This case started out as a class action brought by negro students and parents of negro students to desegregate the three public high schools in Pasadena, California, and was brought on behalf of the plaintiffs “and of all similarly situated students enrolled in one of the three high schools.” Before an answer had been filed by the Pasadena City Board of Education and the three members of the Board who were named defendants (hereafter the appellees), the United States moved to intervene as a party plaintiff under Sec. 902 of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Pub.Law 88-352, Title IX § 902, Act of July 2, 1964, 78 Stat. 266, 42 U.S.C. § 2000h-2, and the motion was granted. In summary, the complaint in intervention of the United States brought into the case the entire Pasadena Public School system, containing 28 elementary, 5 junior high schools, 3 senior high schools and 2 special schools. The complaint in intervention prayed for an injunction, enjoining the appellees from discrimination upon the basis of race in the operation of the Pasadena School district and from failing to adopt and implement a plan for the elimination of discriminatory practices.
The appellees then moved to strike the allegations in the complaint in intervention, concerning the elementary, junior high schools and special schools, and the motion was granted. It is from this order that the government appeals. The district court added to its order, striking from the complaint in intervention, the statement that the order “is granted without prejudice to the right of the in-tervenor to urge the matter again.”
*1244 THE QUESTIONS PRESENTED
This appeal presents the following questions:
1. Did the district court err in restricting the government’s complaint in intervention under Sec. 902 to the scope of plaintiffs’ complaint, thereby precluding the government from seeking relief from racial discrimination in the entire operation of the appellees’ school system?
2. Is the district court’s order, striking portions of the complaint in intervention, appealable?
I.
DID THE COURT ERR IN STRIKING FROM THE COMPLAINT IN INTERVENTION?
The controversy turns around the meaning of the last sentence in Sec. 902 of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000h-2, reading: “In such action the United States shall be entitled to the same relief as if it had instituted the action.” The government cites legislative history to sustain its position. We do not find the legislative history to be too significant. “* * * [T]his is a case for applying the canon of construction of the wag who said, when the legislative history is doubtful, go to the statute.” Mr. Justice Frankfurter in Greenwood v. United States (1956)
We do not read this sentence as a restriction upon the rights of the United States to relief. The sentence certainly does not limit the United States, as the appellees contend, to the relief asked for by the plaintiff.
Had the Attorney General instituted an action in behalf of the United States under Sec. 407(a) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Public Law 88-352, Title IV § 407(a), Act of July 2, 1964, 78 Stat. 248, 42 U.S.C. § 2000c-6, he could have asked for complete relief involving the entire Pasadena School system. If the complaint first filed concerned only the high school system, it could have been amended as of right before answer filed, to claim relief as to the entire school system. We do not read the sentence as containing words of limitation upon the rights of the United States, but as broadly stating such rights.
The right to intervention by the United States as provided in Sec. 902 is an absolute and not a permissive one. There are two other intervention provisions contained in the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Sec. 204(a) allows the Attorney General to intervene in cases seeking injunction against denial of equal access to public accommodations and Sec. 706 (e) allows similar intervention in employment discrimination cases. Both sections provide that “the court may, in its discretion, permit” such intervention. No similar discretionary language appears in Sec. 902.
Our reading of Sec. 902 is consistent with other decisions in which the government has intervened under that statute. In Sanders v. Ellington (M.D.Tenn.1968)
McGhee v. Nashville Special School District No. 1 (Civil Action No. 962, W.D.Ark. unreported) was a similar case. Private litigants sought the desegregation of the two independent but overlapping school districts in Arkansas, one serving negro students and the other serving white students. The United States was allowed to intervene under Sec. 902 and to add as defendants the school officials of three additional independent districts which overlapped each other, one of which overlapped one of the original districts and the second overlapped the first added district. The litigation continues on the merits, on an *1245 amended complaint in intervention despite the challenge by the defendants to the scope of the litigation as set forth in the government’s amended complaint in intervention.
In Lee v. Macon County Board of Education (M.D.Ala.1967)
A leading commentator, in referring to the intervenor with an absolute right to intervene, states, “It would be meaningless to give him an absolute right to intervene in order to protect his interests, if once in the proceedings he was barred from raising questions' necessary for his own protection,” 4 Moore’s Fed. Practice, Par. 24.16(4), p. 117 (2d ed. 1968). Prior to the adoption of the F.R. Civ.P. in 1937, old equity Rule 37 barred an intervenor from raising issues which were not “subordinate” to the original parties’ pleadings. No similar provision was carried over into the 1937 rules, and courts have not generally adhered to the old subordination doctrine. See, 4 Moore’s Fed. Practice, Par. 24.16(1), pp. 108-112 (2d ed. 1968).
In Stewart-Warner Corp. v. Westinghouse Electric Corp. (2 Cir. 1963)
“The whole tenor and frame work of the Rules of Civil Procedure preclude application of a standard which strictly limits the intervenor to those defenses and counterclaims which the original defendant could himself have interposed. Where there exists a sufficiently close relationship between the claims and defenses of the intervenor and those of the original defendant to permit adjudication of all claims in one forum and in one suit without unnecessary delay — and to avoid as well the delay and waste of judicial resources attendant upon requiring separate trials — the district court is without discretion to deny the inter-venor the opportunity to advance such claims. In the first instance, the district court’s analysis must be accorded great weight. But where, as here, the record makes manifest the desirability of bringing the claims of all parties within the ambit of one litigation, we are compelled to reverse the district court’s order.” Id., p. 827.
Finally, the school board has an obligation to operate “a racially nondiscriminatory school system,” Brown v. Board of Education (1955)
Full compliance with the Fourteenth Amendment obligation of the appellees to achieve and maintain a unitary, nonracial system of public education, Brown v. Board of Education (1954)
We conclude that the district court erred in striking the allegations from the government’s complaint in intervention.
II.
IS THE ORDER OF THE DISTRICT COURT APPEALABLE ?
28 U.S.C. § 1292(a) (1) provides that an interlocutory order of a district court refusing to grant an injunction is an appealable order. Although the order entered herein merely strikes part of the government’s complaint, it in fact denies injunctive relief -sought by the government insofar as it concerned the other schools in the appellees’ system in addition to the high schools.
Under Sec. 129 of the Judicial Code (old 28 U.S.C. § 227), the substantial equivalent of present § 1292(a) (1) of Title 28 U.S.C., an order denying leave to file a counterclaim praying for an injunction was an appealable interlocutory order. In-A-Floor Safe Co. v. Diebold Safe & Lock Co. (9 Cir. 1937)
The same rule has been applied in determining the appealability of orders denying the right to file or dismiss counterclaims of intervenors. Stewart-Warner Corp. v. Westinghouse Electric Corp., 2 Cir.,
The cases cited by appellees are distinguishable. In Baltimore Contractors Inc. v. Bodinger (1955)
Nor is Jorgensen Bros. v. Commerce-Pacific Inc. (9 Cir. 1961)
In our case the district court, by striking allegations concerning the other units of the school system, in substance denied the government its right to the prohibitory and mandatory injunctions sought by its complaint in intervention. Whether a ruling is final or not under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, must be given “a practical rather than a technical construction”, Gillespie v. United States Steel Corp. (1964)
Judge Friendly, in his dissent in Stewart-Warner Corp. v. Westinghouse Electric Corp., supra, draws a distinction which is applicable here. He stated,
“The distinction taken in National Machinery [National Machinery Co. v. Waterbury Farrel Foundry & Machine Co. (2 Cir. 1961)290 F.2d 527 ] was between a ‘refusal’ based on an allegedly erroneous conclusion that the law does not permit the claim for an injunction to be heard in the action (as in General Electric [General Electric v. Marvel Rare Metals Corp. (1932)287 U.S. 430 ,53 S.Ct. 202 ,77 L.Ed. 408 ] Cutting Room Appliances [Cutting Room Appliances v. Empire Cutting Machine Co. (2 Cir. 1951)186 F.2d 997 ] and Telechron) [Telechron Inc. v. Parissi (2 Cir. 1952)197 F.2d 757 ] and one based on alleged abuse of a discretionary power over the scope of the action. Where the order is of the former type, the danger of serious harm from the court’s erroneous belief in the existence of a legal barrier to its entertaining a claim for an injunction has been thought to outweigh the general undesirability of interlocutory appeals.”325 F.2d 829 .
Telechron,
In our case, the district court erroneously concluded that the United States was limited in the relief it could obtain, to the relief sought by the plantiffs. The order of the district court was more than a discretionary order controlling the litigation. The district court has given clear indication that the plaintiff high school students and their parents have no standing in the class action to represent students in the other grades, and that the United States has no right by complaint in intervention to expand the litigation to encompass the school system.
In Brunson v. Board of Trustees (4 Cir. 1962)
*1248 There remains the question of the effect of the district court’s statement attached to its order, that the motion to strike was granted without prejudice to the right of the intervenor to urge the matter again. Had the district court denied the motion to strike, and set up a schedule to try the case in segments, we would have a different case.
Orders by the district court controlling the sequence in which portions of the case would be tried would ordinarily not constitute appealable orders. Switzerland Cheese Association Inc. v. E. Horne’s Market, Inc. (1966)
However, in Harris v. Gibson (5 Cir. 1963)
We think the effect of the court’s order allowing intervenors to again raise the question is similar in effect to. an order of the court denying a temporary injunction without prejudice to an application for its' renewal. Although the injunction may be granted at a later date, the prejudice suffered after its denial, is sufficient to make the denial an appealable order.
We are cognizant of the dangers of proliferating appeals from interlocutory orders. We think the issue here has public importance. Springfield School Committee v. Barksdale (1 Cir. 1965)
The order is reversed and the case remanded to the district court with instructions to reinstate the stricken allegations.
Notes
. The sole exception appears to be Rogers v. Paul, (1965)
