Lead Opinion
Plaintiffs, parents of Spanish-surnamed children attending public school in the San Jose Unified School District, filed this class action on behalf of themselves and all other parents of children similarly situated. The complaint charged that defendants were operating a segregated public school system in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, and sought desegregation of the school district. The district court found that the school district was racially imbalanced and that the imbalance had been maintained by defendants. No liability attached, however, because the court decided defendants acted without segregative intent. Diaz v. San Jose Unified School District,
In a previous appeal, this court reversed and remanded for further proceedings, reasoning that the district court’s decision suggested the school district’s racially-neutral neighborhood school policy “constituted either a complete defense to the charge of segregative intent, or,- completely dispelled the inferenсes of segregative intent that flowed from the [plaintiffs’] proof.” Diaz v. San Jose Unified School District,
On remand, the district court analyzed Columbus and Dayton, this court’s opinion, and thrеe subsequent Supreme Court decisions, and carefully reconsidered the evidence in light thereof. Diaz v. San Jose Unified School District,
I. THE DISTRICT COURT’S FINDINGS
To avoid repeating the fact statements in the three prior reported opinions, only а very brief summary of the facts is presented here. The parties have always agreed that because no statutory dual system of schools has ever existed, plaintiffs “must prove not only that segregated schooling exists but also that it was brought about or maintained by intentional state action.” Keyes v. School District No. 1,
What is disputed is the existence of segregative intent, a factual matter to be reviewed for “clear error.” Pullman-Standard v. Swint,
II. TRANSPORTATION
As the district court explained, the San Jose Unified School District uses a great deal of busing, “both in terms of the number of students being transported (approximately one-third of the student population) and in terms of the money expended (over $850,000 per year).”
Plaintiffs have used the foregoing findings to construct two arguments. First, plaintiffs contend that, in the face of school officials’ knowledge that the district would probably remain segregated without some form of busing, the consistent refusal to consider busing is compelling evidence of segregative intent. The district court found, however, that although this evidence was “particulаrly disturbing,” when viewed in context along with all the other evidence it would not support a finding of segregative intent. Id. at 637-38. This court is no less disturbed by defendants’ unwillingness to consider busing as a means of alleviating the racial imbalance. The issue is close, but the district judge weighed the evidence carefully and his findings are well-reasoned. Applying the very narrow standard of review articulated by the Supreme Court in Pullman Standard v. Swint, we are not prepared to say the district court clearly erred in finding the evidence insufficient to show segregative intent.
Plaintiffs’ second argument relies on an opinion of this court recently affirmed by the Supreme Court, Washington v. Seattle School District No. 1, - U.S. -, 102
In Seattle School District No. 1, Washington voters approved an initiative that sought to prohibit “direct or indirect” student assignments to a school other than the one “geographically nearest or next nearest the studеnt’s place of residence ... and which offers the course of study pursued by such student.” See Wash.Rev.Code § 28A.26.010 (1981). The initiative contains such broad exceptions,
The Supreme Court agreed with this court and the district court that the initiative drew a racial classification because it prohibited school districts from acting only in matters involving racial criteria. Id. at -,
The distinction from our case is apparent. We have been cited to no legislation in California that disrupts or interferes in any way with the decision-making authority of school districts.
III. FACULTY-STAFF ASSIGNMENTS
At trial, school district officials conceded that Spanish-surnamed teachers were assigned to predominantly Spanish-surname schools. The officials claimed that the assignments were for educational purposes,
On appeal, plaintiffs characterize the district court’s discussion as a finding that defendants’ faculty-staff assignment policies were unconstitutional. Citing Fed.R. Civ.P. 15(b), plaintiffs request this court to remand with instructions to allow an amended complaint in light of the evidence adduced at trial on this “unconstitutional” practice. We believe the district court’s opinion makes clear that the faculty-staff issue was not tried independently, but only as an element of evidence to prove segregative intent.
IV. STATE-IMPOSED DUTY TO INTEGRATE
Dayton and Columbus make clear that units of government which had a dual system of schools before Brown v. Board of Education,
Plaintiffs’ reasoning is faulty on two grounds. First, the “presumption” plaintiffs refer to in Dayton was actually a burden imposed on the school district of “showing that actions that increased or continued the effects of the dual system serve important and legitimate ends.” Dayton,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The initiаtive permits the school board to assign a student beyond his neighborhood school if he “requires special education, care or guidance” or if “there are health or safety hazards, either natural or man made, or physical barriers or obstacles ... between the student’s place of residence and the nearest or next nearest school” or if “the school nearest or next nearest to his place or residence is unfit or inadequate because of overcrowding, unsafe conditions or lack of physical facilities.” Wash.Rev.Code § 28A.26.010 (1981).
. “Except for racially-balancing purposes, Initiative 350 permits local school districts to assign students other than to their nearest or next nearest schools for most, if not all, of the major reasons for which students are at present assigned to schools other than the nearest or next nearest schools.” Seattle School District No. 1 v. Washington,
. If legislation did exist that removes certain powers from school districts, it would not, of itself, be objeсtionable. “[T]he political majority may generally restructure the political process to place obstacles in the path of everyone;” the constitutional infirmity obtains only “when the state allocates governmental power non-neutrally, by explicitly using the racial nature of a decision to determine the decisionmaking process.” Washington v. Seattle School District No. 1, -U.S. -, -,
. “However, this court is concerned, in the context of this suit, only with any effect that this assignment policy had on the segregation of the student population of the schools.”
. Until 1979, the California Constitution empowered state courts to order desegregation measures regardless of whether the segregation was de jure or de facto in origin. See Crawford v. Board of Education,
. In so doing, we endorse the perceptive admonition of Chief Judge Peckham in the Conclusion of his exhaustive and thoughtful opinion of July 15, 1981.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Minority students are not the only ones who suffer the harmful effects of segregation. All the other students in the segregated system, as well as teachers and administrators, are victims when minority students are removed from the mainstream of public education. The loss is not limited to those within the school system but is bоrne by all of us who have a stake in the future of this nation. If the limits of the law compel us to perpetuate the exclusion of minorities from the mainstream of our national life, we must do so only after the most careful deliberation.
If the law of desegregation continues to develop in what the majority conceives as its present direction, it will be all but impossible for a minority litigant to make the showing of “segregative intent” necessary to establish that an undeniably segregated school systеm has been unlawfully segregated. There is no dispute that the San Jose public school system is racially imbalanced. The record leaves no doubt that the Board was fully aware that their chosen course of action over a period of two decades would perpetuate this segregation. The Board does not deny this.
In tort law a person is deemed to “intend” the reasonably foreseeable consequences of his actions. In cases of racial discrimination, howеver, the foreseeable segregative effect of institutional action will not, in and of itself, support a finding of “segregative intent.” See Dayton Board of Education v. Brinkman,
The record reflects that for twenty years and more the Board of Trustees of the San Jose Unified School District has known that thе public schools of San Jose were improperly segregated. It has done nothing to correct the situation, even though it has had numerous opportunities for reform. Although I have the utmost respect for the trial judge, I disagree with his conclusion that the record demonstrates that the Board maintained a sincere commitment to desegregation in spite of its failure to act. The Board’s actions speak louder than its words. It is not disputed that the Board has taken no action to aсcomplish its stated goal of a desegregated system. The district court found that “the district has clearly gotten cold feet on a number of occasions and has failed to follow through on its claimed goal of desegregating the district.” Diaz II,
The district court found and the record shоws that there were abundant opportunities for actions which would promote desegregation. Whenever the Board was presented with a choice, whenever it had an opportunity to change direction, it made the choice that confirmed and perpetuated segregation in the San Jose public schools. Such consistency in the face of the undeniable fact of segregation is, in my opinion, a clear expression of the “segregative intent” necessary to support a finding of unlawful segregation.
The effect of the majority opinion is to hold that a reluctant school board that talks about desegregation but refuses to do anything to promote it has done all that the constitution requires. I fear that the effect of the majority’s position will be that a school board that wishes to maintain a segregated system in the future will need only
I do not ignore the district court’s admonition that “[t]his court would be extremely disturbed and saddened if its decision in this ease was interpreted by either of the parties to this action or the public as encouragement to the Board to lay back and accept the consequences of the imbalance.” Id. at 644. I simply find it insufficient to address the fact that the public schools of San Jose are segregated and the Board has wilfully rejected every proposal to improve the racial imbalance. The district court expresses its concern about the future. This action was brought to correct the evils of the present. Having prevailed on this sordid record, the Board need never act to reform this school system.
I recognize the narrow limits imposed on our review by Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a) and Pullman-Standard v. Swint,
My concern is reinforced by the district court’s finding that the Board consistently refused to implement other suggestions for reducing the racial imbalаnce in the San Jose schools. These suggestions included the creation of magnet schools and education parks, as well as the implementation of open enrollment and voluntary bussing. The district court found “perfectly reasonable and rational explanations” for the Board’s refusal to implement any of these proposals. Id. at 638. The only support in the record for such a conclusion is the finding that the Board believed that nothing short of busing could remedy the racial imbalance in the San Jose schools, but the record also shows that the Board refused even to consider busing as a remedy. In fact the Board refused to consider implementing any proposal which might have reduced the racial imbalance of the San Jose public schools.
Further, the district court’s conclusion that the Board’s behavior during the bond issue election campaign did not support an inference of “segregative intent” is not consistent with the undisputed facts. The Board issued public statements that the failure to pass the bond issue would result in the transfer of students from one attendance area to another. It also gave repeated assurances that it would not use bond issue money to finance busing for the purpose of desegregation, although busing for other purposes was widely used throughout the system. I conclude that the message of those two statements upon the voters in San Jose was “if you don’t vote for the bond issue, we will have to desegregate” and “if you do vote for thе bond issue, we promise riot to use the money to desegregate.” This, together with the court’s findings, is more than sufficient to support an inference of “segregative intent.”
The Board rejected all of QUEST’S recommendations for correcting the racial imbalance. In spite of this, the district court concluded that “the Board was trying its best, in a difficult situation, to continue to move forward towards some affirmative effort to integrate.” Id. at 640. There is no evidence in the record that the Board ever “move[d] forward” or was “continuing] to move forward.” The district court set forth its rationale for refusing to find inferences of “segregative intent”:
To make such an inference would be to warn all school districts which have racially imbalanced schools not to make any affirmative moves towards integration unless they are certain that they will succeed; otherwise, the effort will become the basis for an inference of discriminatory purpose on their part, rather than an inferencе of the very opposite intent which in fact motivated them.
I recognize that the federal constitution does not require the Board to integrate the public schools of San Jose. The Board’s only obligation is that it not segregate intentionally. The record and the district court’s findings compel my conclusion that the Board failed to meet this obligation. I would reverse with instructions to fashion a remеdy to correct the unconstitutional segregation in the San Jose public school system. It is of no comfort to the plaintiffs that the district court concluded that “[c]ontinued failure to choose the path which leads towards less ethnic imbalance in the schools could well, at some future time, form the basis for a conclusion that the school officials do, in fact, wish to keep the Anglos and the Spanish-surnamed students segregated in the SJUSD.” Id. at 644. More than twenty years have elapsed with no break in this continuing failure. This, in my opinion, is sufficient to support an inference of “segregative intent.”
I would reverse.
