Respondents brought this class action, alleging that the Detroit
public school system is racially segregated as a result of the
official policies and actions of petitioner state and city
officials, and seeking implementation of a plan to eliminate the
segregation and establish a unitary nonracial school system. The
District Court, after concluding that various acts by the
petitioner Detroit Board of Education had created and perpetuated
school segregation in Detroit, and that the acts of the Board, as a
subordinate entity of the State, were attributable to the State,
ordered the Board to submit Detroit-only desegregation plans. The
court also ordered the state officials to submit desegregation
plans encompassing the three-county metropolitan area, despite the
fact that the 85 outlying school districts in these three counties
were not parties to the action and there was no claim that they had
committed constitutional violations. Subsequently, outlying school
districts were allowed to intervene, but were not permitted to
assert any claim or defense on issues previously adjudicated or to
reopen any issue previously decided, but were allowed merely to
advise the court as to the propriety of a metropolitan plan and to
submit any objections, modifications, or alternatives to any such
plan. Thereafter, the District Court ruled that it was proper to
consider metropolitan plans, that Detroit-only plans submitted by
the Board and respondents were inadequate to accomplish
desegregation, and that, therefore, it would seek a solution beyond
the limits of the Detroit school District, and concluded that
"[s]chool district lines are simply matters of political
convenience, and may not be used to deny constitutional rights."
Without having evidence that the suburban school districts had
committed acts of
de jure segregation, the court appointed
a panel to submit a plan for the
Page 418 U. S. 718
Detroit schools that would encompass an entire designated
desegregation area consisting of 53 of the 85 suburban school
districts plus Detroit, and ordered the Detroit Board to acquire at
least 295 school buses to provide transportation under an interim
plan to be developed for the 1972-1973 school year. The Court of
Appeals, affirming in part, held that the record supported the
District Court's finding as to the constitutional violations
committed by the Detroit Board and the state officials; that,
therefore, the District Court was authorized and required to take
effective measures to desegregate the Detroit school system; and
that a metropolitan area plan embracing the 53 outlying districts
was the only feasible solution and was within the District Court's
equity powers. But the court remanded so that all suburban school
districts that might be affected by a metropolitan remedy could be
made parties and have an opportunity to be heard as to the scope
and implementation of such a remedy, and vacated the order as to
the bus acquisitions, subject to its reimposition at an appropriate
time.
Held: The relief ordered by the District Court and
affirmed by the Court of Appeals was based upon erroneous
standards, and was unsupported by record evidence that acts of the
outlying districts had any impact on the discrimination found to
exist in the Detroit schools. A federal court may not impose a
multidistrict, area-wide remedy for single-district
de
jure school segregation violations where there is no finding
that the other included school districts have failed to operate
unitary school systems or have committed acts that effected
segregation within the other districts, there is no claim or
finding that the school district boundary lines were established
with the purpose of fostering racial segregation, and there is no
meaningful opportunity for the included neighboring school
districts to present evidence or be heard on the propriety of a
multidistrict remedy or on the question of constitutional
violations by those districts. Pp.
418 U. S.
737-753.
(a) The District Court erred in using as a standard the declared
objective of development of a metropolitan area plan which, upon
implementation, would leave "no school, grade or classroom . . .
substantially disproportionate to the overall pupil racial
composition" of the metropolitan area as a whole. The clear import
of
Swann v. Board of Education, 402 U. S.
1, is that desegregation, in the sense of dismantling a
dual school system, does not require any particular racial balance.
Pp.
418 U. S.
739-741.
Page 418 U. S. 719
(b) While boundary lines may be bridged in circumstances where
there has been a constitutional violation calling for
inter-district relief, school district lines may not be casually
ignored or treated as a mere administrative convenience;
substantial local control of public education in this country is a
deeply rooted tradition. Pp.
418 U. S.
741-742.
(c) The inter-district remedy could extensively disrupt and
alter the structure of public education in Michigan, since that
remedy would require, in effect, consolidation of 54 independent
school districts historically administered as separate governmental
units into a vast new super school district, and, since -- entirely
apart from the logistical problems attending large-scale
transportation of students -- the consolidation would generate
other problems in the administration, financing, and operation of
this new school system. Pp.
418 U. S.
742-743.
(d) From the scope of the inter-district plan itself, absent a
complete restructuring of the Michigan school district laws, the
District Court would become, first, a
de facto
"legislative authority" to resolve the complex operational problems
involved, and thereafter a "school superintendent" for the entire
area, a task which few, if any, judges are qualified to perform,
and one which would deprive the people of local control of schools
through elected school boards. Pp.
418 U. S.
743-744.
(e) Before the boundaries of separate and autonomous school
districts may be set aside by consolidating the separate units for
remedial purposes or by imposing a cross-district remedy, it must
be first shown that there has been a constitutional violation
within one district that produces a significant segregative effect
in another district;
i.e., specifically, it must be shown
that racially discriminatory acts of the state or local school
districts, or of a single school district have been a substantial
cause of inter-district segregation. Pp.
418 U. S.
744-745.
(f) With no showing of significant violation by the 53 outlying
school districts and no evidence of any inter-district violation or
effect, the District Court transcended the original theory of the
case as framed by the pleadings, and mandated a metropolitan area
remedy the approval of which would impose on the outlying
districts, not shown to have committed any constitutional
violation, a standard not previously hinted at in any holding of
this Court. P.
418 U. S.
745.
(g) Assuming,
arguendo, that the State was derivatively
responsible for Detroit's segregated school conditions, it does not
follow
Page 418 U. S. 720
that an inter-district remedy is constitutionally justified or
required, since there has been virtually no showing that either the
State or any of the 85 outlying districts engaged in any activity
that had a cross-district effect. Pp.
418 U. S.
748-749.
(h) An isolated instance of a possible segregative effect as
between two of the school districts involved would not justify the
broad metropolitan-wide remedy contemplated, particularly since
that remedy embraced 52 districts having no responsibility for the
arrangement and potentially involved 503,000 pupils in addition to
Detroit's 276,000 pupils. Pp.
418 U. S.
749-750.
484 F.2d 215, reversed and remanded.
BURGER, C.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
STEWART, BLACKMUN, POWELL, and REHNQUIST, JJ., joined. STEWART, J.,
filed a concurring opinion,
post, p.
418 U. S. 753.
DOUGLAS, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
418 U. S. 757.
WHITE, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which DOUGLAS, BRENNAN,
and MARSHALL, JJ., joined,
post, p.
418 U. S. 762.
MARSHALL, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which DOUGLAS,
BRENNAN, and WHITE, JJ., joined,
post, p.
418 U. S.
781.
Page 418 U. S. 721
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER delivered the opinion of the Court.
We granted certiorari in these consolidated cases to determine
whether a federal court may impose a multi-district, area-wide
remedy to a single-district
de jure segregation problem
absent any finding that the other included school district have
failed to operate unitary school systems within their districts,
absent any claim or finding that the boundary lines of any affected
school district were established with the purpose of fostering
racial segregation in public schools, absent any finding that the
included districts committed acts which effected segregation within
the other districts, and absent a
Page 418 U. S. 722
meaningful opportunity for the included neighboring school
districts to present evidence or be heard on the propriety of a
multi-district remedy or on the question of constitutional
violations by those neighboring districts. [
Footnote 1]
I
The action was commenced in August, 1970, by the respondents,
the Detroit Branch of the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People [
Footnote 2]
and individual parents and students, on behalf of a class later
defined by order of the United States District Court for the
Eastern District of Michigan, dated February 16, 1971, to include
"all school children in the City of Detroit, Michigan, and all
Detroit resident parents who have children of school age." The
named defendants in the District Court included the Governor of
Michigan, the Attorney General, the State Board of Education, the
State Superintendent of Public Instruction, the Board of Education
of the city of Detroit, its members, and the city's former
superintendent of schools. The State of Michigan as such is not a
party to this litigation, and references to the State must be read
as references to the public officials, state and local, through
whom the State is alleged to have acted. In their complaint,
respondents attacked the constitutionality of a statute of the
State of Michigan known as Act 48 of the 1970 Legislature on the
ground that it put the State of Michigan in the position of
unconstitutionally interfering with the execution and operation of
a voluntary plan of partial high school desegregation, known as the
April 7, 1970, Plan, which had been adopted by the Detroit Board of
Education to be effective beginning
Page 418 U. S. 723
with the fall 1970 semester. The complaint also alleged that the
Detroit Public School System was and is segregated on the basis of
race as a result of the official policies and actions of the
defendants and their predecessors in office, and called for the
implementation of a plan that would eliminate "the racial identity
of every school in the [Detroit] system and . . . maintain now and
hereafter a unitary, nonracial school system."
Initially the matter was tried on respondents' motion for a
preliminary injunction to restrain the enforcement of Act 48 so as
to permit the April 7 Plan to be implemented. On that issue, the
District Court ruled that respondents were not entitled to a
preliminary injunction, since, at that stage, there was no proof
that Detroit had a dual segregated school system. On appeal, the
Court of Appeals found that the "implementation of the April 7 plan
was [unconstitutionally] thwarted by State action in the form of
the Act of the Legislature of Michigan," 433 F.2d 897, 902 (CA6
1970), and that such action could not be interposed to delay,
obstruct, or nullify steps lawfully taken for the purpose of
protecting rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. The case
was remanded to the District Court for an expedited trial on the
merits.
On remand, the respondents moved for immediate implementation of
the April 7 Plan in order to remedy the deprivation of the claimed
constitutional rights. In response, the School Board suggested two
other plans, along with the April 7 Plan, and urged that top
priority be assigned to the so-called "Magnet Plan," which was
"designed to attract children to a school because of its superior
curriculum." The District Court approved the Board's Magnet Plan,
and respondents again appealed to the Court of Appeals, moving for
summary reversal. The Court of Appeals refused to pass on the
merits of the Magnet Plan, and ruled that the District Court
had
Page 418 U. S. 724
not abused its discretion in refusing to adopt the April 7 Plan
without an evidentiary hearing. The case was again remanded with
instructions to proceed immediately to a trial on the merits of
respondents' substantive allegations concerning the Detroit school
system. 438 F.2d 945 (CA6 1971).
The trial of the issue of segregation in the Detroit school
system began on April 6, 1971, and continued through July 22, 1971,
consuming some 41 trial days. On September 27, 1971, the District
Court issued its findings and conclusions on the issue of
segregation, finding that
"Governmental actions and inaction at all levels, federal, State
and local, have combined with those of private organizations, such
a loaning institutions and real estate associations and brokerage
firms to establish and to maintain the pattern of residential
segregation throughout the Detroit metropolitan area."
338 F.
Supp. 582, 587 (ED Mich.1971). While still addressing a
Detroit-only violation, the District Court reasoned:
"While it would be unfair to charge the present defendants with
what other governmental officers or agencies have done, it can be
said that the actions or the failure to act by the responsible
school authorities, both city and state, were linked to that of
these other governmental units. When we speak of governmental
action, we should not view the different agencies as a collection
of unrelated units. Perhaps the most that can be said is that all
of them, including the school authorities, are, in part,
responsible for the segregated condition which exists. And we note
that just as there is an interaction between residential patterns
and the racial composition of the schools, so there is a
corresponding effect on the residential pattern by the racial
composition of the schools."
Ibid.
Page 418 U. S. 725
The District Court found that the Detroit Board of Education
created and maintained optional attendance zones [
Footnote 3] within Detroit neighborhoods
undergoing racial transition and between high school attendance
areas of opposite predominant racial compositions. These zones, the
court found, had the "natural, probable, foreseeable and actual
effect" of allowing white pupils to escape identifiably Negro
schools.
Ibid. Similarly, the District Court found that
Detroit school attendance zones had been drawn along north-south
boundary lines despite the Detroit Board's awareness that drawing
boundary lines in an east-west direction would result in
significantly greater desegregation. Again, the District Court
concluded, the natural and actual effect of these acts was the
creation and perpetuation of school segregation within Detroit.
The District Court found that, in the operation of its school
transportation program, which was designed to relieve overcrowding,
the Detroit Board had admittedly bused Negro Detroit pupils to
predominantly Negro schools which were beyond or away from closer
white schools with available space. [
Footnote 4] This practice was found to have continued in
recent years despite the Detroit Board's avowed policy, adopted in
1967, of utilizing transportation to increase desegregation:
"With one exception (necessitated by the burning of a white
school), defendant Board has never bused
Page 418 U. S. 726
white children to predominantly black school. The Board has not
bused white pupils to black schools despite the enormous amount of
space available in inner-city schools. There were 22,961 vacant
seats in schools 90% or more black."
Id. at 588.
With respect to the Detroit Board of Education's practice in
school construction, the District Court found that Detroit school
construction generally tended to have a segregative effect, with
the great majority of schools being built in either overwhelmingly
all-Negro or all-white neighborhoods, so that the new schools
opened as predominantly one-race schools. Thus, of the 14 schools
which opened for use in 1970-1971, 11 opened over 90% Negro and one
opened less than 10% Negro.
The District Court also found that the State of Michigan had
committed several constitutional violations with respect to the
exercise of its general responsibility for, and supervision of,
public education. [
Footnote 5]
The State, for example, was found to have failed, until the 1971
Session of the Michigan Legislature, to provide authorization
or
Page 418 U. S. 727
funds for the transportation of pupils within Detroit regardless
of their poverty or distance from the school to which they were
assigned; during this same period, the State provided many
neighboring, mostly white, suburban districts the full range of
state supported transportation.
The District Court found that the State, through Act 48, acted
to "impede, delay and minimize racial integration in Detroit
schools." The first sentence of § 12 of Act 48 was designed to
delay the April 7, 1970, desegregation plan originally adopted by
the Detroit Board. The remainder of § 12 sought to prescribe for
each school in the eight districts criteria of "free choice" and
"neighborhood schools," which, the District Court found, "had as
their purpose and effect the maintenance of segregation." 338 F.
Supp. at 589. [
Footnote 6]
The District Court also held that the acts of the Detroit Board
of Education, as a subordinate entity of the State, were
attributable to the State of Michigan, thus creating a vicarious
liability on the part of the State. Under Michigan law,
Mich.Comp.Laws § 388.851 (1970), for example, school building
construction plans had to be approved by the State Board of
Education, and, prior to 1962, the State Board had specific
statutory authority to supervise schoolsite selection. The proofs
concerning the effect of Detroit's school construction program
were,
Page 418 U. S. 728
therefore, found to be largely applicable to show state
responsibility for the segregative results. [
Footnote 7]
Turning to the question of an appropriate remedy for these
several constitutional violations, the District Court deferred a
pending motion [
Footnote 8] by
intervening parent defendants
Page 418 U. S. 729
to join as additional parties defendant the 85 outlying school
districts in the three-county Detroit metropolitan area on the
ground that effective relief could not be achieved without their
presence. [
Footnote 9] The
District Court concluded that this motion to join was "premature,"
since it "has to do with relief," and no reasonably specific
desegregation plan was before the court.
338 F.
Supp. at 595. Accordingly, the District Court proceeded to
order the Detroit Board of Education to submit desegregation plans
limited to the segregation problems found to be existing within the
city of Detroit. At the same time, however, the state defendants
were directed to submit desegregation plans encompassing the
three-county metropolitan area [
Footnote 10] despite the fact that the 85 outlying
school
Page 418 U. S. 730
districts of these three counties were not parties to the action
and despite the fact that there had been no claim that these
outlying districts had committed constitutional violations.
[
Footnote 11] An effort to
appeal these orders to the Court of Appeals was dismissed on the
ground that the orders were not appealable. 468 F.2d 902 (CA6),
cert. denied, 409 U.S. 844 (1972). The sequence of the
ensuing actions and orders of the District Court are significant
factors, and will therefore be catalogued in some detail.
Following the District Court's abrupt announcement that it
planned to consider the implementation of a multi-district,
metropolitan area remedy to the segregation problems identified
within the city of Detroit, the District Court was again requested
to grant the outlying school districts intervention as of right on
the ground that the District Court's new request for multi-district
plans "may, as a practical matter, impair or impede [the
intervenors'] ability to protect" the welfare of their students.
The District Court took the motions to intervene under advisement
pending submission of the requested desegregation plans by Detroit
and the state officials. On March 7, 1972, the District Court
notified all parties and the petitioner school districts seeking
intervention that March 14, 1972, was the deadline for submission
of recommendations for conditions of intervention and the
Page 418 U. S. 731
date of the commencement of hearings on Detroit-only
desegregation plans. On the second day of the scheduled hearings,
March 15, 1972, the District Court granted the motions of the
intervenor school districts [
Footnote 12] subject,
inter alia, to the
following conditions:
"1. No intervenor will be permitted to assert any claim or
defense previously adjudicated by the court."
"2. No intervenor shall reopen any question or issue which has
previously been decided by the court."
"
* * * *"
"7. New intervenors are granted intervention for two principal
purposes: (a) to advise the court, by brief, of the legal propriety
or impropriety of considering a metropolitan plan; (b) to review
any plan or plans for the desegregation of the so-called larger
Detroit Metropolitan area, and submitting objection, modifications
or alternatives to it or them, and in accordance with the
requirements of the United States Constitution and the prior orders
of this court."
1 Joint Appendix 206 (hereinafter App.).
Upon granting the motion to intervene, on March 15, 1972, the
District Court advised the petitioning intervenors that the court
had previously set March 22, 1972, as the date for the filing of
briefs on the legal propriety of a "metropolitan" plan of
desegregation and, accordingly, that the intervening school
districts would have one week to muster their legal arguments on
the issue. [
Footnote 13]
Page 418 U. S. 732
Thereafter, and following the completion of hearings on the
Detroit-only desegregation plans, the District Court issued the
four rulings that were the principal issues in the Court of
Appeals.
(a) On March 24, 1972, two days after the intervenors' briefs
were due, the District Court issued its ruling on the question of
whether it could "consider relief in the form of a metropolitan
plan, encompassing not only the City of Detroit, but the larger
Detroit metropolitan area." It rejected the state defendants'
arguments that no state action caused the segregation of the
Detroit schools, and the intervening suburban districts' contention
that inter-district relief was inappropriate unless the suburban
districts themselves had committed violations. The court
concluded:
"[I]t is proper for the court to consider metropolitan plans
directed toward the desegregation of the Detroit public schools as
an alternative to the present intra-city desegregation plans before
it and, in the event that the court finds such intra-city plans
inadequate to desegregate such schools, the court is of the opinion
that it is required to consider a metropolitan remedy for
desegregation."
Pet. App. 51a.
(b) On March 28, 1972, the District Court issued its findings
and conclusions on the three Detroit-only plans submitted by the
city Board and the respondents. It found that the best of the three
plans "would make the Detroit school system more identifiably Black
. . . , thereby increasing the flight of Whites from the city and
the system."
Id. at 55a. From this the court concluded
that the plan "would not accomplish desegregation . . . within the
corporate geographical limits of the city."
Id. at 56a.
Accordingly, the District Court held that it "must look beyond the
limits of the Detroit school
Page 418 U. S. 733
district for a solution to the problem," and that "[s]chool
district lines are simply matters of political convenience, and may
not be used to deny constitutional rights."
Id. at
57a.
(c) During the period from March 28 to April 14, 1972, the
District Court conducted hearings on a metropolitan plan. Counsel
for the petitioning intervenors was allowed to participate in these
hearings, but he was ordered to confine his argument to "the size
and expanse of the metropolitan plan," without addressing the
intervenors' opposition to such a remedy or the claim that a
finding of a constitutional violation by the intervenor districts
was an essential predicate to any remedy involving them.
Thereafter, on June 14, 1972, the District Court issued its ruling
on the "desegregation area" and related findings and conclusions.
The court acknowledged at the outset that it had
"taken no proofs with respect to the establishment of the
boundaries of the 86 public school districts in the counties [in
the Detroit area], nor on the issue of whether, with the exclusion
of the city of Detroit school district, such school districts have
committed acts of
de jure segregation."
Nevertheless, the court designated 53 of the 85 suburban school
districts plus Detroit as the "desegregation area," and appointed a
panel to prepare and submit "an effective desegregation plan" for
the Detroit schools that would encompass the entire desegregation
area. [
Footnote 14] The plan
was to be based on 15 clusters, each containing part of the Detroit
system and two or more suburban districts,
Page 418 U. S. 734
and was to
"achieve the greatest degree of actual desegregation to the end
that, upon implementation, no school, grade or classroom [would be]
substantially disproportionate to the overall pupil racial
composition."
345 F.
Supp. 914, 918 (ED Mich.1972).
(d) On July 11, 1972, and in accordance with a recommendation by
the court-appointed desegregation panel, the District Court ordered
the Detroit Board of Education to purchase or lease "at least" 295
school buses for the purpose of providing transportation under an
interim plan to be developed for the 1972-1973 school year. The
costs of this acquisition were to be borne by the state defendants.
Pet. App. 106a-107a.
On June 12, 1973, a divided Court of Appeals, sitting en banc,
affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded for further
proceedings. 484 F.2d 215 (CA6). [
Footnote 15] The Court of Appeals held, first, that the
record supported the District Court's findings and conclusions on
the constitutional violations committed by the Detroit Board,
id. at 221-238, and by the state defendants,
id.
at 239-241. [
Footnote 16] It
stated that the acts of racial discrimination
Page 418 U. S. 735
shown in the record are "causally related to the substantial
amount of segregation found in the Detroit school system,"
id. at 241, and that "the District Court was therefore
authorized and required to take effective measures to desegregate
the Detroit Public School System."
Id. at 242.
The Court of Appeals also agreed with the District Court
that
"any less comprehensive a solution than a metropolitan area plan
would result in an all-black school system immediately surrounded
by practically all-white suburban school systems, with an
overwhelmingly white majority population in the total metropolitan
area."
Id. at 245. The court went on to state that it
could
"not see how such segregation can be any less harmful to the
minority students than if the same result were accomplished within
one school district."
Ibid.
Accordingly, the Court of Appeals concluded that
"the only feasible desegregation plan involves the crossing of
the boundary lines between the Detroit School District and adjacent
or nearby school districts for the limited purpose of providing an
effective desegregation plan."
Id. at 249. It reasoned that such a plan would be
appropriate because of the State's violations, and could be
implemented because of the State's authority to control local
school districts. Without further elaboration, and without any
discussion of the claims that no constitutional violation by the
outlying districts had been
Page 418 U. S. 736
shown and that no evidence on that point had been allowed, the
Court of Appeals held:
"[T]he State has committed
de jure acts of segregation
and . . . the State controls the instrumentalities whose action is
necessary to remedy the harmful effects of the State acts."
Ibid. An inter-district remedy was thus held to be
"within the equity powers of the District Court."
Id. at
250. [
Footnote 17]
The Court of Appeals expressed no views on the propriety of the
District Court's composition of the metropolitan "desegregation
area." It held that all suburban school districts that might be
affected by any metropolitan-wide remedy should, under Fed.Rule
Civ.Proc.19, be made parties to the case on remand and be given an
opportunity to be heard with respect to the scope and
implementation of such a remedy. 484 F.2d at 251-252. Under the
terms of the remand, however, the District Court was not "required"
to receive further evidence on the issue of segregation in the
Detroit schools or on the propriety of a Detroit-only remedy, or on
the question of whether the affected districts had committed any
violation of the constitutional rights of Detroit pupils or others.
Id. at 252. Finally, the Court of Appeals vacated the
District Court's order directing the acquisition of school buses,
subject to the right of the District Court to consider reimposing
the order "at the appropriate time."
Ibid.
Page 418 U. S. 737
II
Ever since
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.
S. 483 (1954), judicial consideration of school
desegregation cases has begun with the standard:
"[I]n the field of public education, the doctrine of 'separate
but equal' has no place. Separate educational facilities are
inherently unequal."
Id. at
347 U. S. 495.
This has been reaffirmed time and again as the meaning of the
Constitution and the controlling rule of law.
The target of the
Brown holding was clear and
forthright: the elimination of state-mandated or deliberately
maintained dual school systems with certain schools for Negro
pupils and others for white pupils. This duality and racial
segregation were held to violate the Constitution in the cases
subsequent to 1954, including particularly
Green v. County
School Board of New Kent County, 391 U.
S. 430 (1968);
Raney v. Board of Education,
391 U. S. 443
(1968);
Monroe v. Bard of Comm'rs, 391 U.
S. 450 (1968);
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board
of Education, 402 U. S. 1 (1971);
Wright v. Council of the City of Emporia, 407 U.
S. 451 (1972);
United States v. Scotland Neck Board
of Education, 407 U. S. 484
(1972).
The
Swann case, of course, dealt
"with the problem of defining in more precise terms than
heretofore the scope of the duty of school authorities and district
courts in implementing
Brown I and the mandate to
eliminate dual systems and establish unitary systems at once."
402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 6.
In
Brown v. Board of Education, 349 U.
S. 294 (1955) (
Brown II), the Court's first
encounter with the problem of remedies in school desegregation
cases, the Court noted:
"In fashioning and effectuating the decrees, the courts will be
guided by equitable principles. Traditionally,
Page 418 U. S. 738
equity has been characterized by a practical flexibility in
shaping its remedies and by a facility for adjusting and
reconciling Public and private needs."
Id. at
349 U. S. 300
(footnotes omitted). In further refining the remedial process,
Swann held, the task is to correct, by a balancing of the
individual and collective interests, "the condition that offends
the Constitution." A federal remedial power may be exercised "only
on the basis of a constitutional violation" and, "[a]s with any
equity case, the nature of the violation determines the scope of
the remedy." 402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 16.
Proceeding from these basic principles, we first note that, in
the District Court, the complainants sought a remedy aimed at the
condition alleged to offend the Constitution -- the segregation
within the Detroit City School District. [
Footnote 18] The court acted on this theory of the
case and in its initial ruling on the "Desegregation Area"
stated:
"The task before this court, therefore, is now, and . . . has
always been, how to desegregate the Detroit public schools."
345 F. Supp. at 921. Thereafter, however, the District Court
abruptly rejected the proposed Detroit-only plans on the ground
that,
"while [they] would provide a racial mix more in keeping with
the Black-White proportions of the student population [they] would
accentuate the racial identifiability of the
Page 418 U. S. 739
[Detroit] district as a Black school system, and would not
accomplish desegregation."
Pet.App. 56a. " [T]he racial composition of the student body is
such," said the court, "that the plan's implementation would
clearly make the entire Detroit public school system racially
identifiable" (
id. at 54a), "leav[ing] many of its schools
75 to 90 percent Black."
Id. at 55a. Consequently, the
court reasoned, it was imperative to "look beyond the limits of the
Detroit school district for a solution to the problem of
segregation in the Detroit public schools . . . ," since "[s]chool
district lines are simply matters of political convenience, and may
not be used to deny constitutional rights."
Id. at 57a.
Accordingly, the District Court proceeded to redefine the relevant
area to include areas of predominantly white pupil population in
order to ensure that, "upon implementation, no school, grade or
classroom [would be] substantially disproportionate to the overall
pupil racial composition" of the entire metropolitan area.
While specifically acknowledging that the District Court's
findings of a condition of segregation were limited to Detroit, the
Court of Appeals approved the use of a metropolitan remedy largely
on the grounds that it is
"impossible to declare 'clearly erroneous' the District Judge's
conclusion that any Detroit only segregation plan will lead
directly to a single segregated Detroit school district
overwhelmingly black in all of its schools, surrounded by a ring of
suburbs and suburban school districts overwhelmingly white in
composition in a State in which the racial composition is 87 per
cent white and 13 per cent black."
484 F.2d at 249.
Viewing the record as a whole, it seems clear that the District
Court and the Court of Appeals shifted the primary
Page 418 U. S. 740
focus from a Detroit remedy to the metropolitan area only
because of their conclusion that total desegregation of Detroit
would not produce the racial balance which they perceived as
desirable. Both courts proceeded on an assumption that the Detroit
schools could not be truly desegregated -- in their view of what
constituted desegregation -- unless the racial composition of the
student body of each school substantially reflected the racial
composition of the population of the metropolitan area as a whole.
The metropolitan area was then defined as Detroit plus 53 of the
outlying school districts. That this was the approach the District
Court expressly and frankly employed is shown by the order which
expressed the court's view of the constitutional standard:
"Within the limitations of reasonable travel time and distance
factors, pupil reassignments shall be effected within the clusters
described in Exhibit P.M. 12 so as to achieve the greatest degree
of actual desegregation to the end that, upon implementation,
no school, grade or classroom [will be] substantially
disproportionate to the overall pupil racial composition."
345 F. Supp. at 918 (emphasis added).
In
Swann, which arose in the context of a single
independent school district, the Court held: .
"If we were to read the holding of the District Court to
require, as a matter of substantive constitutional right, any
particular degree of racial balance or mixing, that approach would
be disapproved and we would be obliged to reverse."
402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 24. The
clear import of this language from
Swann is that
desegregation, in the sense of dismantling a dual school system,
does not require any particular racial balance in
Page 418 U. S. 741
each "school, grade or classroom." [
Footnote 19]
See Spencer v. Kugler,
404 U. S. 1027
(1972).
Here, the District Court's approach to what constituted "actual
desegregation" raises the fundamental question, not presented in
Swann, as to the circumstances in which a federal court
may order desegregation relief that embraces more than a single
school district. The court's analytical starting point was its
conclusion that school district lines are no more than arbitrary
lines on a map drawn "for political convenience." Boundary lines
may be bridged where there has been a constitutional violation
calling for inter-district relief, but the notion that school
district lines may be casually ignored or treated as a mere
administrative convenience is contrary to the history of public
education in our country. No single tradition in public education
is more deeply rooted than local control over the operation of
schools; local autonomy has long been thought essential both to the
maintenance of community concern and support for public schools and
to
Page 418 U. S. 742
quality of the educational process.
See Wright v. Council of
the City of Emporia, 407 U.S. at
407 U. S. 469.
Thus, in
San Antonio School District v. Rodriguez,
411 U. S. 1,
411 U. S. 50
(1973), we observed that local control over the educational process
affords citizens an opportunity to participate in decisionmaking,
permits the structuring of school programs to fit local needs, and
encourages "experimentation, innovation, and a healthy competition
for educational excellence."
The Michigan educational structure involved in this case, in
common with most States, provides for a large measure of local
control, [
Footnote 20] and a
review of the scope and character of these local powers indicates
the extent to which the inter-district remedy approved by the two
courts could disrupt and alter the structure of public
education
Page 418 U. S. 743
in Michigan. The metropolitan remedy would require, in effect,
consolidation of 54 independent school districts historically
administered as separate units into a vast new super school
district.
See n 10,
supra. Entirely apart from the logistical and other
serious problems attending large-scale transportation of students,
the consolidation would give rise to an array of other problems in
financing and operating this new school system. Some of the more
obvious questions would be: what would be the status and authority
of the present popularly elected school boards? would the children
of Detroit be within the jurisdiction and operating control of a
school board elected by the parents and residents of other
districts? what board or boards would levy taxes for school
operations in these 54 districts constituting the consolidated
metropolitan area? what provisions could be made for assuring
substantial equality in tax levies among the 54 districts, if this
were deemed requisite? what provisions would be made for financing?
would the validity of long-term bonds be jeopardized unless
approved by all of the component districts as well as the State?
what body would determine that portion of the curricula now left to
the discretion of local school boards? who would establish
attendance zones, purchase school equipment, locate and construct
new schools, and indeed attend to all the myriad day-to-day
decisions that are necessary to school operations affecting
potentially more than three-quarters of a million pupils?
See n 10,
supra.
It may be suggested that all of these vital operational problems
are yet to be resolved by the District Court, and that this is the
purpose of the Court of Appeals' proposed remand. But it is obvious
from the scope of the inter-district remedy itself that, absent a
complete restructuring of the laws of Michigan relating to school
districts, the District Court will become first, a
de
facto
Page 418 U. S. 744
"legislative authority" to resolve these complex questions, and
then the "school superintendent" for the entire area. This is a
task which few, if any, judges are qualified to perform and one
which would deprive the people of control of schools through their
elected representatives.
Of course, no state law is above the Constitution. School
district lines and the present laws with respect to local control
are not sacrosanct, and, if they conflict with the Fourteenth
Amendment, federal courts have a duty to prescribe appropriate
remedies.
See, e.g., Wright v. Council of the City of
Emporia, 407 U. S. 451
(1972);
United States v. Scotland Neck Board of Education,
407 U. S. 484
(1972) (state or local officials prevented from carving out a new
school district from an existing district that was in process of
dismantling a dual school system);
cf. Haney v. County Board of
Education of Sevier County, 429 F.2d 364 (CA8 1970) (State
contributed to separation of races by drawing of school district
lines);
United States v. Texas, 321 F.
Supp. 1043 (ED Tex.1970),
aff'd, 447 F.2d 441 (CA5
1971),
cert. denied sub nom. Edgar v. United States, 404
U.S. 1016 (1972) (one or more school districts created and
maintained for one race). But our prior holdings have been confined
to violations and remedies within a single school district. We
therefore turn to address, for the first time, the validity of a
remedy mandating cross-district or inter-district consolidation to
remedy a condition of segregation found to exist in only one
district.
The controlling principle consistently expounded in our holdings
is that the scope of the remedy is determined by the nature and
extent of the constitutional violation.
Swann, 402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 16.
Before the boundaries of separate and autonomous school districts
may be set aside by consolidating the separate units for remedial
purposes or by imposing a cross-district remedy, it must
Page 418 U. S. 745
first be shown that there has been a constitutional violation
within one district that produces a significant segregative effect
in another district. Specifically, it must be shown that racially
discriminatory acts of the state or local school districts, or of a
single school district have been a substantial cause of
inter-district segregation. Thus, an inter-district remedy might be
in order where the racially discriminatory acts of one or more
school districts caused racial segregation in an adjacent district,
or where district lines have been deliberately drawn on the basis
of race. In such circumstances, an inter-district remedy would be
appropriate to eliminate the inter-district segregation directly
caused by the constitutional violation. Conversely, without an
inter-district violation and inter-district effect, there is no
constitutional wrong calling for an inter-district remedy.
The record before us, voluminous as it is, contains evidence of
de jure segregated conditions only in the Detroit schools;
indeed, that was the theory on which the litigation was initially
based, and on which the District Court took evidence.
See
supra at
418 U. S.
725-726. With no showing of significant violation by the
53 outlying school districts and no evidence of any inter-district
violation or effect, the court went beyond the original theory of
the case as framed by the pleadings and mandated a metropolitan
area remedy. To approve the remedy ordered by the court would
impose on the outlying districts, not shown to have committed any
constitutional violation, a wholly impermissible remedy based on a
standard not hinted at in
Brown I and
II or any
holding of this Court.
In dissent, MR. JUSTICE WHITE and MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL undertake
to demonstrate that agencies having state-wide authority
participated in maintaining the dual school system found to exist
in Detroit. They are apparently of the view that, once such
participation is
Page 418 U. S. 746
shown, the District Court should have a relatively free hand to
reconstruct school districts outside of Detroit in fashioning
relief. Our assumption,
arguendo, see infra at
418 U. S. 748,
that state agencies did participate in the maintenance of the
Detroit system, should make it clear that it is not on this point
that we part company. [
Footnote
21] The difference between us arises, instead, from established
doctrine laid down by our cases.
Brown, supra; Green, supra;
Swann, supra; Scotland Neck, supra; and
Emporia,
supra, each addressed the issue of constitutional wrong in
terms of an established geographic and administrative school system
populated by both Negro and white children. In such a context,
terms such as "unitary" and "dual" systems, and "racially
identifiable schools," have meaning, and the necessary federal
authority to remedy the constitutional wrong is firmly established.
But the remedy is necessarily designed, as all remedies are, to
restore the victims of discriminatory conduct to the position they
would have occupied in the absence of such conduct. Disparate
treatment of white and Negro students occurred within the Detroit
school system, and not elsewhere, and, on this record, the remedy
must be limited to that system.
Swann, supra, at
402 U. S. 16.
The constitutional right of the Negro respondents residing in
Detroit is to attend a unitary school system in that district.
Unless petitioners drew the district lines in a discriminatory
fashion, or arranged for white students
Page 418 U. S. 747
residing in the Detroit District to attend schools in Oakland
and Macomb Counties, they were under no constitutional duty to make
provisions for Negro students to do so. The view of the dissenters,
that the existence of a dual system in Detroit can be made the
basis for a decree requiring cross-district transportation of
pupils, cannot be supported on the grounds that it represents
merely the devising of a suitably flexible remedy for the violation
of rights already established by our prior decisions. It can be
supported only by drastic expansion of the constitutional right
itself, an expansion without any support in either constitutional
principle or precedent. [
Footnote 22]
Page 418 U. S. 748
III
We recognize that the six-volume record presently under
consideration contains language and some specific incidental
findings thought by the District Court to afford a basis for
inter-district relief. However, these comparatively isolated
findings and brief comments concern only one possible
inter-district violation, and are found in the context of a
proceeding that, as the District Court conceded, included no proof
of segregation practiced by any of the 85 suburban school districts
surrounding Detroit. The Court of Appeals, for example, relied on
five factors which, it held, amounted to unconstitutional state
action with respect to the violations found in the Detroit
system:
(1) It held the State derivatively responsible for the Detroit
Board's violations on the theory that actions of Detroit as a
political subdivision of the State were attributable to the State.
Accepting,
arguendo, the correctness of this finding of
state responsibility for the segregated conditions within the city
of Detroit, it does not follow that an inter-district remedy is
constitutionally justified or required. With a single exception,
discussed later, there has been no showing that either the State or
any of the 85 outlying districts engaged in activity that had a
cross-district effect. The boundaries of the Detroit School
District, which are coterminous with the boundaries of the city of
Detroit, were established over a century ago by neutral legislation
when the city was incorporated; there is no evidence in the record,
nor is there any suggestion by the respondents, that either the
original boundaries of the Detroit School District, or any other
school district in Michigan, were established for the purpose of
creating, maintaining, or perpetuating segregation of races. There
is no claim and there is no evidence hinting that petitioner
outlying school districts and their
Page 418 U. S. 749
predecessors, or the 30-odd other school districts in the
tri-county area -- but outside the District Court's "desegregation
area" -- have ever maintained or operated anything but unitary
school systems. Unitary school systems have been required for more
than a century by the Michigan Constitution as implemented by state
law. [
Footnote 23] Where the
schools of only one district have been affected, there is no
constitutional power in the courts to decree relief balancing the
racial composition of that district's schools with those of the
surrounding districts.
(2) There was evidence introduced at trial that, during the late
1950's, Carver School District, a predominantly Negro suburban
district, contracted to have Negro high school students sent to a
predominantly Negro school in Detroit. At the time, Carver was an
independent school district that had no high school because,
according to the trial evidence, "Carver District . . . did not
have a place for adequate high school facilities." 484 F.2d at 231.
Accordingly, arrangements were made with Northern High School in
the abutting Detroit School District so that the Carver high school
students could obtain a secondary school education. In 1960, the
Oak Park School District, a predominantly white suburban district,
annexed the predominantly Negro Carver School District, through the
initiative of local officials.
Page 418 U. S. 750
Ibid. There is, of course, no claim that the 1960
annexation had a segregative purpose or result or that Oak Park now
maintains a dual system.
According to the Court of Appeals, the arrangement during the
late 1950's which allowed Carver students to be educated within the
Detroit District was dependent upon the "tacit or express" approval
of the State Board of Education, and was the result of the refusal
of the white suburban districts to accept the Carver students.
Although there is nothing in the record supporting the Court of
Appeals' supposition that suburban white schools refused to accept
the Carver students, it appears that this situation, whether with
or without the State's consent, may have had a segregative effect
on the school populations of the two districts involved. However,
since "the nature of the violation determines the scope of the
remedy,"
Swann. 402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 16,
this isolated instance affecting two of the school districts would
not justify the broad metropolitan-wide remedy contemplated by the
District Court and approved by the Court of Appeals, particularly
since it embraced potentially 52 districts having no responsibility
for the arrangement and involved 503,000 pupils in addition to
Detroit's 276,000 students.
(3) The Court of Appeals cited the enactment of state
legislation (Act 48) which had the effect of rescinding Detroit's
voluntary desegregation plan (the April 7 Plan). That plan,
however, affected only 12 of 21 Detroit high schools, and had no
causal connection with the distribution of pupils by race between
Detroit and the other school districts within the tri-county
area.
(4) The court relied on the State's authority to supervise
schoolsite selection and to approve building construction as a
basis for holding the State responsible for the segregative results
of the school construction program in Detroit. Specifically, the
Court of Appeals asserted
Page 418 U. S. 751
that, during the period between 1949 and 1962, the State Board
of Education exercised general authority as overseer of site
acquisitions by local boards for new school construction, and
suggested that this state-approved school construction "fostered
segregation throughout the Detroit Metropolitan area." 484 F.2d at
241. This brief comment, however, is not supported by the evidence
taken at trial, since that evidence was specifically limited to
proof that schoolsite acquisition and school construction within
the city of Detroit produced
de jure segregation within
the city itself.
Id. at 235-238. Thus, there was no
evidence suggesting that the State's activities with respect to
either school construction or site acquisition within Detroit
affected the racial composition of the school population outside
Detroit or, conversely, that the State's school construction and
site acquisition activities within the outlying districts affected
the racial composition of the schools within Detroit.
(5) The Court of Appeals also relied upon the District Court's
finding:
"This and other financial limitations, such as those on bonding
and the working of the state aid formula whereby suburban districts
were able to make far larger per pupil expenditures despite less
tax effort, have created and perpetuated systematic educational
inequalities."
Id. at 239. However, neither the Court of Appeals nor
the District Court offered any indication in the record or in their
opinions as to how, if at all, the availability of state-financed
aid for some Michigan students outside Detroit, but not for those
within Detroit, might have affected the racial character of any of
the State's school districts. Furthermore, as the respondents
recognize, the application of our recent ruling in
San Antonio
School District v. Rodriguez, 411 U. S.
1 (1973), to this state education financing system is
questionable, and this issue was not
Page 418 U. S. 752
addressed by either the Court of Appeals or the District Court.
This, again, underscores the crucial fact that the theory upon
which the case proceeded related solely to the establishment of
Detroit city violations as a basis for desegregating Detroit
schools, and that, at the time of trial, neither the parties nor
the trial judge was concerned with a foundation for inter-district
relief. [
Footnote 24]
IV
Petitioners have urged that they were denied due process by the
manner in which the District Court limited their participation
after intervention was allowed, thus precluding adequate
opportunity to present evidence that they had committed no acts
having a segregative effect in Detroit. In light of our holding
that, absent an inter-district violation, there is no basis for an
inter-district remedy, we need not reach these claims. It is clear,
however, that the District Court, with the approval of the Court of
Appeals, has provided an inter-district remedy in the face of a
record which shows no constitutional violations that would call for
equitable relief except within the city of Detroit. In these
circumstances, there was no occasion for the parties to address, or
for the District Court to consider, whether there were racially
discriminatory acts for which any of the 53 outlying districts were
responsible and which had direct and significant segregative effect
on schools of more than one district.
We conclude that the relief ordered by the District Court and
affirmed by the Court of Appeals was based upon an erroneous
standard and was unsupported by record evidence that acts of the
outlying districts effected the discrimination found to exist in
the schools of Detroit.
Page 418 U. S. 753
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed
and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion leading to prompt formulation of a decree directed to
eliminating the segregation found to exist in Detroit city schools,
a remedy which has been delayed since 1970.
Reversed and remanded.
* Together with No. 73-435,
Allen Park Public Schools et al.
v. Bradley et al., and No. 73-436,
Grosse Pointe Public
School System v. Bradley et al., also on certiorari to the
same court.
[
Footnote 1]
484 F.2d 215 (CA6),
cert. granted, 414 U.S. 1038
(1973).
[
Footnote 2]
The standing of the NAACP as a proper party plaintiff was not
contested in the trial court, and is not an issue in this case.
[
Footnote 3]
Optional zones, sometimes referred to as dual zones or dual
overlapping zones, provide pupils living within certain areas a
choice of attendance at one of two high schools.
[
Footnote 4]
The Court of Appeals found record evidence that, in at least one
instance during the period 1957-1958, Detroit served a suburban
school district by contracting with it to educate its Negro high
school students by transporting them away from nearby suburban
white high schools, and past Detroit high schools which were
predominantly white, to Negro or predominantly Negro Detroit
schools. 484 F.2d at 231.
[
Footnote 5]
School districts in the State of Michigan are instrumentalities
of the State and subordinate to its State Board of Education and
legislature. The Constitution of the State of Michigan, Art. 8, §
2, provides in relevant part:
"The legislature shall maintain and support a system of free
public elementary and secondary schools as defined by law."
Similarly, the Michigan Supreme Court has stated: "The school
district is a State agency. Moreover, it is of legislative
creation. . . ."
Attorney General ex rel. Kies v. Lowrey,
131 Mich. 639, 644, 92 N.W. 289, 290 (1902);
"'Education in Michigan belongs to the State. It is no part of
the local self-government inherent in the township or municipality,
except so far as the legislature may choose to make it such. The
Constitution has turned the whole subject over to the legislature.
. . .'"
Attorney General ex rel. Zacharias v. Detroit Board of
Education, 154 Mich. 584, 590, 118 N.W. 606, 609 (1908).
[
Footnote 6]
"Sec. 12. The implementation of any attendance provisions for
the 1970-71 school year determined by any first. class school
district board
shall be delayed pending the date of
commencement of functions by the first class school district boards
established under the provisions of this amendatory act, but such
provision shall not impair the right of any such board to determine
and implement prior to such date such changes in attendance
provisions as are mandated by practical necessity. . . ."
Act No. 48, § 12, Mich. Pub.Acts of 1970; Mich.Comp.Laws §
388.182 (1970) (emphasis added).
[
Footnote 7]
The District Court briefly alluded to the possibility that the
State, along with private persons, had caused, in part, the housing
patterns of the Detroit metropolitan area which, in turn, produced
the predominantly white and predominantly Negro neighborhoods that
characterize Detroit:
"It is no answer to say that restricted practices grew gradually
(as the black population in the area increased between 1920 and
1970), or that, since 1948, racial restrictions on the ownership of
real property have been removed. The policies pursued by both
government and private persons and agencies have a continuing and
present effect upon the complexion of the community -- as we know,
the choice of a residence is a relatively infrequent affair. For
many years, FHA and VA openly advised and advocated the maintenance
of 'harmonious' neighborhoods,
i.e., racially and
economically harmonious. The conditions created continue."
338 F.
Supp. 582, 587 (ED Mich.1971).
Thus, the District Court concluded:
"The affirmative obligation of the defendant Board has been and
is to adopt and implement pupil assignment practices and policies
that compensate for and avoid incorporation into the school system
the effects of residential racial segregation."
Id. at 593.
The Court of Appeals, however, expressly noted that:
"In affirming the District Judge's findings of constitutional
violations by the Detroit Board of Education and by the State
defendants resulting in segregated schools in Detroit, we have not
relied at all upon testimony pertaining to segregated housing
except as school construction programs helped cause or maintain
such segregation."
484 F.2d at 242. Accordingly, in its present posture, the case
does not present any question concerning possible state housing
violations.
[
Footnote 8]
On March 22, 1971, a group of Detroit residents, who were
parents of children enrolled in the Detroit public schools, were
permitted to intervene as parties defendant. On June 24, 1971, the
District Judge alluded to the "possibility" of a metropolitan
school system, stating:
"[A]s I have said to several witnesses in this case: 'How do you
desegregate a black city, or a black school system.'"
Petitioners' Appendix 243a (hereinafter Pet. App.).
Subsequently, on July 16, 1971, various parents filed a motion to
require joinder of all of the 85 outlying independent school
districts within the tri-county area.
[
Footnote 9]
The respondents, as plaintiffs below, opposed the motion to join
the additional school districts, arguing that the presence of the
state defendants was sufficient and all that was required even if,
in shaping a remedy, the affairs of these other districts was to be
affected.
338 F.
Supp. at 595.
[
Footnote 10]
At the time of the 1970 census, the population of Michigan was
8,875,083, almost half of which, 4,199,931, resided in the
tri-county area of Wayne, Oakland, and Macomb. Oakland and Macomb
Counties abut Wayne County to the north, and Oakland County abuts
Macomb County to the west. These counties cover 1,952 square miles,
Michigan Statistical Abstract (9th ed.1972), and the area is
approximately the size of the State of Delaware (2,057 square
miles), more than half again the size of the State of Rhode Island
(1,214 square miles) and almost 30 times the size of the District
of Columbia (67 square miles). Statistical Abstract of the United
States (93d ed.1972). The populations of Wayne, Oakland, and Macomb
Counties were 2,666,751; 907,871; and 625,309, respectively, in
1970. Detroit, the State's largest city, is located in Wayne
County.
In the 1970-1971 school year, there were 2,157,449 children
enrolled in school districts in Michigan. There are 86 independent,
legally distinct school districts within the tri-county area,
having a total enrollment of approximately 1,000,000 children. In
1970, the Detroit Board of Education operated 319 schools with
approximately 276,000 students.
[
Footnote 11]
In its formal opinion, subsequently announced, the District
Court candidly recognized:
"It should be noted that the court has taken no proofs with
respect to the establishment of the boundaries of the 86 public
school districts in the counties of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb, nor
on the issue of whether, with the exclusion of the city of Detroit
school district, such school districts have committed acts of
de jure segregation."
345 F.
Supp. 914, 920 (ED Mich.1972).
[
Footnote 12]
According to the District Court, intervention was permitted
under Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 24(a), "Intervention of Right," and also
under Rule 24(b), "Permissive Intervention."
[
Footnote 13]
This rather abbreviated briefing schedule was maintained despite
the fact that the District Court had deferred consideration of a
motion made eight months earlier, to bring the suburban districts
into the case.
See text accompanying
n 8,
supra.
[
Footnote 14]
As of 1970, the 53 school districts outside the city of Detroit
that were included in the court's "desegregation area" had a
combined student population of approximately 503,000 students
compared to Detroit's approximately 276,000 students. Nevertheless,
the District Court directed that the intervening districts should
be represented by only one member on the desegregation panel, while
the Detroit Board of Education was granted three panel members. 345
F. Supp. at 917.
[
Footnote 15]
The District Court had certified most of the foregoing rulings
for interlocutory review pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) (1 App. 26
266), and the case was initially decided on the merits by a panel
of three judges. However, the panel's opinion and judgment were
vacated when it was determined to rehear the case en banc, 484 F.2d
at 218.
[
Footnote 16]
With respect to the State's violations, the Court of Appeals
held: (1) that, since the city Board is an instrumentality of the
State and subordinate to the State Board, the segregative action of
the Detroit Board "are the actions of an agency of the State,"
id. at 238; (2) that the state legislation rescinding
Detroit's voluntary desegregation plan contributed to increasing
segregation in the Detroit schools,
ibid.; (3) that, under
state law prior to 1962, the State Board had authority over school
construction plans, and therefore had to be held responsible "for
the segregative results,"
ibid.; (4) that the "State
statutory scheme of support of transportation for school children
directly discriminated against Detroit,"
id. at 240, by
not providing transportation funds to Detroit on the same basis as
funds were provided to suburban districts,
id. at 38; and
(5) that the transportation of Negro students from one suburban
district to a Negro school in Detroit must have had the "approval,
tacit or express, of the State Board of Education,"
ibid.
[
Footnote 17]
The court sought to distinguish
Bradley v. School Board of
the City of Richmond, 462 F.2d 1058 (CA4 1972),
aff'd by
an equally divided Court, 412 U. S. 92
(1973), on the grounds that the District Court in that case had
ordered an actual consolidation of three school districts, and that
Virginia's Constitution and statutes, unlike Michigan's, gave the
local boards exclusive power to operate the public schools. 484
F.2d at 251.
[
Footnote 18]
Although the list of issues presented for review in petitioners'
briefs and petitions for writs of certiorari do not include
arguments on the findings of segregative violations on the part of
the Detroit defendants, two of the petitioners argue in brief that
these findings constitute error. This Court's Rules 23(1)(c) and
40(1)(d)(2), at a minimum, limit our review of the Detroit
violation findings to "plain error," and, under our decision last
Term in
Keyes v. School District No. 1, Denver, Colorado,
413 U. S. 189
(1973), the findings appear to be correct.
[
Footnote 19]
Disparity in the racial composition of pupils within a single
district may well constitute a "signal" to a district court at the
outset, leading to inquiry into the causes accounting for a
pronounced racial identifiability of schools within one school
system. In
Swann, for example, we were dealing with a
large but single independent school system, and a unanimous Court
noted:
"Where the . . . proposed plan for conversion from a dual to a
unitary system contemplates the continued existence of some schools
that are all or predominantly of one race [the school authority
has] the burden of showing that such school assignments are
genuinely nondiscriminatory."
402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 26.
See also Keyes, supra, at
413 U. S. 208.
However, the use of significant racial imbalance in schools within
an autonomous school district as a signal which operates simply to
shift the burden of proof is a very different matter from equating
racial imbalance with a constitutional violation calling for a
remedy.
Keyes, supra, also involved a remedial order
within a single autonomous school district.
[
Footnote 20]
Under the Michigan School Code of 1955, the local school
district is an autonomous political body corporate, operating
through a Board of Education popularly elected. Mich.Comp.Laws §§
340.27, 340.55, 340.107, 340.148, 340.149, 340.188. As such, the
day-to-day affairs of the school district are determined at the
local level in accordance with the plenary power to acquire real
and personal property, §§ 340.26, 340.77, 340.113, 340.165,
340.192, 340.352; to hire and contract with personnel, §§ 340.569,
340.574; to levy taxes for operations, § 340.563; to borrow against
receipts, § 340.567; to determine the length of school terms, §
340.575; to control the admission of nonresident students, §
340.582; to determine courses of study, § 340.583; to provide a
kindergarten program, § 340.584; to establish and operate
vocational schools, § 340.585; to offer adult education programs, §
340.586; to establish attendance areas, § 340.589; to arrange for
transportation of nonresident students, § 340.591; to acquire
transportation equipment, § 340.594; to receive gifts and bequests
for educational purposes, § 340.605; to employ an attorney, §
340.609; to suspend or expel students, § 340.613; to make rules and
regulations for the operation of schools, § 340.614; to cause to be
levied authorized millage, § 340.643a; to acquire property by
eminent domain, § 340.711
et seq.; and to approve and
select textbooks, § 340.882.
[
Footnote 21]
Since the Court has held that a resident of a school district
has a fundamental right protected by the Federal Constitution to
vote in a district election, it would seem incongruous to disparage
the importance of the school district in a different context.
Kramer v. Union Free School District No. 15, 395 U.
S. 621,
395 U. S. 626
(1969). While the district there involved was located in New York,
none of the facts in our possession suggest that the relation of
school districts to the State is significantly different in New
York from that in Michigan.
[
Footnote 22]
The suggestion in the dissent of MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL that
schools which have a majority of Negro students are not
"desegregated," whatever the racial makeup of the school district's
population and however neutrally the district lines have been drawn
and administered, finds no support in our prior cases. In
Green
v. County School Board of New Kent County, 391 U.
S. 430 (1968), for example, this Court approved a
desegregation plan which would have resulted in each of the schools
within the district having a racial composition of 57% Negro and
43% white. In
Wright v. Council of the City of Emporia,
407 U. S. 451
(1972), the optimal desegregation plan would have resulted in the
schools' being 66% Negro and 34% white, substantially the same
percentages as could be obtained under one of the plans involved in
this case. And in
United States v. Scotland Neck Board of
Education, 407 U. S. 484,
407 U. S. 491
n. 5 (1972), a desegregation plan was implicitly approved for a
school district which had a racial composition of 77% Negro and 22%
white. In none of these cases was it even intimated that "actual
desegregation" could not be accomplished as long as the number of
Negro students was greater than the number of white students.
The dissents also seem to attach importance to the metropolitan
character of Detroit and neighboring school districts. But the
constitutional principles applicable in school desegregation cases
cannot vary in accordance with the size or population dispersal of
the particular city, county, or school district as compared with
neighboring areas.
[
Footnote 23]
People ex rel. Workman v. Board of Education of
Detroit, 18 Mich. 400 (1869); Act 34, § 28, Mich.Pub.Acts of
1867. The Michigan Constitution and laws provide that "[e]very
school district shall provide for the education of its pupils
without discrimination as to religion, creed, race, color or
national origin," Mich.Const.1963, Art. 8, § 2; that "[n]o separate
school or department shall be kept for any person or persons on
account of race or color," Mich.Comp.Laws § 340.355; and that
"[a]ll persons, residents of a school district . . . shall have an
equal right to attend school therein,"
id. § 340.356.
See also Act 319, Part II, c. 2, § 9, Mich. Pub.Acts of
1927.
[
Footnote 24]
Apparently, when the District Court,
sua sponte,
abruptly altered the theory of the case to include the possibility
of multidistrict relief, neither the plaintiffs nor the trial judge
considered amending the complaint to embrace the new theory.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, concurring.
In joining the opinion of the Court, I think it appropriate, in
view of some of the extravagant language of the dissenting
opinions, to state briefly my understanding of what it is that the
Court decides today.
The respondents commenced this suit in 1970, claiming only that
a constitutionally impermissible allocation of educational
facilities along racial lines had occurred in public schools within
a single school district whose lines were coterminous with those of
the city of Detroit. In the course of the subsequent proceedings,
the District Court found that public school officials had
contributed to racial segregation within that district by means of
improper use of zoning and attendance patterns, optional attendance
areas, and building and site selection. This finding of a violation
of the Equal Protection Clause was upheld by the Court of Appeals,
and is accepted by this Court today.
See ante at
418 U. S. 738
n. 18. In the present posture of the case, therefore, the Court
does not deal with questions of substantive constitutional law. The
basic issue now before the Court concerns, rather, the appropriate
exercise of federal equity jurisdiction. [
Footnote 2/1]
Page 418 U. S. 754
No evidence was adduced and no findings were made in the
District Court concerning the activities of school officials in
districts outside the city of Detroit, and no school officials from
the outside districts even participated in the suit until after the
District Court had made the initial determination that is the focus
of today's decision. In spite of the limited scope of the inquiry
and the findings, the District Court concluded that the only
effective remedy for the constitutional violations found to have
existed within the city of Detroit was a desegregation plan calling
for busing pupils to and from school districts outside the city.
The District Court found that any desegregation plan operating
wholly "
within the corporate geographical limits of the city'"
would be deficient, since it "`would clearly make the entire
Detroit public school system racially identifiable as Black.'" 484
F.2d 215, 244, 243. The Court of Appeals, in affirming the decision
that an inter-district remedy was necessary, noted that a plan
limited to the city of Detroit
"would result in an all black school system immediately
surrounded by practically all white suburban school systems, with
an overwhelmingly white majority population in the total
metropolitan area."
Id. at 245.
The courts were in error for the simple reason that the remedy
they thought necessary was not commensurate with the constitutional
violation found. Within a single school district whose officials
have been shown to have engaged in unconstitutional racial
segregation, a remedial decree that affects every individual school
may be dictated by "common sense,"
see Keyes v. School District
No. 1, Denver, Colorado, 413 U. S. 189,
413 U. S. 203,
and indeed may provide the only effective means to eliminate
segregation "root and branch,"
Green v. County School Board of
New Kent County, 391 U. S. 430,
391 U. S. 438,
and to "effectuate a transition to a racially nondiscriminatory
school
Page 418 U. S. 755
system."
Brown v. Board of Education, 349 U.
S. 294,
349 U. S. 301.
See Keyes, supra at
413 U. S.
198-205. But in this case, the Court of Appeals approved
the concept of a remedial decree that would go beyond the
boundaries of the district where the constitutional violation was
found, and include schools and schoolchildren in many other school
districts that have presumptively been administered in complete
accord with the Constitution.
The opinion of the Court convincingly demonstrates,
ante at
418 U. S.
742-743, that traditions of local control of schools,
together with the difficulty of a judicially supervised
restructuring of local administration of schools, render improper
and inequitable such an inter-district response to a constitutional
violation found to have occurred only within a single school
district.
This is not to say, however, that an inter-district remedy of
the sort approved by the Court of Appeals would not be proper, or
even necessary, in other factual situations. Were it to be shown,
for example, that state officials had contributed to the separation
of the races by drawing or redrawing school district lines,
see
Haney v. County Board of Education of Sevier County, 429 F.2d
364;
cf. Wright v. Council of the City of Emporia,
407 U. S. 451;
United States v. Scotland Neck Board of Education,
407 U. S. 484; by
transfer of school units between districts,
United States v.
Texas, 321 F.
Supp. 1043,
aff'd, 447 F.2d 441;
Turner v. Warren
County Board of Education, 313 F.
Supp. 380; or by purposeful, racially discriminatory use of
state housing or zoning laws, then a decree calling for transfer of
pupils across district lines or for restructuring of district lines
might well be appropriate.
In this case, however, no such inter-district violation was
shown. Indeed, no evidence at all concerning the administration of
schools outside the city of Detroit was presented other than the
fact that these schools contained
Page 418 U. S. 756
a higher proportion of white pupils than did the schools within
the city. Since the mere fact of different racial compositions in
contiguous districts does not itself imply or constitute a
violation of the Equal Protection Clause in the absence of a
showing that such disparity was imposed, fostered, or encouraged by
the State or its political subdivisions, it follows that no
inter-district violation was shown in this case. [
Footnote 2/2] The formulation of an inter-district
remedy was thus simply not responsive to the factual record before
the District Court, and was an abuse of that court's equitable
powers.
Page 418 U. S. 757
In reversing the decision of the Court of Appeals, this Court is
in no way turning its back on the proscription of state-imposed
segregation first voiced in
Brown v. Board of Education,
347 U. S. 483, or
on the delineation of remedial powers and duties most recently
expressed in
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of
Education, 402 U. S. 1. In
Swann, the Court addressed itself to the range of
equitable remedies available to the courts to effectuate the
desegregation mandated by
Brown and its progeny, noting
that the task in choosing appropriate relief is "to correct . . .
the condition that offends the Constitution," and that "the nature
of the violation determines the scope of the remedy. . . ."
Id. at
402 U. S. 16.
The disposition of this case thus falls squarely under these
principles. The only "condition that offends the Constitution"
found by the District Court in this case is the existence of
officially supported segregation in and among public schools in
Detroit itself. There were no findings that the differing racial
composition between schools in the city and in the outlying suburbs
was caused by official activity of any sort. It follows that the
decision to include in the desegregation plan pupils from school
districts outside Detroit was not predicated upon any
constitutional violation involving those school districts. By
approving a remedy that would reach beyond the limits of the city
of Detroit to correct a constitutional violation found to have
occurred solely within that city the Court of Appeals thus went
beyond the governing equitable principles established in this
Court's decisions.
[
Footnote 2/1]
As this Court stated in
Brown v. Board of Education,
349 U. S. 294,
349 U. S.
300:
"[E]quity has been characterized by a practical flexibility in
shaping its remedies and by a facility for adjusting and
reconciling public and private needs. These [school desegregation]
cases call for the exercise of these traditional attributes of
equity power."
[
Footnote 2/2]
My Brother MARSHALL seems to ignore this fundamental fact when
he states,
post at
418 U. S. 799,
that
"the most essential finding [made by the District Court] was
that Negro children in Detroit had been confined by intentional
acts of segregation to a growing core of Negro schools surrounded
by a receding ring of white schools."
This conclusion is simply not substantiated by the record
presented in this case. The record here does support the claim made
by the respondents that white and Negro students within Detroit who
otherwise would have attended school together were separated by
acts of the State or its subdivision. However, segregative acts
within the city alone cannot be presumed to have produced -- and no
factual showing was made that they did produce -- an increase in
the number of Negro students in the city as a whole. It is this
essential fact of a predominantly Negro school population in
Detroit -- caused by unknown and perhaps unknowable factors such as
in-migration, birth rates, economic changes, or cumulative acts of
private racial fears -- that accounts for the "growing core of
Negro schools," a "core" that has grown to include virtually the
entire city. The Constitution simply does not allow federal courts
to attempt to change that situation unless and until it is shown
that the State, or its political subdivisions, have contributed to
cause the situation to exist. No record has been made in this case
showing that the racial composition of the Detroit school
population or that residential patterns within Detroit and in the
surrounding areas were in any significant measure caused by
governmental activity, and it follows that the situation over which
my dissenting Brothers express concern cannot serve as the
predicate for the remedy adopted by the District Court and approved
by the Court of Appeals.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting.
The Court of Appeals has acted responsibly in these cases, and
we should affirm its judgment. This was the fourth time the case
was before it over a span of less than three years. The Court of
Appeals affirmed the District
Page 418 U. S. 758
Court on the issue of segregation and on the "Detroit-only"
plans of desegregation. The Court of Appeals also approved in
principle the use of a metropolitan area plan, vacating and
remanding only to allow the other affected school districts to be
brought in as parties, and in other minor respects.
We have before us today no plan for integration. The only orders
entered so far are interlocutory. No new principles of law are
presented here. Metropolitan treatment of metropolitan problems is
commonplace. If this were a sewage problem or a water problem, or
an energy problem, there can be no doubt that Michigan would stay
well within federal constitutional bounds if it sought a
metropolitan remedy. In
Bradley v. School Board of City of
Richmond, 462 F.2d 1058,
aff'd by an equally divided
Court, 412 U. S. 92, we
had a case involving the Virginia school system where local school
boards had "exclusive jurisdiction" of the problem, not "the State
Board of Education," 462 F.2d at 1067. Here, the Michigan
educational system is unitary, maintained and supported by the
legislature and under the general supervision of the State Board of
Education. [
Footnote 3/1] The State
controls the boundaries of school districts. [
Footnote 3/2] The State supervises schoolsite selection.
[
Footnote 3/3] The construction is
done through municipal bonds approved by several state agencies.
[
Footnote 3/4] Education in
Michigan is a state project, with very little completely local
control, [
Footnote 3/5] except that
the schools are financed locally, not on a state-wide basis.
Indeed,
Page 418 U. S. 759
the proposal to put school funding in Michigan on a state-wide
basis was defeated at the polls in November, 1972. [
Footnote 3/6] Yet the school districts, by state
law, are agencies of the State. [
Footnote 3/7] State action is indeed challenged as
violating the Equal Protection Clause. Whatever the reach of that
claim may be, it certainly is aimed at discrimination based on
race.
Therefore, as the Court of Appeals held, there can be no doubt
that, as a matter of Michigan law, the State itself has the final
say as to where and how school district lines should be drawn.
[
Footnote 3/8]
When we rule against the metropolitan area remedy, we take a
step that will likely put the problems of the blacks and our
society back to the period that antedated the "separate but equal"
regime of
Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.
S. 537. The reason is simple.
The inner core of Detroit is now rather solidly black; [
Footnote 3/9] and the blacks, we know, in
many instances are likely to
Page 418 U. S. 760
be poorer, [
Footnote 3/10]
just as were the Chicanos in
San Antonio School District v.
Rodriguez, 411 U. S. 1. By that
decision, the poorer school districts [
Footnote 3/11] must pay their own way. It is therefore
a foregone conclusion that we have now given the States a formula
whereby the poor must pay their own way. [
Footnote 3/12]
Page 418 U. S. 761
Today's decision, given
Rodriguez, means that there is
no violation of the Equal Protection Clause though the schools are
segregated by race and though the black schools are not only
"separate" but "inferior."
So far as equal protection is concerned, we are now in a
dramatic retreat from the 7-to-1 decision in 1896 that blacks could
be segregated in public facilities, provided they received equal
treatment.
As I indicated in
Keyes v. School District No. 1 Denver,
Colorado, 413 U. S. 189,
413 U. S.
214-217, there is, so far as the school cases go, no
constitutional difference between
de facto and
de
jure segregation. Each school board performs state action for
Fourteenth Amendment purposes when it draws the lines that confine
it to a given area, when it builds schools at particular sites, or
when it allocates students. The creation of the school districts in
Metropolitan Detroit either maintained existing segregation or
caused additional segregation. Restrictive covenants maintained by
state action or inaction build black ghettos. It is state action
when public funds are dispensed by housing agencies to build racial
ghettos. Where a community is racially mixed and school authorities
segregate schools, or assign black teachers to black schools or
close schools in fringe areas and build new schools in black areas
and in more distant white areas, the State creates and nurtures a
segregated school system just as surely as did those States
involved in
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.
S. 483, when they maintained dual school systems.
All these conditions and more were found by the District Court
to exist. The issue is not whether there should be racial balance,
but whether the State's use of
Page 418 U. S. 762
various devices that end up with black schools and white schools
brought the Equal Protection Clause into effect. Given the State's
control over the educational system in Michigan, the fact that the
black schools are in one district and the white schools are in
another is not controlling -- either constitutionally or equitably.
[
Footnote 3/13] No specific plan
has yet been adopted. We are still at an interlocutory stage of a
long drawn-out judicial effort at school desegregation. It is
conceivable that ghettos develop on their own, without any hint of
state action. But since Michigan, by one device or another, has,
over the years, created black school districts and white school
districts, the task of equity is to provide a unitary system for
the affected area where, as here, the State washes its hands of its
own creations.
[
Footnote 3/1]
Mich.Const., Art. 8, §§ 2, 3.
[
Footnote 3/2]
See 484 F.2d 215, 247-248; Mich.Comp.Laws §§ 340.402,
340.431, 340.447, 388.681 (1970).
[
Footnote 3/3]
Mich.Comp.Laws § 388.851 (1948), as amended by Act 231, Mich.
Pub.Acts of 1949, and Act 175, Mich. Pub.Acts 1962.
[
Footnote 3/4]
See Mich.Comp.Laws §§ 132.1 and 132.2 (1970); 3 App.
157.
[
Footnote 3/5]
See 484 F.2d at 248-249.
[
Footnote 3/6]
See Detroit Free Press, Nov. 8, 1972, p. 1A, col. 3.
Michigan has recently passed legislation which could eliminate
some, but not all, of the inequities in school financing.
See Act 101, Mich. Pub.Acts of 1973.
[
Footnote 3/7]
See 484 F.2d at 246-247; Mich.Const. Art. 8, §§ 2,
3.
[
Footnote 3/8]
See 418
U.S. 717fn3/2|>n. 2,
supra.
[
Footnote 3/9]
A tremendous change has occurred in the distribution of this
country's black population since World War I.
See Hauser,
Demographic Factors in the Integration of the Negro, Daedalus
847-877 (fall 1965). In 1910, 73% of all blacks lived on farms and
in rural areas; by 1960, 73% lived in urban areas, mainly in the
largest metropolitan areas. Moreover, due to the fact that the
black population is younger than the white population, the
concentration of blacks in the cities is even more pronounced for
the school-age population. The pattern of change which has existed
since World War I is continuing, and hence the proportion of blacks
in the urban North and West will continue to increase. Dept. of
Health, Education, and Welfare, J. Coleman
et al.,
Equality of Educational Opportunity 39-40 (1966).
[
Footnote 3/10]
"There are some definite and systematic directions of difference
between the schools attended by minorities and those attended by
the majority. It appears to be in the most academically related
areas that the schools of minority pupils show the most consistent
deficiencies."
Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare, Coleman
et al.,
supra, 418
U.S. 717fn3/9|>n. 9, at 120.
[
Footnote 3/11]
That some school districts are markedly poorer than others is
beyond question. The California Supreme Court has noted that
per-pupil expenditures in two different districts -- both located
in the same county -- were $2,223 and $616.
Serrano v.
Prest, 5 Cal. 3d 584,
600 n. 15, 487 P.2d 1241, 1252 n. 15 (1971). In New York, the
Fleischmann Commission reported that the two Long Island districts
of Great Neck and Levittown spent $2,078 and $1,189, respectively,
per pupil. 1 New York State Commission on the Quality, Cost, and
Financing of Elementary and Secondary Education, Fleischmann Report
58 (1973).
"A further glaring inequity resulting from the current systems
of school finance is that variations in per pupil expenditures
among school districts tend to be inversely related to educational
need. City students, with greater than average educational
deficiencies, consistently have less money spent on their education
and have higher pupil/teacher ratios than do their high-income
counterparts in the favored schools of suburbia."
Glickstem & Want, Inequality in School Financing: The Role
of the Law, 25 Stan.L.Rev. 335, 338 (1973).
[
Footnote 3/12]
Cities face an especially difficult problem in paying the cost
of education, since they have the "municipal overburden" which
results from greater costs for health, public safety, sanitation,
public works, transportation, public welfare, public housing, and
recreation. Because of municipal overburden, cities on the average
devote only about 30% of their budgets to their schools. This
compares with the over 50% which is spent on schools by the
suburbs. J. Berke & J. Callahan, Inequities in School Finance
(1971), reprinted in Senate Select Committee on Equal Educational
Opportunity, 92d Cong., 2d Sess., Report on Issues in School
Finance 129, 142 (Comm.Print 1972);
see Glickstein &
Want,
supra, 418
U.S. 717fn3/11|>n. 11, at 387.
[
Footnote 3/13]
MR. JUSTICE STEWART indicates that equitable factors weigh in
favor of local school control and the avoidance of administrative
difficulty given the lack of an "inter-district" violation.
Ante at
418 U. S. 755.
It would seem to me that the equities are stronger in favor of the
children of Detroit who have been deprived of their constitutional
right to equal treatment by the State of Michigan.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, MR. JUSTICE
BRENNAN, and MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL join, dissenting.
The District Court and the Court of Appeals found that, over a
long period of years, those in charge of the Michigan public
schools engaged in various practices calculated to effect the
segregation of the Detroit school system. The Court does not
question these findings, nor could it reasonably do so. Neither
does it question the obligation of the federal courts to devise a
feasible and effective remedy. But it promptly cripples the ability
of the judiciary to perform this task, which is of fundamental
importance to our constitutional system, by
Page 418 U. S. 763
fashioning a strict rule that remedies in school cases must stop
at the school district line unless certain other conditions are
met. As applied here, the remedy for unquestioned violations of the
equal protection rights of Detroit's Negroes by the Detroit School
Board and the State of Michigan must be totally confined to the
limits of the school district, and may not reach into adjoining or
surrounding districts unless and until it is proved there has been
some sort of "inter-district violation" -- unless unconstitutional
actions of the Detroit School Board have had a segregative impact
on other districts, or unless the segregated condition of the
Detroit schools has itself been influenced by segregative practices
in those surrounding districts into which it is proposed to extend
the remedy.
Regretfully, and for several reasons, I can join neither the
Court's judgment nor its opinion. The core of my disagreement is
that deliberate acts of segregation and their consequences will go
unremedied not because a remedy would be infeasible or unreasonable
in terms of the usual criteria governing school desegregation
cases, but because an effective remedy would cause what the Court
considers to be undue administrative inconvenience to the State.
The result is that the State of Michigan, the entity at which the
Fourteenth Amendment is directed, has successfully insulated itself
from its duty to provide effective desegregation remedies by
vesting sufficient power over its public schools in its local
school districts. If this is the case in Michigan, it will be the
case in most States.
There are undoubted practical as well as legal limits to the
remedial powers of federal courts in school desegregation cases.
The Court has made it clear that the achievement of any particular
degree of racial balance in the school system is not required by
the Constitution;
Page 418 U. S. 764
nor may it be the primary focus of a court in devising an
acceptable remedy for
de jure segregation. A variety of
procedures and techniques are available to a district court
engrossed in fashioning remedies in a case such as this; but the
courts must keep in mind that they are dealing with the process of
educating the young, including the very young. The task is
not to devise a system of pains and penalties to punish
constitutional violations brought to light. Rather, it is to
desegregate an
educational system in which the races have
been kept apart without, at the same time, losing sight of the
central
educational function of the schools.
Viewed in this light, remedies calling for school zoning,
pairing, and pupil assignments, become more and more suspect as
they require that schoolchildren spend more and more time in buses
going to and from school and that more and more educational dollars
be diverted to transportation systems. Manifestly, these
considerations are of immediate and urgent concern when the issue
is the desegregation of a city school system where residential
patterns are predominantly segregated and the respective areas
occupied by blacks and whites are heavily populated and
geographically extensive. Thus, if one postulates a metropolitan
school system covering a sufficiently large area, with the
population evenly divided between whites and Negroes and with the
races occupying identifiable residential areas, there will be very
real practical limits on the extent to which racially identifiable
schools can be eliminated within the school district. It is also
apparent that the larger the proportion of Negroes in the area, the
more difficult it would be to avoid having a substantial number of
all-black or nearly all-black schools.
The Detroit school district is both large and heavily populated.
It covers 139.6 square miles, encircles two
Page 418 U. S. 765
entirely separate cities and school districts, and surrounds a
third city on three sides. Also, whites and Negroes live in
identifiable areas in the city. The 1970 public school enrollment
in the city school district totaled 289,763 and was 63.6 Negro and
34.8 white. [
Footnote 4/1] If
"racial balance" were achieved in every school in the district,
each school would be approximately 64% Negro. A remedy confined to
the district could achieve no more desegregation. Furthermore, the
proposed intra-city remedies were beset with practical problems.
None of the plans limited to the school district was satisfactory
to the District Court. The most promising proposal, submitted by
respondents, who were the plaintiffs in the District Court, would
"leave many of its schools 75 to 90 percent Black." 484 F.2d 215,
244 (CA6 1973). [
Footnote 4/2]
Transportation on a "vast scale" would be required; 900 buses would
have to be purchased for the transportation of pupils who are not
now bused.
Id. at 243. The District Court also found that
the plan "would change a school system which is now Black and White
to one that would be perceived as Black, thereby increasing the
flight of Whites from the city and the system, thereby increasing
the Black student population."
Id. at 244. For the
District Court,
"[t]he conclusion, under the evidence in this case, is
inescapable that relief of segregation in the public schools of
the
Page 418 U. S. 766
City of Detroit cannot be accomplished within the corporate
geographical limits of the city."
Ibid.
The District Court therefore considered extending its remedy to
the suburbs. After hearings, it concluded that a much more
effective desegregation plan could be implemented if the suburban
districts were included. In proceeding to design its plan on the
basis that student bus rides to and from school should not exceed
40 minutes each way as a general matter, the court's express
finding was that,
"[f]or all the reasons stated heretofore -- including time,
distance, and transportation factors -- desegregation within the
area described is physically easier and more practicable and
feasible than desegregation efforts limited to the corporate
geographic limits of the city of Detroit."
345 F.
Supp. 914, 930 (ED Mich.1972).
The Court of Appeals agreed with the District Court that the
remedy must extend beyond the city limits of Detroit. It concluded
that,
"[i]n the instant case, the
only feasible desegregation
plan involves the crossing of the boundary lines between the
Detroit School District and adjacent or nearby school districts for
the limited purpose of providing an effective desegregation
plan."
484 F.2d at 249. (Emphasis added.) It also agreed that
"any Detroit-only desegregation plan will lead directly to a
single segregated Detroit school district overwhelmingly black in
all of its schools, surrounded by a ring of suburbs and suburban
school districts overwhelmingly white in composition in a State in
which the racial composition is 87 per cent white and 13 per cent
black."
Ibid. There was
"more than ample support for the District Judge's findings of
unconstitutional segregation by race resulting in major part from
action and inaction of public authorities, both local and State. .
. . Under this record, a remedial order of a court of equity which
left the Detroit school system overwhelmingly black (for the
foreseeable
Page 418 U. S. 767
future) surrounded by suburban school systems overwhelmingly
white cannot correct the constitutional violations herein
found."
Id. at 250. To conclude otherwise, the Court of Appeals
announced, would call up "haunting memories of the now long
overruled and discredited
separate but equal doctrine' of
Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U. S. 537 . .
. (1896)," and "would be opening a way to nullify Brown v.
Board of Education, which overruled Plessy. . . ."
484 F.2d at 249.
This Court now reverses the Court of Appeals. It does not
question the District Court's findings that any feasible
Detroit-only plan would leave many schools 75 to 90 percent black,
and that the district would become progressively more black as
whites left the city. Neither does the Court suggest that including
the suburbs in a desegregation plan would be impractical or
infeasible because of educational considerations, because of the
number of children requiring transportation, or because of the
length of their rides. Indeed, the Court leaves unchallenged the
District Court's conclusion that a plan including the suburbs would
be physically easier and more practical and feasible than a
Detroit-only plan. Whereas the most promising Detroit-only plan,
for example, would have entailed the purchase of 900 buses, the
metropolitan plan would involve the acquisition of no more than 350
new vehicles.
Despite the fact that a metropolitan remedy, if the findings of
the District Court accepted by the Court of Appeals are to be
credited, would more effectively desegregate the Detroit schools,
would prevent resegregation, [
Footnote
4/3] and would be easier and more feasible from many
Page 418 U. S. 768
standpoints, the Court fashions out of whole cloth an arbitrary
rule that remedies for constitutional violations occurring in a
single Michigan school district must stop at the school district
line. Apparently, no matter how much less burdensome or more
effective and efficient in many respects, such as transportation,
the metropolitan plan might be, the school district line may not be
crossed. Otherwise, it seems, there would be too much disruption of
the Michigan scheme for managing its educational system, too much
confusion, and too much administrative burden.
The District Court, on the scene and familiar with local
conditions, had a wholly different view. The Court of Appeals also
addressed itself at length to matters of local law and to the
problems that inter-district remedies might present to the State of
Michigan. Its conclusion, flatly contrary to that of this Court,
was that "the constitutional right to equality before the law [is
not] hemmed in by the boundaries of a school district," and that an
inter-district remedy
"is supported by the status of school districts under Michigan
law and by the historical control exercised over local school
districts by the legislature of Michigan and by State agencies and
officials. . . . [I]t is well established under the Constitution
and laws of Michigan that the public school system is a State
function and that local school districts are instrumentalities of
the State created for administrative convenience. [
Footnote 4/4]"
484 F.2d at 245-246.
Page 418 U. S. 769
I am surprised that the Court, sitting at this distance from the
State of Michigan, claims better insight than the Court of Appeals
and the District Court as to whether an inter-district remedy for
equal protection violations practiced by the State of Michigan
would involve undue difficulties for the State in the management of
its public schools. In the area of what constitutes an acceptable
desegregation plan,
"we must of necessity rely to a large extent, as this Court has
for more than 16 years, on the informed judgment of the district
courts in the first instance and on courts of appeal."
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education,
402 U. S. 1,
402 U. S. 28
(1971). Obviously, whatever difficulties there might be, they are
surmountable, for the Court itself concedes that, had there been
sufficient evidence of an inter-district violation, the District
Court could have fashioned a single remedy for the districts
implicated, rather than a different remedy for each district
Page 418 U. S. 770
in which the violation had occurred or had an impact. I am even
more mystified as to how the Court can ignore the legal reality
that the constitutional violations, even if occurring locally, were
committed by governmental entities for which the State is
responsible, and that it is the State that must respond to the
command of the Fourteenth Amendment. An inter-district remedy for
the infringements that occurred in this case is well within the
confines and powers of the State, which is the governmental entity
ultimately responsible for desegregating its schools. The Michigan
Supreme Court has observed that "[t]he school district is a State
agency,"
Attorney General ex rel. Kies v. Lowrey, 131
Mich. 639, 644, 92 N.W. 289, 290 (1902), and that
"'[e]ducation in Michigan belongs to the State. It is no part of
the local self-government inherent in the township or municipality,
except so far as the legislature may choose to make it such. The
Constitution has turned the whole subject over to the legislature.
. . .'"
Attorney General ex rel. Zacharulis v. Detroit Board of
Education, 154 Mich. 584, 590, 118 N.W. 606, 609 (1908).
It is unnecessary to catalogue at length the various public
misdeeds found by the District Court and the Court of Appeals to
have contributed to the present segregation of the Detroit public
schools. The legislature contributed directly by enacting a statute
overriding a partial high school desegregation plan voluntarily
adopted by the Detroit Board of Education. Indirectly, the trial
court found the State was accountable for the thinly disguised,
pervasive acts of segregation committed by the Detroit Board,
[
Footnote 4/5] for Detroit's school
construction
Page 418 U. S. 771
plans that would promote segregation, and for the Detroit school
district's not having funds for pupil transportation within the
district. The State was also chargeable with responsibility for the
transportation of Negro high school students in the late 1950's
from the suburban Ferndale School District, past closer suburban
and Detroit high schools with predominantly white student bodies,
to a predominantly Negro high school within Detroit.
Swann v.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education, supra, at
402 U. S. 20-21,
and
Keyes v. School District No. 1, Denver, Colorado,
413 U. S. 189
(1973), make abundantly clear that the tactics employed by the
Detroit Board of Education, a local instrumentality of the State,
violated the constitutional rights of the Negro students in
Detroit's public schools and required equitable relief sufficient
to accomplish the maximum, practical desegregation within the power
of the political body against which the Fourteenth Amendment
directs its proscriptions. No "State" may deny any individual the
equal protection of the laws; and if the Constitution and the
Supremacy Clause are to have any substance at all, the courts must
be free to devise workable remedies against the political entity
with the effective power to determine local choice. It is also the
case here that the State's legislative interdiction of Detroit's
voluntary effort to desegregate its school system was
unconstitutional.
See North Carolina State Board of Education
v. Swann, 402 U. S. 43
(1971).
The Court draws the remedial line at the Detroit school district
boundary, even though the Fourteenth Amendment is addressed to the
State and even though
Page 418 U. S. 772
the
State denies equal protection of the laws when its
public agencies, acting in its behalf, invidiously discriminate.
The State's default is "the condition that offends the
Constitution,"
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of
Education, supra, at
402 U. S. 16, and
state officials may therefore be ordered to take the necessary
measures to completely eliminate from the Detroit public schools
"all vestiges of state-imposed segregation."
Id. at
402 U. S. 15. I
cannot understand, nor does the majority satisfactorily explain,
why a federal court may not order an appropriate inter-district
remedy if this is necessary or more effective to accomplish this
constitutionally mandated task. As the Court unanimously observed
in
Swann:
"Once a right and a violation have been shown, the scope of a
district court's equitable powers to remedy past wrongs is broad,
for breadth and flexibility are inherent in equitable
remedies."
Ibid. In this case, both the right and the State's
Fourteenth Amendment violation have concededly been fully
established, and there is no acceptable reason for permitting the
party responsible for the constitutional violation to contain the
remedial powers of the federal court within administrative
boundaries over which the transgressor itself has plenary
power.
The unwavering decisions of this Court over the past 20 years
support the assumption of the Court of Appeals that the District
Court's remedial power does not cease at the school district line.
The Court's first formulation of the remedial principles to be
followed in disestablishing racially discriminatory school systems
recognized the variety of problems arising from different local
school conditions and the necessity for that "practical
flexibility" traditionally associated with courts of equity.
Brown v. Board of Education, 349 U.
S. 294,
349 U. S.
299-301 (1955) (
Brown II). Indeed, the district
courts to which
Page 418 U. S. 773
the
Brown cases were remanded for the formulation of
remedial decrees were specifically instructed that they might
consider,
inter alia,
"revision of school districts and attendance areas into compact
units to achieve a system of determining admission to the public
schools on a nonracial basis. . . ."
Id. at
349 U. S.
300-301. The malady addressed in
Brown II was
the state-wide policy of requiring or permitting school segregation
on the basis of race, while the record here concerns segregated
schools only in the city of Detroit. The obligation to rectify the
unlawful condition nevertheless rests on the State. The permissible
revision of school districts contemplated in
Brown II
rested on the State's responsibility for desegregating its
unlawfully segregated schools, not on any segregative effect which
the condition of segregation in one school district might have had
on the schools of a neighboring district. The same situation
obtains here, and the same remedial power is available to the
District Court.
Later cases reinforced the clearly essential rules that state
officials are fully answerable for unlawfully caused conditions of
school segregation which can effectively be controlled only by
steps beyond the authority of local school districts to take, and
that the equity power of the district courts includes the ability
to order such measures implemented. When the highest officials of
the State of Arkansas impeded a federal court order to desegregate
the public schools under the immediate jurisdiction of the Little
Rock School Board, this Court refused to accept the local board's
assertion of its good faith as a legal excuse for delay in
implementing the desegregation order. The Court emphasized that,
"from the point of view of the Fourteenth Amendment, they [the
local school board members] stand in this litigation as the agents
of the State."
Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U. S.
1,
358 U. S. 16
(1958). Perhaps
Page 418 U. S. 774
more importantly for present purposes, the Court went on to
state:
"The record before us clearly establishes that the growth of the
Board's difficulties to a magnitude beyond its unaided power to
control is the product of state action. Those difficulties . . .
can also be brought under control by state action."
Ibid. See also Griffin v. School Board,
377 U. S. 218,
377 U. S. 228,
377 U. S.
233-234 (1964).
In the context of dual school systems, the Court subsequently
made clear the
"affirmative duty to take whatever steps might be necessary to
convert to a unitary system in which racial discrimination would be
eliminated root and branch,"
and to come forward with a desegregation plan that "promises
realistically to work
now." Green v. County School Board
of New Kent County,
391 U. S. 430,
391 U. S.
437-438, 439 (1968). "Freedom of choice" plans were
rejected as acceptable desegregation measures where "reasonably
available other ways . . . promising speedier and more effective
conversion to a unitary, nonracial school system . . ." exist.
Id. at
391 U. S. 441.
Imperative insistence on immediate full desegregation of dual
school systems "to operate now and hereafter only unitary schools"
was reiterated in
Alexander v. Holmes County Board of
Education, 396 U. S. 19,
396 U. S. 20
(1969), and
Carter v. West Feliciana Parish School Board,
396 U. S. 290
(1970).
The breadth of the equitable authority of the district courts to
accomplish these comprehensive tasks was reaffirmed in much greater
detail in
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education,
supra, and the companion case of
Davis v. School Comm'rs
of Mobile County, 402 U. S. 33
(1971), where there was unanimous assent to the following
propositions:
"Having once found a violation, the district judge or school
authorities should make every effort to
Page 418 U. S. 775
achieve the greatest possible degree of actual desegregation,
taking into account the practicalities of the situation. A district
court may and should consider the use of all available techniques
including restructuring of attendance zones and both contiguous and
noncontiguous attendance zones. . . . The measure of any
desegregation plan is its effectiveness."
Id. at
402 U. S. 37. No
suggestion was made that inter-district relief was not an available
technique. In
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of
Education itself, the Court, without dissent, recognized that
the District Judge, in fulfilling his obligation to
"make every effort to achieve the greatest possible degree of
actual desegregation[,] will thus necessarily be concerned with the
elimination of one-race schools."
402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 26. Nor
was there any dispute that, to break up the dual school system, it
was within the District Court's "broad remedial powers" to employ a
"frank -- and sometimes drastic -- gerrymandering of school
districts and attendance zones," as well as "pairing,
clustering,' or `grouping' of schools," to desegregate the
"formerly all-Negro schools," despite the fact that these zones
might not be compact or contiguous and might be "on opposite ends
of the city." Id. at 402 U. S. 27. The
school board in that case had jurisdiction over a 550-square-mile
area encompassing the city of Charlotte and surrounding Mecklenburg
County, North Carolina. The Mobile County, Alabama, board in
Davis embraced a 1,248-square-mile area, including the
city of Mobile. Yet the Court approved the District Court's
authority to award county-wide relief in each case in order to
accomplish desegregation of the dual school system.
Even more recently, the Court specifically rejected the claim
that a new school district, which admittedly would operate a
unitary school system within its borders, was beyond the reach of a
court-ordered desegregation plan
Page 418 U. S. 776
for other school districts, where the effectiveness of the plan
as to the other districts depended upon the availability of the
facilities and student population of the new district. In
Wright v. Council of the City of Emporia, 407 U.
S. 451,
407 U. S. 470
(1972), we held "that a new school district may not be created
where its effect would be to impede the process of dismantling a
dual system." MR. JUSTICE STEWART's opinion for the Court made
clear that, if a proposal to erect new district boundary lines
"would impede the dismantling of the [preexisting] dual system,
then a district court, in the exercise of its remedial discretion,
may enjoin it from being carried out."
Id. at
407 U. S. 460.
In
United States v. Scotland Neck Board of Education,
407 U. S. 484
(1972), this same standard was applied to forbid North Carolina
from creating a new city school district within a larger district
which was in the process of dismantling a dual school system. The
Court noted that, if establishment of the new district were
permitted, the "traditional racial identities of the schools in the
area would be maintained,"
id. at
407 U. S.
490
Until today, the permissible contours of the equitable authority
of the district courts to remedy the unlawful establishment of a
dual school system have been extensive, adaptable, and fully
responsive to the ultimate goal of achieving "the greatest possible
degree of actual desegregation." There are indeed limitations on
the equity powers of the federal judiciary, but, until now, the
Court has not accepted the proposition that effective enforcement
of the Fourteenth Amendment could be limited by political or
administrative boundary lines demarcated by the very State
responsible for the constitutional violation and for the
disestablishment of the dual system. Until now, the Court has
instead looked to practical considerations in effectuating a
desegregation
Page 418 U. S. 777
decree such as excessive distance, transportation time, and
hazards to the safety of the schoolchildren involved in a proposed
plan. That these broad principles have developed in the context of
dual school systems compelled or authorized by state statute at the
time of
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.
S. 483 (1954) (
Brown I), does not lessen their
current applicability to dual systems found to exist in other
contexts, like that, in Detroit, where intentional school
segregation does not stem from the compulsion of state law, but
from deliberate individual actions of local and state school
authorities directed at a particular school system. The majority
properly does not suggest that the duty to eradicate completely the
resulting dual system in the latter context is any less than in the
former. But its reason for incapacitating the remedial authority of
the federal judiciary in the presence of school district perimeters
in the latter context is not readily apparent.
The result reached by the Court certainly cannot be supported by
the theory that the configuration of local governmental units is
immune from alteration when necessary to redress constitutional
violations. In addition to the well established principles already
noted, the Court has elsewhere required the public bodies of a
State to restructure the State's political subdivisions to remedy
infringements of the constitutional rights of certain members of
its populace, notably in the reapportionment cases. In
Reynolds
v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533
(1964), for example, which held that equal protection of the laws
demands that the seats in both houses of a bicameral state
legislature be apportioned on a population basis, thus
necessitating wholesale revision of Alabama's voting districts, the
Court remarked:
"Political subdivisions of States -- counties, cities, or
whatever -- never were and never have been considered
Page 418 U. S. 778
as sovereign entities. Rather, they have been traditionally
regarded as subordinate governmental instrumentalities created by
the State to assist in the carrying out of state governmental
functions."
Id. at
377 U.S.
575. And even more pointedly, the Court declared in
Gomillion v. Lightfoot, 364 U. S. 339,
364 U. S.
344-345 (1960), that
"[l]egislative control of municipalities, no less than other
state power, lies within the scope of relevant limitations imposed
by the United States Constitution."
Nor does the Court's conclusion follow from the talismanic
invocation of the desirability of local control over education.
Local autonomy over school affairs, in the sense of the community's
participation in the decisions affecting the education of its
children, is, of course, an important interest. But presently
constituted school district lines do not delimit fixed and
unchangeable areas of a local educational community. If
restructuring is required to meet constitutional requirements,
local authority may simply be redefined in terms of whatever
configuration is adopted, with the parents of the children
attending schools in the newly demarcated district or attendance
zone continuing their participation in the policy management of the
schools with which they are concerned most directly. The majority's
suggestion that judges should not attempt to grapple with the
administrative problems attendant on a reorganization of school
attendance patterns is wholly without foundation. It is precisely
this sort of task which the district courts have been properly
exercising to vindicate the constitutional rights of Negro students
since
Brown I and which the Court has never suggested they
lack the capacity to perform. Intra-district revisions of
attendance zones, and pairing and grouping of schools, are
techniques unanimously approved in
Swann v.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg
Page 418 U. S. 779
Board of Education which entail the same sensitivity to
the interest of parents in the education their children receive as
would an inter-district plan which is likely to employ the very
same methods. There is no reason to suppose that the District
Court, which has not yet adopted a final plan of desegregation,
would not be as capable of giving or as likely to give sufficient
weight to the interest in community participation in schools in an
inter-district setting, consistent with the dictates of the
Fourteenth Amendment. The majority's assumption that the District
Court would act otherwise is a radical departure from the practical
flexibility previously left to the equity powers of the federal
judiciary.
Finally, I remain wholly unpersuaded by the Court's assertion
that
"the remedy is necessarily designed, as all remedies are, to
restore the victims of discriminatory conduct to the position they
would have occupied in the absence of such conduct."
Ante at
418 U. S. 746.
In the first place, under this premise, the Court's judgment is
itself infirm; for had the Detroit school system not followed an
official policy of segregation throughout the 1950's and 1960's,
Negroes and whites would have been going to school together. There
would have been no, or at least not as many, recognizable Negro
schools, and no, or at least not as many, white schools, but "just
schools," and neither Negroes nor whites would have suffered from
the effects of segregated education, with all its shortcomings.
Surely the Court's remedy will not restore to the Negro community,
stigmatized as it was by the dual school system, what it would have
enjoyed over all or most of this period if the remedy is confined
to present day Detroit; for the maximum remedy available within
that area will leave many of the schools almost totally black, and
the system itself will be predominantly black, and will become
increasingly so. Moreover, when a State has engaged in acts of
official segregation over a lengthy
Page 418 U. S. 780
period of time, as in the case before us, it is unrealistic to
suppose that the children who were victims of the State's
unconstitutional
brk:
conduct could now be provided the benefits of which they were
wrongfully deprived. Nor can the benefits which accrue to school
systems in which schoolchildren have not been officially
segregated, and to the communities supporting such school systems,
be fully and immediately restored after a substantial period of
unlawful segregation. The education of children of different races
in a desegregated environment has unhappily been lost, along with
the social, economic, and political advantages which accompany a
desegregated school system as compared with an unconstitutionally
segregated system. It is for these reasons that the Court has
consistently followed the course of requiring the effects of past
official segregation to be eliminated "root and branch" by
imposing, in the present, the duty to provide a remedy which will
achieve "the greatest possible degree of actual desegregation,
taking into account the practicalities of the situation." It is
also for these reasons that, once a constitutional violation has
been found, the district judge obligated to provide such a remedy
"will thus necessarily be concerned with the elimination of
one-race schools." These concerns were properly taken into account
by the District Judge in this case. Confining the remedy to the
boundaries of the Detroit district is quite unrelated either to the
goal of achieving maximum desegregation or to those intensely
practical considerations, such as the extent and expense of
transportation, that have imposed limits on remedies in cases such
as this. The Court's remedy, in the end, is essentially arbitrary
and will leave serious violations of the Constitution substantially
unremedied.
I agree with my Brother Douglas that the Court of Appeals has
acted responsibly in these cases. Regrettably,
Page 418 U. S. 781
the majority's arbitrary limitation on the equitable power of
federal district courts, based on the invisible borders of local
school districts, is unrelated to the State's responsibility for
remedying the constitutional wrongs visited upon the Negro
schoolchildren of Detroit. It is oblivious to the potential
benefits of metropolitan relief, to the noneducational communities
of interest among neighborhoods located in and sometimes bridging
different school districts, and to the considerable inter-district
cooperation already existing in various educational areas.
Ultimately, it is unresponsive to the goal of attaining the utmost
actual desegregation consistent with restraints of practicability,
and thus augurs the frequent frustration of the remedial powers of
the federal courts.
Here, the District Court will be forced to impose an intra-city
desegregation plan more expensive to the district, more burdensome
for many of Detroit's Negro students, and surely more conducive to
white flight than a metropolitan plan would be -- all of this
merely to avoid what the Detroit School Board, the District Court,
and the en banc Court of Appeals considered to be the very
manageable and quite surmountable difficulties that would be
involved in extending the desegregation remedy to the suburban
school districts.
I am therefore constrained to record my disagreement and
dissent.
[
Footnote 4/1]
The percentage of Negro pupils in the Detroit student population
rose to 64.9% in 1971, to 67.3% in 1972, and to 69.8% in 1973, amid
a metropolitan school population whose racial composition in 1970
was 81% white and 19% Negro. 5 App. 16; Racial-Ethnic Distribution
of Students and Employees in the Detroit Public Schools, October
1972, and October 1973; 484 F.2d 215, 250.
[
Footnote 4/2]
The District Court's ruling on the Detroit-only desegregation
plans is set out in full by the Court of Appeals,
id. at
242-245, and is not otherwise officially reported.
[
Footnote 4/3]
The Court has previously disapproved the implementation of
proposed desegregation plans which operate to permit resegregation.
Monroe v. Board of Comm'r, 391 U.
S. 450,
391 U. S.
459-460 (1968) ("free transfer" plan).
[
Footnote 4/4]
The Court of Appeals also noted several specific instances of
school district mergers ordered by the State Board of Education for
financial reasons. 484 F.2d at 247. Limitations on the authority,
of local school districts were also outlined by the Court of
Appeals:
"Local school districts, unless they have the approval of the
State Board of Education or the Superintendent of Public
Instruction, cannot consolidate with another school district, annex
territory, divide or attach parts of other districts, borrow monies
in anticipation of State aid, or construct, reconstruct or remodel
school buildings or additions to them."
Id. at 249. (Footnotes and supporting statutory
citations omitted.) And the Court of Appeals properly considered
the State's statutory attempt to undo the adoption of a voluntary
high school desegregation plan by the Detroit Board of Education as
evidencing state control over local school district affairs.
Ibid. Finally, it is also relevant to note that the
District Court found that the school district boundaries in that
segment of the metropolitan area preliminarily designated as the
desegregation area "in general bear no relationship to other
municipal, county, or special district governments, needs or
services," that some educational services are already provided to
students on an inter-district basis requiring their travel from one
district to another, and that local communities in the metropolitan
area share noneducational interests in common, which do not adhere
to school district lines, and have applied metropolitan solutions
to other governmental needs.
345 F.
Supp. 914, 934-935 (ED Mich.1972).
[
Footnote 4/5]
These included the creation and alteration of attendance zones
and feeder patterns from the elementary to the secondary schools in
a manner naturally and predictably perpetuating racial segregation
of students, the transportation of Negro students beyond
predominantly white schools with available space to predominantly
Negro schools, the use of optional attendance areas in
neighborhoods in which Negro families had recently begun to settle
to permit white students to transfer to predominantly white schools
nearer the city limits, and the construction of schools in the
heart of residentially segregated areas, thereby maximizing school
segregation.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, MR. JUSTICE
BRENNAN, and MR. JUSTICE WHITE join, dissenting.
In
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.
S. 483 (1954), this Court held that segregation of
children in public schools on the basis of race deprives minority
group children of equal educational opportunities, and therefore
denies them the equal protection of the laws under the
Page 418 U. S. 782
Fourteenth Amendment. This Court recognized then that remedying
decades of segregation in public education would not be an easy
task. Subsequent events, unfortunately, have seen that prediction
bear bitter fruit. But however imbedded old ways, however ingrained
old prejudices, this Court has not been diverted from its appointed
task of making "a living truth" of our constitutional ideal of
equal justice under law.
Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U. S.
1,
358 U. S. 20
(1958).
After 20 years of small, often difficult steps toward that great
end, the Court today takes a giant step backwards. Notwithstanding
a record showing widespread and pervasive racial segregation in the
educational system provided by the State of Michigan for children
in Detroit, this Court holds that the District Court was powerless
to require the State to remedy its constitutional violation in any
meaningful fashion. Ironically purporting to base its result on the
principle that the scope of the remedy in a desegregation case
should be determined by the nature and the extent of the
constitutional violation, the Court's answer is to provide no
remedy at all for the violation proved in this case, thereby
guaranteeing that Negro children in Detroit will receive the same
separate and inherently unequal education in the future as they
have been unconstitutionally afforded in the past.
I cannot subscribe to this emasculation of our constitutional
guarantee of equal protection of the laws, and must respectfully
dissent. Our precedents, in my view, firmly establish that where,
as here, state-imposed segregation has been demonstrated, it
becomes the duty of the State to eliminate root and branch all
vestiges of racial discrimination and to achieve the greatest
possible degree of actual desegregation. I agree with both the
District Court and the Court of Appeals that, under the facts of
this case, this duty cannot be fulfilled unless the State
Page 418 U. S. 783
of Michigan involves outlying metropolitan area school districts
in its desegregation remedy. Furthermore, I perceive no basis
either in law or in the practicalities of the situation justifying
the State's interposition of school district boundaries as absolute
barriers to the implementation of an effective desegregation
remedy. Under established and frequently used Michigan procedures,
school district lines are both flexible and permeable for a wide
variety of purposes, and there is no reason why they must now stand
in the way of meaningful desegregation relief.
The rights at issue in this case are too fundamental to be
abridged on grounds as superficial as those relied on by the
majority today. We deal here with the right of all of our children,
whatever their race, to an equal start in life and to an equal
opportunity to reach their full potential as citizens. Those
children who have been denied that right in the past deserve better
than to see fences thrown up to deny them that right in the future.
Our Nation, I fear, will be ill-served by the Court's refusal to
remedy separate and unequal education, for unless our children
begin to learn together, there is little hope that our people will
ever learn to live together.
I
The great irony of the Court's opinion and, in my view, its most
serious analytical flaw, may be gleaned from its concluding
sentence, in which the Court remands for
"prompt formulation of a decree directed to eliminating the
segregation found to exist in Detroit city schools, a remedy which
has been delayed since 1970."
Ante at
418 U. S. 753.
The majority, however, seems to have forgotten the District Court's
explicit finding that a Detroit-only decree, the only remedy
permitted under today's decision, "would not accomplish
desegregation."
Page 418 U. S. 784
Nowhere in the Court's opinion does the majority confront, let
alone respond to, the District Court's conclusion that a remedy
limited to the city of Detroit would not effectively desegregate
the Detroit city schools. I, for one, find the District Court's
conclusion well supported by the record, and its analysis compelled
by our prior cases. Before turning to these questions, however, it
is best to begin by laying to rest some mischaracterizations in the
Court's opinion with respect to the basis for the District Court's
decision to impose a metropolitan remedy.
The Court maintains that, while the initial focus of this
lawsuit was the condition of segregation within the Detroit city
schools, the District Court abruptly shifted focus in mid-course
and altered its theory of the case. This new theory, in the
majority's words, was "equating racial imbalance with a
constitutional violation calling for a remedy."
Ante at
418 U. S. 741
n.19. As the following review of the District Court's handling of
the case demonstrates, however, the majority's characterization is
totally inaccurate. Nowhere did the District Court indicate that
racial imbalance between school districts in the Detroit
metropolitan area or within the Detroit School District constituted
a constitutional violation calling for inter-district relief. The
focus of this case was from the beginning, and has remained, the
segregated system of education in the Detroit city schools and the
steps necessary to cure that condition which offends the Fourteenth
Amendment.
The District Court's consideration of this case began with its
finding, which the majority accepts, that the State of Michigan,
through its instrumentality, the Detroit Board of Education,
engaged in widespread purposeful acts of racial segregation in the
Detroit School District. Without belaboring the details, it is
sufficient to
Page 418 U. S. 785
note that the various techniques used in Detroit were typical of
methods employed to segregate students by race in areas where no
statutory dual system of education has existed.
See, e.g.,
Keyes v. School District No. 1, Denver, Colorado, 413 U.
S. 189 (1973). Exacerbating the effects of extensive
residential segregation between Negroes and whites, the school
board consciously drew attendance zones along lines which maximized
the segregation of the races in schools as well. Optional
attendance zones were created for neighborhoods undergoing racial
transition so as to allow whites in these areas to escape
integration. Negro students in areas with overcrowded schools were
transported past or away from closer white schools with available
space to more distant Negro schools. Grade structures and
feeder-school patterns were created and maintained in a manner
which had the foreseeable and actual effect of keeping Negro and
white pupils in separate schools. Schools were also constructed in
locations and in sizes which ensured that they would open with
predominantly one-race student bodies. In sum, the evidence adduced
below showed that Negro children had been intentionally confined to
an expanding core of virtually all-Negro schools immediately
surrounded by a receding band of all-white schools.
Contrary to the suggestions in the Court's opinion, the basis
for affording a desegregation remedy in this case was not some
perceived racial imbalance either between schools within a single
school district or between independent school districts. What we
confront here is "a systematic program of segregation affecting a
substantial portion of the students, schools . . . and facilities
within the school system. . . ."
Id. at
413 U. S. 201.
The constitutional violation found here was not some
de
facto racial imbalance, but rather the purposeful,
intentional, massive,
de jure segregation of the Detroit
city schools,
Page 418 U. S. 786
which, under our decision in
Keyes, forms "a predicate
for a finding of the existence of a dual school system,"
ibid., and justifies "all-out desegregation"
Id.
at
413 U. S.
214.
Having found a
de jure segregated public school system
in operation in the city of Detroit, the District Court turned next
to consider which officials and agencies should be assigned the
affirmative obligation to cure the constitutional violation. The
court concluded that responsibility for the segregation in the
Detroit city schools rested not only with the Detroit Board of
Education, but belonged to the State of Michigan itself and the
state defendants in this case -- that is, the Governor of Michigan,
the Attorney General, the State Board of Education, and the State
Superintendent of Public Instruction. While the validity of this
conclusion will merit more extensive analysis below, suffice it for
now to say that it was based on three considerations. First, the
evidence at trial showed that the State itself had taken actions
contributing to the segregation within the Detroit schools. Second,
since the Detroit Board of Education was an agency of the State of
Michigan, its acts of racial discrimination were acts of the State
for purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment. Finally, the District
Court found that, under Michigan law and practice, the system of
education was, in fact, a state school system, characterized by
relatively little local control and a large degree of centralized
state regulation, with respect to both educational policy and the
structure and operation of school district.
Having concluded, then, that the school system in the city of
Detroit was a
de jure segregated system and that the State
of Michigan had the affirmative duty to remedy that condition of
segregation, the District Court then turned to the difficult task
of devising an effective remedy. It bears repeating that the
District Court's focus at this stage of the litigation remained
what it had
Page 418 U. S. 787
been at the beginning -- the condition of segregation within the
Detroit city schools. As the District Court stated:
"From the initial ruling [on segregation] to this day, the basis
of the proceedings has been and remains the violation:
de
jure school segregation. . . . The task before this court,
therefore, is now, and . . . has always been, how to desegregate
the Detroit public schools."
The District Court first considered three desegregation plans
limited to the geographical boundaries of the city of Detroit. All
were rejected as ineffective to desegregate the Detroit city
schools. Specifically, the District Court determined that the
racial composition of the Detroit student body is such that
implementation of any Detroit-only plan "would clearly make the
entire Detroit public school system racially identifiable as Black"
and would "leave many of its schools 75 to 90 percent Black." The
District Court also found that a Detroit-only plan
"would change a school system which is now Black and White to
one that would be perceived as Black, thereby increasing the flight
of Whites from the city and the system, thereby increasing the
Black student population."
Based on these findings, the District Court reasoned that
"relief of segregation in the public schools of the City of Detroit
cannot be accomplished within the corporate geographical limits of
the city" because a Detroit-only decree "would accentuate the
racial identifiability of the district as a Black school system,
and would not accomplish desegregation." The District Court
therefore concluded that it "must look beyond the limits of the
Detroit school district for a solution to the problem of
segregation in the Detroit public schools. . . ."
In seeking to define the appropriate scope of that expanded
desegregation area, however, the District Court continued to
maintain as its sole focus the condition shown to violate the
Constitution in this case -- the segregation of the Detroit school
system. As it stated, the
Page 418 U. S. 788
primary question
"remains the determination of the area necessary and practicable
effectively to eliminate 'root and branch' the effects of
state-imposed and supported segregation and to desegregate the
Detroit public schools."
There is simply no foundation in the record, then, for the
majority's accusation that the only basis for the District Court's
order was some desire to achieve a racial balance in the Detroit
metropolitan area. [
Footnote 5/1]
In fact, just the contrary is the case. In considering proposed
desegregation areas, the District Court had occasion to criticize
one of the State's proposals specifically because it had no basis
other than its "particular racial ratio," and did not focus on
"relevant factors, like eliminating racially identifiable schools
[and] accomplishing maximum actual desegregation of the Detroit
public schools." Similarly, in rejecting the Detroit School Board's
proposed desegregation area, even though it included more all-white
districts and therefore achieved a higher white-Negro ratio, the
District Court commented:
"There is nothing in the record which suggests that these
districts need be included in the desegregation area in order to
disestablish the racial
Page 418 U. S. 789
identifiabiity of the Detroit public schools. From the evidence,
the primary reason for the Detroit School Board's interest in the
inclusion of these school districts is not racial desegregation,
but to increase the average socio-economic balance of all the
schools in the abutting regions and clusters."
The Court also misstates the basis for the District Court's
order by suggesting that, since the only segregation proved at
trial was within the Detroit school system, any relief which
extended beyond the jurisdiction of the Detroit Board of Education
would be inappropriate because it would impose a remedy on outlying
districts "not shown to have committed any constitutional
violation."
Ante at
418 U. S. 745.
[
Footnote 5/2] The essential
foundation of inter-district relief in this case was not to correct
conditions within outlying districts which themselves engaged in
purposeful segregation. Instead, inter-district relief was seen as
a necessary part of any meaningful effort by the State of Michigan
to remedy the state caused segregation within the city of
Detroit.
Rather than consider the propriety of inter-district relief on
this basis, however, the Court has conjured up a largely fictional
account of what the District Court was attempting to accomplish.
With all due respect, the Court, in my view, does a great
disservice to the District Judge who labored long and hard with
this complex litigation by accusing him of changing horses in
midstream and shifting the focus of this case from the pursuit of a
remedy for the condition of segregation
Page 418 U. S. 790
within the Detroit school system to some unprincipled attempt to
impose his own philosophy of racial balance on the entire Detroit
metropolitan area.
See ante at
418 U. S.
738-739. The focus of this case has always been the
segregated system of education in the city of Detroit. The District
Court determined that inter-district relief was necessary and
appropriate only because it found that the condition of segregation
within the Detroit school system could not b cured with a
Detroit-only remedy. It is on this theory that the inter-district
relief must stand or fall. Unlike the Court, I perceive my task to
be to review the District Court's order for what it is, rather than
to criticize it for what it manifestly is not.
II
As the foregoing demonstrates, the District Court's decision to
expand its desegregation decree beyond the geographical limits of
the city of Detroit rested in large part on its conclusions (A)
that the State of Michigan was ultimately responsible for curing
the condition of segregation within the Detroit city schools, and
(b) that a Detroit-only remedy would not accomplish this task. In
my view, both of these conclusions are well supported by the facts
of this case and by this Court's precedents.
A
To begin with, the record amply supports the District Court's
findings that the State of Michigan, through state officers and
state agencies, had engaged in purposeful acts which created or
aggravated segregation in the Detroit schools. The State Board of
Education, for example, prior to 1962, exercised its authority to
supervise local schoolsite selection in a manner which contributed
to segregation. 484 F.2d 215, 238 (CA6 1973). Furthermore, the
State's continuing authority, after 1962,
Page 418 U. S. 791
to approve school building construction plans [
Footnote 5/3] had intertwined the State with site
selection decisions of the Detroit Board of Education which had the
purpose and effect of maintaining segregation.
The State had also stood in the way of past efforts to
desegregate the Detroit city schools. In 1970, for example, the
Detroit School Board had begun implementation of its own
desegregation plan for its high schools, despite considerable
public and official resistance. The State Legislature intervened by
enacting Act 48 of the Public Acts of 1970, specifically
prohibiting implementation of the desegregation plan and thereby
continuing the growing segregation of the Detroit school system.
Adequate desegregation of the Detroit system was also hampered by
discriminatory restrictions placed by the State on the use of
transportation within Detroit. While state aid for transportation
was provided by statute for suburban districts, many of which were
highly urbanized, aid for intra-city transportation was excepted.
One of the effects of this restriction was to encourage the
construction of small walk-in neighborhood schools in Detroit,
thereby lending aid to the intentional policy of creating a school
system which reflected, to the greatest extent feasible, extensive
residential segregation. Indeed, that one of the purposes of the
transportation restriction was to impede desegregation was
evidenced when the Michigan Legislature amended the State
Transportation Aid Act to cover intra-city transportation but
expressly prohibited the allocation of funds for cross-busing of
students within a school district to achieve racial balance.
[
Footnote 5/4]
Cf. North
Carolina State Board of Education v. Swann, 402 U. S.
43 (1971).
Page 418 U. S. 792
Also significant was the State's involvement during the 1950's
in the transportation of Negro high school students from the Carver
School District past a closer white high school in the Oak Park
District to a more distant Negro high school in the Detroit system.
Certainly the District Court's finding that the State Board of
Education had knowledge of this action and had given its tacit or
express approval was not clearly erroneous. Given the comprehensive
statutory powers of the State Board of Education over contractual
arrangements between school districts in the enrollment of student
on a nonresident tuition basis, including certification of the
number of pupils involved in the transfer and the amount of tuition
charged, over the review of transportation routes and distances,
and over the disbursement of transportation funds, [
Footnote 5/5] the State Board inevitably knew and
understood the significance of this discriminatory act.
Aside from the acts of purposeful segregation committed by the
State Legislature and the State Board of Education, the District
Court also concluded that the State was responsible for the many
intentional acts of segregation committed by the Detroit Board of
Education, an agency of the State. The majority is only willing to
accept this finding arguendo.
See ante at
418 U. S. 748.
I have no doubt, however, as to its validity under the Fourteenth
Amendment.
"The command of the Fourteenth Amendment," it should be
recalled, "is that no
state' shall deny to any person within
its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." Cooper v.
Aaron, 358 U. S. 1,
358 U. S. 16
(1958). While a State can act only through "the officers or agents
by whom its powers are exerted," Ex parte Virginia,
100 U. S. 339,
100 U. S. 347
(1880), actions by an agent or officer of
Page 418 U. S. 793
the State are encompassed by the Fourteenth Amendment for, "as
he acts in the name and for the State, and is clothed with the
State's power, his act is that of the State."
Ibid.
See also Cooper v. Aaron, supra; Virginia v. Rives,
100 U. S. 313,
100 U. S. 318
(1880);
Shelley v. Kraemer, 334 U. S.
1,
334 U. S. 14
(1948).
Under Michigan law a "school district is an agency of the State
government."
School District of the City of Lansing v. State
Board of Education, 367 Mich. 591, 600, 116 N.W.2d 866, 870
(1962). It is
"a legal division of territory, created by the State for
educational purposes, to which the State has granted such powers as
are deemed necessary to permit the district to function as a State
agency."
Detroit Board of Education v. Superintendent of Public
Instruction, 319 Mich. 436, 450, 29 N.W.2d 902, 908 (1947).
Racial discrimination by the school district, an agency of the
State, is therefore racial discrimination by the State itself,
forbidden by the Fourteenth Amendment.
See, e.g., Pennsylvania
v. Board of Trusts, 353 U. S. 230
(1957).
We recognized only last Term in
Keyes that it was the
State itself which was ultimately responsible for
de jure
acts of segregation committed by a local school board. A deliberate
policy of segregation by the local board, we held, amounted to
"state-imposed segregation." 413 U.S. at
413 U. S. 200.
Wherever a dual school system exists, whether compelled by state
statute or created by a local board's systematic program of
segregation,
"the
State automatically assumes an affirmative duty
'to effectuate a transition to a racially nondiscriminatory school
system' [and] to eliminate from the public schools within their
school system 'all vestiges of state-imposed segregation.'"
Ibid. (emphasis added).
Vesting responsibility with the State of Michigan for Detroit's
segregated schools is particularly appropriate, as
Page 418 U. S. 794
Michigan, unlike some other States, operates a single state-wide
system of education, rather than several separate and independent
local school systems. The majority's emphasis on local governmental
control and local autonomy of school districts in Michigan will
come as a surprise to those with any familiarity with that State's
system of education. School districts are not separate and distinct
sovereign entities under Michigan law, but, rather, are
"
auxiliaries of the State,'" subject to its "absolute power."
Attorney General of Michigan ex rel. Kies v. Lowrey,
199 U. S. 233,
199 U. S. 240
(1905). The courts of the State have repeatedly emphasized that
education in Michigan is not a local governmental concern, but a
state function.
"Unlike the delegation of other powers by the legislature to
local governments, education is not inherently a part of the local
self-government of a municipality. . . . Control of our public
school system is a State matter delegated and lodged in the State
legislature by the Constitution. The policy of the State has been
to retain control of its school system, to be administered
throughout the State under State laws by local State agencies
organized with plenary powers to carry out the delegated functions
given [them] by the legislature."
School District of the City of Lansing v. State Board of
Education, supra at 595, 116 N.W.2d at 868. The Supreme Court
of Michigan has noted the deep roots of this policy:
"It has been settled by the Ordinance of 1787, the several
Constitutions adopted in this State, by its uniform course of
legislation, and by the decisions of this court, that education in
Michigan is a matter of State concern, that it is no part of the
local self-government of a particular township or municipality. . .
.
Page 418 U. S. 795
The legislature has always dictated the educational policy of
the State."
In re School District No. 6, 284 Mich. 132, 145-146,
278 N.W. 792, 797 (1938).
The State's control over education is reflected in the fact
that, contrary to the Court's implication, there is little or no
relationship between school districts and local political units. To
take the 85 outlying local school districts in the Detroit
metropolitan area as examples, 17 districts lie in two counties,
two in three counties. One district serves five municipalities;
other suburban municipalities are fragmented into as many as six
school districts. Nor is there any apparent state policy with
regard to the size of school districts, as they now range from
2,000 to 285,000 students.
Centralized state control manifests itself in practice, as well
as in theory. The State controls the financing of education in
several ways. The legislature contributes a substantial portion of
most school districts' operating budgets with funds appropriated
from the State's General Fund revenues raised through state-wide
taxation. [
Footnote 5/6] The
State's power over the purse can be and is, in fact, used to
enforce the State's powers over local districts. [
Footnote 5/7] In addition, although local districts
obtain funds through local property taxation, the State has assumed
the responsibility to ensure equalized property valuations
throughout the State. [
Footnote
5/8] The State also establishes
Page 418 U. S. 796
standards for teacher certification and teacher tenure;
[
Footnote 5/9] determines part of
the required curriculum; [
Footnote
5/10] sets the minimum school term; [
Footnote 5/11] approves bus routes, equipment, and
drivers; [
Footnote 5/12] approves
textbooks; [
Footnote 5/13] and
establishes procedures for student discipline. [
Footnote 5/14] The State Superintendent of Public
Instruction and the State Board of Education have the power to
remove local school board members from office for neglect of their
duties. [
Footnote 5/15]
Most significantly for present purposes, the State has
wide-ranging powers to consolidate and merge school districts, even
without the consent of the districts themselves or of the local
citizenry. [
Footnote 5/16]
See, e.g., Attorney General ex rel. Keis v. Lowrey, 131
Mich. 639, 92 N.W. 289 (1902),
aff'd, 199 U.
S. 233 (1905). Indeed, recent years have witnessed an
accelerated program of school district consolidations, mergers, and
annexations, many of which were state-imposed. Whereas the State
had 7,362 local districts in 1912, the number had been reduced to
1,438 in 1964 and to 738 in 1968. [
Footnote 5/17] By June, 1972, only 608 school districts
remained. Furthermore, the State has broad powers to transfer
property from one district to another, again without the consent of
the local school districts affected by the transfer. [
Footnote 5/18]
See, e.g., School
District
Page 418 U. S. 797
of the City of Lansing v. State Board of Education, supra;
Imlay Township District v. State Board of Education, 359 Mich.
478,
102 N.W.2d
720 (1960).
Whatever may be the history of public education in other parts
of our Nation, it simply flies in the face of reality to say, as
does the majority, that, in Michigan, "[n]o single tradition in
public education is more deeply rooted than local control over the
operation of schools. . . ."
Ante at
418 U. S. 741.
As the State's Supreme Court has said: "We have repeatedly held
that education in this State is not a matter of local concern, but
belongs to the State at large."
Collins v. City of
Detroit, 195 Mich. 330, 335-336, 161 N.W. 905, 907 (1917).
See also Sturgis v. County of Allegan, 343 Mich. 209, 215,
72 N.W.2d
56, 59 (1955);
Van Fleet v. Oltman, 244 Mich. 241,
244, 221 N.W. 299, 300 (1928);
Child Welfare Society of Flint
v. Kennedy School District, 220 Mich. 290, 296, 189 N.W. 1002,
1004 (1922). Indeed, a study prepared for the 1961 Michigan
Constitutional Convention noted that the Michigan Constitution's
articles on education had resulted in "the establishment of a state
system of education in contrast to a series of local school
systems." Elementary and Secondary Education and the Michigan
Constitution, Michigan Constitutional Convention Studies 1
(1961).
In sum, several factors in this case coalesce to support the
District Court's ruling that it was the State of Michigan itself,
not simply the Detroit Board of Education, which bore the
obligation of curing the condition of segregation within the
Detroit city schools. The actions of the State itself directly
contributed to Detroit's segregation. Under the Fourteenth
Amendment, the State is ultimately responsible for the actions of
its local agencies. And, finally, given the structure of Michigan's
educational system, Detroit's segregation cannot be
Page 418 U. S. 798
viewed as the problem of an independent and separate entity.
Michigan operates a single state-wide system of education, a
substantial part of which was shown to be segregated in this
case.
B
What action, then, could the District Court require the State to
take in order to cure Detroit's condition of segregation? Our prior
cases have not minced words as to what steps responsible officials
and agencies must take in order to remedy segregation in the public
schools. Not only must distinctions on the basis of race be
terminated for the future, but school officials are also
"clearly charged with the affirmative duty to take whatever
steps might be necessary to convert to a unitary system in which
racial discrimination would be eliminated root and branch."
Green v. County School Board of New Kent County,
391 U. S. 430,
391 U. S.
437-438 (1968).
See also Lee v. Macon County Board
of Education, 267 F.
Supp. 458 (MD Ala.),
aff'd sub nom. Wallace v. United
States, 389 U. S. 215
(1967). Negro students are not only entitled to neutral
nondiscriminatory treatment in the future. They must receive "what
Brown II promised them: a school system in which all
vestiges of enforced racial segregation have been eliminated."
Wright v. Council of the City of Emporia, 407 U.
S. 451,
407 U. S. 463
(1972).
See also Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of
Education, 402 U. S. 1,
402 U. S. 15
(1971). These remedial standards are fully applicable not only to
school districts where a dual system was compelled by statute, but
also where, as here, a dual system was the product of purposeful
and intentional state action.
See Keyes, 413 U.S. at
413 U. S.
200-201.
After examining three plans limited to the city of Detroit, the
District Court correctly concluded that none would eliminate root
and branch the vestiges of
Page 418 U. S. 799
unconstitutional segregation. The plans' effectiveness, of
course, had to be evaluated in the context of the District Court's
findings as to the extent of segregation in the Detroit city
schools. As indicated earlier, the most essential finding was that
Negro children in Detroit had been confined by intentional acts of
segregation to a growing core of Negro schools surrounded by a
receding ring of white schools. [
Footnote 5/19] Thus, in 1960, of Detroit's 251
Page 418 U. S. 800
regular attendance schools, 100 were 90% or more white and 71
were 90% or more Negro. In 1970, of Detroit's 282 regular
attendance schools, 69 were 90% or more white and 133 were 90% or
more Negro. While in 1960, 68% of all schools were 90% or more one
race, by 1970, 71.6% of the schools fell into that category. The
growing core of all-Negro schools was further evidenced in total
school district population figures. In 1960, the Detroit system had
46% Negro students and 54% white students, but by 1970, 64% of the
students were Negro and only 36% were white. This increase in the
proportion of Negro students was the highest of any major Northern
city.
It was with these figures in the background that the District
Court evaluated the adequacy of the three Detroit-only plans
submitted by the parties. Plan A, proposed by the Detroit Board of
Education, desegregated the high schools and about a fifth of the
middle-level schools. It was deemed inadequate, however, because it
did not desegregate elementary schools and left the middle-level
schools not included in the plan more segregated than ever. Plan C,
also proposed by the Detroit Board, was deemed inadequate because
it too covered only some grade levels, and would leave elementary
schools segregated. Plan B, the plaintiffs' plan, though requiring
the transportation of 82,000 pupils and the acquisition of 900
school buses, would make little
Page 418 U. S. 801
headway in rooting out the vestiges of segregation. To begin
with, because of practical limitations, the District Court found
that the plan would leave many of the Detroit city schools 75% to
90% Negro. More significantly, the District Court recognized that,
in the context of a community which historically had a school
system marked by rigid
de jure segregation, the likely
effect of a Detroit-only plan would be to "change a school system
which is now Black and White to one that would be perceived as
Black. . . ." The result of this changed perception, the District
Court found, would be to increase the flight of whites from the
city to the outlying suburbs, compounding the effects of the
present rate of increase in the proportion of Negro students in the
Detroit system. Thus, even if a plan were adopted which, at its
outset, provided in every school a 65% Negro-35% white racial mix
in keeping with the Negro-white proportions of the total student
population, such a system would, in short order, devolve into an
all-Negro system. The net result would be a continuation of the
all-Negro schools which were the hallmarks of Detroit's former dual
system of one-race schools.
Under our decisions, it was clearly proper for the District
Court to take into account the so-called "white flight" from the
city schools which would be forthcoming from any Detroit-only
decree. The court's prediction of white flight was well supported
by expert testimony based on past experience in other cities
undergoing desegregation relief. We ourselves took the possibility
of white flight into account in evaluating the effectiveness of a
desegregation plan in
Wright, supra, where we relied on
the District Court's finding that, if the city of Emporia were
allowed to withdraw from the existing system, leaving a system with
a higher proportion of Negroes, it "
may be anticipated that the
proportion
Page 418 U. S.
802
of whites in county schools may drop as those who can
register in private academies.' . . . " 407 U.S. at 407 U. S. 464.
One cannot ignore the white flight problem, for where legally
imposed segregation has been established, the District Court has
the responsibility to see to it not only that the dual system is
terminated at once, but also that future events do not serve to
perpetuate or reestablish segregation. See Swann, 402 U.S.
at 402 U. S. 21.
See also Green, 391 U.S. at 391 U. S. 438
n. 4; Monroe v. Board of Comm'rs, 391 U.
S. 450, 391 U. S. 459
(1968).
We held in
Swann, supra, that, where
de jure
segregation is shown, school authorities must make "every effort to
achieve the greatest possible degree of actual desegregation." 402
U.S. at
402 U. S. 26.
This is the operative standard reemphasized in
Davis v. School
Comm'rs of Mobile County, 402 U. S. 33,
402 U. S. 37
(1971). If these words have any meaning at all, surely it is that
school authorities must, to the extent possible, take all
practicable steps to ensure that Negro and white children, in fact,
go to school together. This is, in the final analysis, what
desegregation of the public schools is all about.
Because of the already high and rapidly increasing percentage of
Negro students in the Detroit system, as well as the prospect of
white flight, a Detroit-only plan simply has no hope of achieving
actual desegregation. Under such a plan, white and Negro students
will not go to school together. Instead, Negro children will
continue to attend all-Negro schools. The very evil that
Brown
I was aimed at will not be cured, but will be perpetuated for
the future.
Racially identifiable schools are one of the primary vestiges of
state-imposed segregation which an effective desegregation decree
must attempt to eliminate. In
Swann, supra, for example,
we held that "[t]he district judge or school authorities . . . will
thus necessarily be concerned with the elimination of one-race
schools." 402
Page 418 U. S. 803
U.S. at
402 U. S. 26.
There is "a presumption," we stated, "against schools that are
substantially disproportionate in their racial composition."
Ibid. And in evaluating the effectiveness of desegregation
plans in prior cases, we ourselves have considered the extent to
which they discontinued racially identifiable schools.
See,
e.g., Green v. County School Board of New Kent County, supra;
Wright v. Council of the City of Emporia, supra. For a
principal end of any desegregation remedy is to ensure that it is
no longer "possible to identify a
white school' or a `Negro
school.'" Swann, supra, at 402 U. S. 18. The
evil to be remedied in the dismantling of a dual system is the
"[r]acial identification of the system's schools." Green,
391 U.S. at 391 U. S. 435.
The goal is a system without white schools or Negro schools a
system with "just schools." Id. at 391 U. S. 442.
A school authority's remedial plan or a district court's remedial
decree is to be judged by its effectiveness in achieving this end.
See Swann, supra, at 402 U. S. 25;
Davis, supra, at 402 U. S. 37;
Green, supra, at 391 U. S.
439.
We cautioned in
Swann, of course, that the dismantling
of a segregated school system does not mandate any particular
racial balance. 402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 24. We
also concluded that a remedy under which there would remain a small
number of racially identifiable schools was only presumptively
inadequate and might be justified.
Id. at
402 U. S. 26. But
this is a totally different case
The flaw of a Detroit-only decree is not that it does not reach
some ideal degree of racial balance or mixing. It simply does not
promise to achieve actual desegregation at all. It is one thing to
have a system where a small number of students remain in racially
identifiable schools. It is something else entirely to have a
system where all students continue to attend such schools.
The continued racial identifiability of the Detroit schools
under a Detroit-only remedy is not simply a reflection of their
high percentage of Negro students.
Page 418 U. S. 804
What is or is not a racially identifiable vestige of
de
jure segregation must necessarily depend on several factors.
Cf. Keyes, 413 U.S. at
413 U. S. 196.
Foremost among these should be the relationship between the schools
in question and the neighboring community. For these purposes, the
city of Detroit and its surrounding suburbs must be viewed as a
single community. Detroit is closely connected to its suburbs in
many ways, and the metropolitan area is viewed as a single cohesive
unit by its residents. About 40% of the residents of the two
suburban counties included in the desegregation plan work in Wayne
County, in which Detroit is situated. Many residents of the city
work in the suburbs. The three counties participate in a wide
variety of cooperative governmental ventures on a metropolitan-wide
basis, including a metropolitan transit system, park authority,
water and sewer system, and council of governments. The Federal
Government has classified the tri-county area as a Standard
Metropolitan Statistical Area, indicating that it is an area of
"economic and social integration."
United States v. Connecticut
National Bank, ante at
418 U. S.
670.
Under a Detroit-only decree, Detroit's schools will clearly
remain racially identifiable in comparison with neighboring schools
in the metropolitan community. Schools with 65% and more Negro
students will stand in sharp and obvious contrast to schools in
neighboring districts with less than 2% Negro enrollment. Negro
students will continue to perceive their schools as segregated
educational facilities, and this perception will only be increased
when whites react to a Detroit-only decree by fleeing to the
suburbs to avoid integration. School district lines, however
innocently drawn, will surely be perceived as fences to separate
the races when, under a Detroit-only decree, white parents withdraw
their children
Page 418 U. S. 805
from the Detroit city schools and move to the suburbs in order
to continue them in all-white schools. The message of this action
will not escape the Negro children in the city of Detroit.
See
Wright, 407 U.S. at
407 U. S. 466.
It will be of scant significance to Negro children who have for
years been confined by
de jure acts of segregation to a
growing core of all-Negro schools surrounded by a ring of all-white
schools that the new dividing line between the races is the school
district boundary.
Nor can it be said that the State is free from any
responsibility for the disparity between the racial makeup of
Detroit and its surrounding suburbs. The State's creation, through
de jure acts of segregation, of a growing core of
all-Negro schools inevitably acted as a magnet to attract Negroes
to the areas served by such schools and to deter them from settling
either in other areas of the city or in the suburbs. By the same
token, the growing core of all-Negro schools inevitably helped
drive whites to other areas of the city or to the suburbs. As we
recognized in
Swann:
"People gravitate toward school facilities, just as schools are
located in response to the needs of people. The location of schools
may thus influence the patterns of residential development of a
metropolitan area and have important impact on composition of
inner-city neighborhoods. . . . [Action taken] to maintain the
separation of the races with a minimum departure from the formal
principles of 'neighborhood zoning' . . . does more than simply
influence the short-run composition of the student body. . . . It
may well promote segregated residential patterns which, when
combined with 'neighborhood zoning,' further lock the school system
into the mold of separation of the races. Upon a proper
Page 418 U. S. 806
showing, a district court may consider this in fashioning a
remedy."
402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 20-21.
See also Keyes, 413 U.S. at
413 U. S. 202.
The rippling effects on residential patterns caused by purposeful
acts of segregation do not automatically subside at the school
district border. With rare exceptions, these effects naturally
spread through all the residential neighborhoods within a
metropolitan area.
See id. at
413 U. S.
202-203.
The State must also bear part of the blame for the white flight
to the suburbs which would be forthcoming from a Detroit-only
decree and would render such a remedy ineffective. Having created a
system where white and Negroes were intentionally kept apart so
that they could not become accustomed to learning together, the
State is responsible for the fact that many whites will react to
the dismantling of that segregated system by attempting to flee to
the suburbs. Indeed, by limiting the District Court to a
Detroit-only remedy and allowing that flight to the suburbs to
succeed, the Court today allows the State to profit from its own
wrong and to perpetuate for years to come the separation of the
races it achieved in the past by purposeful state action.
The majority asserts, however, that involvement of outlying
districts would do violence to the accepted principle that "the
nature of the violation determines the scope of the remedy."
Swann, supra, at
402 U. S. 16.
See ante at
418 U. S.
744-745. Not only is the majority's attempt to find in
this single phrase the answer to the complex and difficult
questions presented in this case hopelessly simplistic, but, more
important, the Court reads these words in a manner which perverts
their obvious meaning. The nature of a violation determines the
scope of the remedy simply because the function of any remedy is to
cure the violation to which it is addressed. In school
segregation
Page 418 U. S. 807
cases, as in other equitable causes, a remedy which effectively
cures the violation is what is required.
See Green, 391
U.S. at
3 U. S. 439;
Davis, 402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 37. No
more is necessary, but we can tolerate no less. To read this
principle as barring a district court from imposing the only
effective remedy for past segregation and remitting the court to a
patently ineffective alternative is, in my view, to turn a simple
common sense rule into a cruel and meaningless paradox. Ironically,
by ruling out an inter-district remedy, the only relief which
promises to cure segregation in the Detroit public schools, the
majority flouts the very principle on which it purports to
rely.
Nor should it be of any significance that the suburban school
districts were not shown to have themselves taken any direct action
to promote segregation of the races Given the State's broad powers
over local school districts, it was well within the State's powers
to require those districts surrounding the Detroit school district
to participate in a metropolitan remedy. The State's duty should be
no different here than in cases where it is shown that certain of a
State's voting districts are malapportioned in violation of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
See Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.
S. 533 (1964). Overrepresented electoral districts are
required to participate in reapportionment although their only
"participation" in the violation was to do nothing about it.
Similarly, electoral districts which themselves meet representation
standards must frequently be redrawn as part of a remedy for other
over- and under-inclusive districts. No finding of fault on the
part of each electoral district and no finding of a discriminatory
effect on each district is a prerequisite to its involvement in the
constitutionally required remedy. By the same logic, no finding of
fault on the part of the suburban school districts in this case
Page 418 U. S. 808
and no finding of a discriminatory effect on each district
should be a prerequisite to their involvement in the
constitutionally required remedy.
It is the State, after all, which bears the responsibility under
Brown of affording a nondiscriminatory system of
education. The State, of course, is ordinarily free to choose any
decentralized framework for education it wishes, so long as it
fulfills that Fourteenth Amendment obligation. But the State should
no more be allowed to hide behind its delegation and
compartmentalization of school districts to avoid its
constitutional obligations to its children than it could hide
behind its political subdivisions to avoid its obligations to its
voters.
Reynolds v. Sims, supra, at
377 U.S. 575.
See also Gomillion v.
Lightfoot, 364 U. S. 339
(1960).
It is a hollow remedy indeed where, "after supposed
desegregation,' the schools remained segregated in fact."
Hobson v. Hansen, 269 F.
Supp. 401, 495 (DDC 1967). We must do better than "`substitute
. . . one segregated school system for another segregated school
system.'" Wright, 407 U.S. at 407 U. S. 456.
To suggest, as does the majority, that a Detroit-only plan somehow
remedies the effects of de jure segregation of the races
is, in my view, to make a solemn mockery of Brown I's
holding that separate educational facilities are inherently unequal
and of Swann's unequivocal mandate that the answer to
de jure segregation is the greatest possible degree of
actual desegregation.
III
One final set of problems remains to be considered. We
recognized in
Brown II, and have reemphasized ever since,
that, in fashioning relief in desegregation cases,
"the courts will be guided by equitable principles.
Traditionally, equity has been characterized by a practical
flexibility in shaping its remedies and by a facility for
Page 418 U. S. 809
adjusting and reconciling public and private needs."
Brown II, 349 U.S. at
349 U. S. 300.
See also Swann, supra.
Though not resting its holding on this point, the majority
suggests that various equitable considerations militate against
inter-district relief. The Court, for example, refers to financing
and administrative problems, the logistical problems attending
large-scale transportation of students, and the prospect of the
District Court's becoming a "
de facto legislative
authority'" and "`school superintendent' for the entire area."
Ante at 418 U. S.
743-744. The entangling web of problems woven by the
Court, however, appears on further consideration to be constructed
of the flimsiest of threads.
I deal first with the last of the problems posed by the Court --
the specter of the District Court
qua "school
superintendent" and "legislative authority" -- for analysis of this
problem helps put the other issues in proper perspective. Our
cases, of course, make clear that the initial responsibility for
devising an adequate desegregation plan belongs with school
authorities, not with the District Court. The court's primary role
is to review the adequacy of the school authorities' efforts and to
substitute is own plan only if and to the extent they default.
See Swann, 402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 16;
Green, 391 U.S. at
391 U. S. 439.
Contrary to the majority's suggestions, the District Judge in this
case consistently adhered to these procedures, and there is every
indication that he would have continued to do so. After finding
de jure segregation, the court ordered the parties to
submit proposed Detroit-only plans. The state defendants were also
ordered to submit a proposed metropolitan plan extending beyond
Detroit's boundaries. As the District Court stated, "the State
defendants . . . bear the initial burden of coming forward with a
proposal that promises to work." The state defendants defaulted in
this obligation, however.
Page 418 U. S. 810
Rather than submit a complete plan, the State Board of Education
submitted six proposals, none of which was, in fact, a
desegregation plan. It was only upon this default that the District
Court began to take steps to develop its own plan. Even then, the
District Court maximized school authority participation by
appointing a panel representing both plaintiffs and defendants to
develop a plan. Pet. App. 99a-100a. Furthermore, the District Court
still left the state defendants the initial responsibility for
developing both interim and final financial and administrative
arrangements to implement inter-district relief.
Id. at
104a-105a. The Court of Appeals further protected the interests of
local school authorities by ensuring that the outlying suburban
districts could fully participate in the proceedings to develop a
metropolitan remedy.
These processes have not been allowed to run their course. No
final desegregation plan has been proposed by the panel of experts,
let alone approved by the District Court. We do not know in any
detail how many students will be transported to effect a
metropolitan remedy, and we do not know how long or how far they
will have to travel. No recommendations have yet been submitted by
the state defendants on financial and administrative arrangements.
In sum, the practicality of a final metropolitan plan is simply not
before us at the present time. Since the State and the panel of
expert have not yet had an opportunity to come up with a workable
remedy, there is no foundation for the majority's suggestion of the
impracticality of inter-district relief. Furthermore, there is no
basis whatever for assuming that the District Court will inevitably
be forced to assume the role of legislature or school
superintendent. [
Footnote
5/20]
Page 418 U. S. 811
Were we to hold that it was its constitutional duty to do so,
there is every indication that the State of Michigan would fulfill
its obligation and develop a plan which is workable, administrable,
financially sound, and, most important, in the best interest of
quality education for all of the children in the Detroit
metropolitan area.
Since the Court chooses, however, to speculate on the
feasibility of a metropolitan plan, I feel constrained to comment
on the problem areas it has targeted. To begin with, the majority's
questions concerning the practicality of consolidation of school
districts need not give us pause. The State clearly has the power,
under existing law, to effect a consolidation if it is ultimately
determined that this offers the best prospect for a workable and
stable desegregation plan.
See supra at
418 U. S.
796-797. And given the 1,000 or so consolidations of
school districts which have taken place in the past, it is hard to
believe that the State has not already devised means of solving
most, if not all, of the practical problems which the Court
suggests consolidation would entail.
Furthermore, the majority ignores long-established Michigan
procedures under which school districts may enter into contractual
agreements to educate their pupils in other districts using state
or local funds to finance nonresident education. [
Footnote 5/21] Such agreements could form an
Page 418 U. S. 812
easily administrable framework for inter-district relief short
of outright consolidation of the school districts. The District
Court found that inter-district procedures like these were
frequently used to provide special educational services for
handicapped children, and extensive statutory provision is also
made for their use in vocational education. [
Footnote 5/22] Surely if school districts are willing
to engage in inter-district programs to help those unfortunate
children crippled by physical or mental handicaps, school districts
can be required to participate in an inter-district program to help
those children in the city of Detroit whose educations and very
futures have been crippled by purposeful state segregation.
Although the majority gives this last matter only fleeting
reference, it is plain that one of the basic emotional and legal
issues underlying these cases concerns the propriety of
transportation of students to achieve desegregation. While others
may have retreated from its standards,
see, e.g., Keyes,
413 U.S. at
413 U. S. 217
(POWELL, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part), I continue
to adhere to the guidelines set forth in
Swann on this
issue.
See 402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 231.
And though no final desegregation plan is presently before us, to
the extent the outline of such a plan is now visible, it is clear
that the transportation it would entail will be fully consistent
with these guidelines.
First of all, the metropolitan plan would not involve the busing
of substantially more students than already ride buses. The
District Court found that, state-wide, 35-40% of all students
already arrive at school on a bus. In those school districts in the
tri-county Detroit metropolitan area eligible for state
reimbursement of transportation costs, 42%-52% of all students rode
buses to school. In the tri-county areas as a whole,
approximately
Page 418 U. S. 813
300,000 pupils arrived at school on some type of bus, with about
60,000 of these apparently using regular public transit. In
comparison, the desegregation plan, according to its present rough
outline, would involve the transportation of 310,000 students,
about 40% of the population within the desegregation area.
With respect to distance and amount of time traveled, 17 of the
outlying school districts involved in the plan are contiguous to
the Detroit district. The rest are all within 8 miles of the
Detroit city limits. The trial court, in defining the desegregation
area, placed a ceiling of 40 minutes one way on the amount of
travel time, and many students will obviously travel for far
shorter periods. As to distance, the average state-wide bus trip is
82 miles one way, and, in some parts of the tri-county area,
students already travel for one and a quarter hours or more each
way. In sum, with regard to both the number of students transported
and the time and distances involved, the outlined desegregation
plan "compares favorably with the transportation plan previously
operated. . . ."
Swann, supra, at
402 U. S. 30.
As far as economics are concerned, a metropolitan remedy would
actually be more sensible than a Detroit-only remedy. Because of
prior transportation aid restrictions,
see supra at
418 U. S. 791,
Detroit largely relied on public transport, at student expense, for
those students who lived too far away to walk to school. Since no
inventory of school buses existed, a Detroit-only plan was
estimated to require the purchase of 900 buses to effectuate the
necessary transportation. The tri-county area, in contrast, already
has an inventory of 1,800 buses, many of which are now
underutilized. Since increased utilization of the existing
inventory can take up much of the increase in transportation
involved in the inter-district remedy, the District Court found
that only 350 additional buses would
Page 418 U. S. 814
probably be needed, almost two-thirds fewer than a Detroit-only
remedy. Other features of an inter-district remedy bespeak its
practicality, such as the possibility of pairing up Negro schools
near Detroit's boundary with nearby white schools on the other side
of the present school district line.
Some disruption, of course, is the inevitable product of any
desegregation decree, whether it operates within one district or on
an inter-district basis. As we said in
Swann, however:
"Absent a constitutional violation, there would be no basis for
judicially ordering assignment of students on a racial basis. All
things being equal, with no history of discrimination, it might
well be desirable to assign pupils to schools nearest their homes.
But all things are not equal in a system that has been deliberately
constructed and maintained to enforce racial segregation. The
remedy for such segregation may be administratively awkward,
inconvenient, and even bizarre in some situations, and may impose
burdens on some; but all awkwardness and inconvenience cannot be
avoided. . . ."
402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 28.
Desegregation is not and was never expected to be an easy task.
Racial attitudes ingrained in our Nation's childhood and
adolescence are not quickly thrown aside in its middle years. But
just as the inconvenience of some cannot be allowed to stand in the
way of the rights of others, so public opposition, no matter how
strident, cannot be permitted to divert this Court from the
enforcement of the constitutional principles at issue in this case.
Today's holding, I fear, is more a reflection of a perceived public
mood that we have gone far enough in enforcing the Constitution's
guarantee of equal justice than it is the product of neutral
principle of law. In
Page 418 U. S. 815
the short run, it may seem to be the easier course to allow our
great metropolitan areas to be divided up each into two cities --
one white, the other black -- but it is a course, I predict, our
people will ultimately regret. I dissent.
[
Footnote 5/1]
Contrary to the Court's characterization, the use of racial
ratios in this case in no way differed from that, in
Swann v.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education, 402 U. S.
1 (1971). Here, as there, mathematical ratios were used
simply as "a starting point in the process of shaping a remedy,
rather than an inflexible requirement."
Id. at
402 U. S. 25. It
may be expected that a final desegregation plan in this case would
deviate from a pure mathematical approach. Indeed, the District
Court's most recent order appointing a panel of experts to draft an
inter-district plan requires only that the plan be designed "to
achieve the greatest degree of actual desegregation . . . [w]ithin
the limitations of reasonable travel time and distance factors."
345 F.
Supp. 914, 918 (ED Mich.1972).
Cf. 402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 23.
[
Footnote 5/2]
It does not appear that even the majority places any real weight
on this consideration, since it recognizes that inter-district
relief would be proper where a constitutional violation within one
district produces a significant segregative effect in another
district,
see ante at
418 U. S.
744-745, thus allowing inter-district relief to touch
districts which have not themselves violated the Constitution
[
Footnote 5/3]
See Mich.Comp.Laws § 388.851 (1970).
[
Footnote 5/4]
See § 388.1179.
[
Footnote 5/5]
See §§ 388.629 and 340.600.
[
Footnote 5/6]
See § 388.611. The State contributed an average of 34%
of the operating budgets of the 54 school districts included in the
original proposed desegregation area. In 11 of these districts,
state contributions exceeded 50% of the operating budgets.
[
Footnote 5/7]
See, e.g.,
id. § 340.575.
See also
1949-1950 Report of the Attorney General 104 (Roth); Vol. 1, 1955
Report of the Attorney General 561 (Kavanagh); 1961-1962 Report of
the Attorney General 533 (Kelley).
[
Footnote 5/8]
See Mich.Comp.Laws §§ 211.34 and 340.681.
[
Footnote 5/9]
§ 340.569.
[
Footnote 5/10]
§§ 257.811(c), 340.361, 340.781, 340.782, 388.371.
[
Footnote 5/11]
§ 340.575.
[
Footnote 5/12]
§ 388.1171.
[
Footnote 5/13]
§ 340.887(1).
[
Footnote 5/14]
Op.Atty.Gen. No. 4705 (July 7, 1970), 1969-1970 Report of the
Attorney General 156 (Kelley).
[
Footnote 5/15]
See Mich.Comp.Laws § 340.253.
[
Footnote 5/16]
See generally §§ 340.401-340.415 (consolidations),
340.431340.449 (annexations).
[
Footnote 5/17]
See 1 Michigan Senate Journal, 1968, p. 423.
[
Footnote 5/18]
See generally Mich.Comp.Laws §§ 340.461-340.468
[
Footnote 5/19]
Despite MR. JUSTICE STEWART's claim to the contrary,
ante at
418 U. S. 756
n. 2, of his concurring opinion, the record fully supports my
statement that Negro students were intentionally confined to a core
of Negro schools within the city of Detroit.
See, e.g.,
supra at
418 U. S.
784-785,
418 U. S.
790-792. Indeed, MR. JUSTICE STEWART acknowledges that
intentional acts of segregation by the State have separated white
and Negro students within the city, and that the resulting core of
all-Negro schools has grown to encompass most of the city. In
suggesting that my approval of an inter-district remedy rests on a
further conclusion that the State or its political subdivisions
have been responsible for the increasing percentage of Negro
students in Detroit, my Brother STEWART misconceives the thrust of
this dissent. In light of the high concentration of Negro students
in Detroit, the District Judge's finding that a Detroit-only remedy
cannot effectively cure the constitutional violation within the
city should be enough to support the choice of an inter-district
remedy. Whether state action is responsible for the growth of the
core of all-Negro schools in Detroit is, in my view, quite
irrelevant.
The difficulty with MR. JUSTICE STEWART's position is that he,
like the Court, confuses the inquiry required to determine whether
there has been a substantive constitutional violation with that
necessary to formulate an appropriate remedy once a constitutional
violation has been shown. While a finding of state action is, of
course, a prerequisite to finding a violation, we have never held
that, after unconstitutional state action has been shown, the
District Court, at the remedial stage, must engage in a second
inquiry to determine whether additional state action exists to
justify a particular remedy. Rather, once a constitutional
violation has been shown, the District Court is duty-bound to
formulate an effective remedy and, in so doing, the court is
entitled -- indeed, it is required -- to consider all the factual
circumstances relevant to the framing of an effective decree. Thus,
in
Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education, we
held that the District Court must take into account the existence
of extensive residential segregation in determining whether a
racially neutral "neighborhood school" attendance plan was an
adequate desegregation remedy, regardless of whether this
residential segregation was caused by state action. So here, the
District Court was required to consider the facts that the Detroit
school system was already predominantly Negro, and would likely
become all-Negro upon issuance of a Detroit-only decree in framing
an effective desegregation remedy, regardless of state
responsibility for this situation.
[
Footnote 5/20]
In fact, the District Court remarked
"that this court's task is to enforce constitutional rights, not
to act as a schoolmaster; the court's task is to protect the
constitutional rights here found violated with as little intrusion
into the education process as possible. The court's objective is to
establish the minimum constitutional framework within which the
system of public schools may operate now and hereafter in a
racially unified, nondiscriminatory fashion. Within that framework
the body politic, educators, parents, and, most particularly, the
children must be given the maximum opportunity to experiment and
secure a high quality, and equal, educational opportunity."
Pet. App. 82a.
[
Footnote 5/21]
See, e.g., Mich.Comp.Laws §§ 340.69, 340.121(d),
340.359, 340.582, 340.582a, 340.590.
[
Footnote 5/22]
See id. §§ 340.330-340.330u