452 F.2d 1385 | D.C. Cir. | 1971
The task immediately at hand is resolution of appellants’ motion for an injunction restraining appellees from discontinuing a tiny facet of the District’s public education program pending decision of the appeal in this case on the merits.
The appeal, already under submission, brought under review the District Court’s dismissal of appellants’ complaints seeking, mter alia, to enjoin on grounds of federal unconstitutionality Section 401(2) of the District of Columbia Revenue Act of 1968
The Bannockburn project was initiated cooperatively in 1968 by District and County school authorities and extended briefly into the current school term. It has enabled the attendance, on a voluntary basis, at the almost exclusively white Bannockburn School of a few randomly-selected Negro children who otherwise would have enrolled in the almost all-black Meyer Elementary School in the District. From inception of the enterprise its expense — principally tuition and transportation costs — has been absorbed by the District’s Board of Education from its Federal Impact Aid funds.
The objective of the motion, as previously indicated, is maintenance of the status quo — the continuing attendance of the District group at Bannockburn— pending disposition of the appeal.
That decision followed a lengthy, vigorous in-meeting debate during which a number of factors associated with the Bannockburn venture were discussed. Close review of the transcript of the discussion identifies a variety of reasons advanced by members who favored cessation of the Board’s undertaking. Among those expressed were the nonparticipation of Montgomery County in the expense, the nonattendanee reciprocally of Bannockburn children at the Meyer
To be sure, the financial aspects of the Bannockburn offering were canvassed as the Board pondered its fate. As stated, there -was objection that the entire cost, though small,
We are unable, then, to discern a nexus between Section 401(2) and the demise, for the time being at least, of the Bannockburn project. Instead, we perceive a Board decision predicated on grounds distinct from the issues presented on the appeal. Appellants postulated, both in the District Court and here, the Board’s desire to continue the Bannockburn program and the concomitant possibility that Section 401(2) would frustrate efforts to implement it financially. The requested injunction, on the other hand, would in practical effect compel the Board to maintain an arrangement which upon an evaluation of factors essentially unrelated to Section 401(2) it has decided to halt. Such a transformation cannot permissibly serve to introduce what in essence would be a new case on appeal.
Motion denied.
. Fed.R.App.P. 8(a).
. 82 Stat. 615 (1968), D.C.Code § 31-1118(2) (Supp. IV 1971).
. 28 U.S.C. §§ 2282, 2284 (1970).
. It has been appellants’ position throughout this litigation that § 401(2) would exert a substantial adverse impact on Board decisions as to the prolongation of this project.
. See 20 U.S.C. § 236 et seq. (1970). Those funds, it seems agreed, are unaffected by the § 401(2) prohibition.
. The motion was presented to this court and not, as is ordinarily necessary, to the District Court in the first instance. Fed.R.App.P. 8(a). As reason therefore, appellants allege the urgency for immediate relief rendered application to the District Court impracticable. See id. With the disposition we make of the motion, we do not reach the question whether appellants were correct in that view.
. The Superintendent of Schools reported to the Board that “provision [had been] made for joint faculty meetings, parent group meetings and exchange student visitation for specific activities” but the record is clear that no County child has been in attendance at the Meyer School.
. $58,800 for the current academic year.
. Through either the Board’s Impact Aid budget or the Emergency School Assistance Program, 45 C.F.R. Pt. 181 (1971).
. That, apparently, because the Board’s foothold in Montgomery County would thereby be lost, and with it the District’s ability to meet an expected requirement of the Emergency School Assistance Program, see note 9, supra, of demonstrated cooperation with suburban areas.
. See note 7, supra.
. E. g., Miller v. Avirom, 127 U.S.App.D.C. 367, 369-371, 384 F.2d 319, 321-322 (1967).