Gertrude P. FULLER, Richard L. Grubman, Thomas F. Cacciola
and Josephine Cacciola, His Wife, and Others to Be Named,
Plaintiffs-Appellants, in No. 15043 and Jerry Volpe et al.,
Intervening-Plaintiffs-Appellants, in No. 15044
v.
Austin A. VOLK et al., Defendants-Appellees, Frederick M.
Raubinger, Commissioner of Education of the State
of New Jersey, Kenneth Ancrum, Deborah
Spruill, et al., Intervening- Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 15043, 15044.
United States Court of Appeals Third Circuit.
Argued March 5, 1965, Reargued June 2, 1965.
Decided Sept. 30, 1965.
James T. Murphy, Vorsanger & Murphy, Englewood, N.J., for appellant Fuller et al.
James A. Major, Hackensack, N.J. (Major & Major, Hackensack, N.J., on the brief), for appellant Volpe et al.
Charles Rodgers, John J. Breslin, Jr., Hackensack, N.J. (Breslin & Breslin, Hackensack, N.J., on the brief), for Board of School Estimates of Englewood.
Sidney Dincin, Englewood, N.J., for Board of Education of City of Englewood.
Morton Stavis, Newark, N.J., for Deborah Spruill.
Robert L. Carter, New York City (Barbara A. Morris, New York City, Herbert H. Tate, Newark, N.J., on the brief), for Ancrum et al.
Arthur J. Sills, Atty. Gen. of New Jersey, Trenton, N.J., Howard H. Kestin, Depute Atty. Gen., of counsel and on the brief, for Frederick M. Raubinger, etc.
Before BIGGS, Chief Judge, and FORMAN and FREEDMAN, Circuit Judges.
BIGGS, Chief Judge.
This civil action attacks the constitutionality of a public school districting plan in the City of Englewood, New Jersey, on the ground that the plan promulgated by the defendants by which racial imbalance in the school system was substantially reduced denies to the plaintiffs the equal protection of the laws guaranteed to them by the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution.1 The plaintiffs claim that the plan of integration is unconstitutional as being based on race and that the plan as formulated is unconstitutional because it gave the parents of Negro children in the Lincoln School the right to vote the plan into existence.
The plaintiffs in this present action consist of two groups of plaintiffs: The original plaintiffs, hereinafter referred to as the Fullers,2 and the intervening plaintiffs, hereinafter referred to as the Volpes.3 The defendants are the members of the Board of Education of the City of Englewood; the City of Englewood; Commissioner Raubinger, the Commissioner of Education of the State of New Jersey, and some thirty-eight minor children attending the public schools in Englewood, who, by their parents, were permitted to intervene as parties-defendants in this litigation.
Prior to the commencement of the September 1963 school term, the Englewood school system consisted of a central high school, grades 10 through 12; a central junior high school, grades 7 through 9 and a system of five elementary schools, grades 1 through 6.4 These elementary schools were operated under the 'neighborhood' school plan, whereby students attended elementary schools located in their own neighborhoods. Under this plan, severe racial imbalance existed in the elementary schools as a result of existing housing patterns in the community. As of September 1962 enrollment and racial composition in the elementary schools were as follows:
School Enrollment % White % Negro Cleveland 477 99.6 .4 Liberty 418 38.0 62.0 Lincoln 505 2.0 98.0 Quarles 343 96.8 3.2 Roosevelt 345 85.5 14.5
The intervening defendants in the instant case, the Spruills and Ancrums, petitioned Commissioner Raubinger, charging the Englewood Board of Education 'with the maintenance of racially segregated public schools and with refusal to implement plans to eliminate patterns of racial segregation alleged to exist in the public schools.'5 The Volpes cross-petitioned the Englewood Board of Education, protesting any departure from the status quo. After consolidation by the Commissioner of the Spruill and Ancrum petitions, the Volpes were permitted to intervene in the proceeding. The Commissioner found that the existing racial imbalance was not the product of deliberate or intentional conduct on the part of the Englewood Board of Education, but rather that it was the result of 'patterns of housing and the operation of other socio-economic forces' causing 'concentration of pupils of one race' in the Lincoln School district.6 Commissioner Raubinger held that 'compulsory attendance at an all Negro School, such as the Lincoln School, at least where appropriate means can be found to avoid it, constitutes a denial of educational opportunity under New Jersey law which the school district is required to correct.'7 The Commissioner ordered the Englewood Board of Education to formulate a plan or plans to reduce the extreme concentration of Negroes in the Lincoln School and to submit the plan or plans to the Commissioner for approval before August 1, 1963 and to put the plan, as approved, into effect at the commencement of the 1963-64 school term.
In accordance with Commissioner Raubinger's ruling, the Englewood Board of Education promulgated a plan which provided for the establishment of a central sixth-grade school at the former Junior High School building at 11 Engle Street (Engle Street School). The plan also provided for the transfer of all students at the Lincoln School, grades one through five, to the Cleveland, Quarles or Roosevelt schools, taking into consideration such factors as the distance to be traveled and distribution of class loads. No provision was made for either transfer into or out of the Liberty School. The plan stated that those children in Lincoln School who did not wish to transfer should have the opportunity to remain at Lincoln School 'provided that it is administratively and educationally practicable to do so.', but that 'as a prerequisite to the establishment of the city-wide sixth-grade school * * * either of the following two conditions must occur: 1. 125 or more present students of Lincoln School must NOT elect to remain for the 1963-64 term at Lincoln School or 2. The number of transfers from Lincoln will result in class loads in Quarles, Cleveland, or Roosevelt Schools which, in the opinion of the Board of Education, are educationally undesirable.'
In order to implement the plan, questionnaires were sent to parents of children in grades 1 through 5 in the Lincoln School, to determine whether there were enough interested pupils to put the plan into effect. As of August 19, 1963, there were 242 acceptances of assignments out of the Lincoln School and 21 'votes' to remain at the Lincoln School. Accordingly, the Board of Education proceeded with its implementation plans. The Board of School Estimate certified $53,000 for the implementation of the plan which, when added to $50,000 already available to the Board of Education, made a fund of $103,000 available for the implementation of the plan. The plan included renovation of the Engle Street School, the purchase of equipment and moving administrative offices from the Engle Street School to the Lincoln School.
The school term opened on September 4, 1963, but at that time the Engle Street School was not yet ready for use. Therefore, only 125 pupils, grades one through five, were assigned out of the Lincoln School into the Cleveland, Roosevelt and Quarles Schools. The Engle Street School was ready for occupancy and the city-wide sixth grade plan went into effect on October 28. Since that time, all children in grades one through five in the Lincoln School were transferred or sent to the Cleveland, Roosevelt and Quarles Schools and all children in the sixth grade have been attending the city-wide sixth grade school, the Engle Street School. The enrollment and racial composition of the elementary schools as of November 12, 1963, under the plan of integration, were as follows:
Schools Number of and Grades Pupils % White % Negro Engle Street (6) 290 58.3 41.7 Cleveland (1-5) 547 66.3 33.7 Liberty (1-5) 283 39.0 61.0 Roosevelt (1-5) 310 65.8 34.2 Quarles (1-5) 301 81.4 18.6
The plaintiffs moved for summary judgment, Rule 56, Fed.R.Civ.Proc., 28 U.S.C. After argument on the motion, the court below entered judgment for the defendants, holding that the plaintiffs failed to show a denial of any constitutional right. Fuller v. Volk,
The original plaintiffs, the Fullers, allege that they have standing to sue to enjoin the expenditure of public funds for an unconstitutional purpose because they are taxpayers in the City of Englewood and the State of New Jersey. There is no longer any doubt that a local taxpayer can invoke federal jurisdiction to attack the constitutionality of state or local expenditures. Doremus v. Board of Education,
The original plaintiffs, the Fullers, must bring their case within the ambit of federal question jurisdictional provisions, 28 U.S.C. 1331, in order that this court and the court below may have jurisdiction. Section 1331(a) grants jurisdiction to the district courts in all civil actions arising under 'the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States' in which 'the matter in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $10,000, exclusive of interest and costs.' If jurisdiction would lie under the civil rights provision of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. 1343, there would be no issue of jurisdictional amount. Hague v. CIO,
It is well-settled law that only in a true class action may the claims of each member of the class be aggregated in order to obtain the requisite jurisdictional amount in controversy. Clark v. Paul Gray, Inc.,
In Russell v. Stansell,
As we have indicated the present action is controlled by Scott v. Frazier, thereby preventing the aggregation of claims. See Doby v. Brown,
We come next to the jurisdictional questions as they may affect the Volpes who alleged that they are suing as parents of children in the Englewood public schools. There is no question that they have asserted a separate and independent basis for jurisdiction by their allegations that the children on whose behalf they sue are unconstitutionally being compelled to attend schools determined solely on the basis of race. This allegation presents no problem of jurisdictional amount in controversy. Hague v. CIO,
However, the question remains whether their intervention can cure the jurisdictional defect thereby giving the district court jurisdiction. It is well-settled that since intervention contemplates an existing suit in a court of competent jurisdiction and because intervention is ancillary to the main cause of action, intervention will not be permitted to breathe life into a 'nonexistent' law suit. United States ex rel. Texas Portland Cement Co. v. McCord,
However, a court has discretion to treat the pleading of an intervenor as a separate action in order that it might adjudicate the claims raised by the intervenor. Hackner v. Guaranty Trust Co.,
Assuming that the court below should find on remand that the intervening plaintiffs have the standing to maintain their suit and therefore possesses the jurisdiction, the power to adjudicate their cause, that court next must examine the operative facts and the law on which the intervening plaintiffs' suit must be based, as the court below shall find these to be in the light of the decision of the Supreme Court of New Jersey in Booker v. Board of Education,
Assuming that there is jurisdiction, the trial court may be faced with a unique and anomalous situation. Even if Commissioner Raubinger's plan employed to desegregate the Englewood Schools be held invalid under state law in the light of Booker because it does not go far enough, an issue concerning which we can presently express no opinion, nonetheless the plaintiffs attack the Raubinger Englewood Plan on federal constitutional grounds because in their view it goes too far. But, the Booker decision concerned itself primarily with the Plainfield Plan which is different in some respects, at least, from Raubinger's Englewood Plan though it resembles it in others. A careful examination and comparison of the two plans are necessary and the court below must view the Raubinger Englewood Plan in the light of the principles laid down in the Booker decision.
Assuming the existence of jurisdiction, the power in the court below to adjudicate the intervening plaintiffs' case, when the Englewood Plan has been examined and compared in the light of Booker, other serious questions may face the court below. Though we cannot and do not attempt here to give an advisory opinion, we think it is appropriate to point out some of the issues which might impel a district court's judgment in the context of this case as it appears to us. First, the court below should inquire into the relevancy of exhaustion of administrative remedies by the plaintiffs in the light of Booker v. Board of Education. See Natural Gas Pipeline Co. v. Slattery,
The judgment will be vacated and the case will be remanded with the direction to the court below to proceed in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
Cf. Morean v. Board of Education,
The caption of the original complaint, in addition to listing Gertrude P. Fuller as a party-plaintiff, sets out as additional parties-plaintiffs 'Richard L. Grubman, Thomas F. Cacciola and Josephine Cacciola, his wife, and others to be named.'
The intervenors-plaintiffs, in accordance with Rule 24(c), Fed.R.Civ.Proc., 28 U.S.C., filed a pleading in the court below. This pleading, captioned 'Intervening Plaintiffs Complaint,' sets out as intervenors in addition to Jerry and Katherine Volpe, 'Louis Pugach and Beatrice Pugach, his wife, Alan Lasser and Judith Lasser, his wife, Ottilio D'Allesio and Marie D'Allesio, his wife, Sol Handler and Lillian Handler, his wife, Eugene F. Clements and Marjorie Clements, his wife, Edward Robbins and Gloria Robbins, his wife, Lloyd Pollard and Blanche Pollard, his wife.'
The Englewood Board of Education also operated a system of kindergartens. The kindergartens are unaffected by the districting plan here under attack and no issue has been presented to this court or the court below concerning them
Opinion of the Commissioner of Education, Spruill v. Board of Education of the City of Englewood, p. 2 (July 1, 1963)
Id. at p. 7
Id. at p. 8
Compare 3 Moore, Federal Practice, 23.13 at 3482-3483 (1964), with Note, Taxpayers' Suits: A Survey & Summary, 69 Yale L.J. 895, 920 (1960), and Jaffe, Standing to Secure Judicial Review: Public Actions, 74 Harv.L.Rev. 1265, 1281 (1961)
Indeed an inference to the contrary may be drawn from the affidavit of Leroy McCloud, Principal of the 'Central Sixth Grade Engle Street School,' received in this court on June 10, 1965. The affidavit, which will accompany the record on our remand to the court below, states that none of the intervening plaintiffs had any children in the school 'during the current 1964-1965 school year.'
Doremus v. Board of Education,
See United Public Workers v. Mitchell,
The court below did not have the benefit of the decision of the Supreme Court in Harman v. Forssenius,
