice, stayed the judgment of the
Washington Supreme Court pending the "final disposition of the case
by this Court." By virtue of this stay, DeFunis has remained in law
school, and was in the first term of his third and final year when
this Court first considered his certiorari petition in the fall of
1973. Because of our concern that DeFunis' third-year standing in
the Law School might have rendered this case moot, we requested the
parties to brief the question of mootness before we acted on the
petition. In response, both sides contended that the case was not
moot. The respondents indicated that, if the decision of the
Washington Supreme Court were permitted to stand, the petitioner
could complete the term for which he was then enrolled, but would
have to apply to the faculty for permission to continue in the
school before he could register for another term. [
Footnote 2]
We granted the petition for certiorari on November 19, 1973. 414
U.S. 1038. The case was in due course orally argued on February 26,
1974.
In response to questions raised from the bench during the oral
argument, counsel for the petitioner has informed the Court that
DeFunis has now registered "for his final
Page 416 U. S. 316
quarter in law school." Counsel for the respondents have made
clear that the Law School will not in any way seek to abrogate this
registration. [
Footnote 3] In
light of DeFunis' recent registration for the last quarter of his
final law school year, and the Law School's assurance that his
registration is fully effective, the insistent question again
arises whether this case is not moot, and to that question we now
turn.
The starting point for analysis is the familiar proposition that
"federal courts are without power to decide questions that cannot
affect the rights of litigants in the case before them."
North
Carolina v. Rice, 404 U. S. 244 246
(1971). The inability of the federal judiciary
"to review moot cases derives from the requirement of Art. III
of the Constitution under which the exercise of judicial power
depends upon the existence of a case or controversy."
Liner v. Jafco, Inc., 375 U. S. 301,
375 U. S. 306
n. 3 (1964);
see also Powell v. McCormack, 395 U.
S. 486,
395 U. S. 496
n. 7 (1969);
Sibron v. New York, 392 U. S.
40,
392 U. S. 50 n.
8 (1368). Although, as a matter of Washington state law, it appears
that this case would be saved from mootness by "the great public
interest in the continuing issues raised by this appeal," 82 Wash.
2d 11, 23 n. 6, 507 P.2d 1169, 1177 n. 6 (1973), the fact remains
that, under Art. III,
"[e]ven in cases arising in the state courts, the question of
mootness is a federal one which a federal court must resolve before
it assumes jurisdiction."
North Carolina v. Rice, supra, at
404 U. S.
246.
The respondents have represented that, without regard to the
ultimate resolution of the issues in this case,
Page 416 U. S. 317
DeFunis will remain a student in the Law School for the duration
of any term in which he has already enrolled. Since he has now
registered for his final term, it is evident that he will be given
an opportunity to complete all academic and other requirements for
graduation, and, if he does so, will receive his diploma regardless
of any decision this Court might reach on the merits of this case.
In short, all parties agree that DeFunis is now entitled to
complete his legal studies at the University of Washington and to
receive his degree from that institution. A determination by this
Court of the legal issues tendered by the parties is no longer
necessary to compel that result, and could not serve to prevent it.
DeFunis did not cast his suit as a class action, and the only
remedy he requested was an injunction commanding his admission to
the Law School. He was not only accorded that remedy, but he now
has also been irrevocably admitted to the final term of the final
year of the Law School course. The controversy between the parties
has thus clearly ceased to be "definite and concrete," and no
longer "touch[es] the legal relations of parties having adverse
legal interests."
Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Haworth,
300 U. S. 227,
300 U. S.
240-241 (1937).
It matters not that these circumstances partially stem from a
policy decision on the part of the respondent Law School
authorities. The respondents, through their counsel, the Attorney
General of the State, have professionally represented that in no
event will the status of DeFunis now be affected by any view this
Court might express on the merits of this controversy. And it has
been the settled practice of the Court, in contexts no less
significant, fully to accept representations such as these as
parameters for decision.
See Gerende v. Election Board,
341 U. S. 56
(1951);
Whitehill v. Elkins, 389 U. S.
54,
389 U. S. 57-58
(1967);
Ehlert v. United States, 402 U. S.
99,
Page 416 U. S. 318
402 U. S. 107
(1971);
cf. Law Students Research Council v. Wadmond,
401 U. S. 154,
401 U. S.
162-163 (1971).
There is a line of decisions in this Court standing for the
proposition that the
"voluntary cessation of allegedly illegal conduct does not
deprive the tribunal of power to hear and determine the case,
i.e., does not make the case moot."
United States v. W. T. Grant Co., 345 U.
S. 629,
345 U. S. 632
(1953);
United States v. Trans-Missouri Freight Assn.,
166 U. S. 290,
166 U. S.
308-310 (1897);
Walling v. Helmerich & Payne,
Inc., 323 U. S. 37,
323 U. S. 43
(1944);
Gray v. Sanders, 372 U. S. 368,
372 U. S. 376
(1963);
United States v. Phosphate Export Assn.,
393 U. S. 199,
393 U. S.
202-203 (1968). These decisions and the doctrine they
reflect would be quite relevant if the question of mootness here
had arisen by reason of a unilateral change in the admissions
procedures of the Law School. For it was the admissions procedures
that were the target of this litigation, and a voluntary cessation
of the admissions practices complained of could make this case moot
only if it could be said with assurance "that
there is no
reasonable expectation that the wrong will be repeated.'"
United States v. W. T. Grant Co., supra, at 345 U. S. 633.
Otherwise, "[t]he defendant is free to return to his old ways,"
id. at 345 U. S. 632,
and this fact would be enough to prevent mootness because of the
"public interest in having the legality of the practices settled."
Ibid. But mootness in the present case depends not at all
upon a "voluntary cessation" of the admissions practices that were
the subject of this litigation. It depends, instead, upon the
simple fact that DeFunis is now in the final quarter of the final
year of his course of study, and the settled and unchallenged
policy of the Law School to permit him to complete the term for
which he is now enrolled.
It might also be suggested that this case presents a question
that is "capable of repetition, yet evading
Page 416 U. S. 319
review."
Southern Pacific Terminal Co. v. ICC,
219 U. S. 498,
219 U. S. 515
(1911);
Roe v. Wade, 410 U. S. 113,
410 U. S. 125
(1973), and is thus amenable to federal adjudication even though it
might otherwise be considered moot. But DeFunis will never again be
required to run the gauntlet of the Law School's admission process,
and so the question is certainly not "capable of repetition" so far
as he is concerned. Moreover, just because this particular case did
not reach the Court until the eve of the petitioner's graduation
from law school, it hardly follows that the issue he raises will in
the future evade review. If the admissions procedures of the Law
School remain unchanged, [
Footnote
4] there is no reason to suppose that a subsequent case
attacking those procedures will not come with relative speed to
this Court now that the Supreme Court of Washington has spoken.
This case, therefore, in no way presents the exceptional situation
in which the
Southern Pacific Terminal doctrine might
permit a departure from
"[t]he usual rule in federal cases . . . that an actual
controversy must exist at stages of appellate or certiorari review,
and not simply at the date the action is initiated."
Roe v. Wade, supra, at
410 U. S. 125;
United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U. S.
36 (1950).
Because the petitioner will complete his law school studies at
the end of the term for which he has now registered regardless of
any decision this Court might reach on the merits of this
litigation, we conclude that the Court cannot, consistently with
the limitations of
Page 416 U. S. 320
Art. III of the Constitution, consider the substantive
constitutional issues tendered by the parties. [
Footnote 5] Accordingly, the judgment of the
Supreme Court of Washington is vacated, and the cause is remanded
for such proceedings as by that court may be deemed
appropriate.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Also included as petitioners are DeFunis' parents and his wife.
Hereafter, the singular form "petitioner" is used.
[
Footnote 2]
By contrast, in their response to the petition for certiorari,
the respondents had stated that DeFunis
"will complete his third year [of law school] and be awarded his
J.D. degree at the end of the 1973-74 academic year regardless of
the outcome of this appeal."
[
Footnote 3]
In their memorandum on the question of mootness, counsel for the
respondents unequivocally stated:
"If Mr. DeFunis registers for the spring quarter under the
existing order of this court during the registration period from
February 20, 1974, to March l, 1974 that registration would not be
canceled unilaterally by the university regardless of the outcome
of this litigation."
[
Footnote 4]
In response to an inquiry from the Court, counsel for the
respondents has advised that some changes have been made in the
admissions procedures "for the applicants seeking admission to the
University of Washington law school for the academic year
commencing September, 1974." The respondents' counsel states,
however, that
"[these] changes do not affect the policy challenged by the
petitioners . . . in that . . . special consideration still is
given to applicants from 'certain ethnic groups.'"
[
Footnote 5]
It is suggested in dissent that "[a]ny number of unexpected
events -- illness, economic necessity, even academic failure --
might prevent his graduation at the end of the term."
Post
at
416 U. S. 348.
"But such speculative contingencies afford no basis for our passing
on the substantive issues [the petitioner] would have us decide,"
Hall v. Beals, 396 U. S. 45,
396 U. S. 49
(1969), in the absence of "evidence that this is a prospect of
immediacy and reality.'" Golden v. Zwickler,
394 U. S. 103,
394 U. S. 109
(1969); Maryland Casualty Co. v. Pacific Coal & Oil
Co., 312 U. S. 270,
312 U. S. 273
(1941).
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting.
I agree with MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN that this case is not moot,
and, because of the significance of the issues raised I think it is
important to reach the merits.
I
The University of Washington Law School received 1,601
applications for admission to its first-year class beginning in
September, 1971. There were spaces available for only about 150
students, but in order to enroll this number, the school eventually
offered admission to 275 applicants. All applicants were put into
two groups, one of which was considered under the minority
admissions program. Thirty-seven of those offered admission had
indicated on an optional question on their application that their
"dominant" ethnic origin was either black, Chicano, American
Indian, or Filipino, the four groups included in the minority
admissions program. Answers to this optional question were
apparently the sole basis
Page 416 U. S. 321
upon which eligibility for the program was determined. Eighteen
of these 37 actually enrolled in the Law School.
In general, the admissions process proceeded as follows: an
index called the Predicted First Year Average (Average) was
calculated for each applicant on the basis of a formula combining
the applicant's score on the Law School Admission Test (LSAT) and
his grades in his last two years in college. [
Footnote 2/1] On the basis of its experience with
previous years' applications, the Admission Committee, consisting
of faculty, administration, and students, concluded that the most
outstanding applicants were those with averages above 77; the
highest average of any applicant was 81. Applicants with averages
above 77 were considered as their applications arrived by random
distribution of their files to the members of the Committee who
would read them and report their recommendations back to the
Committee. As a result of the first three Committee meetings in
February, March, and April, 1971, 78 applicants from this group
were admitted, although virtually no other applicants were offered
admission this early. [
Footnote
2/2] By the final conclusion of
Page 416 U. S. 322
the admissions process in August, 1971, 147 applicants with
averages above 77 had been admitted, including all applicants with
averages above 78, and 93 of 105 applicants with averages between
77 and 78.
Also beginning early in the admissions process was the culling
out of applicants with averages below 74.5. These were reviewed by
the Chairman of the Admissions Committee, who had the authority to
reject them summarily without further consideration by the rest of
the Committee. A small number of these applications were saved by
the Chairman for Committee consideration on the basis of
information in the file indicating greater promise than suggested
by the Average. Finally during the early months, the Committee
accumulated the applications of those with averages between 74.5
and 77 to be considered at a later time when most of the
applications had been received, and thus could be compared with one
another. Since DeFunis' average was 76.23, he was in this middle
group.
Beginning in their May meeting, the Committee considered this
middle group of applicants, whose folders had been randomly
distributed to Committee members for their recommendations to the
Committee. Also considered at this time were remaining applicants
with averages below 74.5 who had not been summarily rejected, and
some of those with averages above 77 who had not been summarily
admitted, but instead held for further consideration. Each
Committee member would consider the applications competitively,
following rough guidelines
Page 416 U. S. 323
as to the proportion who could be offered admission. After the
Committee had extended offers of admission to somewhat over 200
applicants, a waiting list was constructed in the same fashion, and
was divided into four groups ranked by the Committee's assessment
of their applications. DeFunis was on this waiting list, but was
ranked in the lowest quarter. He was ultimately told in August,
1971, that there would be no room for him.
Applicants who had indicated on their application forms that
they were either black, Chicano, American Indian, or Filipino were
treated differently in several respects. Whatever their Averages,
none were given to the Committee Chairman for consideration of
summary rejection, nor were they distributed randomly among
Committee members for consideration along with the other
applications. Instead, all applications of black students were
assigned separately to two particular Committee members: a
first-year black law student on the Committee and a professor on
the Committee who had worked the previous summer in a special
program for disadvantaged college students considering application
to the Law School. [
Footnote 2/3]
Applications from among the other three minority groups were
assigned to an assistant dean who was on the Committee. The
minority applications, while considered competitively with one
another, were never directly compared to the remaining
applications, either by the subcommittee or by the full Committee.
As in the admissions process generally, the Committee sought to
find "within the minority category, those persons who we thought
had the highest probability of
Page 416 U. S. 324
succeeding in Law School." [
Footnote
2/4] In reviewing the minority applications, the Committee
attached less weight to the Average "in making a total judgmental
evaluation as to the relative ability of the particular applicant
to succeed in law school." 82 Wash. 2d 11, 21, 507 P.2d 1169, 1175.
In its publicly distributed Guide to Applicants, the Committee
explained that
"[a]n applicant's racial or ethnic background was considered as
one factor in our general attempt to convert formal credentials
into realistic predictions. [
Footnote
2/5]"
Thirty-seven minority applicants were admitted under this
procedure. Of these, 36 had Averages below DeFunis' 76.23, and 30
had Averages below 74.5, and thus would ordinarily have been
summarily rejected by the Chairman. There were also 48 nonminority
applicants admitted who had Averages below DeFunis. Twenty-three of
these were returning veterans,
see 416
U.S. 312fn2/2|>n. 2,
supra, and 25 were others who
presumably were admitted because of other
Page 416 U. S. 325
factors in their applications that made them attractive
candidates despite their relatively low Averages.
It is reasonable to conclude from the above facts that, while
other factors were considered by the Committee, and were on
occasion crucial, the Average was, for most applicants, a heavily
weighted factor, and was, at the extremes, virtually dispositive.
[
Footnote 2/6] A different balance
was apparently struck, however, with regard to the minority
applicants. Indeed, at oral argument, the respondents' counsel
advised us that, were the minority applicants considered under the
same procedure as was generally used, none of those who eventually
enrolled at the Law School would have been admitted.
The educational policy choices confronting a university
admissions committee are not ordinarily a subject for Judicial
oversight; clearly it is not for us, but for the law school, to
decide which tests to employ, how heavily to weigh recommendations
from professors or undergraduate grades, and what level of
achievement on the chosen criteria are sufficient to demonstrate
that the candidate is qualified for admission. What places this
case in a special category is the fact that the school did not
choose one set of criteria but two, and then determined which to
apply to a given applicant on the basis of his race. The
Page 416 U. S. 326
Committee adopted this policy in order to achieve "a reasonable
representation" of minority groups in the Law School. 82 Wash. 2d
at 20, 507 P.2d at 1175. Although it may be speculated that the
Committee sought to rectify what it perceived to be cultural or
racial biases in the LSAT or in the candidates' undergraduate
records, the record in this case is devoid of any evidence of such
bias, and the school has not sought to justify its procedures on
this basis.
Although testifying that "[w]e do not have a quota . . . " the
Law School dean explained that "[w]e want a reasonable
representation. We will go down to reach it if we can," without
"taking people who are unqualified in an absolute sense. . . ."
Statement of Facts 420. By "unqualified in an absolute sense," the
dean meant candidates who "have no reasonable probable likelihood
of having a chance of succeeding in the study of law. . . ."
Ibid. But the dean conceded that, in "reaching," the
school does take "some minority students who at least, viewed as a
group, have a less such likelihood than the majority student group
taken as a whole."
Id. at 423.
"Q. Of those who have made application to go to the law school,
I am saying you are not taking the best qualified?"
"A. In total?"
"Q. In total."
"A. In using that definition, yes."
Id. at 423-424.
It thus appears that, by the Committee's own assessment, it
admitted minority students who, by the tests given, seemed less
qualified than some white students who were not accepted, in order
to achieve a "reasonable representation." In this regard, it may be
pointed out that, for the year 1969-1970 -- two years before the
class to which DeFunis was seeking admission -- the Law School
Page 416 U. S. 327
reported an enrollment of eight black students out of a total of
356. [
Footnote 2/7] Defendants' Ex.
7. That percentage, approximately 2.2%, compares to a percentage of
blacks in the population of Washington of approximately 2.1%.
[
Footnote 2/8]
II
There was a time when law schools could follow the advice of
Wigmore, who believed that "the way to find out whether a boy has
the makings of a competent lawyer is to see what he can do in a
first year of law studies." Wigmore, Juristic Psychopoyemetrology
-- Or, How to Find Out Whether a Boy Has the Makings of a Lawyer,
24 Ill.L.Rev. 454, 46364 (1929). In those days, there were enough
spaces to admit every applicant who met minimal credentials, and
they all could be given the opportunity to prove themselves at law
school. But by the 1920's, many law schools found that they could
not admit all minimally qualified applicants, and some selection
process began. [
Footnote 2/9] The
pressure to use some kind of admissions test mounted, and a number
of schools instituted them. One early precursor to the modern day
LSAT was the Ferson-Stoddard Law Aptitude examination. Wigmore
conducted his own study of that test with 50 student volunteers,
and concluded that it "had no substantial practical value."
Id. at 463. But his conclusions were not accepted, and the
harried law
Page 416 U. S. 328
schools still sought some kind of admissions test which would
simplify the process of judging applicants, and, in 1948, the LSAT
was born. It has been with us ever since. [
Footnote 2/10]
The test purports to predict how successful the applicant will
be in his first year of law school, and consists of a few hours'
worth of multiple choice questions. But the answers the student can
give to a multiple choice question are limited by the creativity
and intelligence of the test-maker; the student with a better or
more original understanding of the problem than the test-maker may
realize that none of the alternative answers are any good, but
there is no way for him to demonstrate his understanding.
"It is obvious from the nature of the tests that they do not
give the candidate a significant opportunity to express himself. If
he is subtle in his choice of answers it will go against him; and
yet there is no other way for him to show any individuality. If he
is strong-minded, nonconformist, unusual, original, or creative --
as so many of the truly important people are -- he must stifle his
impulses and conform as best he can to the norms that the multiple
choice testers set up in their unimaginative, scientific way. The
more profoundly gifted the candidate is, the more his resentment
will rise against the mental strait jacket into which the testers
would force his mind."
B. Hoffmann, The Tyranny of Testing 91-92 (1962).
Those who make the tests and the law schools which use them
point, of course, to the high correlations between the test scores
and the grades at law school the first year.
E.g.,
Winterbottom, Comments on "A Study of the Criteria for Legal
Education and Admission to the
Page 416 U. S. 329
Bar," An Article by Dr. Thomas M. Goolsby, Jr., 21 J.Legal Ed.
75 (1968). Certainly the tests do seem to do better than chance.
But they do not have the value that their deceptively precise
scoring system suggests. The proponents' own data show that, for
example, most of those scoring in the bottom 20% on the test do
better than that, in law school -- indeed, six of every 100 of them
will be in the
top 20 of their law school class.
Id. at 79. And no one knows how many of those who were not
admitted because of their test scores would, in fact, have done
well were they given the chance. There are many relevant factors,
such as motivation, cultural backgrounds of specific minorities
that the test cannot measure, and they inevitably must impair its
value as a predictor. [
Footnote
2/11] Of course, the law school that admits only those with the
highest test scores finds that, on the average they do much better,
and thus the test is a convenient tool for the admissions
committee. The price is paid by the able student who, for unknown
reasons, did not achieve that high score -- perhaps even the
minority with a different cultural background. Some tests, at least
in the past, have been aimed at eliminating Jews.
The school can safely conclude that the applicant with a score
of 750 should be admitted before one with a score of 500. The
problem is that, in many cases, the choice will be between 643 and
602 or 574 and 528. The numbers create an illusion of difference
standing to overwhelm other factors.
"The wiser testers are well aware of the defects of the multiple
choice format and the danger of placing reliance on any one method
of assessment to the exclusion of all others. What is distressing
is how little their caveats have impressed the people who succumb
to the propaganda of the testmakers
Page 416 U. S. 330
and use these tests mechanically as though they were a valid
substitute for judgment."
Hoffmann,
supra, at 215.
Of course, the tests are not the only thing considered; here,
they were combined with the pre-law grades to produce a new number
called the Average. The grades have their own problems; one
school's A is another school's C. And even to the extent that this
formula predicts law school grades, its value is limited. The law
student with lower grades may, in the long pull of a legal career,
surpass those at the top of the class.
"[L]aw school admissions criteria have operated within a
hermetically sealed system; it is now beginning to leak. The
traditional combination of LSAT and GPA [undergraduate grade point
average] may have provided acceptable predictors of likely
performance in law school in the past. . . . [But] [t]here is no
clear evidence that the LSAT and GPA provide particularly good
evaluators of the intrinsic or enriched ability of an individual to
perform as a law student or lawyer in a functioning society
undergoing change. Nor is there any clear evidence that grades and
other evaluators of law school performance, and the bar
examination, are particularly good predictors of competence or
success as a lawyer."
Rosen, Equalizing Access to Legal Education: Special Programs
for Law Students Who Are Not Admissible by Traditional Criteria,
1970 U.Tol.L.Rev. 321, 332-333.
But, by whatever techniques, the law school must make choices.
Neither party has challenged the validity of the Average employed
here as an admissions tool, and therefore consideration of its
possible deficiencies is not presented as an issue. The Law School
presented no evidence to show that adjustments in the process
employed were used in order validly to compare applicants of
different races; instead, it chose to avoid making such
comparisons. Finally,
Page 416 U. S. 331
although the Committee did consider other information in the
files of all applicants, the Law School has made no effort to show
that it was because of these additional factors that it admitted
minority applicants who would otherwise have been rejected. To the
contrary, the school appears to have conceded that, by its own
assessment -- taking all factors into account -- it admitted
minority applicants who would have been rejected had they been
white. We have no choice but to evaluate the Law School's case as
it has been made.
III
The Equal Protection Clause did not enact a requirement that law
schools employ as the sole criterion for admissions a formula based
upon the LSAT and undergraduate grades, nor does it prohibit law
schools from evaluating an applicant's prior achievements in light
of the barriers that he had to overcome. A black applicant who
pulled himself out of the ghetto into a junior college may thereby
demonstrate a level of motivation, perseverance, and ability that
would lead a fair-minded admissions committee to conclude that he
shows more promise for law study than the son of a rich alumnus who
achieved better grades at Harvard. That applicant would be offered
admission not because he is black, but because, as an individual,
he has shown he has the potential, while the Harvard man may have
taken less advantage of the vastly superior opportunities offered
him. Because of the weight of the prior handicaps, that black
applicant may not realize his full potential in the first year of
law school, or even in the full three years, but in the long pull
of a legal career, his achievements may far outstrip those of his
classmates whose earlier records appeared superior by conventional
criteria. There is currently no test available to the
Admissions
Page 416 U. S. 332
Committee that can predict such possibilities with assurance,
but the Committee may nevertheless seek to gauge it as best it can,
and weigh this factor in its decisions. Such a policy would not be
limited to blacks, or Chicanos or Filipinos, or American Indians,
although undoubtedly groups such as these may in practice be the
principal beneficiaries of it. But a poor Appalachian white, or a
second generation Chinese in San Francisco, or some other American
whose lineage is so diverse as to defy ethnic labels, may
demonstrate similar potential, and thus be accorded favorable
consideration by the Committee.
The difference between such a policy and the one presented by
this case is that the Committee would be making decisions on the
basis of individual attributes, rather than according a preference
solely en the basis of race. To be sure, the racial preference here
was not absolute -- the Committee did not admit all applicants from
the four favored groups. But it did accord all such applicants a
preference by applying, to an extent not precisely ascertainable
from the record, different standards by which to judge their
applications, with the result that the Committee admitted minority
applicants who, in the school's own judgment, were less promising
than other applicants who were rejected. Furthermore, it is
apparent that, because the Admissions Committee compared minority
applicants only with one another, it was necessary to reserve some
proportion of the class for them, even if, at the outset, a precise
number of places were not set aside. [
Footnote 2/12] That proportion, apparently 15% to
Page 416 U. S. 333
20%, was chosen because the school determined it to be
"reasonable," [
Footnote 2/13]
although no explanation is provided as to how that number, rather
than some other, was found appropriate. Without becoming embroiled
in a semantic debate over whether this practice constitutes a
"quota," it is clear that, given the limitation on the total number
of applicants who could be accepted, this policy did reduce the
total number of places for which DeFunis could compete -- solely on
account of his race. Thus, as the Washington Supreme Court
concluded, whatever label one wishes to apply to it, "the minority
admissions policy is certainly not benign with respect to
nonminority students who are displaced by it." 82 Wash. 2d at 32,
507 P.2d at 1182. A finding that the state school employed a racial
classification in selecting its students subjects it to the
strictest scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause.
The consideration of race as a measure of an applicant's
qualification normally introduces a capricious and irrelevant
factor working an invidious discrimination,
Anderson v.
Martin, 375 U. S. 399,
375 U. S. 402;
Loving v. Virginia, 388 U. S. 1,
388 U. S. 10;
Harper v. Virginia Board of Elections, 383 U.
S. 663,
383 U. S. 668.
Once race is a starting point, educators and courts are immediately
embroiled in competing claims of different racial and ethnic groups
that should make difficult, manageable standards consistent
Page 416 U. S. 334
with the Equal Protection Clause.
"The clear and central purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment was
to eliminate all official state sources of invidious racial
discrimination in the States."
Loving, supra, at
388 U. S. 10. The
Law School's admissions policy cannot be reconciled with that
purpose, unless cultural standards of a diverse, rather than a
homogeneous society, are taken into account. The reason is that
professional persons, particularly lawyers, are not selected for
life in a computerized society. The Indian who walks to the beat of
Chief Seattle of the Muckleshoot Tribe in Washington [
Footnote 2/14] has a different culture
from examiners at law schools.
The key to the problem is the consideration of each application
in
a racially neutral way. Since the LSAT reflects
questions touching on cultural backgrounds, the Admissions
Committee acted properly, in my view, in setting minority
applications apart for separate processing. These minorities have
cultural backgrounds that are vastly different from the dominant
Caucasian. Many Eskimos, American Indians, Filipinos, Chicanos,
Asian Indians, Burmese, and Africans come from such disparate
backgrounds that a test sensitively tuned for most applicants would
be wide of the mark for many minorities.
The melting pot is not designed to homogenize people, making
them uniform in consistency. The melting pot, as I understand it,
is a figure of speech that depicts the wide diversities tolerated
by the First Amendment under one flag.
See 2 S. Morison
& H. Commager, The Growth of the American Republic, c. VIII
(4th ed.1950). Minorities in our midst who are to serve actively in
our public affairs should be chosen on talent and character alone,
not on cultural orientation or leanings.
Page 416 U. S. 335
I do know, coming as I do from Indian country in Washington,
that many of the young Indians know little about Adam Smith or Karl
Marx, but are deeply imbued with the spirit and philosophy of Chief
Robert B. Jim of the Yakimas, Chief Seattle of the Muckleshoots,
and Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce which offer competitive attitudes
towards life, fellow man, and nature. [
Footnote 2/15]
I do not know the extent to which blacks in this country are
imbued with ideas of African Socialism. [
Footnote 2/16] Leopold Senghor and Sekou Toure, the
most articulate of African leaders, have held that modern African
political philosophy is not oriented either to Marxism or to
capitalism. [
Footnote 2/17] How
far the reintroduction into educational curricula of ancient
African art and history has reached the minds of young
Afro-Americans I do not know. But at least as respects Indians,
blacks, and Chicanos -- as well as those from Asian cultures -- I
think a separate classification of these applicants is warranted,
lest race be a subtle force in eliminating minority members because
of cultural differences.
Insofar as LSAT's reflect the dimensions and orientation of the
Organization Man, they do a disservice to minorities. I personally
know that admissions tests were once used to eliminate Jews. How
many other minorities they aim at, I do not know. My reaction is
that the presence of an LSAT is sufficient warrant for a school to
put racial minorities into a separate class in order better to
probe their capacities and potentials.
The merits of the present controversy cannot, in my view, be
resolved on this record. A trial would
Page 416 U. S. 336
involve the disclosure of hidden prejudices, if any, against
certain minorities and the manner in which substitute measurements
of one's talents and character were employed in the conventional
tests. I could agree with the majority of the Washington Supreme
Court only if, on the record, it could be said that the Law
School's selection was racially neutral. The case, in my view,
should be remanded for a new trial to consider,
inter
alia, whether the established LSAT's should be eliminated so
far as racial minorities are concerned.
This does not mean that a separate LSAT must be designed for
minority racial groups, although that might be a possibility. The
reason for the separate treatment of minorities as a class is to
make more certain that racial factors do not militate
against
an applicant or on his behalf. [
Footnote 2/18]
There is no constitutional right for any race to be preferred.
The years of slavery did more than retard the progress of blacks.
Even a greater wrong was done the whites by creating arrogance
instead of humility, and by encouraging the growth of the fiction
of a superior race.
Page 416 U. S. 337
There is no superior person by constitutional standards. A
DeFunis who is white is entitled to no advantage by reason of that
fact; nor is he subject to any disability, no matter what his race
or color. Whatever his race, he had a constitutional right to have
his application considered on its individual merits in a racially
neutral manner.
The slate is not entirely clean. First, we have held that
pro rata representation of the races is not required
either on juries,
see Cassell v. Texas, 339 U.
S. 282,
339 U. S.
286-287, or in public schools,
Swann v.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education, 402 U. S.
1,
402 U. S. 24.
Moreover, in
Hughes v. Superior Court, 339 U.
S. 460, we reviewed the contempt convictions of pickets
who sought by their demonstration to force an employer to prefer
Negroes to whites in his hiring of clerks, in order to ensure that
50% of the employees were Negro. In finding that California could
constitutionally enjoin the picketing there involved, we quoted
from the opinion of the California Supreme Court, which noted that
the pickets would
"'make the right to work for Lucky dependent not on fitness for
the work nor on an equal right of all, regardless of race, to
compete in an open market, but rather on membership in a particular
race. If petitioners were upheld in their demand, then other races,
white, yellow, brown, and red, would have equal rights to demand
discriminatory hiring on a racial basis.'"
Id. at
339 U. S.
463-464. We then noted that
"[t]o deny to California the right to ban picketing in the
circumstances of this case would mean that there could be no
prohibition of the pressure of picketing to secure proportional
employment on ancestral grounds of Hungarians in Cleveland, of
Poles in Buffalo, of Germans in Milwaukee, of Portuguese in New
Bedford, of Mexicans in San Antonio, of the
Page 416 U. S. 338
numerous minority groups in New York, and so on through the
whole gamut of racial and religious concentrations in various
cities."
Id.at
339 U. S.
464.
The reservation of a proportion of the law school class for
members of selected minority groups is fraught with similar
dangers, for one must immediately determine which groups are to
receive such favored treatment and which are to be excluded, the
proportions of the class that are to be allocated to each, and even
the criteria by which to determine whether an individual is a
member of a favored group. There is no assurance that a common
agreement can be reached, and first the schools and then the courts
will be buffeted with the competing claims. The University of
Washington included Filipinos, but excluded Chinese and Japanese;
another school may limit its program to blacks, or to blacks and
Chicanos. Once the Court sanctioned racial preferences such as
these, it could not then wash its hands of the matter, leaving it
entirely in the discretion of the school, for then we would have
effectively overruled
Sweatt v. Painter, 339 U.
S. 629, and allowed imposition of a "zero" allocation.
[
Footnote 2/19] But what standard
is the Court to apply when a rejected applicant of Japanese
ancestry brings suit to require the University of Washington to
extend the same privileges to his group? The Committee might
conclude that the population of Washington is now 2% Japanese, and
that Japanese also constitute 2% of the
Page 416 U. S. 339
Bar, but that, had they not been handicapped by a history of
discrimination, Japanese would now constitute 5% of the Bar, or
20%. Or, alternatively, the Court could attempt to assess how
grievously each group has suffered from discrimination, and
allocate proportions accordingly; if that were the standard, the
current University of Washington policy would almost surely fall,
for there is no Western State which can claim that it has always
treated Japanese and Chinese in a fair and evenhanded manner.
See, e.g., Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.
S. 356;
Terrace v. Thompson, 263 U.
S. 197;
Oyama v. California, 332 U.
S. 633. This Court has not sustained a racial
classification since the wartime cases of
Korematsu v. United
States, 323 U. S. 214, and
Hirabayashi v. United States, 320 U. S.
81, involving curfews and relocations imposed upon
Japanese-Americans. [
Footnote
2/20]
Page 416 U. S. 340
Nor, obviously, will the problem be solved if, next year, the
Law School included only Japanese and Chinese, for then Norwegians
and Swedes, Poles and Italians, Puerto Ricans and Hungarians, and
all other groups which form this diverse Nation would have just
complaints.
The key to the problem is consideration of such applications
in a racially neutral way. Abolition of the LSAT would be
a start. The invention of substitute tests might be made to get a
measure of an applicant's cultural background, perception, ability
to analyze, and his or her relation to groups. They are highly
subjective, but, unlike the LSAT, they are not concealed, but in
the open. A law school is not bound by any legal principle to admit
students by mechanical criteria which are insensitive to the
potential of such an applicant which may be realized in a more
hospitable environment. It will be necessary under such an approach
to put more effort into assessing each individual than is required
when LSAT scores and undergraduate grades dominate the selection
process. Interviews with the applicant and others who know him is a
time-honored test. Some schools currently run summer programs in
which potential students who likely would be bypassed under
conventional admissions criteria are given the opportunity to try
their hand at law courses, [
Footnote
2/21] and certainly their performance in such programs could be
weighed heavily. There is, moreover, no bar to considering an
individual's prior achievements in
Page 416 U. S. 341
light of the racial discrimination that barred his way, as a
factor in attempting to assess his true potential for a successful
legal career. Nor is there any bar to considering on an individual
basis, rather than according to racial classifications, the
likelihood that a particular candidate will more likely employ his
legal skills to service communities that are not now adequately
represented than will competing candidates. Not every student
benefited by such an expanded admissions program would fall into
one of the four racial groups involved here, but it is no drawback
that other deserving applicants will also get an opportunity they
would otherwise have been denied. Certainly such a program would
substantially fulfill the Law School's interest in giving a more
diverse group access to the legal profession. Such a program might
be less convenient administratively than simply sorting students by
race, but we have never held administrative convenience to justify
racial discrimination.
The argument is that a "compelling" state interest can easily
justify the racial discrimination that is practiced here. To many,
"compelling" would give members of one race even more than
pro
rata representation. The public payrolls might then be
deluged, say, with Chicanos, because they are, as a group, the
poorest of the poor and need work more than others, leaving
desperately poor individual blacks and whites without employment.
By the same token, large quotas of blacks or browns could be added
to the Bar, waiving examinations required of other groups, so that
it would be better racially balanced. [
Footnote 2/22]
Page 416 U. S. 342
The State, however, may not proceed by racial classification to
force strict population equivalencies for every group in every
occupation, overriding individual preferences. The Equal Protection
Clause commands the elimination of racial barriers, not their
creation in order to satisfy our theory as to how society ought to
be organized. The purpose of the University of Washington cannot be
to produce black lawyers for blacks, Polish lawyers for Poles,
Jewish lawyers for Jews, Irish lawyers for Irish. It should be to
produce good lawyers for Americans, and not to place First
Amendment barriers against anyone. [
Footnote 2/23] That is the point at the heart of all
our
Page 416 U. S. 343
school desegregation cases, from
Brown v. Board of
Education, 347 U. S. 483,
through
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education,
402 U. S. 1. A
segregated admissions process creates suggestions of stigma and
caste no less than a segregated classroom, and, in the end, it may
produce that result despite its contrary intentions. One other
assumption must be clearly disapproved: that blacks or browns
cannot make it on their individual merit. That is a stamp of
inferiority that a State is not permitted to place on any
lawyer.
If discrimination based on race is constitutionally permissible
when those who hold the reins can come up with "compelling" reasons
to justify it, then constitutional guarantees acquire an
accordion-like quality. Speech is closely brigaded with action when
it triggers a fight,
Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire,
315 U. S. 568, as
shouting "fire" in a crowded theater triggers a riot. It may well
be that racial strains, racial susceptibility to certain diseases,
racial sensitiveness to environmental conditions that other races
do not experience, may, in an extreme situation, justify
differences in racial treatment that no fair-minded person would
call "invidious" discrimination. Mental ability is not in that
category. All races can compete fairly at all professional levels.
So
Page 416 U. S. 344
far as race is concerned, any state-sponsored preference to one
race over another in that competition is, in my view, "invidious"
and violative of the Equal Protection Clause.
The problem tendered by this case is important and crucial to
the operation of our constitutional system, and educators must be
given leeway. It may well be that a whole congeries of applicants
in the marginal group defy known methods of selection. Conceivably,
an admissions committee might conclude that a selection by lot of,
say, the last 20 seats is the only fair solution. Courts are not
educators; their expertise is limited; and our task ends with the
inquiry whether, judged by the main purpose of the Equal Protection
Clause -- the protection against racial discrimination [
Footnote 2/24] -- there has been an
"invidious" discrimination.
We would have a different case if the suit were one to displace
the applicant who was chosen in lieu of DeFunis. What the record
would show concerning his potentials would have to be considered
and weighed. The educational decision, provided proper guidelines
were used, would reflect an expertise that courts should honor. The
problem is not tendered here, because the physical facilities were
apparently adequate to take DeFunis in addition to the others. My
view is only that I cannot say by the tests used and applied he was
invidiously discriminated against because of his race.
I cannot conclude that the admissions procedure of the Law
School of the University of Washington that excluded DeFunis is
violative of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment. The judgment of the Washington Supreme Court should be
vacated, and the case remanded for a new trial.
Page 416 U. S. 345
|
416
U.S. 312app|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF DOUGLAS, J., DISSENTING
The following are excerpts from the Law School's current
admissions policy, as provided to the Court by counsel for the
respondents.
ADMISSIONS
A. Policy Statement Regarding Admission to Entering Classes of
Juris Doctor Program -- Adopted by the Law Faculty December 4,
1973.
§ 1. The objectives of the admissions program are to select and
admit those applicants who have the best prospect of high quality
academic work at the law school and, in the minority admissions
program described below, the further objective there stated.
§ 2. In measuring academic potential, the law school relies
primarily on the undergraduate grade-point average and the
performance on the Law School Admission Test (LSAT). The weighting
of these two indicators is determined statistically by reference to
past experience at this school. For most applicants, the resulting
applicant ranking is the most nearly accurate of all available
measures of relative academic potential. In truly exceptional
cases,
i.e., those in which the numerical indicators
clearly appear to be an inaccurate measure of academic potential,
the admission decision indicated by them alone may be altered by a
consideration of the factors listed below. The number of these
truly exceptional cases in any particular year should fall
somewhere from zero to approximately forty. These factors are used,
however, only as an aid in assessing the applicant's academic
potential in its totality, without undue emphasis or reliance upon
one or a few, and without an attempt to quantify in advance the
strength of their
Page 416 U. S. 346
application, singly or as a whole, in a particular case. They
are:
a) the difficulty or ease of the undergraduate curriculum track
pursued;
b) the demanding or non-demanding quality of the undergraduate
school or department;
c) the attainment of an advanced degree, the nature thereof, and
difficulty or ease of its attainment;
d) the applicant's pursuits subsequent to attainment of the
undergraduate degree and the degree of success therein, as bearing
on the applicant's academic potential;
e) the possibility that an applicant many years away from
academic work may do less well on the LSAT than his or her
counterpart presently or recently in academic work;
f) substantial change in mental or physical health that
indicates prospect for either higher or lower quality of academic
work;
g) substantial change in economic pressures or other
circumstances that indicates prospect for either higher or lower
quality of academic work;
h) exceptionally good or bad performance upon the writing test
ingredient of the LSAT, if the current year's weighting of the
numerical indicators does not otherwise take the writing score into
account;
i) the quality and strength of recommendations bearing upon the
applicant's academic potential;
j) objective indicators of motivation to succeed at the academic
study of law;
k) variations in the level of academic achievement over time;
and
l) any other indicators that serve the objective stated
above.
* * * *
§ 6. Because certain ethnic groups in our society
Page 416 U. S. 347
have historically been limited in their access to the legal
profession, and because the resulting underrepresentation can
affect the quality of legal services available to members of such
groups, as well as limit their opportunity for full participation
in the governance of our communities, the faculty recognizes a
special obligation in its admissions policy to contribute to the
solution of the problem.
Qualified minority applicants are therefore admitted under the
minority admissions program in such number that the entering class
will have a reasonable proportion of minority persons, in view of
the obligation stated above and of the overall objective of the law
school to provide legal education for qualified persons generally.
For the purpose of determining the number to be specially admitted
under the program, and not as a ceiling on minority admissions
generally, the faculty currently believes that approximately 15 to
20 percent is such a reasonable proportion if there are sufficient
qualified applicants available. Under the minority admissions
program, admission is offered to those applicants who have a
reasonable prospect of academic success at the law school,
determined in each case by considering the numerical indicators
along with the listed factors in Section 2, above, but without
regard to the restriction upon number contained in that
section.
No particular internal percentage or proportion among various
minority groups in the entering class is specified; rather, the law
school strives for a reasonable internal balance given the
particular makeup of each year's applicant population.
As to some or all ethnic groups within the scope of the minority
admissions program, it may be appropriate to give a preference in
some degree to residents of the state; that determination is made
each year in view of
Page 416 U. S. 348
all the particulars of that year's situation, and the preference
is given when necessary to meet some substantial local need for
minority representation.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The grades are calculated on a conventional 4.0 scale, and the
LSAT is scored on a scale ranging from 200 to 800. A Writing Test
given on the same day as the LSAT and administered with it is also
included in the formula; it is scored on a scale of 20 to 80. The
Admissions Committee combines these scores into the Average by
calculating the sum of 51.3, 3.4751 x the grade-point average,
.0159 x LSAT score, and .0456 x the Writing Test score. App. 24.
For a brief discussion of the use of the LSAT in combination with
undergraduate grades to predict law school success,
see
Winterbottom, Comments on "A Study of the Criteria for Legal
Education and Admission to the Bar," An Article by Dr. Thomas M.
Goolsby, Jr., 21 J.Legal Ed. 75 (1968).
[
Footnote 2/2]
The only other substantial group admitted at this point were 19
"military" applicants. These were students who had previously been
admitted to the school but who had either been unable to come, or
forced to leave during their tenure, because of the draft. They
were given preferential treatment upon reapplication after
completing their military obligation. Since neither party has
raised any issue concerning this group of applicants, the remaining
consideration of the admissions procedure will not discuss them.
Four minority applicants were also admitted at this time, although
none apparently had scores above 77. App. 31. Their admission was
presumably pursuant to the procedure for minority applicants
described below.
[
Footnote 2/3]
This was a Council on Legal Education Opportunities program,
federally funded by the Office of Economic Opportunity and
sponsored by the American Bar Association, the Association of
American Law Schools, the National Bar Association, and the Law
School Admissions Council.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Testimony of the Chairman of the Admissions Committee, Statement
of Facts 353.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The Guide to Applicants explained:
"We gauged the potential for outstanding performance in law
school not only from the existence of high test scores and grade
point averages, but also from careful analysis of recommendations,
the quality of work in difficult analytical seminars, courses, and
writing programs, the academic standards of the school attended by
the applicant, the applicant's graduate work (if any), and the
nature of the applicant's employment (if any), since
graduation."
"An applicant's ability to make significant contributions to law
school classes and the community at large was assessed from such
factors as his extracurricular and community activities,
employment, and general background."
"We gave no preference to, but did not discriminate against,
either Washington residents or women in making our determinations.
An applicant's racial or ethnic background was considered as one
factor in our general attempt to convert formal credentials into
realistic predictions."
82 Wash. 2d 11, 18-19, 507 P.2d 1169, 1174.
[
Footnote 2/6]
The respondents provided the following table in response to an
interrogatory during the proceedings in the state court:
Predicted Number of Number
First Year Averages Applications Received Accepted
81 1 1
80 2 2
79 11 11
78 42 42
77 105 93
76 169 53
75 210 22
App. 34.
[
Footnote 2/7]
Although there is apparently no evidence in point in the record,
respondents suggest that, at least some of these eight students
were also admitted on a preferential basis. Brief for Respondents
40 n. 27.
[
Footnote 2/8]
United States Bureau of the Census, Census of Population: 1970,
General Population Characteristics, Washington, Final Report PC(1)
-- B49, Table 18.
[
Footnote 2/9]
For a history of gradual acceptance among law schools of
standardized tests as an admission tool,
see Ramsey, Law
School Admissions: Science, Art, or Hunch?, 12 J. Legal Ed. 503
(1960).
[
Footnote 2/10]
For a survey of the use of the LSAT by American law schools as
of 1965,
see Lunneborg & Radford, The LSAT: A Survey
of Actual Practice, 18 J.Legal Ed. 313 (1966).
[
Footnote 2/11]
Rock, Motivation, Moderators, and Test Bias, 1970 U.Tol.L.Rev.
527, 535.
[
Footnote 2/12]
At the outset, the Committee may have chosen only a range with
the precise number to be determined later in the process as the
total number of minority applicants, and some tentative assessment
of their quality, could be determined. This appears to be the
current articulated policy,
see 416
U.S. 312app|>App. to this opinion § 6, and we are advised by
the respondents that § 6 "represents a more formal statement of the
policy which was in effect in 1971 . . . , but does not represent
any change in policy." Letter to the Court dated March 19, 1974, p.
1. The fact that the Committee did not set a precise number in
advance is obviously irrelevant to the legal analysis. Nor does it
matter that there is some minimal level of achievement below which
the Committee would not reach in order to achieve its stated goal
as to the proportion of the class reserved for minority groups, so
long as the Committee was willing, in order to achieve that goal,
to admit minority applicants who, in the Committee's own judgment,
were less qualified than other rejected applicants and who would
not otherwise have been admitted.
[
Footnote 2/13]
See 416
U.S. 312fn2/12|>n. 12,
supra, and
416
U.S. 312app|>App. to this opinion § 6.
[
Footnote 2/14]
Uncommon Controversy, Report Prepared for American Friends
Service Committee 29-30 (1970).
[
Footnote 2/15]
See C. Fee, Chief Joseph, The Biography of a Great
Indian (1936)
[
Footnote 2/16]
See F. Brockway, African Socialism (1963); African
Socialism (W. Friedland & C. Rosberg ed.1964).
[
Footnote 2/17]
See L. Senghor, On African Socialism (M. Cook
ed.1964).
[
Footnote 2/18]
We are not faced here with a situation where barriers are
overtly or covertly put in the path of members of one racial group
which are not required by others. There was also no showing that
the purpose of the school's policy was to eliminate arbitrary and
irrelevant barriers to entry by certain racial groups into the
legal profession groups.
Griggs v. Duke Power Co.,
401 U. S. 424. In
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education,
402 U. S. 1,
402 U. S. 16, we
stated that, as a matter of educational policy, school authorities
could, within their broad discretion, specify that each school
within its district have a prescribed ratio of Negro to white
students reflecting the proportion for the district as a whole, in
order to disestablish a dual school system. But there is a crucial
difference between the policy suggested in
Swann and that
under consideration here: the
Swann policy would impinge
on no person's constitutional rights, because no one would be
excluded from a public school and no one has a right to attend a
segregated public school.
[
Footnote 2/19]
Sweatt held that a State could not justify denying a
black admission to its regular law school by creating a new law
school for blacks. We held that the new law school did not meet the
requirements of "equality" set forth in
Plessy v.
Ferguson, 163 U. S. 537.
The student, we said, was entitled to
"legal education equivalent to that offered by the State to
students of other races. Such education is not available to him in
a separate law school as offered by the State."
339 U.S. at
339 U. S.
635.
[
Footnote 2/20]
Those cases involved an exercise of the war power, a great
leveler of other rights. Our Navy was sunk at Pearl Harbor, and no
one knew where the Japanese fleet was. We were advised on oral
argument that, if the Japanese landed troops on our west coast,
nothing could stop them west of the Rockies. The military judgment
was that, to aid in the prospective defense of the west coast, the
enclaves of Americans of Japanese ancestry should be moved inland,
lest the invaders, by donning civilian clothes, would wreak even
more serious havoc on our western ports. The decisions were
extreme, and went to the verge of wartime power; and they have been
severely criticized. It is, however, easy in retrospect to denounce
what was done, as there actually was no attempted Japanese invasion
of our country. While our Joint Chiefs of Staff were worrying about
Japanese soldiers landing on the west coast, they actually were
landing in Burma and at Kota Bharu in Malaya. But those making
plans for defense of the Nation had no such knowledge, and were
planning for the worst. Moreover, the day we decided
Korematsu, we also decided
Ex parte Endo,
323 U. S. 283,
holding that, while evacuation of the Americans of Japanese
ancestry was allowable under extreme war conditions, their
detention after evacuation was not. We said:
"A citizen who is concededly loyal presents no problem of
espionage or sabotage. Loyalty is a matter of the heart and mind,
not of race, creed, or color. He who is loyal is, by definition,
not a spy or a saboteur. When the power to detain is derived from
the power to protect the war effort against espionage and sabotage,
detention which has no relationship to that objective is
unauthorized."
Id. at
323 U. S.
302.
[
Footnote 2/21]
See 416
U.S. 312fn2/3|>n. 3,
supra.
[
Footnote 2/22]
In
Johnson v. Committee on Examinations, 407 U.S. 915,
we denied certiorari in a case presenting a similar issue. There,
the petitioner claimed that the bar examiners reconsidered the
papers submitted by failing minority applicants whose scores were
close to the cutoff point, with the result that some minority
applicants were admitted to the Bar although they initially had
examination scores lower than those of white applicants who
failed.
As the Arizona Supreme Court denied Johnson admission summarily,
in an original proceeding, there were no judicial findings either
sustaining or rejecting his factual claims of racial bias, putting
the case in an awkward posture for review here. Johnson
subsequently brought a civil rights action in Federal District
Court, seeking both damages and injunctive relief. The District
Court dismissed the action, and the Court of Appeals affirmed,
holding that the lower federal courts did not have jurisdiction to
review the decisions of the Arizona Supreme Court on admissions to
the state Bar. Johnson then sought review here, and we denied his
motion for leave to file a petition for mandamus, prohibition
and/or certiorari on February 19, 1974.
Johnson v. Wilmer,
415 U.S. 911. Thus, in the entire history of the case, no court had
ever actually sustained Johnson's factual contentions concerning
racial bias in the bar examiners' procedures.
DeFunis thus
appears to be the first case here squarely presenting the
problem.
[
Footnote 2/23]
Underlying all cultural background tests are potential
ideological issues that have plagued bar associations and the
courts.
In re Summers, 325 U. S. 561,
involved the denial of the practice of law to a man who could not
conscientiously bear arms. The vote against him was five to four.
Konigsberg v. State Bar, 353 U. S. 252,
followed, after remand, by
Konigsberg v. State Bar,
366 U. S. 36,
resulted in barring one from admission to a state bar because of
his refusal to answer questions concerning Communist Party
membership. He, too, was excluded five to four. The petitioner in
Schware v. Board of Bar Examiners, 353 U.
S. 232, was, however, admitted to practice even though
he had, about 10 years earlier, been a member of the Communist
Party. But
In re Anastaplo, 366 U. S.
82, a five-to-four decision, barred a man from admission
to a state bar not because he invoked the Fifth Amendment when
asked about membership in the Communist Party, but because he
asserted that the First and Fourteenth Amendments protected him
from that inquiry.
Baird v. State Bar of Arizona,
401 U. S. 1, held by
a divided vote that a person could not be kept out of the state bar
for refusing to answer whether he had ever been a member of the
Communist Party;
and see In re Stolar, 401 U. S.
23.
[
Footnote 2/24]
See Slaughter House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 81.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, MR. JUSTICE
WHITE, and MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL concur, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. Many weeks of the school term remain,
and petitioner may not receive his degree despite respondents'
assurances that petitioner will be allowed to complete this term's
schooling regardless of our decision. Any number of unexpected
events -- illness, economic necessity, even academic failure --
might prevent his graduation at the end of the term. Were that
misfortune to befall, and were petitioner required to register for
yet another term, the prospect that he would again face the hurdle
of the admissions policy is real, not fanciful; for respondents
warn that
"Mr. DeFunis would have to take some appropriate action to
request continued admission for the remainder of his law school
education, and
some discretionary action by the University on
such request would have to be taken."
Respondents' Memorandum on the Question of Mootness 3-4
(emphasis supplied). Thus, respondents' assurances have not
dissipated the possibility that petitioner might once again have to
run the gauntlet of the University's allegedly unlawful admissions
policy. The Court therefore proceeds on an erroneous premise in
resting its mootness holding on a supposed inability to render any
judgment that may affect one way or the other petitioner's
completion of his law studies. For surely if we were to reverse the
Washington Supreme Court, we could insure that, if for some reason
petitioner did not graduate this spring, he would be entitled to
reenrollment at a later time on the same basis as others who have
not faced the hurdle of the University's allegedly unlawful
admissions policy.
Page 416 U. S. 349
In these circumstances, and because the University's position
implies no concession that its admissions policy is unlawful, this
controversy falls squarely within the Court's long line of
decisions holding that the "[m]ere voluntary cessation of allegedly
illegal conduct does not moot a case."
United States v.
Phosphate Export Assn., 393 U. S. 199,
393 U. S. 203
(1968);
see Gray v. Sanders, 372 U.
S. 368 (1963);
United States v. W. T. Grant
Co., 345 U. S. 629
(1953);
Walling v. Helmerich & Payne, Inc.,
323 U. S. 37
(1944);
FTC v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.,
304 U. S. 257
(1938);
United States v. Trans-Missouri Freight Assn.,
166 U. S. 290
(1897). Since respondents' voluntary representation to this Court
is only that they will permit petitioner to complete this term's
studies, respondents have not borne the "heavy burden,"
United
States v. Phosphate Export Assn., supra, at
393 U. S. 203,
of demonstrating that there was not even a "mere possibility" that
petitioner would once again be subject to the challenged admissions
policy.
United States v. W. T. Grant Co., supra, at
345 U. S. 633.
On the contrary, respondents have positioned themselves so as to be
"free to return to [their] old ways."
Id. at
345 U. S.
632.
I can thus find no justification for the Court's straining to
rid itself of this dispute. While we must be vigilant to require
that litigants maintain a personal stake in the outcome of a
controversy to assure that
"the questions will be framed with the necessary specificity,
that the issues will be contested with the necessary adverseness,
and that the litigation will be pursued with the necessary vigor to
assure that the constitutional challenge will be made in a form
traditionally thought to be capable of judicial resolution,"
Flast v. Cohen, 392 U. S. 83,
392 U. S. 106
(1968), there is no want of an adversary contest in this case.
Indeed, the Court concedes that, if petitioner has lost his stake
in this controversy, he did so only when he
Page 416 U. S. 350
registered for the spring term. But petitioner took that action
only after the case had been fully litigated in the state courts,
briefs had been filed in this Court, and oral argument had been
heard. The case is thus ripe for decision on a fully developed
factual record with sharply defined and fully canvassed legal
issues.
Cf. Sibron v. New York, 392 U. S.
40,
392 U. S. 57
(1968).
Moreover, in endeavoring to dispose of this case as moot, the
Court clearly disserves the public interest. The constitutional
issues which are avoided today concern vast numbers of people,
organizations, and colleges and universities, as evidenced by the
filing of twenty-six
amicus curiae briefs. Few
constitutional questions in recent history have stirred as much
debate, and they will not disappear. They must inevitably return to
the federal courts, and ultimately again to this Court.
Cf.
Richardson v. Wright, 405 U. S. 208,
405 U. S. 212
(1972) (dissenting opinion). Because avoidance of repetitious
litigation serves the public interest, that inevitability counsels
against mootness determinations, as here, not compelled by the
record.
Cf. United States v. W. T. Grant Co., supra, at
345 U. S. 632;
Parker v. Ellis, 362 U. S. 574,
362 U. S. 594
(1960) (dissenting opinion). Although the Court should, of course,
avoid unnecessary decisions of constitutional questions, we should
not transform principles of avoidance of constitutional decisions
into devices for sidestepping resolution of difficult cases.
Cf. 19 U. S.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S.
404-405 (1821) (Marshall, C.J.).
On what appears in this case, I would find that there is an
extant controversy and decide the merits of the very important
constitutional questions presented.