SULLIVAN ET AL. v. LITTLE HUNTING PARK, INC., ET AL.
No. 33
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued October 13, 1969—Decided December 15, 1969
396 U.S. 229
Allison W. Brown, Jr., argued the cause for petitioners. With him on the briefs were Peter Ames Eveleth, Robert M. Alexander, Jack Greenberg, and James M. Nabrit III.
John Charles Harris argued the cause and filed a brief for respondents.
Briefs of amici curiae urging reversal were filed by Solicitor General Griswold, Assistant Attorney General Leonard, Louis F. Claiborne, Peter L. Strauss, and Joseph J. Connolly for the United States, and by Arnold Forster, Sol Rabkin, Melvin L. Wulf, Edwin J. Lukas, Samuel Rabinove, and Paul Hartman for the Anti-Defamation League of B‘nai B‘rith et al.
This case, which involves an alleged discrimination against a Negro family in the use of certain community facilities, has been here before. The Virginia trial court dismissed petitioners’ complaints and the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia denied the appeals saying that they were not perfected “in the manner provided by law in that opposing counsel was not given reasonable written notice of the time and place of tendering the transcript and a reasonable opportunity to examine the original or a true copy of it” under that court‘s Rule 5:1, § 3(f).1
The case came here and we granted the petition for certiorari and vacated the judgments and remanded the case to the Supreme Court of Appeals for further consideration in light of Jones v. Mayer Co., 392 U. S. 409. 392 U. S. 657. On the remand, the Supreme Court of Appeals restated its prior position stating, “We had no jurisdiction in the cases when they were here before, and we have no jurisdiction now. We adhere to our orders refusing the appeals in these cases.” 209 Va. 279, 163 S. E. 2d 588. We brought the case here the second time on a petition for certiorari. 394 U. S. 942.
I
When the case was first here respondents opposed the petition, claiming that Rule 5:1, § 3 (f), was not complied with. Petitioners filed a reply brief addressing themselves to that question. Thus the point now tendered was fully exposed when the case was here before, though we ruled on it sub silentio.
In this case counsel for petitioners on June 9, 1967, gave oral notice to counsel for respondents that he was submitting the transcripts to the trial judge. He wrote counsel for respondents on the same day to the same effect, saying he was submitting the transcripts to the trial judge that day, filing motions to correct them, and asking the trial court to defer signing them for a ten-day period to allow counsel for respondents time to consent to the motions or have them otherwise disposed of by the court. The judge, being absent from his chambers on June 9, ruled that he had not received the transcripts until June 12. The motions to correct came on for a hearing June 16, at which time the judge ruled that he would not act on the motions until counsel for respondents had agreed or disagreed with the changes requested. After examining the transcripts between June 16 and June 19, counsel for respondents told counsel for petitioners that he had no objections to the corrections or to entry of orders granting the motions to correct. Counsel for respondents then signed the proposed orders which counsel for petitioners had prepared. The proposed orders were submitted to the trial judge on June 20; and on the same day he signed the transcripts, after they had been corrected.
As we read its cases, the Supreme Court of Appeals stated the controlling principle in the following language:
“The requirement that opposing counsel have a reasonable opportunity to examine the transcript sets out the purpose of reasonable notice. If, after
receipt of notice, opposing counsel be afforded reasonable opportunity to examine the transcript, and to make objections thereto, if any he has, before it is signed by the trial judge, the object of reasonable notice will have been attained.” Bacigalupo v. Fleming, 199 Va. 827, 835, 102 S. E. 2d 321, 326.
In that case opposing counsel had seven days to examine the record and make any objections. In the present case he had three days. But so far as the record shows he did not at the time complain that he was not given that “reasonable opportunity” he needed to examine and correct the transcripts.
Petitioners’ counsel does not urge—nor do we suggest—that the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has fashioned a novel procedural requirement for the first time in this case; cf. NAACP v. Alabama, 357 U. S. 449, 457-458; past decisions of the state court refute any such notion. See Bacigalupo v. Fleming, supra; Bolin v. Laderberg, 207 Va. 795, 153 S. E. 2d 251; Cook v. Virginia Holsum Bakeries, 207 Va. 815, 153 S. E. 2d 209.2 But those same decisions do not enable us
II
Little Hunting Park, Inc., is a Virginia nonstock corporation organized to operate a community park and playground facilities for the benefit of residents in an area of Fairfax County, Virginia. A membership share entitles all persons in the immediate family of the shareholder to use the corporation‘s recreation facilities. Under the bylaws a person owning a membership share is entitled when he rents his home to assign the share to his tenant, subject to approval of the board of directors. Paul E. Sullivan and his family owned a house
Sullivan and Freeman sued under
The trial court denied relief to each petitioner. We reverse those judgments.
In Jones v. Mayer Co., 392 U. S. 409, we reviewed at length the legislative history of
“Negro citizens, North and South, who saw in the Thirteenth Amendment a promise of freedom—freedom to ‘go and come at pleasure’ and to ‘buy and sell when they please‘—would be left with ‘a mere paper guarantee’ if Congress were powerless to assure that a dollar in the hands of a Negro will purchase the same thing as a dollar in the hands
of a white man. At the very least, the freedom that Congress is empowered to secure under the Thirteenth Amendment includes the freedom to buy whatever a white man can buy, the right to live wherever a white man can live. If Congress cannot say that being a free man means at least this much, then the Thirteenth Amendment made a promise the Nation cannot keep.” 392 U. S., at 443.
The Virginia trial court rested on its conclusion that Little Hunting Park was a private social club. But we find nothing of the kind on this record. There was no plan or purpose of exclusiveness. It is open to every white person within the geographic area, there being no selective element other than race. See Daniel v. Paul, 395 U. S. 298, 301-302. What we have here is a device functionally comparable to a racially restrictive covenant, the judicial enforcement of which was struck down in Shelley v. Kraemer, 334 U. S. 1, by reason of the Fourteenth Amendment.
In Jones v. Mayer Co., the complaint charged a refusal to sell petitioner a home because he was black. In the instant case the interest conveyed was a leasehold of realty coupled with a membership share in a nonprofit company organized to offer recreational facilities to owners and lessees of real property in that residential area. It is not material whether the membership share be considered realty or personal property, as
We turn to Sullivan‘s expulsion for the advocacy of Freeman‘s cause. If that sanction, backed by a state court judgment, can be imposed, then Sullivan is punished for trying to vindicate the rights of minorities protected by
We noted in Jones v. Mayer Co., that the Fair Housing Title of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, 82 Stat. 81, in no way impaired the sanction of
Section 1982 derived from the 1866 Act is plainly “not inconsistent” with the 1964 Act, which has been construed as not “pre-empting every other mode of protecting a federal ‘right’ or as granting immunity” to those who had long been subject to federal law. United States v. Johnson, 390 U. S. 563, 566.
We held in Jones v. Mayer Co. that although
Finally, as to damages, Congress, by
We had a like problem in Bell v. Hood, 327 U. S. 678, where suit was brought against federal officers for alleged
“[W]here federally protected rights have been invaded, it has been the rule from the beginning that courts will be alert to adjust their remedies so as to grant the necessary relief. And it is also well settled that where legal rights have been invaded, and a federal statute provides for a general right to sue for such invasion, federal courts may use any available remedy to make good the wrong done.” Id., at 684.
The existence of a statutory right implies the existence of all necessary and appropriate remedies. See Texas & N. O. R. Co. v. Railway Clerks, 281 U. S. 548, 569-570. As stated in Texas & Pacific R. Co. v. Rigsby, 241 U. S. 33, 39:
“A disregard of the command of the statute is a wrongful act, and where it results in damage to one of the class for whose especial benefit the statute was enacted, the right to recover the damages from the party in default is implied. . . .”
Compensatory damages for deprivation of a federal right are governed by federal standards, as provided by Congress in
“The jurisdiction in civil . . . matters conferred on the district courts by the provisions of this chapter and Title 18, for the protection of all persons in the United States in their civil rights, and for their vindication, shall be exercised and enforced in conformity with the laws of the United States, so far as such laws are suitable to carry the same into effect; but in all cases where they are not adapted to the object, or are deficient in the provisions necessary
to furnish suitable remedies and punish offenses against law, the common law, as modified and changed by the constitution and statutes of the State wherein the court having jurisdiction of such civil or criminal cause is held, so far as the same is not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States, shall be extended to and govern the said courts in the trial and disposition of the cause. . . .”
This means, as we read
It is suggested, not by any party, but by the dissent, that any relief should await proceedings under the fair housing provisions of Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968. 82 Stat. 81,
Reversed.
In Jones v. Mayer Co., 392 U. S. 409 (1968), the Court decided that a little-used section of a 100-year-old statute prohibited private racial discrimination in the sale of real property. This construction of a very old statute, in no way required by its language,1 and open to serious question in light of the statute‘s legislative history,2 seemed to me unnecessary and unwise because of the recently passed, but then not yet fully effective, Fair Housing Title of the Civil Rights Act of 1968 (hereafter Fair Housing Law).3 Today, the Court goes yet beyond Jones (1) by implying a private right to damages for violations of
Because the Fair Housing Law will become fully effective less than three weeks from now,4 I think the majority even more unwise than it was in Jones, in precipitately breathing still more life into
I
ADEQUACY OF THE STATE GROUND
The Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, both before and after this Court‘s earlier remand, refused to consider the federal questions presented to it because it found that petitioners had failed to give opposing counsel “reasonable written notice of the time and place of tendering the transcript and a reasonable opportunity to examine the original or a true copy of it,” in violation of Rule 5:1, § 3 (f), of the local rules of court.5 The majority here suggests that the State‘s procedural requirement, though not a “novel” one “fashioned . . . for the first time in this case,” nevertheless had not been “so consistently applied . . . as to amount to a self-denial of the power to entertain the federal claim.” The majority then goes on to conclude that because the State‘s procedural rule is “more properly deemed discretionary than jurisdictional,” review should not be barred here.
I am not certain what the majority means in its apparent distinction between rules that it deems “discretionary” and those that it deems “jurisdictional.” Perhaps the majority wishes to suggest that the dismissals of petitioners’ writs of error by the Supreme Court of Appeals were simply ad hoc discretionary refusals to accept plenary review of the lower court‘s decisions, analogous to this Court‘s denial of certiorari. If this were all the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals had done, review of a federal question properly raised below would of course not be barred here. The mere discretionary refusal of the highest state court to grant review of a lower court decision does not provide an adequate state ground. In such circumstances, the decision of the lower court, rather than the order of the highest court refusing review, becomes the judgment of the “highest court of a State in which a decision could be had” for purposes of
But this case clearly does not present this kind of discretionary refusal of a state appellate court to accept review. Although the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals may well have the “discretion” to refuse review7 in a particular case without giving reasons or reconciling its refusal with earlier decisions, the dismissal below was not simply an ad hoc exercise of the power not to review every case presented. Instead the state court dismissed the petitions for review for a stated reason, namely, a
The majority might have another meaning in mind when it describes the State‘s procedural rule as “discretionary.” It may be suggesting that “reasonable written notice,” and “reasonable opportunity to examine” are such flexible standards that the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has the “discretion” to decide a close case either of two ways without creating an obvious conflict with earlier decisions. If this is what the majority means by “discretionary rule,” then I must register my disagreement. This kind of “discretion” is nothing more than “the judicial formulation of law,” for a court has an obligation to be reasonably consistent and “to explain the decision, including the reason for according different treatment to the instant case.”9 Surely a state ground
Although the majority‘s loose use of the word “discretionary” may suggest that any decision made pursuant to a broad standard cannot provide an adequate state ground, I think examination of the earlier opinions of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, several of which are cited by the majority, provides the proper foundation for the result reached by the majority, under the principle of NAACP v. Alabama, 357 U. S. 449 (1958).
The finding of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals of a violation of Rule 5:1, § 3 (f), in this case was in my view based on a standard of reasonableness much stricter than that which could have been fairly extracted from the earlier Virginia cases applying the rule10 and its predecessor statute.11 In other words, although Rule 5:1, § 3 (f), itself may not be novel, the standard implicitly governing the rule‘s application to the facts here was. I think it fair to conclude that in light of these earlier decisions, and the principle set forth in Bacigalupo v. Fleming, 199 Va. 827, 835, 102 S. E. 2d 321, 326 (1958),12 the petitioners here might have justifiably
II
Because Congress has now provided a comprehensive scheme for dealing with the kinds of discrimination found in this case, I think it very unwise as a matter of policy for the Court to use
Petitioners here complain of discrimination in the provision of recreation facilities ancillary to a rented house found in one of the four subdivisions served by Little Hunting Park. On the one hand, the Fair
By attempting to deal with the problem of discrimination in the provision of recreational facilities under
Not only does
These remedies are expressly provided for in the Fair Housing Law, which, with its variety of techniques for enforcing its prohibition of housing discrimination, again stands in sharp contrast with
Given this comprehensive, contemporary statute, the limitations of which have not yet even been established, I believe that the Court should not decide this case but should instead dismiss the writ of certiorari as improvidently granted.21 This Court‘s certiorari jurisdiction should not be exercised simply “for the benefit of the particular litigants,” Rice v. Sioux City Cemetery, 349 U. S. 70, 74 (1955), but instead for the “settlement of [issues] of importance to the public as distinguished from . . . the parties,” Layne & Bowler Corp. v. Western Well Works, Inc., 261 U. S. 387, 393 (1923). Even from the perspective of the parties, this case has lost much of its practical importance due to the fact that Dr. Freeman‘s work has taken him and his family away from the area served by Little Hunting Park, thereby making moot his original claim for injunctive relief.22 But more fundamentally, I think here, as I did in Jones, that the existence of the Fair Housing Law renders the decision of this case of little “importance to the public.” For, although the 1968 Act does not cover this particular case,23 should a Negro in the future rent a house but be
III
The undiscriminating manner in which the Court has dealt with this case is both highlighted and compounded by the Court‘s failure to face, let alone resolve, two issues that lie buried beneath the surface of its opinion. Both issues are difficult ones, and the fact that the majority has not come to grips with them serves to illustrate the inevitable difficulties the Court will encounter if it continues to employ
A. RELIEF FOR SULLIVAN
Because the majority opinion is highly elliptical as to (1) the circumstances surrounding Sullivan‘s expulsion from Little Hunting Park, (2) the relief Sullivan sought in the state court, and (3) the decision of the trial court, it is necessary for me to begin my analysis simply by stating the facts of these aspects of the case. A full
1. The Circumstances of Sullivan‘s Expulsion. After the Board of Little Hunting Park refused to approve the assignment of a membership share from Sullivan to Freeman, Sullivan attempted to convince the Board to reverse its decision. To this end, Sullivan first met with members of the Board, and protested their actions. He subsequently mobilized a campaign both by other members of the club and by persons in the community as a whole to force the Board to reconsider its decision. The means used in this campaign, as the brief for petitioner Sullivan acknowledges,25 included phone calls to members of the Board, letters to local clergy, and the circulation among the members of Little Hunting Park of a petition that called for a meeting of the full membership to consider Dr. Freeman‘s case.
On July 8 Sullivan received a letter from the Board which stated that it had determined that there was “due cause” to warrant a hearing in order to determine whether Sullivan should be expelled from Little Hunting Park, pursuant to its bylaws, for “conduct inimicable to the Corporation members.” This letter referred to Sullivan‘s “non-acceptance of the Board‘s decision on the assignment of your membership to your tenant . . . along with the continued harassment of the board members” as the basis for the Board‘s “due cause” determination.
In response to these actions, Sullivan brought this suit in the Circuit Court of Fairfax County, Virginia, against Little Hunting Park and its Board seeking as relief (1) an order compelling Little Hunting Park to reinstate his membership; (2) monetary damages in the amount of $15,000; and (3) an injunction requiring the Board to approve the assignment to Freeman and forbidding the Board to use race as a factor in considering membership. The trial court, after hearing disputed evidence as to the reasons for Sullivan‘s expulsion, found for the defendants. It stated that the
2. With this statement of the record in mind, several observations must be made about the majority‘s treatment of Sullivan‘s rights. First, in stating that “Sullivan‘s expulsion [was] for the advocacy of Freeman‘s cause,” the majority surely cannot be taken to have resolved disputed testimony, and decided the facts underlying Sullivan‘s expulsion. If these facts are relevant to Sullivan‘s remedial rights, as surely they must be, then a remand for detailed findings seems unavoidable under the majority‘s own premises.
Second, the majority has not explained what legal standard should determine Sullivan‘s rights under
One can imagine a variety of standards, each based on different legal conclusions as to the “rights” and “duties” created by
B. STATE COURT REMEDIES FOR FEDERAL RIGHTS
Because this case arises from a state court, it presents special problems which the majority overlooks, and which suggests again the undesirability of deciding this case in the context of this ancient statute. In deciding that there is a right to recover damages in this case, the majority overlooks the complications involved by dint of the fact that a state court is being asked to provide
Implied remedies for federal rights are sometimes solely a matter of federal law28 and other times dependent, either wholly or partially, upon state law.29 Difficult and complex questions are involved in determining what remedies a state court must30 or must not31 provide in cases involving federal rights.32
It should be noted that the majority‘s opinion, though perhaps deciding very little33 only adds to the confusion already existing in this area. Section 1988 of Title 42, which the majority apparently thinks decides this case, is concerned with the remedial powers of federal district courts and it provides that the federal courts shall look to state law to find appropriate remedies when the applicable federal civil rights law is “deficient in the provisions necessary to furnish suitable remedies . . . .” But the majority turns this provision on its head by suggesting (1) that
By reason of these considerations, many of which could hardly have been foreseen at the time certiorari was granted, I would dismiss the writ in this case as improvidently granted.
