This is the second time in recent months that we have been asked to reverse an order refusing to allow intervention, entered by the district judge who is presiding over the South Bend, Indiana school desegregation case. In the previous case,
United States v. South Bend Community School Corp.,
Our previous decision, along with many similar decisions in this and other circuits, see, e.g.,
United States v. Board of School Comm’rs of Indianapolis,
The appellants note the statement in our previous opinion that “the NAACP has not attacked the proposed plan as constitutionally or otherwise inadequate and has merely suggested improvements,” id., and point out that they do contend the plan is inadequate and unconstitutional. But the quoted statement was an observation, not a holding. Adequacy of representation and the substantive nature of the would-be intervenor’s challenge are analytically distinct. If a parent could intervene in a school desegregation suit as of right merely by stating his concern in constitutional terms, or by denouncing the decree rather than seeking to modify it incrementally, the requirement of adequacy of representation would be a dead letter, and school desegregation suits would become unmanageable.
Nor was the Brookins class entitled to a hearing to explore its substantive allegations. That would have amounted to granting the motion to intervene. We acknowledge some superficial appeal to the appellants’ contention that if the decree is as bad as they say it is, their interests are not being adequately represented by the Department, and that the district court could not determine whether it was as bad as they say it is without granting them a hearing. But the appellants could if they had wanted prosecute their own suit against the school board. They started down that road but then decided to piggyback on the Department. This they could do only within the limits of Rule 24(a)(2), which makes inadequacy of representation an absolute requirement in order to prevent litigation from becoming hopelessly complex.
There is an alternative basis for the district court’s denial of the motion to intervene. Rule 24(a)(2) requires that the motion to intervene be “timely,” although it does not attempt to define the term or specify rigid time limits. The purpose of the requirement is to prevent a tardy intervenor from derailing a lawsuit within sight of the terminal. As soon as a prospective intervenor knows or has reason to know that his interests might be adversely affected by the outcome of the litigation he must move promptly to intervene. The revised consent decree was entered on April 17 and long before then its outlines were perceptible. Nevertheless, the Brookins class waited four and a half months after the decree was entered to file its motion. It should have filed within days of the April 17 order, if not sooner; there was no excuse for waiting till the school year began, so that if the motion had been granted the implementation of the decree would have been delayed. “[A] motion to intervene after entry of a decree should be denied except in extraordinary circumstances.”
Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council for Clean Air v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
Insofar as the appeal challenges the district court’s refusal to allow permissive intervention (Rule 24(b)(2)), it is frivolous in light of our previous decision. See
Affirmed.
