Almost two decades ago, the federal district court in Indianapolis issued an injunction requiring the busing of public schoolchildren living in certain parts of the city that were primarily black to public schools located in primarily white suburban areas of Marion County.
*509 There is no question that in adding compulsory busing of kindergarten students to the original injunction, the district judge modified that injunction, and an order modifying an injunction is appealable without regard to finality. 28 Ú.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). . But there is a question whether the part of his order that continues the underlying injunction in force is similarly appealable.
The board moved to lift the injunction and dismiss the suit (now in its thirtieth year) on the ground that the Indianapolis Public School District has achieved what in the euphemistic lexicon of school segregation cases is called “unitary-status,” which means that the district is not (or, as here, is no longer) discriminating. The district court declined to address this issue, saying that it was “not fully advised as to whether IPS should be declared ‘unitary’ in whole or in part, and [the court] will therefore take additional evidence on this issue at a further hearing to be scheduled in the near future.” The hearing has not yet been held, or, so far as we know, even scheduled.
Standing alone, the language that we have just quoted would signify that the court was not ruling on the board’s request to lift the injunction because the request depended on a factual determination that would require further proceedings. Postponement of a ruling on a request to dissolve an injunction is not treated as a denial for purposes of appealability — otherwise the movant could appeal before the judge had had a chance to consider his motion — unless it is so protracted that it has the practical effect of a denial; in that event it is deemed a constructive denial, and immediate appeal is allowed.
IDS Life Ins. Co. v. SunAmerica, Inc.,
Judges may not issue busing orders (“transfer orders,” in another bit of school segregation litigation jargon) that send the kids outside the boundaries of the public school district in which they live, if the only violation of the equal protection clause is by that school district.
Missouri v. Jenkins,
There is, as a result, an element of non sequitur in the school board’s request for the dissolution of the interdistrict busing order on the ground that IPS is no longer engaged in racial discrimination. IPS was found to *510 have engaged in racial discrimination and was placed under orders designed to remedy that discrimination; but the interdistrict order is based upon, and seeks to remedy, acts of other public entities altogether.
The non sequitur weakens (though, as we are about to see, it does not destroy) IPS’s case on the merits, but at least shows that we have jurisdiction over the appeal without our having to invoke the controversial and embattled doctrine of'pendent appellate jurisdiction, on which see
Swint v. Chambers County Comm’n,
Coming to the merits, we begin by observing 'that if all that the board were arguing was that it is no longer discriminating, the appeal would border on the frivolous for the reason just indicated — the fundamental difference between interdistriet and intradistrict remedies in school segregation cases. But there is more. The board argues that after thirty years of litigation, and eighteen years of busing, it is time to put this suit on the path to a conclusion by taking a careful look to see whether the litigation and the decree have accomplished their purpose. It points out that the Supreme Court disfavors permanent injunctions in school cases. The administration of public schools is a state executive function rather than a federal judicial function, and so ought not to be subjected to the perpetual tutelage of the federal courts. The Court has said that “local autonomy of school districts is a vital national tradition,” and that “a district court must strive to restore the state and local authorities to the control of a school system operating in compliance with the Constitution.”
Missouri v. Jenkins, supra,
The goal of winding up a district court’s supervision of public education is not limited to intradistrict cases, that is, to cases involving discrimination by the school district itself. Such a limitation would be unprincipled, is disavowed by the United States (the principal appellee), is not supported by the case law or by anything in the equal protection clause, the principles of federalism, or the precepts of equitable jurisprudence, and was rejected in
Coalition to Save Our Children v. State Board of Education,
This is not to say that the injunction should be dissolved tomorrow; no one wants that. To ensure that the injunction is not dissolved so suddenly as to disrupt the education of the children currently being bused, the board itself proposes to phase it out over a thirteen-year period: anyone already enrolled in a suburban school pursuant to the injunction would be permitted to remain until graduation from high school. Still, it wants to begin the process of phasing out immediately. Yet it can be permitted to do that only if it can present evidence that the busing order issued almost two decades ago has, in fact, outlived its usefulness. The viola
*511
tions by the state and by the housing authority are long in the past. But to the extent that their consequences linger, continued equitable relief may be appropriate. That is the teaching of cases such as
Missouri v. Jenkins, supra,
The district judge’s ground for continuing the order in force is that, had it not been for those old violations, 7,000 more black schoolchildren would today live in the suburbs to which they are being bused and 7,000 fewer in the inner city. This is the sheerest speculation, implying an ability to trace the causality of social change over decades with a degree of precision that few social scientists would claim. The school board should be allowed to prove that the demography of Marion County today is, so far as anyone can determine, approximately what one would have expected even if there had not been the history of official discrimination for which the busing order is the remedy. E.g.,
Pasadena City Board of Education v. Spangler,
Some of the appellees argue that the right to present such evidence lies not with the school board but with the state (and, in principle, the county housing authority— but not in practice, as we shall see), as they are the wrongdoers against whom the inter-district part of the decree is aimed. We cannot understand the sense of that argument. Of course in the normal case it is the wrongdoer and only the wrongdoer who would be expected to incur the cost of demonstrating that the injunction directed against him should be lifted. But we are in the eloudcuckooland of institutional reform litigation. The state and the housing authority are not hurting as a result of a decree1 that requires the busing of students from one part of Marion County to another (or rather not hurting much, because the state does pay the costs of busing, as a result -of our decision in
United States v. Board of School Commissioners,
*512
This is not a case, moreover, in which one unit of state government (such as IPS) seeks to justify its inability to comply with the-law or a federal judicial decree by reference to acts of another unit, such as the state legislature, that are tying its hands.
United States v. Board of Education,
It is even clearer that the part of the decree that subjects the kindergarteners to compulsory busing must be vacated. No one asked the judge for this modification; there was no hearing on it. As a result, there is nothing in the judge’s order, or in the record on which it is based, about the respective kindergarten programs, facilities, and capacities in the transferor and transferee areas or about the appropriateness of compelling the busing of such young children against their parents’ wishes and whether they are to'be in the same buses, with much older children. .It is true that two years ago the district judge modified the decree to allow the busing of kindergarteners from some of the inner-city neighborhoods and that he based the modification in part on a finding that the suburban schools to which these children would be bused had made kindergarten an integral part of the elementary school program. But the present modification adds schools without any finding about their programs and rescinds the voluntary feature of the original modification without explanation.
In defense of the modification that they did not seek, the appellees point out that the district judge has learned a lot about public school education in Marion County in the thirty years that he has been presiding over this litigation.' For all we know he has more years of experience with running a school system than all the members of the school board of IPS combined. But great knowledge is a temptation as well as a resource: a temptation to blur the separation of powers, to shift the balance between the federal courts and state and local government too .far toward the courts, and to disregard procedural niceties, all in fulfillment of a confident sense of mission.
Although we are vacating the district court’s order, we want to emphasize the limited scope of our decision. We do not hold that the busing order should be dissolved or that, if it is not dissolved, still it must not extend to kindergartners. Those are judgments to be made in the first instance by the district court — but upon proper findings made upon a record compiled in an evidentiary hearing.
Vacated and Remanded.
