Federal school land grants to Mississippi in the early 19th
century did not apply to lands in northern Mississippi that were
held by the Chickasaw Indian Nation, an area that came to be the
northern 23 counties in the State. The Chickasaws thereafter ceded
this area to the United States by a treaty under which the lands
were sold, but no lands for public schools (Sixteenth Section
lands) were reserved from sale. Congress then provided for the
reservation of lands in lieu (Lieu Lands) of Sixteenth Section
lands not reserved in the Chickasaw Cession, and for vesting of the
title to the Lieu Lands in the State for the use of schools within
the Cession. These Lieu Lands were given to the State. The state
legislature, however, sold the Chickasaw Cession Lieu Lands and
invested the proceeds in loans to railroads that were later
destroyed in the Civil War, and never replaced. Under a current
Mississippi statute, remaining Sixteenth Section and Lieu Lands
"constitute property held in trust for the benefit of the public
schools." Another state statute provides that all funds derived
from Sixteenth Section or Lieu Lands shall be credited to the
school districts of the township in which such Sixteenth Section
lands are located or to which any Lieu Lands belong, and shall not
be expended except for the education of children of the school
district to which the lands belong. Consequently, all proceeds from
Sixteenth Section and Lieu Lands are allocated directly to the
township in which the lands are located or to which the lands
apply. With respect to the Chickasaw Cession counties, to which no
lands now belong, the state legislature has paid "interest" on the
lost principal acquired from the sale of those lands in the form of
annual appropriations to the Chickasaw Cession schools. This dual
treatment has resulted in a disparity in the level of school funds
from the Sixteenth Section lands that are available to the
Chickasaw Cession schools as compared to the schools in the rest of
the State, the average Sixteenth Section income per pupil in the
latter schools being much greater than the average income per pupil
in the former schools. Petitioner local school officials and
schoolchildren from the Chickasaw Cession filed suit in Federal
District Court against respondent state officials, challenging the
disparity in Sixteenth Section funds
Page 478 U. S. 266
and alleging (1) that the sale of the Chickasaw Cession school
lands and the unwise investment of the proceeds had abrogated the
State's trust obligation to hold those lands for the benefit of
Chickasaw Cession schoolchildren in perpetuity and (2) that the
disparity deprived those schoolchildren of a minimally adequate
level of education and of the equal protection of the laws.
Declaratory and other relief was sought. The District Court
dismissed the complaint, holding the claims barred by,
inter
alia, the Eleventh Amendment. The Court of Appeals affirmed,
holding that, although the equal protection claim asserted a
current ongoing and disparate distribution of state funds for the
support of local schools, the remedy for which would not be barred
by the Eleventh Amendment, dismissal of the complaint was proper
since such differential funding was not unconstitutional under
San Antonio Independent School Dist. v. Rodriguez,
411 U. S. 1.
Held:
1. Petitioners' trust claims are barred by the Eleventh
Amendment, even if petitioners' characterization of the legal wrong
as being a breach of a continuing obligation to comply with the
trust obligations is accepted. There is no substantive difference
between a not-yet-extinguished liability for a past breach of trust
and the continuing obligation to meet trust responsibilities
asserted by petitioners.
Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.
S. 651. In both cases, the trustee is required, because
of the past loss of the trust corpus, to use its own resources to
take the place of the corpus or the lost income from the corpus.
Thus. petitioners' trust claim, like the claim rejected in
Edelman, may not be sustained. Pp.
478 U.S. 279-281.
2. Petitioners' equal protection claim is not barred by the
Eleventh Amendment. The alleged ongoing constitutional violation --
the State's unequal distribution of the benefits of school lands --
is precisely the type of continuing violation for which a remedy
may permissibly be fashioned under
Ex parte Young,
209 U. S. 123. The
essence of the equal protection claim is the present disparity in
the distribution of the benefits of state-held assets, and not the
State's past actions. Pp.
478 U. S.
281-282.
3. The assertion in the complaint that petitioners are being
deprived of a minimally adequate education is a legal conclusion,
rather than a factual allegation that must be accepted as true.
Consequently, focusing only on the funding disparities properly
pleaded, the Court of Appeals properly determined that
Rodriguez dictates the applicable standard of review: the
alleged differential treatment violates equal protection only if
not rationally related to a legitimate state interest. The Court of
Appeals incorrectly determined, however, that
Rodriguez
controlled this case.
Rodriguez did not purport to
validate all funding variations that might result from a State's
public school funding decisions, but held merely that the
variations that resulted from allowing local control over
Page 478 U. S. 267
local property tax funding of the public schools were
constitutionally permissible in that case. This case is different
from
Rodriguez, because here the differential financing is
attributable to a state decision to divide state resources
unequally among school districts. Nevertheless, the question
remains whether the variations in the benefits received by school
districts from Sixteenth Section or Lieu Lands are, on the
allegations in the complaint and as a matter of law, rationally
related to a legitimate state interest, and this question should be
resolved by the Court of Appeals on remand. A crucial consideration
in resolving this question is whether federal law requires the
State to allocate the economic benefits of school lands to schools
in the townships in which those lands are located. If, as a matter
of federal law, the State has no choice in the matter, whether the
complaint states an equal protection claim depends on whether the
federal policy is itself violative of the Equal Protection Clause.
If it is, the State may be enjoined from implementing such policy.
But if the federal law is valid and the State is bound by it, then
it provides a rational reason for the funding disparity. Pp.
478 U. S.
283-292.
756 F.2d 1087, affirmed in part, vacated in part, and
remanded.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
O'CONNOR, J., joined; in Parts I and III of which BRENNAN,
MARSHALL, BLACKMUN. and STEVENS, JJ., joined; and in Part II of
which BURGER, C.J., and POWELL and REHNQUIST, JJ., joined. BRENNAN,
J., filed an opinion concurring in part, concurring in the judgment
in part, and dissenting in part, in which MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, and
STEVENS, JJ., joined,
post, p.
478 U. S. 292.
BLACKMUN, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in
part,
post, p.
478 U. S. 293.
POWELL, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in
part, in which BURGER, C.J., and REHNQUIST, J., joined,
post, p.
478 U. S.
295.
JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, we consider the claims of school officials and
schoolchildren in 23 northern Mississippi counties that they
Page 478 U. S. 268
are being unlawfully denied the economic benefits of public
school lands granted by the United States to the State of
Mississippi well over 100 years ago. Specifically, we must
determine to what extent these claims are barred by the Eleventh
Amendment, and, with respect to those claims that are not barred,
if any, whether the complaint is sufficient to withstand a motion
to dismiss for failure to state a claim.
I
The history of public school lands in the United States
stretches back over 200 years. [
Footnote 1] Even before the ratification of the
Constitution, the Congress of the Confederation initiated a
practice with regard to the Northwest Territory [
Footnote 2] which was followed with most
other public lands that eventually became States and were admitted
to the Union. In particular, the Land Ordinance of 1785, which
provided for the survey and sale of the Northwest Territory,
"reserved the lot No. 16, of every township, for the maintenance of
public schools within the said township. . . ." 1 Laws of the
United States 565 (1815). [
Footnote
3] In 1802, when the eastern portion of the
Page 478 U. S. 269
Northwest Territory became what is now the State of Ohio,
Congress granted Ohio the lands that had been previously reserved
under the 1785 Ordinance for the use of public schools in the
State. 2 Stat. 175. [
Footnote
4]
Following the Ohio example of reserving lands for the
maintenance of public schools,
"'grants were made for common school purposes to each of the
public-land States admitted to the Union. Between the years of 1802
and 1846, the grants were of every section sixteen, and,
thereafter, of sections sixteen and thirty-six. In some instances,
additional sections have been granted.'"
Andrus v. Utah, 446 U. S. 500,
446 U. S.
506-507, n. 7 (1980) (quoting
United States v.
Morrison, 240 U. S. 192,
240 U. S. 198
(1916) (footnotes omitted)). Thus, the basic Ohio example has been
followed with respect to all but a few of the States admitted since
then. 446 U.S. at
446 U. S.
522-523, n. 4 (POWELL, J., dissenting). In addition to
the school lands designated in this manner, Congress made provision
for townships in which the pertinent section or sections were not
available for one reason or another. Thus, Congress generally
indemnified States for the missing designated sections, allowing
the States to select lands in an amount equal to and in lieu of the
designated but unavailable lands.
See, e.g., ch. 83, 4
Stat. 179 (1826).
See generally Andrus v. Utah, supra, at
446 U. S.
507-508;
Morrison, supra, at
240 U. S.
200-202.
Page 478 U. S. 270
Although the basic pattern of school lands grants was generally
consistent from State to State in terms of the reservation and
grant of the lands, the specific provisions of the grants varied by
State and over time.
See generally B. Hibbard, A History
of the Public Land Policies 314-318 (1939). For example, in Indiana
and Alabama, the school lands were expressly granted to the
inhabitants of the townships directly.
See 3 Stat. 290
(1816) (Indiana); 3 Stat. 491 (1819) (Alabama). [
Footnote 5] In most of the other grants
before 1845, the school lands were given instead to the States, but
were explicitly designated to be for the use of the townships in
which they lay.
See, e.g., 2 Stat. 233-234 (1803)
(Mississippi); 3 Stat. 375 (1817) (same); 5 Stat. 58 (1836)
(Arkansas). The Michigan grant in 1836, on the other hand, was
simply "to the State for the use of schools."
See 5 Stat.
59. After 1845, the type of grant used in Michigan, granting the
lands to the State for the use of its schools generally, became the
norm.
See, e.g., 9 Stat. 58 (1846) (Wisconsin); 11 Stat.
383 (1859) (Oregon). Finally, the most recent grants are phrased
not as outright gifts to the States for a specific use, but instead
as express trusts. These grants also are stated to be to the States
for the support of the schools in those States generally. In
addition, though, under these grants, the State is specifically
designated a trustee, there are explicit restrictions on the
management and disposition of the lands in trust, and the Federal
Government expressly retains an ongoing oversight responsibility.
See, e.g., 36 Stat. 574 (1910) (Arizona and New
Mexico).
The history of the school lands grants in Mississippi generally
follows the pattern thus described. In 1798, Congress created the
Mississippi Territory, which included what is now about the
southern third of the States of Mississippi and Alabama.
Page 478 U. S. 271
1 Stat. 549. In 1803, Congress provided for the sale and survey
of all Mississippi Territory lands to which Indian title had been
extinguished, but excepted "the section number sixteen, which shall
be reserved in each township for the support of schools within the
same." 2 Stat. 233-234. In 1804, the Mississippi Territory was
extended northward to the southern boundary of Tennessee. 2 Stat.
305. Two years later, Congress authorized the selection of lands in
lieu of unavailable Sixteenth Sections in the Territory. 2 Stat.
401 (1806). Eventually, in 1817, Mississippi was admitted as a
State, and a further Land Sales Act provided for the survey and
sale of those lands in the northern part of the new State that had
not been covered by the 1803 Act. The 1817 Act provided that these
lands were to be
"surveyed and divided in the manner provided by law for the
surveying of the other public lands of the United States in the
Mississippi territory;"
thus, the Act required that "the section No. 16 in each township
. . . shall be reserved for the support of schools therein." 3
Stat. 375 (1817). The Sixteenth Section lands and lands selected in
lieu thereof were granted to the State of Mississippi.
See
Lambert v. State, 211 Miss. 129, 137,
51 So. 2d
201, 203 (1951).
By their own terms, however, these Acts did not apply to the
lands in northern Mississippi that were held by the Chickasaw
Indian Nation, an area essentially comprising what came to be the
northern 23 counties in the State. This land was held by the
Chickasaws until 1832, when it was ceded to the United States by
the Treaty of Pontitoc Creek. 7 Stat. 381. Although that Treaty
provided that the land would be surveyed and sold "in the same
manner and on the same terms and conditions as the other public
lands,"
id. at 382, no Sixteenth Section lands were
reserved from sale.
City of Corinth v. Robertson, 125
Miss. 31, 57, 87 So. 464, 465-466 (1921). In 1836, Congress
attempted to remedy this oversight by providing for the reservation
of lands in lieu of the Sixteenth Section lands, and for the
vesting of the title to
Page 478 U. S. 272
these lands "in the State of Mississippi, for the use of schools
within [the Chickasaw Cession] in said State." 5 Stat. 116. These
Chickasaw Cession Lieu Lands, some 174,555 acres, App. 36, were
selected and given to the State. In 1856, however, with authority
expressly given by Congress, 10 Stat. 6 (1852), the state
legislature sold these lands and invested the proceeds,
approximately $1,047,330, App. 36, in 8% loans to the State's
railroads. 1856 Miss. Laws, ch. 56. These railroads and the State's
investment in them, unfortunately, were subsequently destroyed
during the Civil War, and never replaced.
From these historical circumstances, the current practice in
Mississippi with regard to Sixteenth Section lands has evolved
directly. Under state law, these lands, which are still apparently
held in large part by the State, "constitute property held in trust
for the benefit of the public schools, and must be treated as
such." Miss.Code Ann. § 29-3-1(1) (Supp.1985). In providing for the
operation of these trusts, the legislature has retained the
historical tie of these lands to particular townships in terms of
both trust administration and beneficiary status. Thus, the State
has delegated the management of this property to local school
boards throughout the State: where Sixteenth Section lands lie
within a school district, or where Lieu Lands were originally
appropriated for a township that lies within a school district, the
board of education of that district has "control and jurisdiction
of said school trust lands and of all funds arising from any
disposition thereof heretofore or hereafter made."
Ibid.
In this respect, the board of education is "under the general
supervision of the state land commissioner."
Ibid.
[
Footnote 6] Further, the State
has, by statute, set forth certain prescriptions for the management
of these lands.
See generally Miss.Code Ann. §§ 29-3-1 to
29-3-135 (1972 and Supp.1985). Most important
Page 478 U. S. 273
for purposes of this case, however, is Miss.Code Ann. § 29-3-109
(Supp.1985), which provides:
"All expendable funds derived from sixteenth section or lieu
lands shall be credited to the school districts of the township in
which such sixteenth section lands may be located, or to which any
sixteenth sections lieu lands may belong. Such funds shall not be
expended except for the purpose of education of the educable
children of the school district to which they belong, or as
otherwise may be provided by law."
Consequently, all proceeds from Sixteenth Section and Lieu Lands
are allocated directly to the specific township in which these
lands are located or to which those lands apply. With respect to
the Chickasaw Cession counties, to which no lands now belong, the
state legislature has, for over 100 years, paid "interest" on the
lost principal acquired from the sale of those lands in the form of
annual appropriations to the Chickasaw Cession schools. Originally,
the rate was 8%, but, since 1890, the rate has been 6%.
See Miss. Const., Art. 8, § 212. The annual amount until
1985 was $62,191. App. 37.
The result of this dual treatment has for many years been a
disparity in the level of school funds from Sixteenth Section lands
that are available to the Chickasaw Cession schools as compared to
the schools in the remainder of the State. In 1984, for example,
the legislative appropriation for the Chickasaw Cession resulted in
an estimated average per pupil income relative to the Sixteenth
Section substitute appropriation of $0.63 per pupil. The average
Sixteenth Section income in the rest of the State, in comparison,
was estimated to be $75.34 per pupil.
Id. at 44. [
Footnote 7] It is this disparity which
gave rise to the present action.
Page 478 U. S. 274
In 1981, the petitioners, local school officials and
schoolchildren from the Chickasaw Cession, filed suit in the United
States District Court for the Northern District of Mississippi
against the respondents, an assortment of state officials,
challenging the disparity in Sixteenth Section funds. The
petitioners' complaint traced the history of public school lands in
Mississippi, characterizing as illegal several of the actions that
resulted in there being now no Sixteenth Section lands in the
Chickasaw Cession area. In particular, the petitioners asserted
that the sale of the Chickasaw Cession school lands and unwise
investment of the proceeds from that sale in the 1850's had
abrogated the State's trust obligation to hold those lands for the
benefit of Chickasaw Cession schoolchildren in perpetuity. The
result of these actions, said the petitioners, was the disparity
between the financial support available to the Chickasaw Cession
schools and other schools in the State, which disparity in turn
allegedly deprived the Chickasaw Cession schoolchildren of a
minimally adequate level of education and of the equal protection
of the laws.
Based on these allegations, the petitioners sought various forms
of relief for breach of the trust regarding the Chickasaw Cession
Sixteenth Section lands and for denial of equal protection.
[
Footnote 8] Specifically, the
complaint sought a declaration
Page 478 U. S. 275
that the state legislation purporting to implement the sale of
the Chickasaw Cession school lands was void and unenforceable; the
establishment by legislative appropriation or otherwise of a fund
in a suitable amount to be held in perpetual trust for the benefit
of plaintiffs; or, in the alternative, making available to
plaintiffs Lieu Lands of the same value as the original Chickasaw
Cession Sixteenth Section lands.
The District Court dismissed the complaint, holding the claims
barred by the applicable statute of limitations and by the Eleventh
Amendment to the United States Constitution. The Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit affirmed,
Papasan v. United States,
756 F.2d 1087 (1985), agreeing that the relief requested in the
complaint was barred by the Eleventh Amendment. Noting that a
federal court should not dismiss a constitutional complaint because
it "seeks one remedy rather than another plainly appropriate one,"
Holt Civic Club v. Tuscaloosa, 439 U. S.
60,
439 U. S. 65
(1978), however, the Court of Appeals deemed the equal protection
claim to assert a current, ongoing, and disparate distribution of
state funds for the support of local schools, the remedy for which
would not be barred by the Eleventh Amendment. Even so, it found
dismissal of the complaint to be proper, since such differential
funding was not unconstitutional under this Court's decision in
San Antonio Independent School Dist. v. Rodriguez,
411 U. S. 1 (1973).
[
Footnote 9]
We granted certiorari, 474 U.S. 1004 (1985), and now vacate the
judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand for further
proceedings.
Page 478 U. S. 276
II
We first consider whether the Eleventh Amendment bars the
petitioners' claims and required dismissal of the complaint.
A
The Amendment provides:
"The Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed
to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted
against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or
by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State."
This language expressly encompasses only suits brought against a
State by citizens of another State, but this Court long ago held
that the Amendment bars suits against a State by citizens of that
same State as well.
See Hans v. Louisiana, 134 U. S.
1 (1890).
"[I]n the absence of consent, a suit in which the State or one
of its agencies or departments is named as the defendant is
proscribed by the Eleventh Amendment."
Pennhurst State School and Hospital v. Halderman,
465 U. S. 89,
465 U. S. 100
(1984). [
Footnote 10] This
bar exists whether the relief sought is legal or equitable.
Id. at
465 U. S.
100-101.
Where the State itself or one of its agencies or departments is
not named as defendant, and where a state official is named
instead, the Eleventh Amendment status of the suit is less
straightforward.
Ex parte Young, 209 U.
S. 123 (1908), held that a suit to enjoin as
unconstitutional a state official's action was not barred by the
Amendment. This holding was based on a determination that an
unconstitutional state enactment is void, and that any action by a
state official that is purportedly authorized by that enactment
cannot be taken in an official capacity, since the state
authorization for such action is a nullity. As the Court explained
in
Young itself:
Page 478 U. S. 277
"If the act which the state Attorney General seeks to enforce be
a violation of the Federal Constitution, the officer proceeding
under such enactment comes into conflict with the superior
authority of that Constitution, and he is in that case stripped of
his official or representative character, and is subjected in his
person to the consequences of his individual conduct. The State has
no power to impart to him any immunity from responsibility to the
supreme authority of the United States."
Id. at
209 U. S.
159-160. Thus, the official, although acting in his
official capacity, may be sued in federal court.
See also
Pennhurst, supra, at
465 U. S. 102,
465 U. S. 105;
Hutto v. Finney, 437 U. S. 678,
437 U. S. 692
(1978).
Young, however, does not insulate from Eleventh
Amendment challenge every suit in which a state official is the
named defendant. In accordance with its original rationale,
Young applies only where the underlying authorization upon
which the named official acts is asserted to be illegal.
See
Cory v. White, 457 U. S. 85
(1982). And it does not foreclose an Eleventh Amendment challenge
where the official action is asserted to be illegal as a matter of
state law alone.
See Pennhurst, supra, at
465 U. S.
104-106. In such a case, federal supremacy is not
implicated, because the state official is acting contrary to state
law only.
We have also described certain types of cases that formally meet
the
Young requirements of a state official acting
inconsistently with federal law, but that stretch that case too far
and would upset the balance of federal and state interests that it
embodies.
Young's applicability has been tailored to
conform as precisely as possible to those specific situations in
which it is
"necessary to permit the federal courts to vindicate federal
rights and hold state officials responsible to 'the supreme
authority of the United States.'"
Pennhurst, supra, at
465 U. S. 105
(quoting
Young, supra, at
209 U. S.
160). Consequently,
Young has been focused on
cases in which a violation of federal law by a state official is
ongoing as opposed to cases in which federal
Page 478 U. S. 278
law has been violated at one time or over a period of time in
the past, as well as on cases in which the relief against the state
official directly ends the violation of federal, law as opposed to
cases in which that relief is intended indirectly to encourage
compliance with federal law through deterrence, or directly to meet
third-party interests such as compensation. As we have noted:
"Remedies designed to end a continuing violation of federal law
are necessary to vindicate the federal interest in assuring the
supremacy of that law. But compensatory or deterrence interests are
insufficient to overcome the dictates of the Eleventh
Amendment."
Green v. Mansour, 474 U. S. 64,
474 U. S. 68
(1985) (citation omitted).
Relief that in essence serves to compensate a party injured in
the past by an action of a state official in his official capacity
that was illegal under federal law is barred even when the state
official is the named defendant. [
Footnote 11] This is true if the relief is expressly
denominated as damages.
See, e.g., Ford Motor Co. v. Department
of Treasury of Indiana, 323 U. S. 459
(1945). It is also true if the relief is tantamount to an award of
damages for a past violation of federal law, even though styled as
something else.
See, e.g., Green v. Mansour, supra, at
474 U. S. 69-70;
Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U. S. 651,
415 U. S.
664-668 (1974). On the other hand, relief that serves
directly to bring an end to a present violation of federal law is
not barred by the Eleventh Amendment, even though accompanied by a
substantial ancillary effect on the state treasury.
See
Milliken v. Bradley, 433 U. S. 267,
433 U. S.
289-290 (1977);
Edelman, supra, at
415 U. S.
667-668.
For Eleventh Amendment purposes, the line between permitted and
prohibited suits will often be indistinct:
"[T]he difference between the type of relief barred by the
Eleventh Amendment and that permitted under
Ex parte Young
will not, in many instances, be that between day and night."
Edelman, supra, at
415 U. S. 667.
Compare, e.g., 440 U. S.
Jordan, 440
Page 478 U. S. 279
U.S. 332 (1979),
with Green v. Mansour, supra. In
discerning on which side of the line a particular case falls, we
look to the substance, rather than to the form, of the relief
sought,
see, e.g., Edelman, supra, at
415 U. S. 668,
and will be guided by the policies underlying the decision in
Ex parte Young.
B
The petitioners claim that the federal grants of school lands to
the State of Mississippi created a perpetual trust, with the State
as trustee, for the benefit of the public schools. Relying on
Alamo Land & Cattle Co. v. Arizona, 424 U.
S. 295 (1976), and
Lassen v. Arizona ex rel. Arizona
Highway Dept., 385 U. S. 458
(1967), the petitioners contend that
"[s]chool lands trusts impose specific burdens and obligations
on the states, as well as the state officials who act as trustees,
which include preserving the corpus, maximizing income, and, where
the corpus is lost or converted wrongfully, continuing the payment
of appropriate income indefinitely."
Brief for Petitioners 13. The idea that this last obligation
exists is gleaned not from any prior judicial construction of
school lands grants, but instead from alleged federal common law
rules that purportedly govern such trusts. The petitioners rely on
this asserted continuing obligation in contending that they seek
only a prospective, injunctive remedy, permissible under
Ex
parte Young, requiring state officials to meet that continuing
federal obligation by providing the Chickasaw Cession schools with
appropriate trust income.
To begin with, it is not at all clear that the school lands
grants to Mississippi created a binding trust. The respondents, in
fact, contend that the school lands were given to the State in fee
simple absolute, and that no binding federal obligation was
imposed.
See Alabama v. Schmidt, 232 U.
S. 168 (1914);
Cooper v.
Roberts, 18 How. 173 (1856). [
Footnote 12] But even
Page 478 U. S. 280
if the petitioners' legal characterization is accepted, their
trust claims are barred by the Eleventh Amendment. The distinction
between a continuing obligation on the part of the trustee and an
ongoing liability for past breach of trust is essentially a formal
distinction of the sort we rejected in
Edelman. There, the
Court of Appeals had upheld an award of "equitable restitution"
against the state official, requiring the payment to the plaintiff
class of "all AABD benefits wrongfully withheld." 415 U.S. at
415 U. S. 656.
We found, to the contrary, that the
"retroactive award of monetary relief . . . is, in practical
effect, indistinguishable in many aspects from an award of damages
against the State."
Id. at
415 U. S.
668.
The characterization in that case of the legal wrong as the
continuing withholding of accrued benefits is very similar to the
petitioners' characterization of the legal wrong here as the breach
of a continuing obligation to comply with the trust
Page 478 U. S. 281
obligations. We discern no substantive difference between a
not-yet-extinguished liability for a past breach of trust and the
continuing obligation to meet trust responsibilities asserted by
the petitioners. In both cases, the trustee is required, because of
the past loss of the trust corpus, to use its own resources to take
the place of the corpus or the lost income from the corpus. Even if
the petitioners here were seeking only the payment of an amount
equal to the income from the lost corpus, [
Footnote 13] such payment would be merely a
substitute for the return of the trust corpus itself. That is,
continuing payment of the income from the lost corpus is
essentially equivalent, in economic terms, to a one-time
restoration of the lost corpus itself: it is, in substance, the
award, as continuing income, rather than as a lump sum, of "
an
accrued monetary liability.'" Milliken v. Bradley, 433
U.S. at 433 U. S. 289
(quoting Edelman, 415 U.S. at 415 U. S.
664). Thus, we hold that the petitioners' trust claim,
like the claim we rejected in Edelman, may not be
sustained.
C
The Court of Appeals held, however, that the petitioners' equal
protection claim was not barred by the Eleventh Amendment. We agree
with that ruling. The complaint asserted:
"By their aforesaid past, present and future deprivations of and
to Plaintiffs and the Plaintiff class of the use and benefits of
their Sixteenth Section Lands, while at the same time granting to
and securing to all other school districts and school children in
the State of Mississippi in perpetuity the use and benefit of their
Sixteenth Section Lands, the State Defendants have deliberately,
intentionally, purposefully, and with design denied to Plaintiffs
and the Plaintiff class the equal protection of
Page 478 U. S. 282
the laws in violation of their rights secured by the Fourteenth
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States."
App. 20. The petitioners also alleged that these same actions
denied them "their rights to an interest in a minimally adequate
level of education, or reasonable opportunity therefor,"
id. at 21, while assuring such right to the other
schoolchildren in the State. Thus, the complaint alleged a present
disparity in the distribution of the benefits from the State's
Sixteenth Section lands.
This alleged ongoing constitutional violation -- the unequal
distribution by the State of the benefits of the State's school
lands -- is precisely the type of continuing violation for which a
remedy may permissibly be fashioned under
Young. It may be
that the current disparity results directly from the same actions
in the past that are the subject of the petitioners' trust claims,
but the essence of the equal protection allegation is the present
disparity in the distribution of the benefits of state-held assets,
and not the past actions of the State. A remedy to eliminate this
current disparity, even a remedy that might require the expenditure
of state funds, would ensure "
compliance in the future
with a substantive federal-question determination,'" rather than
bestow an award for accrued monetary liability. Milliken,
supra, at 433 U. S. 289
(quoting Edelman, supra, at 425 U. S.
668). This claim is, in fact, in all essential respects
the same as the equal protection claim for which relief was
approved in Milliken. Consequently, we agree with the
Court of Appeals that the Eleventh Amendment would not bar relief
necessary to correct a current violation of the Equal Protection
Clause, and that this claim may not properly be dismissed on this
basis. [Footnote
14]
Page 478 U. S. 283
III
The question remains whether the petitioners' equal protection
claim, although not barred by the Eleventh Amendment, is legally
insufficient and was properly dismissed for failure to state a
claim.
See Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 12(b)(6). We are bound, for
the purposes of this review, to take the well-pleaded factual
allegations in the complaint as true.
Miree v. DeKalb
County, 433 U. S. 25
(1977);
Kugler v. Helfant, 421 U.
S. 117 (1975);
Scheuer v. Rhodes, 416 U.
S. 232 (1974);
Cruz v. Beto, 405 U.
S. 319 (1972);
Gardner v. Toilet Goods Assn.,
387 U. S. 167
(1957). Construing these facts and relevant facts obtained from the
public record in the light most favorable to the petitioners, we
must ascertain whether they state a claim on which relief could be
granted.
A
In
Rodriguez, the Court upheld against an equal
protection challenge Texas' system of financing its public schools,
under which funds for the public schools were derived from two main
sources. Approximately half of the funds came from the Texas
Minimum Foundation School Program, a state program aimed at
guaranteeing a certain level of minimum education for all children
in the State. 411 U.S. at
411 U. S. 9. Most
of the remainder of the funds came from local sources -- in
particular, local property taxes.
Id. at
411 U. S. 9, n.
21. As a result of this dual funding system, most specifically as a
result of differences in amounts collected from local property
taxes, "substantial interdistrict disparities in school
expenditures [were] found . . . in varying degrees throughout the
State."
Id. at
411 U. S. 15.
In examining the equal protection status of these disparities,
the Court declined to apply any heightened scrutiny
Page 478 U. S. 284
based either on wealth as a suspect classification or on
education as a fundamental right. As to the latter, the Court
recognized the importance of public education, but noted that
education "is not among the rights afforded explicit protection
under our Federal Constitution."
Id. at
415 U. S. 35. The
Court did not, however, foreclose the possibility
"that some identifiable quantum of education is a
constitutionally protected prerequisite to the meaningful exercise
of either [the right to speak or the right to vote]."
Id. at
415 U. S. 36.
[
Footnote 15] Given the
absence of such radical denial of educational opportunity, it was
concluded that the State's school financing scheme would be
constitutional if it bore "some rational relationship to a
legitimate state purpose."
Id. at
415 U. S.
44.
Applying this standard, the dual Texas system was deemed
reasonably structured to accommodate two separate forces:
"'[T]he desire by members of society to have educational
opportunity for all children, and the desire of each family to
provide the best education it can afford for its own
children.'"
". . . While assuring a basic education for every child in the
State, it permits and encourages a large measure of participation
in and control of each district's schools at the local level."
Id. at
415 U. S. 49
(quoting J. Coleman, Foreword
Page 478 U. S. 285
to G. Strayer & R. Haig, The Financing of Education in the
State of New York vii (1923)).
Given this rational basis, the Court concluded that the mere
"happenstance" that the quality of education might vary from
district to district because of varying property values within the
districts did not render the system "so irrational as to be
invidiously discriminatory." 411 U.S. at
411 U. S. 55. In
particular, the Court found that
"any scheme of local taxation -- indeed the very existence of
identifiable local governmental units -- requires the establishment
of jurisdictional boundaries that are inevitably arbitrary."
Id. at
411 U. S.
53-54.
Almost 10 years later, the Court again considered the equal
protection status of the administration of the Texas public schools
-- this time in relation to the State's decision not to expend any
state funds on the education of children who were not "legally
admitted" to the United States.
Plyler v. Doe,
457 U. S. 202
(1982). The Court did not, however, measurably change the approach
articulated in
Rodriguez. It reiterated that education is
not a fundamental right, and concluded that undocumented aliens
were not a suspect class. 457 U.S. at
457 U. S.
223-224. Nevertheless, it concluded that the
justifications for the discrimination offered by the State were
"wholly insubstantial in light of the costs involved to these
children, the State, and the Nation."
Id. at
457 U. S.
230.
B
The complaint in this case asserted not simply that the
petitioners had been denied their right to a minimally adequate
education, but also that such a right was fundamental, and that,
because that right had been infringed, the State's action here
should be reviewed under strict scrutiny. App. 20. As
Rodriguez and
Plyler indicate, this Court has not
yet definitively settled the questions whether a minimally adequate
education is a fundamental right, and whether a statute alleged to
discriminatorily infringe that right should be accorded heightened
equal protection review.
Page 478 U. S. 286
Nor does this case require resolution of these issues. Although,
for the purposes of this motion to dismiss, we must take all the
factual allegations in the complaint as true, we are not bound to
accept as true a legal conclusion couched as a factual allegation.
See, e.g., Briscoe v. LaHue, 663 F.2d 713, 723 (CA7 1981),
aff'd on other grounds, 460 U. S. 325
(1983).
See generally 2A J. Moore & J. Lucas, Moore's
Federal Practice � 12.07, p. 12-64, and n. 6 (1985). The
petitioners' allegation that, by reason of the funding disparities
relating to the Sixteenth Section lands, they have been deprived of
a minimally adequate education is just such an allegation. The
petitioners do
Page 478 U. S. 287
not allege that schoolchildren in the Chickasaw Counties are not
taught to read or write; they do not allege that they receive no
instruction on even the educational basics; they allege no actual
facts in support of their assertion that they have been deprived of
a minimally adequate education. As we see it, we are not bound to
credit, and may disregard, the allegation that the petitioners have
been denied a minimally adequate education.
Concentrating instead on the disparities in terms of Sixteenth
Section lands benefits that the complaint in fact alleged, and that
are documented in the public record, we are persuaded that the
Court of Appeals properly determined that
Rodriguez
dictates the applicable standard of review. The differential
treatment alleged here constitutes an equal protection violation
only if it is not rationally related to a legitimate state
interest.
Applying this test, the Court of Appeals concluded that,
historical roots aside, the essence of the petitioners' claim was
an attack on Mississippi's system of financing public education.
And it reasoned that the inevitability of disparities in income
derived from real estate managed and administered locally, as in
Rodriguez, supplied a rationale for the disparities
alleged. To begin with, we disagree with the Court of Appeals'
apparent understanding of the crux of the petitioners' claim. As we
read their complaint, the petitioners do not challenge the overall
organization of the Mississippi public school financing program.
Instead, their challenge is restricted to one aspect of that
program: the Sixteenth Section and Lieu Lands funding. All of the
allegations in the complaint center around disparities in the
distribution of these particular benefits, and no allegations
concerning disparities in other public school funding programs are
included.
Consequently, this is a very different claim than the claim made
in
Rodriguez. In
Rodriguez, the contention was
that the State's overall system of funding was unconstitutionally
discriminatory. There, the Court examined the basic structure of
that system, and concluded that it was rationally related to a
legitimate state purpose. In reaching that conclusion, the Court
necessarily found that funding disparities resulting from
differences in local taxes were acceptable because related to the
state goal of allowing a measure of effective local control over
school funding levels.
Rodriguez did not, however, purport
to validate all funding variations that might result from a State's
public school funding decisions. It held merely that the variations
that resulted from allowing local control over local property tax
funding of the public schools were constitutionally permissible in
that case. [
Footnote 16]
Here, the petitioners' claim goes neither to the overall funding
system nor to the local
ad valorem component of that
system. Instead, it goes solely to the Sixteenth Section and Lieu
Lands portion of the State's public school funding. And as to this
claim, we are unpersuaded that
Rodriguez resolves the
equal protection question in favor of the State. The allegations of
the complaint are that the State is distributing
Page 478 U. S. 288
the income from Sixteenth Section lands or from Lieu Lands or
funds unequally among the school districts, to the detriment of the
Chickasaw Cession schools and their students. The Sixteenth Section
and Lieu Lands in Mississippi were granted to and held by the State
itself under state law, these lands "constitute property held in
trust for the benefit of the public schools, and must be treated as
such," Miss.Code Ann. § 29-3-1(1) (Supp.1985), but, in carrying out
the trust, the State has vested the management of these lands in
the local school boards throughout the State, under the supervision
of the Secretary of State, and has credited the income from these
lands to the
"school districts of the township in which such sixteenth
section lands may be located, or to which any sixteenth section
lieu lands may belong,"
such income to be used for the purpose of educating the children
of the school district or as otherwise may be provided by law.
Miss.Code Ann. § 29-3-109 (Supp.1986). This case is therefore very
different from
Rodriguez, where the differential financing
available to school districts was traceable to school district
funds available from local real estate taxation, not to a state
decision to divide state resources unequally among school
districts. The rationality of the disparity in
Rodriguez,
therefore, which rested on the fact that funding disparities based
on differing local wealth were a necessary adjunct of allowing
meaningful local control over school funding, does not settle the
constitutionality of disparities alleged in this case, and we
differ with the Court of Appeals in this respect. [
Footnote 17]
Page 478 U. S. 289
Nevertheless, the question remains whether the variations in the
benefits received by school districts from Sixteenth Section or
Lieu Lands are, on the allegations in the complaint and as a matter
of law, rationally related to a legitimate state interest. We
believe, however, that we should not pursue this issue here, but
should instead remand the case for further proceedings. Neither the
Court of Appeals nor the parties have addressed the equal
protection issue as we think it is posed by this case: given that
the State has title to assets granted to it by the Federal
Government for the use of the State's schools, does the Equal
Protection Clause permit it to distribute the benefit of these
assets unequally among the school districts, as it now does?
A crucial consideration in resolving this issue is whether the
federal law requires the State to allocate the economic benefits of
school lands to schools in the townships in which those lands are
located. If, as a matter of federal law, the State has no choice in
the matter, whether the complaint states an equal protection claim
depends on whether the federal policy is itself violative of the
Clause. If it is, the State may properly be enjoined from
implementing such policy. Contrariwise, if the federal law is valid
and the State is bound by it, then it provides a rational reason
for the funding disparity. Neither the courts below nor the parties
have addressed the equal protection issue in these terms. [
Footnote 18] Another
Page 478 U. S. 290
possible consideration in resolving the equal protection issue
is that school lands require management, and that the State has
assigned this task to the individual districts in which the
Page 478 U. S. 291
lands are located, subject to supervision by the State. The
significance, if any, in equal protection terms of this allocation
of duties in justifying assigning the income exclusively to those
who perform the management function and none of it
Page 478 U. S. 292
to those districts that have no lands to manage is a matter that
is best addressed by the lower courts in the first instance.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed
insofar as it affirmed the dismissal of petitioners' breach of
trust and related claims. With respect to the affirmance of the
District Court's dismissal of the equal protection claim, the
judgment of the Court of Appeals is vacated, and the case is
remanded to that court for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
So ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Although this case comes to us on a motion to dismiss under
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b), we are not precluded in our
review of the complaint from taking notice of items in the public
record, such as documentation of the history of the Mississippi and
other school lands grants. The historical facts recited here
comprise in large part the factual allegations of the complaint,
and are not disputed by the parties; the parties disagree only on
the legal significance of these facts.
[
Footnote 2]
The Northwest Territory, obtained by the United States by virtue
of cessions of western land claims from the original 13 States,
included the land south of Canada, north of the Ohio River, east of
the Mississippi River, and west of the original States. P. Gates,
History of Public Land Law Development 72 (1968).
[
Footnote 3]
The Land Ordinance of 1785 also initiated a land-surveying
practice that was first applied to the Northwest Territory, but
that was applied to all territories acquired by the United States
thereafter:
"At the point where the Ohio River crosses the Pennsylvania
border, a north-south line -- a principal meridian -- was to be run
and a base line westward -- the geographer's line -- was to be
surveyed; parallel lines of longitude and latitude were to be
surveyed, each to be 6 miles apart, making for townships of 36
square miles or 23,040 acres. . . . Each township was to be divided
into lots of one mile square containing 640 acres."
Id. at 65.
Each of these l-square-mile lots was called a "section," so the
section numbered 16, reserved for the public schools, was the
"Sixteenth Section."
[
Footnote 4]
The precise reasons for this practice are somewhat unclear, but
it seems likely that they were a combination of an overall practice
of encouraging education, a congressional desire to accelerate the
disposition of western lands at a higher price, and a policy of
trying to put the public-lands States on some sort of a par with
the original States in terms of taxable property, since federal
land, a large portion of the new States, was not taxable by them.
See generally Andrus v. Utah, 446 U.
S. 500,
446 U. S. 522,
446 U. S. 523
(1980) (POWELL, J., dissenting); P. Gates,
supra, n. 2, at
288-289; B. Hibbard, A History of the Public Land Policies 309-311
(1939).
[
Footnote 5]
At least in Alabama, however, this technical grant of the lands
to the inhabitants of each township was apparently interpreted as
vesting legal title in the State itself.
See, e.g., Alabama v.
Schmidt, 232 U. S. 168,
232 U. S. 172
(1914).
[
Footnote 6]
Pursuant to Miss.Code Ann. § 7-11-4, effective January 1, 1980,
the words "state land commissioner" mean "secretary of state."
See note following Miss.Code Ann. § 29-3-1
(Supp.1985).
[
Footnote 7]
In 1985, while this case was pending in the Court of Appeals,
the state legislature passed a statute providing for increased
Sixteenth Section appropriations for the Chickasaw Cession schools.
1985 Miss. Laws, House Bill No. 6, ch. 23. Under this statute, $1
million was to be appropriated for this purpose in 1985, and this
amount was to increase by $1 million each year until it reached a
maximum of $5 million for the fiscal year 1989-1990 and thereafter.
Even so, the offices of the Mississippi State Auditor and Secretary
of State estimated in 1984 that additional funds of over $7 million
would be required to bring the Chickasaw Cession funding to the
level of the average Sixteenth Section funding in the rest of the
State on a per pupil basis. App. 38.
[
Footnote 8]
The complaint also alleged a denial of due process,
unconstitutional impairment of contractual obligations, a taking
without just compensation, and a Ninth Amendment claim. Of these
additional claims, the petitioners press only the contract-clause
claim here. Since this claim is, in all essential respects, the
same as the petitioners' trust claim for Eleventh Amendment
purposes, our disposition of the trust claim,
infra, at
478 U. S.
276-281, governs this claim as well.
[
Footnote 9]
In their complaint, the petitioners also sought relief from
various federal officials, alleging breach of a promise to fund the
Chickasaw Cession trust and failure to keep the State of
Mississippi from wasting the trust assets. The District Court
dismissed these claims as barred by sovereign immunity, laches, and
the statutes of limitations. The petitioners' appeal from this
dismissal was itself dismissed by joint stipulation. Thus, no
issues involving the federal defendants remain in the case.
[
Footnote 10]
A State may consent to be sued in federal court.
Clark v.
Barnard, 108 U. S. 436,
108 U. S. 447
(1883). Here, however, it is clear that Mississippi has expressly
declined such consent.
See 1984 Miss Gen. Laws, ch. 495, §
3(4).
[
Footnote 11]
When a state official is sued and held liable in his individual
capacity, however, even damages may be awarded.
See Scheuer v.
Rhodes, 416 U. S. 232,
416 U. S.
237-238 (1974).
[
Footnote 12]
Even if there was a binding trust, the petitioners point to no
authority relating specifically to school lands trusts in support
of their contention that the obligation to pay income continues
even though the trust corpus has been lost.
See Brief for
Petitioners 24-28. In addition, even their assertion that such an
obligation should be imposed as a matter of common law is
unsupported. It may be true that a trust beneficiary is not
normally time-barred from suing a trustee for breach of trust and
loss of the corpus until such time as the trustee expressly
repudiates the trust.
See, e.g., Benedict v. New York
City, 250 U. S. 321,
250 U. S. 327
(1919). But this does not mean that there is a continuing
affirmative obligation on the part of the trustee with respect to
the trust corpus and income, as opposed to merely liability for a
past breach of trust that may still be acted upon.
The Restatement, for example, seems to adopt the latter
view:
"If a trust is created and the whole of the trust property
ceases to exist, the trustee no longer holds anything in trust. In
such a case, the trustee is under a personal liability to the
beneficiary if he committed a breach of trust in causing or
allowing the trust property to cease to exist, or if he sold the
trust property to himself or lent trust funds to himself, being
permitted to do so by the terms of the trust. In such a case, if
the trustee should be insolvent, the beneficiary is not entitled to
priority over the general creditors of the trustee. This does not
mean, however, that he owes no duties to the beneficiary except the
duties which a debtor owes to his creditor, or a tortfeasor to the
person he has wronged. He is still in a fiduciary relation to the
beneficiary. He cannot properly purchase the interest of the
beneficiary without making full disclosure of all circumstances
known to him affecting the transaction, and the transaction must be
fair, or the beneficiary can set it aside."
Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 74, Comment c, p.194 (1959)
(citations omitted).
[
Footnote 13]
In fact, the petitioners sought not merely such income, but also
restoration of the trust corpus and the award of past income not
received and interest on that income. App. 28-29.
[
Footnote 14]
The respondents further contend that the petitioners have not
sued any state officials who could grant the relief requested,
see Brief for Respondents Allain
et al. 17-19. We
note, however, that the respondent Secretary of State is, by state
statute, responsible for "general supervision" of the
administration by the local school officials of the Sixteenth
Section and Lieu Lands.
See Miss.Code Ann. § 29-3-1(1)
(Supp.1985). To the extent that the respondent Secretary of State
is acting in a manner that violates the Equal Protection Clause,
such actions may be enjoined under
Ex parte Young,
209 U. S. 123
(1908).
[
Footnote 15]
Instead, the Court noted:
"[W]e have no indication that the present levels of educational
expenditures in Texas provide an education that falls short [of
such a hypothesized constitutional prerequisite]. Whatever merit
appellees' argument might have if a State's financing system
occasioned an absolute denial of educational opportunities to any
of its children, that argument provides no basis for finding an
interference with fundamental rights where only relative
differences in spending levels are involved, and where -- as is
true in the present case -- no charge fairly could be made that the
system fails to provide each child with an opportunity to acquire
the basic minimum skills necessary for the enjoyment of the rights
of speech and of full participation in the political process."
411 U.S. at
411 U. S.
36-37.
[
Footnote 16]
JUSTICE POWELL contends that the fact that the overall system of
school financing here is similar to that approved by the Court in
Rodriguez provides "another reason" to dismiss the
petitioners' claims.
Post at
478 U. S.
301-302, n. 6.
Rodriguez, however, merely
upheld the overall structure of Texas' public school financing and
the component of that system allowing for variations in fundings
due to local taxation. We do not read
Rodriguez as
validating all disparities that might occur in a system that has an
overall structure similar to that approved in that case.
[
Footnote 17]
JUSTICE POWELL asserts that any discrepancies in Sixteenth
Section and Lieu Lands funding cannot be unconstitutional, because
"the Sixteenth Section payments . . . are an insignificant part of
the total payments from all sources made to Mississippi's school
districts."
Post at
478 U. S. 299.
Thus, JUSTICE POWELL seems to envision that some sort of threshold
level of effect in terms of overall school revenues is necessary
before the Equal Protection Clause's strictures become binding. The
petitioners, however, have limited themselves to challenging
discrimination in the Sixteenth Section and Lieu Lands fund.ing
program. This program is in fact separated from other sources of
public school funding by the State itself in administration,
see Miss.Code Ann. § 29-3-1
et seq. (1972 and
Supp.1985), and for accounting purposes,
see, e.g.,
Mississippi State Department of Education, 1986 Annual Report of
the State Superintendent of Public Education 48 (1986). Nor is
there any indication that the levels of benefits received from the
school lands are in any manner correlated to funds received from
other sources.
See, e.g., Miss.Code Ann. § 37-19-1
et
seq. (Supp.1985).
Cf. post at
478 U. S.
300-301, n. 5. In this situation, we decline the
dissent's invitation to look at school receipts overall. We also
decline to append to the general requirements of an equal
protection cause of action an additional threshold effects
requirement.
[
Footnote 18]
As to this question, we make only the following observations.
The starting point of any consideration of this question must be
the federal grants themselves, for it is clear that the interest
transferred to the State depends on the federal laws that
transferred that interest.
See California ex rel. State Lands
Comm'n v. United States, 457 U. S. 273,
457 U. S. 279
(1982) (citing
Borax Consolidated, Ltd. v. Los Angeles,
296 U. S. 10,
296 U. S. 22
(1935)). If the federal law provided for the transfer of an
absolute fee interest, the lands are owned outright by the State.
On the other hand, if the federal law created a trust with the
State as trustee, the State is bound to comply with the terms of
that trust.
Each of these possible conclusions finds some support in this
Court's prior cases. In
Cooper v.
Roberts, 18 How. 173,
59 U. S.
181-182 (1856), for example, the Court approved the sale
of school lands granted to the State of Michigan even where
Congress had not expressly authorized such a sale, stating that
"the grant is to the State directly, without limitation of its
power, though there is a sacred obligation imposed on its public
faith." The Court adopted this same reasoning in
Alabama v.
Schmidt, 232 U. S. 168
(1914), in which the Court approved the application of Alabama's
adverse possession laws to school lands against an argument that
the State's interest could not be extinguished in that manner under
the terms of the grant, and that, when the lands were no longer
used for the support of the schools, title would revert to the
United States. Relying on
Cooper, the Court concluded
that
"[t]he gift to the State is absolute, although, no doubt, as
said in
Cooper, 'there is a sacred obligation imposed on
its public faith.' But that obligation is honorary. . . ."
232 U.S. at
232 U. S.
173-174 (citations omitted).
See also Stuart v.
Easton, 170 U. S. 383,
170 U. S. 394
(1898) (cited by the Court in
Schmidt, supra, at
232 U. S. 174)
("
the mere expression of a purpose will not, of and by itself,
debase a fee'") (quoting Kerlin v. Campbell, 15 Pa.St. 500
(1850)). Thus, the Court's interpretations of some of the earlier
grants conceived of those grants as conveying a fee interest to the
States. See also Brooks v. Koonce, 275 U.S. 486 (1927)
(per curiam), aff'g Sloan v. Blytheville Special School Dist.
No. 5, 169 Ark. 77, 273 S.W. 397 (1925) (relying on
Cooper and Schmidt to dismiss challenge by local
school board to use of proceeds from local Sixteenth Section lands
for the benefit of the State at large).
On the other hand, cases interpreting more recent grants have
found an explicit trust obligation, although it is worth noting
that none of these grants included a provision similar to that at
issue here; they provided for lands for the general benefit of the
schools in the State. However, in
Ervien v. United States,
251 U. S. 41
(1919), for example, the Court upheld a lower court decision
enjoining as a breach of trust any use by the New Mexico Public
Lands Commissioner of Sixteenth Section proceeds for a purpose
other than one of the purposes enumerated in the grant. Thus, the
Court held that, under these circumstances, the phrase "breach of
trust" meant
"that the United States, being the grantor of the lands, could
impose conditions upon their use, and have the right to exact the
performance of the conditions."
Id. at
251 U. S. 48. More
recently, the Court in
Lassen v. Arizona ex rel. Arizona
Highway Dept., 385 U. S. 458,
385 U. S.
460-461 (1967), interpreted and enforced the terms of
the Arizona school lands grant, noting that
"[t]he grant involved here . . . expressly requires the Attorney
General of the United States to maintain whatever proceedings may
be necessary to enforce its terms."
See also Alamo Land & Cattle Co. v. Arizona,
424 U. S. 295
(1976).
Thus, the Court has indicated that some school lands grants did
not create express trusts, and has held that other grants did
create such trusts, although it has never enforced a provision such
as the provision at issue here. The Court has never discussed the
relationship between these two sets of cases, but it is possible
that any variation in results stems from the facts that the terms
of the grants have varied over time.
See Lassen, supra, at
385 U. S. 460.
Thus, it could be that the earlier grants did give the grantee
States absolute fee interests, while the later grants created
actual enforceable trusts. On the other hand, it may be that the
petitioners are correct in asserting that the substance of all of
these grants is the same.
See S.Rep. No. 454, 61st Cong.,
2d Sess., 18-20 (1910) (referring to express trust provisions in
New Mexico and Arizona Enabling Act as "nothing new in principle,"
and noting that, "[f]or many years, it has been the custom to
specify the purposes for which grants of lands are made to incoming
states, and to place express restrictions upon the mode of
disposing of them"). Or perhaps they are all properly viewed as
being in the nature of "a
solemn agreement' which in some ways
may be analogized to a contract between private parties."
Andrus v. Utah, 446 U.S. at 446 U. S. 507.
Perhaps, then, the conditions of the grants are still enforceable
by the United States, although possibly not by third parties. This
may be the case even though the federal defendants disavowed this
position below, arguing that Cooper and Schmidt
control, and that our recent cases are distinguishable because they
involve express trusts. See, e.g., Reply Brief for Federal
Defendants in No. 81-90 (ND Miss.), pp. 60-62.
JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom JUSTICE MARSHALL, JUSTICE BLACKMUN,
and JUSTICE STEVENS join, concurring in part, concurring in the
judgment in part, and dissenting in part.
Although I join Parts I and III of the Court's opinion, and
agree with the result in Part II-C, I do not join Parts II-A and
II-B for the reasons stated in my dissent in
Atascadero State
Hospital v. Scanlon, 473 U. S. 234,
473 U. S.
258-302 (1985) (BRENNAN, J., dissenting).
The Court makes a valiant effort to set forth the principles
that determine whether a particular claim is or is not barred by
the Eleventh Amendment.
See ante at
478 U. S.
276-279. To my mind, the Court's restatement simply
underscores the implausibility of the entire venture, for it
clearly demonstrates that the Court's Eleventh Amendment
jurisprudence consists of little more than a number of
ad
hoc and unmanageable rules bearing little or no relation to
one another or to any coherent framework; indeed, the Court's best
efforts to impose order on the cases in this area has produced only
the conclusion that "[f]or Eleventh Amendment purposes, the line
between permitted and prohibited suits will often be indistinct,"
ante at
478 U. S. 278.
This hodgepodge produces no positive benefits to society. Its only
effect is to impair or prevent effective enforcement of federal
law. It is highly unlikely that, having created a system in which
federal law was to be supreme, the Framers of the Constitution or
of the Eleventh
Page 478 U. S. 293
Amendment nonetheless intended for that law to be unenforceable
in the broad class of cases now barred by this Court's precedents.
In fact, as I demonstrated last Term in
Atascadero, the
Framers intended no such thing.
The magnitude of the Court's mistake has only been increased by
changes that have taken place in our law and our society since
Hans v. Louisiana, 134 U. S. 1 (1890),
took the first step down this ill-advised path, for the National
Government and federal law play a much more important role in
protecting the rights of individuals today. Only
stare
decisis can support the Court's continued adherence to this
unfortunate doctrine.
Stare decisis is indeed a force to
be reckoned with -- although the Court has not felt itself
particularly constrained by
stare decisis in
expanding the protective mantle of sovereign immunity,
see Pennhurst State School & Hospital v. Halderman,
465 U. S. 89,
465 U. S.
165-166, n. 50 (1984) (STEVENS, J., dissenting);
Atascadero State Hospital v. Scanlon, supra, at
473 U. S. 304
(STEVENS, J., dissenting). However, as Chief Justice Taney
observed, the authority of the Court's construction of the
Constitution ultimately "depend[s] altogether on the force of the
reasoning by which it is supported."
Passenger
Cases, 7 How. 283,
48 U. S. 470
(1849) (dissenting opinion). The Court's Eleventh Amendment
jurisprudence is not supported by history or by sound legal
reasoning; it is simply bad law. In matters of such great
institutional importance as this,
stare decisis must
yield.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
The Court today holds that petitioners' breach of trust claims
are barred by the Eleventh Amendment. I cannot agree. Petitioners
claim that Mississippi breached legal obligations placed on it by
federal law. I agree with JUSTICE BRENNAN that the Eleventh
Amendment was never intended to bar such suits.
Ante at
478 U. S.
292-293 (BRENNAN, J., concurring in part, concurring in
judgment in part, and dissenting in part). But even if the Eleventh
Amendment normally would
Page 478 U. S. 294
bar suits against a State by its citizens, I believe that, when
a State willingly accepts a substantial benefit from the Federal
Government, it waives its immunity under the Eleventh Amendment and
consents to suit by the intended beneficiaries of that federal
assistance.
See, e g., Green v. Mansour, 474 U. S.
64,
474 U. S. 81
(1985) (BLACKMUN J. . dissenting);
Atascadero State Hospital v.
Scanlon, 473 U. S. 234,
473 U. S. 304
(1985) (BLACKMUN, J., dissenting);
Edelman v. Jordan,
415 U. S. 651,
415 U. S.
688-696 (1974) (MARSHALL, J., dissenting).
The very Enabling Act that gave Mississippi the benefits of
statehood, including the protections afforded by the Eleventh
Amendment, expressly incorporated the Northwest Ordinance of 1789,
which required the reservation of Sixteenth Section lands for the
benefit of public education.
See Act of Mar. 1, 1817, 3
Stat. 348, 349. And the Act giving Mississippi the Chickasaw
Cession Lieu Lands expressly provided that those lands be held
"upon the same terms and conditions, in all respects, as the
said State now holds the lands heretofore reserved for the use of
schools in said State."
Act of July 4, 1836 § 2, 5 Stat. 116.
Neither the District Court nor the Court of Appeals addressed
the nature of the conditions the Federal Government placed upon
Mississippi's use of the Lieu Lands. But, as the Court notes in
discussing petitioners' equal protection claims, the Federal
Government may have intended to bind Mississippi to use the lands
solely to benefit the schoolchildren of the particular township to
which the school lands were originally attached.
Ante at
478 U. S.
287-289, and n. 16. Moreover, Mississippi apparently has
concluded, as a matter of state law, that school lands "constitute
property held in trust for the benefit of the public schools and
must be treated as such." Miss.Code Ann. § 29-3-1(1) (Supp.1985).
Thus, a fuller consideration of the actual terms on which the
Federal Government conveyed the Lieu Lands to Mississippi might
reveal that the State waived its immunity from suit.
Page 478 U. S. 295
Absent an Eleventh Amendment bar, the complaint should survive a
motion to dismiss. Petitioners have made several allegations which,
read fairly, suggest that Mississippi did not use the Lieu Lands
solely for the benefit of Chickasaw Cession schoolchildren. They
claim that the State leased the Lieu Lands for a minimal sum,
converted the leaseholds into outright ownership without the
payment of additional consideration, invested the entire proceeds
generated by disposition of the Lieu Lands in railroad stock, and
then decided to pay only 6% interest on the hypothetical fund
created to replace the lost Lieu Lands proceeds. I believe these
assertions, which must be taken as true at this stage in the
proceedings, sufficiently articulate a claim that the state
legislature acted to aid the interests of land speculators,
railroads, and the economic development of the entire State at the
expense of the Chickasaw Cession children, in violation of its
trust obligation.
If the Federal Government intended to impress a trust upon the
Lieu Lands with the State as trustee and the Chickasaw Cession
schoolchildren as the beneficiaries, those children should have a
right of action against the State for breach of its fiduciary duty.
As the Court recognizes, damages are the proper remedy for a breach
of fiduciary duty when the corpus of a trust has been entirely
lost.
See ante at
478
U.S. 280-281. Thus, for the reasons expressed by JUSTICE
MARSHALL in
Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.S. at
415 U. S.
691-692, I believe that petitioners would be entitled to
damages if they proved at trial the breach of trust they have
alleged. I therefore would reverse the Court of Appeals' dismissal
of petitioners' trust-based claims, and remand this issue for
fuller consideration.
JUSTICE POWELL, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and JUSTICE
REHNQUIST join, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
The public record refutes petitioners' equal protection claims
that the disparities in funding from various school lands
detrimentally affects students and schools in school districts
Page 478 U. S. 296
within the Chickasaw Cession. Statistics from Mississippi's
State Department of Education show the statewide ranking of school
districts in terms of expenditures per pupil. In this ranking, the
Chickasaw Cession districts are scattered widely among the State's
154 school districts. Moreover, far from being a "critical element
of school funding in Mississippi," as alleged by petitioners, the
Sixteenth Section lands account for only 1 1/2% of overall funds
provided for schools. [
Footnote
2/1] I therefore find no basis for the assumption that
petitioners can prove that students in Chickasaw Cession districts
have been detrimentally affected by this differential, and I do not
believe that petitioners have asserted an equal protection claim
that can survive a motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 12(b)(6). [
Footnote
2/2]
I
A brief procedural history is helpful in putting this litigation
in perspective. Petitioners include a group of county school
boards, superintendents of education, and individual
schoolchildren, all residing in the Chickasaw Cession counties in
north Mississippi. In June, 1981, petitioners sued numerous federal
and state officials, attacking the difference between, on the one
hand, payments from Sixteenth Section lands in other school
districts (the Chocktaw area) and, on the other hand, payments from
the State of Mississippi's trust fund to school districts within
the Chickasaw Cession in place of income from the Chickasaw school
lands.
The complaint recounted alleged "illegalities" as far back as
the Northwest Territory Ordinance of 1785. It sought to have
various federal statutes that "purport to authorize, validate or
confirm" sales of the Sixteenth Section lands declared
Page 478 U. S. 297
"unlawful, void and unenforceable, including but not limited to
(a) the Act of July 4, 1936; (b) the Act of May 19, 1852; (c) the
Act of March 3, 1857; (d) any other acts of Congress having said
effect."
App. 16 (citations omitted).
The complaint also alleged that both the federal and state
defendants had breached perpetual and binding obligations of "an
express/constructive trust" -- the federal defendants by permitting
the State to breach the trust through various statutes
(
e.g., the Northwest Territory Ordinance), and the state
defendants by unlawfully selling the relevant properties and by
ill-advisedly investing the proceeds of that sale. The complaint
further alleged violations of due process by denial of "free
appropriate public education" and -- of relevance to the case as it
stands before this Court -- violations of equal protection by
disparate distribution of certain funds and by infringement upon
the "fundamental rights" of "a suspect class" to "a minimally
adequate level of education." Finally, the complaint alleged
impairment of obligation of contract and taking without just
compensation.
Petitioners sought wide-ranging relief, including conveyance to
them of properties or money of a value equivalent to that of the
relevant school lands and compensation for the income from 1832 to
present that petitioners "would have received . . . if such lands
had been subjected to such prudent use and reasonable management."
Petitioners also sought to obtain new lands as substitution for
those lost, "which may include offshore oil, gas and other mineral
rights." Petitioners additionally sought to "enjoin" and "direct"
the defendants to establish "a fund or funds of such value" as was
necessary to provide "hereafter" and "in perpetuity" annual income
to Chickasaw Cession school districts. Finally, petitioners
demanded that the defendants take other steps to
"eliminate and compensate and for the future guarantee and
protect Plaintiffs and the Plaintiff class against . . .
denials
Page 478 U. S. 298
and deprivations of their rights to due process of law and to
the equal protection of the laws. [
Footnote 2/3]"
The District Court held that the claims against the Federal
Government were barred by sovereign immunity, laches, and statutes
of limitations. This order was not appealed. In a separate order,
the District Court held that any monetary remedy was barred by the
Eleventh Amendment -- a holding affirmed by the Court of Appeals
and by this Court today. I agree with this disposition. I also
would not reach the issues raised by allegations of the denial of a
"fundamental right" to "a minimally adequate education."
See
ante at
478 U. S. 285.
I do not, however, agree with the Court's holding that petitioners'
equal protection allegations regarding the disparate distribution
of funds present a claim of sufficient substance to survive a
motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
12(b)(6).
II
The Court begins the discussion of petitioners' equal protection
claim,
ante at
478 U. S.
283-292, by acknowledging that it is appropriate for the
Court to take notice of "relevant facts obtained from the public
record in the light most favorable to the petitioners."
Ante at
478 U. S. 283.
The most recent figures available
Page 478 U. S. 299
from the State Department of Education of Mississippi, read in
such a light, fatally undercut petitioners' equal protection
claims.
It is alleged -- and here accepted as true -- that there is a
disparity between the payments from the Sixteenth Section lands in
the Chocktaw districts and the payments from the State of
Mississippi's trust fund to Chickasaw districts. [
Footnote 2/4] The complaint characterizes this
disparity as an "unjust, inequitable and unconstitutional
deprivation of the rights of the children of the Chickasaw Cession
counties." App. 2. The Court reads the complaint as alleging that
this unequal distribution of such funds acts "to the detriment of
the Chickasaw Cession schools and their students,"
ante at
478 U. S. 288.
The complaint, however, contains no factual assertions other than
this disparity to support these conclusory allegations, nor is
there any basis for believing a detriment could ever be proved. As
shown in
478
U.S. 265 Table A|>Table A, the various per pupil
expenditures in petitioners' school districts are comparable to,
and in some cases higher than, the average for districts within the
Chocktaw area. And the Sixteenth Section payments -- as the figures
in
478
U.S. 265 Table B|>Table B demonstrate beyond argument -- are
an insignificant part of the total payments from all sources made
to Mississippi's school districts.
The Court does not question these data. It instead states that
petitioners "have limited themselves to challenging discrimination
in the Sixteenth Section" program, and, relying on that limitation,
"decline[s] the dissent's invitation to look at school receipts
overall."
Ante at
478 U. S. 288-289, n. 17. The Court thereby ignores the
undisputed facts concerning the
Page 478 U. S. 300
funding of public education in the State of Mississippi, and
instead bases its equal protection analysis on 1 1/2% of the
overall funds provided for public secondary and elementary schools
in the State. The Equal Protection Clause, at least in the context
of a state funding of schools, is concerned with substance, not
with the
de minimis variations of funding among the
districts.
478
U.S. 265 Table A|>Table A in the Appendix to this opinion,
"School Finances," shows that Chickasaw Cession school districts
are, in fact, distributed throughout a financial ranking of all the
State's school districts, whether the measure used is "Current
Expenditure per Pupil," "Current Expenditure per Pupil for
Instruction Cost," or "Current Expenditure per Pupil . . . Less
Transportation." Specifically, the Table shows that the statewide
average per pupil expenditure was $1965.78, of which $1,261.09 went
towards "instructional cost." All but 6 of the 39 school districts
within the Chickasaw Cession districts spent within $300 of the per
pupil average expenditure; all but two spent within $200 of the
average per pupil instructional expenditure. The per pupil
expenditure was over $1,400 in the Chickasaw district with the
lowest per pupil expenditure, and over $2,400 in the Chickasaw
district with the highest expenditure. In the light of these
figures of expenditures per pupil, I cannot believe that $74.71 --
the alleged difference between the average per pupil payment from
Sixteenth Section lands and the average per pupil payment from the
State's trust fund in place of the Chickasaw school lands --
creates a "detriment" to the students and schools within the
Chickasaw Cession, and thereby gives rise to a violation of equal
protection under the rational-relation standard. [
Footnote 2/5]
Page 478 U. S. 301
Although the figures of expenditures per pupil are fatal to
petitioners' claims, a second set of statistics provides an
additional reason to conclude that an equal protection claim
concerning alleged disparities in Sixteenth Section lands should
not survive a motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 12(b)(6). As shown in
478
U.S. 265 Table B|>Table B, "Receipts for Public Schools,"
payments received from Sixteenth Section lands in 1984-1985,
$16,272,925, accounted for less than 1 1/2% of total "Receipts for
Public Schools" throughout the State. These Sixteenth Section
payments are dwarfed by income from state and federal funds of over
$752 million (totaling 74% of "Receipts for Public Schools").
Variations among school districts of such a small part of the total
receipts cannot support a claim of a violation of the Equal
Protection Clause in the provision of education for the children of
the Chickasaw Cession districts. [
Footnote 2/6]
Page 478 U. S. 302
III
Petitioners' equal protection claims cannot survive a motion
under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) in the light of the
distribution of Chickasaw Cession districts throughout the
statewide rankings of various expenditures per pupil and the
insignificance of the Sixteenth Section funds relative to the total
receipts for education. Accordingly, I dissent.
Page 478 U. S. 303
[
Footnote 2/1]
Mississippi State Department of Education, 1986 Annual Report of
the State Superintendent of Public Education (1986). Tables
478
U.S. 265 Table A|>A and
478
U.S. 265 Table B|>B,
infra, are taken from this
Report, pp. 144-146 and 48, respectively.
[
Footnote 2/2]
I agree with the Court that most of petitioners' claims are
barred by the Eleventh Amendment, and therefore join Part II of the
Court's opinion.
[
Footnote 2/3]
One rarely sees a complaint that is as sweeping in its
allegations and as duplicative in its requests for relief.
Apparently, no question was raised by respondents or the District
Court as to whether, in signing this complaint, counsel for
petitioners complied with Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure. That Rule reads in pertinent part:
"The signature of an attorney or party constitutes a certificate
by him that he has read the pleading, motion, or other paper, that
to the best of his knowledge, information, and belief formed after
reasonable inquiry it is well grounded in fact and is warranted by
existing law or a good faith argument for the extension,
modification, or reversal of existing law, and that it is not
interposed for any improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause
unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of
litigation."
Despite the wide-ranging complaint, the only alleged denial of
equal protection is with respect to the funding in the Chickasaw
Cession school districts. As noted
supra, at
478 U. S. 296,
these funds are only 1 1/2% of overall funding for elementary and
secondary schools within the State.
[
Footnote 2/4]
The Court states that this disparity is $75.34, versus $0.63.
The Court of Appeals and the petition for certiorari give the
relevant figures as $31.25 and $0.80.
Papasan v. United
States, 756 F.2d 1087, 1091 (CA5 1985); Pet. for Cert. 4. The
former figures are derived from an unaudited aggregation of reports
by individual school districts presented in a November, 1984,
report on the Chickasaw Cession districts from the State Auditor
and the Secretary of State. App. 35. As this case arose from a Rule
12(b)(6) motion, I use the disparity most favorable to the
plaintiffs: $74.71.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The State distributes its funds equally throughout Mississippi's
school districts on the basis of "teacher unit[s]."
See
Miss.Code Ann. §§ 37-19-3 and 37-19-5 (Supp.1985); Tr. Oral Arg.
32. As in many States, total funding among districts in Mississippi
varies depending upon local
ad valorem taxes and other
district sources.
See 478
U.S. 265 Table B|>Table B;
see also San Antonio
Independent School Dist. v. Rodriguez, 411 U. S.
1,
411 U. S. 49
(1973). Discrepancies from Sixteenth Section lands are frequently
offset in part or entirely by
ad valorem taxes, and the
variations in local funding from sources other than Sixteenth
Section lands are almost always greater than the alleged
"disparity" relied on in this case.
See Annual Report,
supra, 478
U.S. 265fn2/1|>n. 1, at 94-98 (listing revenue receipts by
local sources).
[
Footnote 2/6]
There is another reason to dismiss petitioner's claims. The
system of financing Mississippi's public schools bears a
substantial similarity to the financing arrangement in the State of
Texas upheld by this Court.
San Antonio Independent School
Dist. v. Rodriguez, supra. In
Rodriguez, almost half
of the revenues for funding elementary and secondary schools came
from a large state-funded program designed to provide a basic
minimal education in every school. Each school district then would
supplement state and federal funds through an
ad valorem
tax on property within its jurisdiction. Similarly, Mississippi
provides each district with funds to support a "minimum program of
education."
See Miss.Code Ann. § 3719-1
et seq.
(1972 and Supp.1985). These funds constitute over half of the
receipts for public schools; federal funds constitute another 18%.
Of the remaining receipts for Mississippi's school districts,
ad valorem taxes, which are levied by, and vary among, the
local school districts, account for over two-thirds.
See
478
U.S. 265 Table B|>Table B,
infra. Mississippi's
financing system, like that of Texas,
"[w]hile assuring a basic education for every child in the
State, . . . permits and encourages a large measure of
participation and control of each district's schools at the local
level."
Rodriquez, supra, at 49.
I also note that Mississippi has taken numerous steps to ensure
the adequacy of the most important single factor in education: the
quality of the teachers. The State has established a Commission on
Teacher and Administrator Education to oversee the training,
certification, and evaluation of public school teachers throughout
Mississippi. Miss.Code Ann. § 37-3-2 (Supp.1985). There is a
guaranteed minimum for teachers' salaries that may be augmented by
the local districts, §§ 37-19-7 and 37-19-15, a scale of pay
increases based on tenure and merit, § 37-19-7, a guarantee of no
reduction in any local supplements to salary, § 37-19-11, a set of
minimum standards for teachers' competency, § 37-19-9. and a
requirement that all teachers employed after July 1, 1975, take the
"national teachers examination," § 37-19-13.
|
478
U.S. 265 Table A|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF POWELL, J.
bwm:
TABLE A
SCHOOL FINANCES**
Natchez Adams 2,131.22 33 1,253.67 73 2,018.70 31
Alcorn 1,694.89 132 1,270.49 63 1,585.03 129
Corinth 1,947.49 64 1,274.92 61 1,862.16 53
Amite 2,331.43 11 1,454.17 18 2,057.52 28
Attala 2,109.59 36 1,298.66 48 1,936.06 40
Kosciusko 1,877.64 88 1,104.12 139 1,727.96 90
Benton 2,121.78 35 1,338.89 38 1,952.98 38
Bolivar #1 *2,082.64 39 1,339.85 36 2,012.20 34
Bolivar #2 *2,769.62 4 1,804.24 2 2,699.23 3
Bolivar #3 *1,943.55 66 1,264.60 68 1,873.11 51
Bolivar #4 *1,793.43 110 1,182.67 106 1,722.98 91
Bolivar #5 *2,027.20 45 1,309.88 45 1,956.74 37
Bolivar #6 *1,657.08 136 1,173.85 116 1,586.61 128
Calhoun 1,770.32 115 1,199.18 95 1,656.17 111
Carroll 2,014.44 51 1,295.68 49 1,821.73 69
Chickasaw 2,158.73 29 1,438.50 21 1,901.76 47
Houston 1,797.93 108 1,233.84 80 1,681.46 105
Okolona 1,635.52 143 1,106.77 137 1,565.18 132
Choctaw 1,935.99 70 1,309.67 46 1,787.92 77
Claiborne 4,085.75 1 2,066.37 1 3,799.88 1
Enterprise *1,729.02 123 1,143.75 128 1,538.66 136
Quitman Cons. *1,813.05 106 1,129.16 133 1,622.30 120
Clay 2,307.56 13 1,482.73 13 2,161.68 13
West Point 1,844.88 97 1,198.97 96 1,733.96 89
Coahoma Cty. 2,414.77 10 1,514.98 6 2,236.92 10
Clarksdale 1,918.05 77 1,255.92 72 1,891.53 49
Copiah 2,168.89 28 1,162.03 122 2,064.60 25
Hazlehurst 1,771.68 114 1,190.21 99 1,660.59 110
Covington 1,912.97 79 1,290.85 50 1,782.63 79
Desoto 1,565.04 148 1,021.31 150 1,467.48 146
Forrest 2,019.63 48 1,352.53 34 1,841.33 60
Hattiesburg 2,215.47 25 1,465.32 15 2,145.72 14
Petal 1,701.54 129 1,182.13 108 1,595.90 124
Franklin 2,298.67 15 1,514.75 7 2,121.11 21
George 1,474.78 153 982.08 152 1,341.92 154
Greene 2,056.05 42 1,278.69 58 1,834.67 65
Grenada 1,764.73 116 1,175.11 114 1,644.66 114
Hancock 1,750.66 119 1,011.95 151 1,566.13 131
Bay St. Louis 1,981.82 56 1,165.33 119 1,905.05 46
Harrison 1,860.89 92 1,264.10 69 1,758.84 83
Biloxi 2,251.56 18 1,411.45 24 2,163.00 12
Gulfport 2,496.19 8 1,457.45 17 2,433.81 7
Long Beach 1,920.58 74 1,257.30 71 1,843.01 59
Pass Christian 2,965.97 2 1,628.06 3 2,874.13 2
Hinds 1,918.64 76 1,215.27 87 1,796.81 73
Jackson 2,429.77 9 1,422.73 22 2,293.98 9
Clinton 1,813.93 105 1,178.70 110 1,702.73 101
Holmes 1,854.79 95 1,223.53 85 1,713.49 94
Durant 1,553.46 151 1,155.74 125 1,553.37 133
Humphreys 2,132.20 32 1,193.35 97 1,959.88 36
Itawamba 1,905.92 80 1,156.48 124 1,749.66 85
Jackson 2,243.31 20 1,364.81 33 2,113.99 23
Moss Point 1,878.90 87 1,249.54 75 1,796.95 71
Ocean Springs 1,920.67 73 1,269.80 64 1,852.01 58
Pascagoula 2,538.68 6 1,494.00 11 2,458.17 5
East Jasper *2,010.43 52 1,265.89 66 1,836.99 64
West Jasper *1,866.24 89 1,244.61 79 1,693.61 103
Jefferson 2,066.22 41 1,351.06 35 1,861.66 54
Jefferson Davis 1,928.49 72 1,275.72 60 1,749.29 86
Jones 1,719.42 125 1,170.06 117 1,551.87 134
Laurel 2,639.67 5 1,590.71 4 2,581.89 4
Kemper 2,096.15 38 1,339.34 37 1,868.72 52
Lafayette 1,698.47 130 1,109.42 136 1,530.26 137
Oxford 2,226.94 24 1,514.00 8 2,118.55 22
Lamar 1,506.98 152 971.37 153 1,382.92 153
Lumberton Line *1,601.57 145 1,182.43 107 1,601.07 122
Lauderdale 1,641.60 138 1,084.88 143 1,485.10 143
Meridian 2,136.57 31 1,398.45 26 2,064.38 26
Lawrence 1,980.57 57 1,193.35 98 1,840.85 62
Leake 1,720.38 124 1,132.06 132 1,574.13 130
Lee 1,694.48 133 1,162.81 120 1,587.20 127
Nettleton Line *1,457.55 154 1,097.67 141 1,444.60
149
Tupelo 2,199.64 27 1,337.87 39 2,137.07 16
Leflore 2,148.73 30 1,384.79 29 2,022.71 30
Greenwood 2,245.93 19 1,459.97 16 2,215.51 11
Lincoln 1,590.44 146 1,076.05 145 1,441.20 150
Brookhaven 2,031.92 44 1,416.07 23 1,920.57 43
Lowndes 1,640.09 140 1,060.41 147 1,517.19 140
Columbus 2,106.33 37 1,383.49 30 2,018.05 33
Madison 2,125.62 34 1,301.47 47 1,912.65 45
Canton 1,697.55 131 1,213.84 90 1,639.48 117
Ridgeland 1,814.86 103 1,150.59 127 1,704.57 100
Marion 2,272.92 16 1,494.76 10 2,061.49 27
Columbia 2,240.43 23 1,448.23 19 2,132.43 18
Marshall 1,684.23 134 1,201.21 94 1,524.60 139
Holly Springs 1,975.64 59 1,232.12 82 1,860.84 55
Monroe 1,706.16 127 1,112.07 135 1,546.87 135
Aberdeen 1,890.98 83 1,245.80 78 1,796.93 72
Amory 1,840.11 98 1,283.43 53 1,764.71 81
Montgomery 2,022.40 47 1,213.96 89 1,856.00 57
Winona 2,005.07 53 1,401.42 25 1,945.24 39
Neshoba 1,638.19 141 1,162.39 121 1,502.41 141
Philadelphia 1,913.78 78 1,319.95 42 1,832.34 67
Newton 1,920.07 75 1,185.90 105 1,719.76 93
Newton Sep. 1,945.74 65 1,249.46 76 1,831.42 68
Union Sep. 1,740.87 121 1,143.63 129 1,646.80 113
Noxubee 1,939.99 69 1,289.94 51 1,749.23 87
Oktibbeha 1,897.03 82 1,337.68 40 1,759.97 82
Starkville 1,965.92 62 1,252.02 74 1,879.25 50
North Panola *1,864.61 90 1,215.43 86 1,705.72 99
South Panola *1,657.45 142 1,100.87 140 1,478.59
145
Pearl River 1,562.46 149 966.38 154 1,418.22 152
Picayune 1,752.85 118 1,190.01 101 1,672.13 106
Poplarville 1,862.97 91 1,190.15 100 1,707.74 96
Perry 2,311.91 12 1,371.84 31 2,111.50 24
Richton 1,886.43 85 1,174.43 115 1,719.79 92
North Pike *1,630.22 144 1,114.71 134 1,480.55 144
South Pike *1,858.62 94 1,265.60 67 1,707.35 98
McComb 1,941.21 68 1,223.67 84 1,858.82 56
Pontotoc 1,775.64 113 1,134.82 131 1,630.30 118
Pontotoc Sep. 1,643.80 137 1,064.43 146 1,461.72
147
Prentiss 1,884.35 86 1,316.58 43 1.756.40 84
Baldwyn 1,859.39 93 1,206.28 92 1,783.64 78
Booneville 1,887.23 84 1,282.05 55 1,792.72 74
Quitman 1,988.47 55 1,335.45 41 1,893.71 48
Rankin 1,556.15 150 1,043.08 148 1,427.91 151
Pearl 1,711.80 126 1,151.38 126 1,594.58 125
Scott 1,737.36 122 1,213.54 91 1,600.68 123
Forest 1,827.34 101 1,287.52 52 1,711.70 95
Anguilla Line *2,018.96 49 1,187.61 103 1,921.95 42
Sharkey Issaquena *2,016.35 50 1,246.07 77 1,841.20 61
Simpson 1,819.91 102 1,260.84 70 1,698.56 102
Smith 1,941.22 67 1,232.87 81 1,739.71 88
Stone 1,989.77 54 1,215.14 88 1,833.56 66
Sunflower 1,978.77 58 1,283.18 54 1,840.10 63
Drew 2,039.51 43 1,385.51 28 1,933.45 41
Indianola 1,640.99 139 1,178.18 111 1,589.70 126
E. Tallahatchie *1,928.67 71 1,273.27 62 1,788.65 76
W. Tallahatchie *1,847.13 96 1,269.31 65 1,707.58 97
Tate 1,786.61 112 1,176.14 112 1,648.01 112
Senatobia 1,743.53 120 1,189.10 102 1,671.48 107
North Tippah *1,829.20 100 1,175.58 113 1,671.22
108
South Tippah *1,757.42 117 1,185.98 104 1,612.25
121
Tishomingo 1,968.02 61 1,157.67 123 1,819.53 70
Iuka 1,577.18 147 1,078.86 144 1,456.91 148
Tunica 1,809.43 107 1,092.64 142 1,661.67 109
Union 1,658.56 135 1,104.20 138 1,527.78 138
New Albany 2,073.07 40 1,367.04 32 1,985.33 35
Walthall 1,797.02 109 1,279.93 56 1,622.85 119
Warren 1,951.95 63 1,166.91 118 1,791.93 75
Vicksburg 2,209.59 26 1,388.60 27 2,128.96 19
Hollandale *1,898.37 81 1,313.56 44 1,778.27 80
Leland *2,261.80 17 1,498.17 9 2,141.71 15
Western Line *2,243.11 21 1,472.29 14 2,123.03 20
Greenville 1,974.31 60 1,279.45 57 1,918.06 44
Wayne 1,790.77 111 1,135.49 130 1,642.63 115
Webster 1,834.83 99 1,225.69 83 1,688.89 104
Wilkinson 2,304.75 14 1,442.19 20 2,137.07 17
Louisville 1,814.22 104 1,181.68 109 1,639.88 116
Coffeeville *2,241.05 22 1,278.55 59 2,028.25 29
Water Valley *1,705.38 128 1,040.79 149 1,492.57
142
Yazoo 2,845.92 3 1,490.19 12 2,333.34 8
Holly Bluff *2,500.03 7 1,524.17 5 2,448.57 6
Yazoo City 2,023.38 46 1,205.28 93 2,018.31 32
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Statewide Average 1,965.78 1,261.09 1,842.94
Chickasaw Average 1,853.52 1,218.82 1,722.82
Chocktaw Average 1,992.92 1,268.17 1,879.67
Page 478 U. S. 308
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* County Office receipts/expenditures prorated to consolidated
districts by ADA.
** All school districts within Chickasaw Cession are denoted by
italic typefact. School districts that are partially within the
Chickasaw Cession are also in italic type.
SOURCE: Mississippi State Board of Education, 1986 Annual Report
of the State Superintendent of Public Education 144-146 (1986).
|
478
U.S. 265 Table B|
bwm:
TABLE B
RECEIPTS FOR PUBLIC SCHOOLS
1984-1985
Source of State Funds:
State Dept. of Ed. $ 9,005,760
Per Capita & Minimum Program 490,568,205
Vocational Ed. 16,269,064
Chickasaw 61,454
Homestead Exemption 30,916,541
EFC Payments 2,898,692
Severance Tax 10,290,972
Driver Penalty Funds 555,963
Textbook 6,110,596
School Lunch 574,624
Adult Ed. 35,619
Educable Children 511,070
Ed. Reform Act 985,796
Other 153,766
------------
Total State Funds $ 568,938,122 56.1%
Source of Federal Funds:
State Dept. Ed. $ 6,293,149
Vocational Ed. 3,540,422
National Forest 3,247,726
T V A 643,509
P.L. 874 2,657,490
ECIA Ch. 1 64,896,618
ECIA Ch. 2 4,388,330
ESEA Other 107,118
OEO 151,860
Soc. Sec. Tit. XX & CETA (Emp. Sec. Comm.) 1,677,019
School Lunch & Sp. Milk & Nonfood Asst. 67,638,280
School Lunch, Commodities, Food 12,660,094
Adult Ed. 745,079
Education Handicapped Act 11,347,044
Other (
e.g., CETA Governor's Office) 3,403,978
-------------
Total Federal Funds $ 183,397,716 18.1%
Source of Local Funds:
Ad Valorem Tax $ 165,985,203
Mineral Lease Tax 86,276
Tuition from Patrons 1,991,041
Transp. Fees from Patrons 222,585
Sixteen Section Income 16,272,925
Interest on Investments 12,800,202
Intermediate Source 816,620
Bond & Int. Fund Receipts 25,406,580
School Lunch 24,668,351
Student Activity 7,063,639
Other 5,809,634
------------
Total Local Sources $ 261,122,056 25.8%
------------
TOTAL REVENUE RECEIPTS $1,013,457,894 100.0%
Nonrevenue Receipts:
Sale of Bonds $ 33,393,809
Sale of Assets 1,603,699
Insurance Loss Recovery 3,383,380
Loans 10,357,549
--------------
TOTAL NONREVENUE RECEIPTS $ 48,738,437
--------------
TOTAL REVENUE & NONREVENUE RECEIPTS $1,062,196,331
SOURCE: Mississippi State Board of Education, 1986 Annual Report
of the State Superintendent of Public Education 48 (1986).
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