Carmichael v. McKissick Opposition to Petition for Writ of Certiorari
Public Court Documents
January 1, 1950
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Brief Collection, LDF Court Filings. Carmichael v. McKissick Opposition to Petition for Writ of Certiorari, 1950. 88b429d0-ac9a-ee11-be37-00224827e97b. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/10f32e8b-85b2-4aae-99dd-65ee0ee9c161/carmichael-v-mckissick-opposition-to-petition-for-writ-of-certiorari. Accessed November 23, 2025.
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Supreme Court of the United States
October Term, 1950
No.
WILLIAM DONALD CARMICHAEL, JR., President of
the University of North Carolina; HENRY P. BRANDIS,
JR., Dean of the Law School of the University of North
Carolina; LEE ROY WELLS ARMSTRONG, Director of
Admissions of the University of North Carolina; ARCH
T. ALLEN, Secretary of the Board of Trustees of the
University of North Carolina; and the University of North
Carolina, a body Incorporate,
Petitioners,
against
FLOYD B. McKISSICK, SOLOMON REVIS, JAMES
LASSITER and J. KENNETH LEE,
Respondents.
R obert L. Carter,
T htjrgood Marshall,
C. 0 . P earson,
F rank D. R eeves,
Spottswood W. R obinson, III,
Counsel for Respondents.
Printed by Law Reporter Ptg. Co., 518 5th St., Wash., D. C.
Court of the United States
October Term, 1950
No.
WILLIAM DONALD CARMICHAEL, JR., President of
the University of North Carolina; JIENR'y P. BRANDIS,
JR., Dean of the Law School of the University of North
Carolina; LEE ROY WELLS ARMSTRONG, Director of
Admissions of the University of North Carolina; ARCH
T. ALLEN, Secretary of the Board of Trustees of the
University of North Carolina; and the University of North
Carolina, a body Incorporate,
Petitioners,
against
FLOYD B. McKISSICK, SOLOMON REVIS, JAMES
LASSITER and J. KENNETH LEE,
Respondents.
OPPOSITION TO PETITION FOR W RIT OF
CERTIORARI
The petition for writ of certiorari and brief in support
thereof filed by petitioners herein fail to show any recog
nizable ground for review by this Court.
The petition in this case, like the petition for writ of
certiorari in Sweatt v. Painter, 339 U. S. 629, fails to dis
tinguish between findings of fact by a trial judge and con
clusions of law by a trial judge determining the application
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of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution.
The plain and concise statements of law set forth in the
unanimous opinion in Sweatt v. Painter have been reen
forced by the decision of this Court in Board of Supervisors
of Louisiana State University et al. v. Roy S. Wilson, 95
L. ed. (Ad. Op.) 200, in which this Court affirmed the judg
ment of the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of Louisiana granting a preliminary injunction
restraining the Board of Supervisors of Louisiana State
University from enforcing an order excluding Negroes from
admission to the law school of Louisiana State University.
In that case there was a separate Negro law school in
existence which had been in operation for several years.
The only difference between the facts in the instant case
and the facts recognized by this Court in Sweatt v. Painter,
is that the Negro law school in North Carolina had been in
existence longer than the Negro law school in Texas. The
other point raised by petitioners which was considered and
rejected by the Court of Appeals is that the state of North
Carolina was proceeding “ in good faith.” The Court of
Appeals considered this point and concluded that “ The
situation differs in circumstance but not in principle from
the decision in Siveatt v. Painter . . . ” The Court of Ap
peals then quoted from the opinion of this Court in Sweatt
v. Painter and concluded that the decision of the District
Court should be reversed.
The opinion and judgment of the Court of Appeals for
the Fourth Circuit in the above-entitled ease is clearly in
keeping with the decision of this Court in the two cases
cited above.
It should also be noted that the University law school
(white) holds a summer session and the college law school
(Negro) does not hold a summer session.
It is, therefore, respectfully submitted that this Court
should, during this term, prior to commencement of the sum
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mer session, either affirm the decision of the United States
Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit or refuse to issue
its writ of certiorari.
R obert L. Carter,
T hurgood Marshall,
C. 0. P earson,
F rank D. R eeves,
Spottswood W. R obinson, III,
Counsel for Respondents.