In the fall of 1977 the Dade County School Board opened the new Pine Lake Elementary School, just four or five blocks from its existing Richmond Elementary School. The physical characteristics of the two schools generally reflect the differences between the middle and upper class, predominantly white, neighborhood served by Pine Lake and the predominantly black neighborhood served by Richmond. The student body at Pine Lake was eighty percent white and twenty percent black. The student body at Richmond was eighty percent black and twenty percent white.
In compliance with the requirements imposed by this court in
Pate v. Dade County School Board,
On June 26, 1978, appellants filed a motion to intervene in the district court. Appellants are dissatisfied parents of children in both the Richmond Heights and Pine Lakes districts. They alleged that their interests were not adequately represented by the existing parties and that they desired to intervene in order to appeal the district court’s order. On June 28, 1978, intervenor, American Civil Liberties Union of Florida, filed its opposition to the proposed intervention. On June 30, 1978, the school board filed a response to the June 16, 1978 order. The school board reported that school officials had met with the bi-tri committee, that the school board had adopted the committee’s recommendation pairing the two schools in question, had fully complied with the court’s order and had determined that no appeal should be taken. The school board stated to the court that there was no longer any case or controversy between the parties and objected to intervention by the present appellants. On August 3,1978, the district court denied appellants’ motion for intervention.
Two separate appeals have been taken. In Case No. 78-2634 the applicants in intervention appealed the district court’s order of June 16, 1978. In Case No. 78-2750 applicants appealed the court’s subsequent order denying intervention. A motion to consolidate was filed in this court and is hereby granted.
The school board moves to dismiss both appeals on the grounds that the original controversy is moot and that the appellants lack standing to appeal the June 16 order. The school board also urges that the district court correctly denied intervention. Appellants concede that unless they are successful in establishing their right to intervene they have no standing in this court in respect to the June 16, 1978 order.
Appellants cite
Smuck v. Hobson,
In Hines this court explored when and by what means parent groups might present complaints growing out of desegregation litigation. The proper course indicated was a petition for intervention. There was no intimation, however, that such petition was one of right. The court held that: “Certainly every group must be allowed the opportunity to show the court that the desired and legally required unitary school system has not been achieved by an earlier court order.” Id. at 765. But it also concluded that: “If the court determined that the issues these new plaintiffs sought to present had been previously determined or if it found that the parties in the original action were aware of these issues and completely competent to represent the interests of the new group, it should deny intervention.” Id. at 765.
The parental interest that justifies permissive intervention is an interest in a desegregated school system. Here, as in the Perry County case, “[t]he parents are not seeking to challenge deficiencies in the implementation of desegregation orders . .” United States v. Perry County Board of Education, supra at 279. They oppose such implementation. Their complaint is that the school board does not also oppose such implementation, but we have held that “Appellants are not entitled to intervention of right simply because they would have voted differently had they been members of these representative bodies.” United States v. Perry County Board of Education, supra at 280.
*504
Applicants in intervention claim a right to protect the local school board from the district court’s exercise of unconstitutional authority. They challenge the lower court’s jurisdiction because of its June 30, 1971 finding that Dade County has a unitary system. There has, however, been no relinquishment of the continuing jurisdiction of the district court. In both our original consideration of this case,
Pate'
v.
Dade County School Board, supra,
and in our more recent opinion,
Pate v. Dade County School Board,
Appellees invite to our attention the ninth circuit’s opinion in
Spangler v. Pasadena City Board of Education,
The appeal from the order of June 16, 1978 is dismissed. The order of the district court denying intervention is affirmed.
CASE NO. 78-2634 APPEAL DISMISSED.
CASE NO. 78-2750 AFFIRMED.
