Letter from Glime to Greenberg & Chackin RE: Copy of Motion to Dismiss, Affidavits & Brief in Support, and Notice of Hearing
Public Court Documents
October 10, 1973
35 pages
Cite this item
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Case Files, Milliken Hardbacks. Letter from Glime to Greenberg & Chackin RE: Copy of Motion to Dismiss, Affidavits & Brief in Support, and Notice of Hearing, 1973. c7b1b1ef-53e9-ef11-a730-7c1e5247dfc0. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/90b0bfb8-ebc5-4fda-8e3a-0fb60c93e237/letter-from-glime-to-greenberg-chackin-re-copy-of-motion-to-dismiss-affidavits-brief-in-support-and-notice-of-hearing. Accessed November 01, 2025.
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M a t h e r , G l i m e a D a o u s t
A T T O R N E Y S A T L A W
C O U N T Y S Q U A R E B U I L D I N G
D O N A L D E . M A T H E R
R A Y M O N D G . G L I M E
J A M E S R . D A O U S T
G A R Y W . W I L D S
£ 5 N O R T H G R A T I O T A V E N U E
M O U N T C L E M E N S , M IC H IG A N 4 8 0 4 3
H E R B E R T J . R U S I N G
D A V I D A . W I D L A K
D E N I S R . LE D U C
T E L E P H O N E
(313) 4 6 3 - 0 5 1 1
October 10, 1973
JACK GREENBERG
NORMAN J. CHACKIN
10 Columbus Circle
New York, New York 10019
Re: Bradley et al vs. Milliken et al
United States District Court
For the Eastern District of Michigan
Civil Action No. 35257
Gentlemen:
Enclosed herewith please find a copy of the Motion to
Dismiss, Affidavits in Support of Motion, Brief in Support
of Motion to Dismiss and Notice of Hearing set for Monday,
the 26th day of November, 1973 at 9:00 A.M. We have filed
the above pleadings this date on behalf of Fraser Public
Schools and Gerald McCaffrey, only.
Very truly yours,
RGG/djp
Encs.
I
• •
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
BRADLEY, et al,
Plaintiffs,
vs -
MILLIKEN, et al,
Civil Action
No. 35257
Defendants.
/
NOTICE OF HEARING
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Defendants, FRASER PUBLIC
SCHOOLS and GERALD McCAFFRSY, will make application to the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Michigan, before the presiding Judge thereof, on Monday, the
26th day of November, 1973, at 9:00 A.M. or as soon thereafter
as counsel may be heard, upon a Motion to Dismiss in the above
entitled cause.
This Application is based upon the Motion to Dismiss
on file in said cause, a copy of which is hereto annexed.
Attorneys for the Defendants,
FRASER PU3LIC SCHOOLS and
GERALD McCAFFREY, Only
25 North Gratiot Avenue
Mount Clemens, Michigan 48043Dated: October 9, 1973.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
BRADLEY, et al,
Plaintiffs,
vs.
MILLIKEN, et al,
Civil Action
No. 35257
Defendants.
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MOTION TO DISMISS
AFFIDAVIT IN SUPPORT OF MOTION
BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF MOTION TO DISMISS
NOTICE OF HEARING
PROOF OF SERVICE
MATHER, GLIME & DAOUST
Attorneys for Defendants,
FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and
GERALD McCAFFREY, Only
25 North Gratiot Avenue
Mount Clemens, Michigan 48043
463-0511
-* A
A.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
BRADLEY, et al,
Plaintiffs,
vs Civil Action
No. 35257
MILLIKEN, et al,
Defendants.
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MOTION TO DISMISS
COUNT I
NOW COMES the Defendants in the above entitled action,
FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and GERALD McCAFFREY, only, by their
attorneys, MATHER, GLIME & DAOUST, and move this Honorable
Court to quash service of process made by the United States
Marshalls’. Office and to dismiss this cause of action for lack
of jurisdiction for the following reason:
1. Service of process was improperly made pursuant to
Rule 4 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.
WHEREFORE, the Defendants FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and
GERALD McCAFFREY, only, respectfully request this Honorable
Court to enter an Order quashing service of process and
dismissing this cause of action for lack of jurisdiction.
COUNT II
NOW COMES the Defendants, FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and
GERALD McCAFFREY, only, by their attorneys, MATHER, GLIME &
DAOUST, and move this Honorable Court to dismiss this cause of
action for the following reasons:
The Complaint and Amended Complaint fail to state1 .
a claim against the Defendants FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and
GERALD McCAFFREY upon which relief can be granted;
2. The addition of the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and
GERALD McCAFFREY as party defendants under Rules 19 and 21 of
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C. by the Order of
September 10, 1973, at this state of the proceedings, coming over
three (3) years after the initiation of this suit and after
extensive litigation has taken place between the parties,
including (but not limited to) pleadings, motions, orders,
direct and cross examination of witnesses, findings of fact,
and a variety of appeals, is an abuse of discretion and cannot
now be remedied, and is extremely prejudicial to the Defendants,
violative of due process of law as guaranteed by the Fifth
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, contrary to
the principles of equity and good conscience, and contrary to
the requirement of Rule 21 of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, 28 U.S.C., that parties be added "on such terms as
are just."
3. Notice of the motion to add the FRASER PUBLIC
SCHOOLS and the FRASER BOARD OF EDUCATION as party defendants
and the hearing thereon was not served upon the FRASER PUBLIC
SCHOOLS and the FRASER BOARD OF EDUCATION and an opportunity
afforded them to be heard until after said motion was once
ruled upon by the Court and the Order to add them as party
defendants was already issued, thereby prejudicing the Court
against any arguments the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS or the members
of the FRASER BOARD OF EDUCATION might later raise as to why
they should not be added as party defendants; which lack of
notice was contrary to the guarantee of due process of law
under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
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States and the principles of equity and good conscience;
4. Any remedy to the alleged wrongs enumerated in the
Complaint and Amended Complaint imposed upon the FRASER
PUBLIC SCHOOLS ana a parent and member of the FRASER BOARD OF
EDUCATION including (but not limited to) the reallocation of
pupils, teachers, resources, and facilities across the boundary
lines of this School District would:
(a) be a deprivation of due process of law as
guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment to tne Constitution
of the United States because the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS
and its BOARD OF EDUCATION have not been a party and
ha^e not been represented in the extensive proceedings
which have taken place in this case heretofore and have
not been guilty of any acts alleged in the Plaintiffs
Complaint or Amended Complaint or the violation of any
Federal Constitutionally protected right;
(b) result in unreasonable hardship, be unduly
harsh, and contrary to equity and good conscience;
(c) usurp the Legislative power of the State of
Michigan and the lawful power of the duly elected Board
of Education of the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS contrary to
the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States;
(d) impose a particular racial balance and a fixed
racial quota upon the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS unnecessary
to the requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States and contrary to the
Tenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States;
(e) create a cumbersome and unwieldy school
3
• •
administrative district, hamper sound education and
curtail decentralized and diversified locally controlled
schools more accessible and responsive to both black
and white parents and to their school age children
(while leaving this benefit available to parents and
children in other areas of the State of Michigan who
fortuitously live a greater distance from the City of
Detroit, than do the parents and children residing in
the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT) unnecessary to the
requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment and contrary
to the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States;
(f) render useless the right of the electors of
the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS DISTRICT to cast ballots for
members of the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS BOARD OF EDUCATION
since local board members would no longer control the
organization and administration of the schools the
Fraser children attend, unnecessary under the Fourteenth
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and
contrary to the Tenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the
Constitution of the United States?
(g) discriminate against parents and children who
wish to participate in school centered, extracurricular,
social or athletic activities;
(h) destroy local programs tailored for local
needs;
(i) disregard the right of private contract as
guaranteed by Article I, Section 10 of the Constitution
of the United States;
(j) be contrary to the right of free association
4-
as guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution
of the United States;
(k) be contrary to the right to travel, to settle,
and to partake of the benefits of a new place as
guaranteed by the First and Fifth Amendments to the
Constitution of the United States;
(l) be the imposition of a penalty upon the
Defendants without a judicial trial and therefore a
bill of attainder in violation of Article I, Section 9
of the Constitution of the United States, and Article 3
of the Constitution of the United States;
(m) be unnecessary under the Fourteenth Amendment
and contrary to the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution
of the United States since the establishment 'and
maintenance of the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS by the FRASER
BOARD OF EDUCATION has never been invidiously motivated
intended to circumvent any federally protected right
of any citizen;
(n) be unnecessary under the Fourteenth Amendment
and contrary to the Tenth Amendment since the FRASER
PUBLIC SCHOOLS by the FRASER BOARD OF EDUCATION have
taken no action whatsoever for the purpose of keeping
their schools predominately white, nor excluded any
child from any school within the District on account
of race, and are therefore a unitary school district;
5. That on or about October 9, 1973, the movants
reguested the concurrence of Plaintifrs- counsel in the relief
sought in this Motion as required by Rule IX (a) of the Rules
for the United States District Court for the Eastern District
of Michigan, and concurrence was denied.
X Jf
WHEREFORE, the Defendants, FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and
GERALD McCAFFREY, only, respectfully move that an Order of
Dismissal be entered in this action for the foregoing reasons.
Attorneys for the Defendants,
FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and
GERALD McCAFFREY, Only
25 North Gratiot Avenue
Mount Clemens, Michigan 48043
Dated: October 9, 1973 463-0511
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
BRADLEY, et al
Plaintiffs
vs. Civil Action
No. 35257
MILLIKEN, et al
Defendants.
/
AFFIDAVIT
NOW COMES SHARRON HENDERSON of the City of Fraser,
County of Macomb and State of Michigan and being duly sworn
deposes and says that:
(a) She is a clerical secretary in the personnel
office of the Fraser Public Schools;
(b) On September 20, 1973 she was served with_a
copy of the Summons, Complaint, and Amended Complaint
in the case of Bradley, et al vs, Milliken et al.,
Civil Action No. 35257,
(c) She is not an agent appointed to receive
service of process for the Fraser Public Schools,^the
Fraser Superintendent, the Fraser Board of Education
or any member thereof,
and further deponent sayeth not.
*- i -Tf
SHARRON HENDERSON”
Subscribed and sworn to before
me this / d day of October, 1973.
7
Michigan
M̂ ^ .
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
BRADLEY, et al,
Plaintiffs,
Civil Action
No. 35257
Defendants.
/
vs.
MILLIKEN, et al,
AFFIDAVIT
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NOW COMES GERALD McCAFFREY of the City of Fraser, County
of Macomb and State of Michigan and being duly sworn deposes
and says that:
(a) He is a trustee of the Fraser Public
Schools Board of Education;
(b) At no time has he been served with a copy of
the Summons, Complaint, or Amended Complaint in the
case of Bradley, et al vs. Milliken, et al., Civil
Action No« 35257,
and further deponent sayeth not.
Subscribed and sworn to before
me this 10th day of October, 1973.
n _A/ /
Diane J. BambachNotary Public, Macomb County, Michigan
My Commission Expires: January 18, 1976
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
BRADLEY, et al,
Plaintiffs,
vs Civil Action
No. 35257
MILLIKEN, et al,
Defendants
/
AFFIDAVIT IN SUPPORT OF MOTION
STATE OF MICHIGAN)
) ss.
COUNTY OF MACOMB )
RAYMOND G. GLIME and DENIS R. LeDUC, having first been
duly sworn, depose and say that they have read the foregoing
Motion to Dismiss by them signed, and that the same is true
to their knowledge, except as to those matters therein stated
to be upon information and belief and as to those matters therein
stated to be upon information and belief and as to those matters
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they believe them t<- r~\ f y i v
Subscribed and sworn to before
me this / & day of October, 1973
w L * 0 /CUi
DARLENE J. PATRICK
Notary Public, Macomb County, Mich.
My commission expires: May 21, 1976
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
BRADLEY, et al,
Plaintiffs,
vs. Civil Action
No. 35257
MILLIKEN, et al,
Defendants,
BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF MOTION TO DISMISS
1. Proper service of process not having been made upon
the Defendants, FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and GERALD McCAFFREY,
Trustee of the Fraser Board of Education, in accordance with
Rules 4(d) (1) and 4(d) (6) of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, 28 U.S.C., this Court is entirely without jurisdiction
over these Defendants and this action must be dismissed. As
to the Defendant, FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS, service of process was
attempted (as demonstrated by the Affidavit attached hereto) but
was improper because it was not in accordance with Rule 4(d)(6)
of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C. which reads:
"Service shall be made as follows: . . .(6)
upon a State or municipal corporation or other
governmental corporation thereof subject to suit,
by delivering a copy of the summons and complaint
to the chief executive officer thereof or by
serving the summons and complaint in the manner
prescribed by the law of that state for the service
of summons or other like process on any such
defendant." Rule 4(d)(6), Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, 28 U.S.C.
The applicable Michigan law referred to is M.C.L. 600.1925(5):
"Service of process upon public, municipal,
quasi municipal, or governmental corporations,
unincorporated boards, or public bodies may be
made by leaving a summons and copy of the
complaint with . . . (5) the president, secretary,
or treasurer in the case of school districts."
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Service of process in this case not having been made upon the
chief executive official of FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS (being the
president of the Fraser Public Schools Board of Education) or ±n
accordance with M.C.L. 600.1925(5), any alleged service of
process was improperly made and should be quashed by this Court
and this case dismissed for lack or jurisdiction.
As to the Defendant, GERALD McCAFFREY, no attempt
whatsoever to achieve proper service of process has been made
by the United States Marshall and therefore this case must be
dismissed against the Defendant, GERALD McCAFFREY, for the lack
of jurisdiction. Rule 4(d)(1), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,
28 U.S.C.
2. The Plaintiffs have failed to state a claim against
the Defendants, FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOL^? and GrRALD McCAFFREY,
upon which relief can be granted.
This is a desegregation case with the Plaintirfs alleging
that they have been denied a Federal Constitutional right uo
integrated schools. No allegation whatsoever has been made
that the establishment, organization or administration of the
FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS has been in any way invidiously motivated.
There is no allegation whatsoever that the FRASER PUBLIC
SCHOOLS are anything but an integrated, unitary school sysuem
fully in accord with the requirements of the Fourteentn
Amendment. Intentional discriminatory actions by the Defendants
must be alleged before there can be any claim to relief. Absent
such allegations, the Plaintiffs have failed to state a proper
claim against the Defendants, FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and
GERALD McCAFFREY. Since judicial authority may only be
exercised when there is a constitutional violation, this case
' ' • •
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must be dismissed. Green v. School Board of New Kent County,
391 U.S. 430 (1968); Swann v„ Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of
Education, 402 U.S. 1 (1971); Alexander v. Holmes County Board
of Education, 396 U.S. 19 (1959).
3. The addition of the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and
GERALD McCAFFREY as party Defendants at this late stage in these
proceedings has clearly abused the discretion granted to the
Court under Rules 19 and 21 of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure. Rule 21 specifically permits a change of parties
"at any stange in the action,," Rule 21, Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, 28 U.S.C.; but the Court should deny the request to
add additional parties if it comes so late in the litigation
that it would cause prejudice. Petit v. George A. Rheman Co.,
1 F.R.D. 271 (N. D. Ga. 1940). While normally the decision to
add or drop a party is in the sound discretion of the Court
(Barr Rubber Products v. Sun Rubber Co. 425 F„2nd 1114 [2nd Cir.
1970]) it is clearly an abuse of discretion under the particular
circumstances of this case.
The order of September 10, 1973, by which the FRASER
PUBLIC SCHOOLS and GERALD McCAFFREY were added as party defendants
has come over three (3) years after the initiation of this suit.
In that interim period there have been pleadings, motions,
orders, voluminous testimony, a trial, findings of fact, and
several appeals. Since the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS is an
independent municipal body with the power to sue and to be
sued, organized and administered by the Fraser Board of Education
(elected by and responsible to the electors of the FRASER SCHOOL
DISTRICT), they have a fundamental right to be informed of any
complaint against them, to cross-examine witnesses and to call
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witnesses on their own behalf. These rights are secured to
them by the Fifth Amendment to our Constitution and cannot be
denied. Addition as party Defendants at this late stage in
these proceedings has effectively prejudiced FRASER PUBLIC
SCHOOLS and GERALD McCAFFREY by denying them this fundamental
right. Almost all of the essential issues in this case have
already been determined and addition of new party Defendants at
this stage must necessarily constitute an abuse of discretion
by the Court.
The restricted hearing granted to these new Defendants
would not remedy the severe prejudicial violations of their
civil rights. Though it may appear harsh, this case should be
dismissed and reinitiated by the Plaintiffs from the very
beginning. The Plaintiffs themselves have caused this dilemma
by failing to join all necessary parties (or to inform the
court of all necessary parties not so joined as required by
Rule 19(c) of the Federal Rules in Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.h
j
In balancing the potential inconvenience to the Plaintiffs,
caused by their own inactions,against the immense injury to
the civil liberties of the Defendants, it is clear that the
convenience of the Plaintiffs must yield. If the Court allows
these proceedings to continue, the rights of the Defendants
will have been trampled, and the discretion of the Court to
add new party Defendants so severely abused as to necessitate
reversal. Hargrove v. Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company
153 F. Supp. 681 (W. D. Ky. 1957).
4. An opportunity to be heard in a meaningful way is
guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the
United States. Armstrong v. Manzo, 380 U.S. 545 (1956). Thi
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right was likewise denied the Defendants by lack of notice of the
motion to add new party Defendants and the lack of any opportunity
to be present and to be heard on that motion before it was once
ruled upon by the Court and the order to add them as party
Defendants already issued. The first hearing on that motion
was the critical time when the Court would consider all the
arguments against adding the new defendants. It would necessarily
have to consider the timeliness of the motion, possible prejudice
to any of the present parties involved and prejudice to the
parties to be added. Once having decided these issues without
the benefit of argument of counsel on behalf of the new party
Defendants the Court would be indisposed to any additional
arguments the new Defendants might later raise as to why they
should not be added as party Defendants. The important decision
having been made in their absence, they have been denied a
meaningful hearing as guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment.
Any proposed new Defendants are in the difficult position
of having to rely on the parties already in the suit to assert
their interests even though the parties already in the suit may
not vigorously oppose the addition of the new parties or be
ill equipped to assert those interests. This conflict may only
be eliminated by giving notice to the party to be added and
allowing them to ap£)ear and to put forth their arguments as to
why they should or should not be added as party Defendants in the
case at the initial hearing on the motion to add additional
parties.
5. Any remedy to the alleged wrongs enumerated in
the complaint and amended complaint which would be imposed upon
the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and a parent and member of the Fraser
5
*
Board of Education such as the reallocation of pupils, teachers
resources, and facilities across the boundary lines of che
school district would:
(a) Be a denial of liberty and property without
/
due process of law as guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment
to the Constitution of the United States since the
Defendants have never had a trial, a judicial hearing, or
any opportunity to be heard in this case. They have
not been present to examine and cross-examine witnesses
or to enter any objections to these proceedings. Therefor
any possible remedy imposed in this case would not only
be a denial of due process of law but a complete denial
of any process of law whatsoever blatantly in violation
of the requirements of the 5th Amendment. Armstrong v .
Manzo, 380 U.S. 545 (1965); Jenkins v. McKeithen, 395
U.S. 411 (1969).
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(b) Result in an unreasonable hardship, be unduly
harsh and contrary to equity anu. goo^ conscience. rnV* /̂ v
r u ' s i
Defendants have done nothing wrong. No allegations or
findings have been made that the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS
or GERALD McCAFFREY have operated other than a completely
desegregated, unitary school system in full compliance
with the Fourteenth Amendment. That is all that can be
asked of them. Bradley v. School Board of the City of
Richmond, 462 F.2d 1058 (4th Cir. 1972), affirmed per
curiam, 93 S.Ct. 1952 (1973); United States v. Texas
Education Agency, 467 F.2d 848 (5th Cir. 1972); Keyes v.
School District No. 1, 445 F .2d 990 (10th Cir. 1971).
Reallocation of pupils, teachers, resources, and
#
facilities across the boundary lines of the school
district would be a harsh and unconscionable remedy— time
and money consuming and disruptive of good education,
contrary to the obvious advantages of local schools
locally controlled in close working cooperation with
parents. The FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and the Fraser
Board of Education do not control housing patterns. They
stand ready to welcome Negro children into any school in
the district so long as the child is a resident of the
district. Under these circumstances, any remedy which
could be rendered in this case, being unduly harsh and
unconscionable, is beyond the equitable powers of this
Court.
(c) Usurp the Legislative and Administrative power
of the State of Michigan and the duly elected Board
of Education of the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS. "The powers
not deligated to the United States by the Constitution
nor prohibited to it by the States are reserved to the
States respectively or to the people." Tenth Amendment
to the Constitution of the United States. This is a
fundamental element of our entire form of Federal
government. If invidious discrimination in the
establishment or maintainence of the FRASER PUBLIC
SCHOOL DISTRICT was shown, then this principal must
yield; but absent such a showing, it is constitutionally
prohibited to the United States to interfere with the
internal affairs of the State and its people, and there
has been no such showing (indeed not even such an
allegation) that the Fraser Board of Education have
in any way established or maintained their district as
7-
an instrument of invidious discrimination. There must
be such a finding of purposeful discrimination by the
Defendant before the United States, through its Courts,
has the power to order any restructuring or in any way to
interfere with the internal affairs oj. the FRa.SER PUBLIC
SCHOOLS. They must show intentional discriminatory
acts by the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS or the Fraser Board of
Education causally connected to segregation within the
District. There has been no finding of this; there has
been no allegation of this; and, th.erei.ore, uhe^e may oe
no remedy. Bradley v. School Board of the City of
Richmond, 462 F.2d 1058 (4th Cir. 1972), afrirmed—ppa.
curiam, 93 S.Ct. 1952 (1973); United States v. Texas
Education Agency, 467 F.2d 848 (5th Cir. 1973); Keyes
v. School District Ho. 1, 445 F.2d 990 (10th Cir. 1971);
Spencer v. Kugler, 326 F. Supp. 1235 (D. N.J. 1971),
affirmed, 404 U.S. 1027 (1972); Deal v. Cincinnati Board
of Education, 419 F.2d 1387 (6th Cir. 1969); Goss v.
Board of Education of the City of Knoxville, C.A. 6,
72-1766-1767 (July 18, 1973).
(d) Impose a particular racial balance and a fixed
racial quota upon the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS— in effect
saying that the number of Negro children presently
attending the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS are necessarily
inadequate to integrate this district and that a certain
fixed quota of Negro children must be transferred to
Fraser and a fixed quota of Fraser children sent to other
districts in order to comply with requirements of the
14th Amendment. This imposition of a particular racial
balance and a fixed racial quota has specifically been
-8-
ruled unnecessary for desegregation. Swann v. Charlotte-
Mecklenburg Board of Education,. 402 U.S. 1 (1971);
Bradley v. School Board of the City of Richmond, 462
F .2d 1058 (4th Cir. 1972).
(e) Create a cumbersome and unwieldy school district,
hamper sound education, and curtail decentralized,
diversified and locally controlled schools, more
accessible and responsive to both black and white parents
and their school aged children. Such a remedy would leave
the valuable benefit of local schools available to parents
and children in other areas of the State of Michigan who
fortuitously live a greater distance from the City of
Detroit than do parents and children residing in the
FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS DISTRICT. This remedy would
necessarily discriminate against any parents and children
who wish to participate in school centered, extra
curricular, social and athletic activities and render
school administrators unable to tailor local programs to
fit local needs. Such destruction to sound education
is unnecessary to the requirements of the 14th Amendment
and contrary to the 10th Amendment to the Constitution
of the United States.
(f) Render useless the right of the electors of the
FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS DISTRICT to cast ballots for members
of the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS Board of Education since
local school board members would no longer control the
organization and administration of the schools the Fraser
children attend. As a member of the Republic, each
citizen has an inherent right to vote which is equal to
that of every other citizen. Just as the right to vote
9-
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may be diluted by disproportionate representation
(Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533 [1964]), so also it may be
diluted by eliminating the effectiveness of each vote.
It is obvious that allowing one Senator to cast a full
vote, but another to cast only half a vote, would
prejudicially dilute the right to vote belonging to the
latter Senator's constituents. So too the ability to
vote for local school board members is diluted and perhaps
rendered useless when the elected school board members
no longer are responsible for the organization and
administration of the schools where the children of their
electors attend. Such action is unnecessary under the
14th Amendment and contrary to the 10th Amendment and
15th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
(g) Endanger resources of the school districts
pledged by contract as security for the indebtedness of that
district and thereby disregard the right of private
. y . m f ~ f - i -* — \ " v * w 4 — /*~ \ /•— v V x t t 7 \ "V - * "1 f~ s 1 * . o '
u O H C - J L a u L C I O U-j S L C l i . C U i U - t t C U J T \ J ~ L - t O X O — /
• ~j /~\ yi T O f \ 4- 4— Vi. _u w a x -j_ w ^ v_y -J- u i i o
Constitution of the United States. Such a remedy would
also disrupt the contractual rights of teachers and other
personnel employed by the district in the same manner.
(h) Be contrary to the fundamental right of free
association as guaranteed by the 1st Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States. Aptheker v. Secretary
of State, 378 U.S. 500 (1964).
(i) Be contrary to the right to travel, to settle and
to partake the benefits of a new place as guaranteed by the
1st and 5th Amendments to the Constitution of the United
States. Citizens have a clear and fundamental right to
move wherever they wish within or without a state.
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Aptheker v. Secretary of State, 378 U .S• 500 (1964).
An important aspect of this right is necessarily the
ability to settle in any community a citizen chooses.
That right should not be denied or diluted as to any
citizen black or white; but any community so chosen is
much more than a mere address. It is a home and a
community. It consists of neighbors, churches, shops,
and most importantly a local school system, and that
free choice of a community is useless if such an
important aspect as its local schools can be deprived
to its residents without cause. Such action is a clear
denial of the fundamental freedom to travel, inherent to
citizenship in the United States.
(j) Be the imposition of a penalty upon the Fraser
Public Schools and the Fraser Board of Education and the
people they represent without benefit of a judicial
trial and therefore either beyond the powers of the
Court as granted under Article III of the Constitution
and the laws of the United States or, if such power is
granted to the Courts, clearly a bill of attainder in
violation of Article I, Section 9 of the Constitution of
the United States.
(k) Be unnecessary under the Fourteenth Amendment
and contrary to the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution
of the United States since the FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS
have never been established or maintained by the Fraser
Board of Education with invidious motives or with the
intention to circumvent or deny any Federally protected
right of any citizen. The FRASER PUBLIC'SCHOOLS and the
11
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Fraser Board of Education have taken no action whatso
ever for the purpose or keeping their schools predominably
white nor excluded any child from any school within the
District on account of the child's race, The FRASER
PUBLIC SCHOOLS are a unitary School District fully in
compliance with the requirements of the Fourteenth
Amendment, Green v, School Board of New Kent County,
391 U.S. 430 (1968); Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg
Board of Education, 402 U.S. 1 (1971). That there are
some predominatly white districts existing in outlying
metropolitan areas does not in and of itself show any
deprivation of constitutional rights to any citizen so
long as the racial makeup of the District is, the product
of neutral and non-discriminatory forces. Without
any finding of invidious discriminatory acts by the
FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and the Fraser Board of Education,
there is no violation of the Fourteenth Amendment and
hence this Court is without power to n n 4- m ’ c f
Ut»U.i.jy UX1C uuiiu.iiJ.uuxu,
tive power of the Fraser Board of Education or the
FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS granted them by the people of
Fraser. Such blatant intervention into the affairs of
the state and of the people without constitutionally
santioned cause is clearly tanned by the Tenth Amendmen
to the Constitution of the United States, Bradiey v.
L.
School Board of the City of Richmond, 462 F .2d 1058
(4th Cir. 1972), affirmed per curiam, 93 S.Ct. 1952 (1973)
United States v. Texas Education Agency, 467 F .2d 848
(5th Cir. 1972); Keyes v. School District No. 1, 445 F .2d
990 (10th Cir. 1971); Spencer v. Kuglsr, 326 F. Supp.
12
]
«
1235 (D. N.J. 1971), affirmed, 404 U.S. 1027 (1972);
Deal v. Cincinnati Board of Education, 419 F.2d 1387 (6th
Cir. 1969); Goss v. Board of Education of the Citv of
Knoxville, C.A. 6, 72-1766-1767 (July 18, 1973).
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Dated: October 9, 1973. Respectfully submitted,
G. Giime
D enifs".R. L e Du c
Attorneys for Defendants,
FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and
GERALD McCAFFREY, Only
25 North Gratiot Avenue
Mount Clemens, Michigan 48043
By
MATHER,
463-0511
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
BRADLEY, et al,
Plaintiffs,
vs.
MILLIKEN, et al,
Defendants.
Civil Action
No. 35257
/
NOTICE OF HEARING
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Defendants, FRASER PUBLIC
SCHOOLS and GERALD McCAFFREY, will make application to the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Michigan, before the presiding Judge thereof, on Monday, the
26th day of November, 1973, at 9:00 A.M. or as soon thereafter
as counsel may be heard, upon a Motion to Dismiss in the above
entitled cause.
This Application is based upon the Motion to Dismiss
on file in said cause, a copy of which is hereto annexed.
Dated: October 9, 1973.
Attorneys for the Defendants,
FRASER PUBLIC SCHOOLS and
GERALD McCAFFREY, Only
25 North Gratiot Avenue
Mount Clemens, Michigan 48043
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
BRADLEY, et al,
Plaintiffs,
vs.
MILLIKEN, et al,
Defendants.
________________________________________________________ /
PROOF OF SERVICE
Civil Action
No. 35257
STATE OF MICHIGAN)
) ss.
COUNTY OF MACOMB )
DARLENE J. PATRICK, being first duly sworn, deposes and
says that she is employed in a secretarial capacity by the firm
of MATHER, GLIME & DAOUST, attorneys for the Defendants, FRASER
PUBLIC SCHOOLS and GERALD McCAFFREY, Only, and that she served
a copy of the Motion to Dismiss, Affidavits in Support of Motion,
Brief in Support of Motion to Dismiss and Notice of Hearing
upon the attorneys on the attached list by placing the same in
an envelope with sufficient postage addressed to each of them
and by depositing the same in a regular United States Mail
receptacle located in Mount Clemens, Michigan, on October 10,
1973.
Further, deponent sayeth not,
DARLENE J. PATRICK
//0
Subscribed and sworn to before
me this 10th day of October,
A.D., 1973.
T - J/IS'yA A' * /V_ ̂
DIANE J ./• BAM3ACH
Notary Public, Macomb County, Michigan
My Commission Expires: January 18, 1976.
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PAUL R. DIMOND
906 Rose Avenue
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104
J. HAROLD FLANNERY
CENTER FOR LAW & EDUCATION
Larsen Hall
14 Appian Way
Cambridge, Mass. 02138
JACK GREENBERG
NORMAN J. CHACHKIN
10 Columbus Circle
New York, New York 10019
WILLIAM M. SAXTON
1831 First National Building
Detroit, Michigan 48226
DOUGLAS H. WEST
3700 Penobscot Building
Detroit, Michigan 48226
LOUIS R. LUCAS
WILLIAM E. CALDWELL
Ratner, Sugarmon & Lucas
525 Commerce Title Building
Memphis, Tennessee 38103
NATHANIEL JONES
1790 Broadway
New York, New York 10019
ELLIOTT HALL
950 Guardian Building
Detroit, Michigan 48226
GEORGE T. ROUMELL, JR.
7th Floor Ford Building
Detroit, Michigan 48226
FRANK J. KELLEY
Attorney General
Law Building
525 W, Ottawa,
Lansing, Michigan 48913
O'BRIEN, MORAN & DIMOND
ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW
210 EAST HURON STREET
ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 48108
(313) 769-6838
THOMAS C. O'BRIEN
MICHAEL C. MORAN
PAUL R. DIMOND
October 8, 1973
The Honorable Stephen J . Roth
U. S. District Court
Federal Building
600 Church St.
Flint, Michigan
Dear Judge Roth,
Please find enclosed an original for filing
and a copy of a motion and proposed order to amend this
Court’s September 10, 1973 Order to add as parties
defendant in this cause the Boards of Education, their
members and the superintendents of the Intervening School
Districts Allen Park, et. al. Counsel for the intervening
school districts, their boards, their members and^superintend
ents have consented to this motion. Although it is my view that
this action has already "commenced” against these boards of
Education, their members and the superintendents of the in
tervening school districts by the filing of the amended
complaint and its service upon them, I believe the record will
be clarified for all concerned if the Court grants the
enclosed motion.
Very truly yours,
cc: Counsel of Record
Re: Civil Action
No. 35257
mjh
e n d s .
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
SOUTHERN DIVISION
RONALD BRADLEY, et al.,
Plaintiffs, Civil Action
No. 35257
vs.
WILLIAM G. MILLIKEN, et al.,
Defendants.
/------------- — ■ —— — j
i
i
j
MOTION TO AMEND NUNC PRO TUNC
THIS COURT'S SEPTEMBER 10, 1973
ORDER JOINING PARTIES DEFENDANT
TO ADD AS PARTIES DEFENDANT THE
BOARDS OF EDUCATION, THEIR MEMBERS,
AND THE SUPERINTENDENTS OF THE
INTERVENING SCHOOL DISTRICTS._____
Plaintiffs hereby move this Court to amend
Nunc Pro Tunc its September 10, 1973 Order joining parties
defendants to add as parties defendants in this cause the
Boards of Education, their members and the Superintendents of
I
the intervening school districts:
!Allen Park Public Schools, School District of
the City of Berkley, Brandon Schools, Centerline
Public Schools, Cherry Hill School District,
Chippewa Valley Public Schools, School District
of the City of Clawson, Crestwood School District,
Dearborn Public Schools, Dearborn Heights School
District No. 7, East Detroit Public Schools, School
District of the City of Ferndale, Flat Rock Community
Schools, Garden City Public Schools, Gibraltar
School District, School District of the City of
Harper Woods, School District of the City of Hazel
Park, Intermediate School District of the County of
Macomb, Lake Shore Public Schools, Lakeview Public
Schools, The Lamphere Schools, Lincoln Park Public Schools,
Wayne-Westland Community Schools, Woodhaven School District
Madison District Public Schools, Melvindale-
North Allen Park School District, School
District of North Dearborn Heights, Novi Community
School District, Oak Park School District, Oxford
Area Community Schools, Redford Union School
District No. 1, Richmond Community Schools,
School District of the City of River Rouge,
Riverview Community School District, Roseville
Public Schools, South Lake Schools, Taylor
School District, Warren Consolidated Schools,
Warren Woods Public Schools, Wyandotte
Public Schools, Southfield Public Schools, School
District of the City of Royal Oak, and the
Grosse Pointe Public School System.
In support of this motion Plaintiffs would show
this Court that:
1. Counsel for the intervening school districts,
Boards of Education, their members and superintendents have
consented to this motion.
2. Plaintiffs1August 3, 1973 Motion to Join
and Substitute Parties included these parties.
3. The boards of education, their members,
and the superintendents of all other school districts
(with exception of Pontiac) in the tri-county area have
already been joined as parties defendant by this Court's
order of September 10, 1973.
4. Service of process of plaintiffs' amended
complaint has been made upon the boards of education,
their members and superintendents of the intervening school
districts and accepted on their behalf by their counsel.
been
5. Therefore, this action has already/"commenced
by plaintiffs against the boards of education, their members
and the superintendents of the intervening school districts
as parties defendant.
school districts are already6. The intervening
parties defendant in this cause; and
7. Amending this Court's prior order nunc pro
tunc as prayed for in this motion will clarify for all
concerned the status of the boards of education, their
members and the superintendents of the intervening school
districts as parties defendant.
Respectfully submitted,
RATNER, SUGARMON & LUCAS
525 Commerce Title Building
Memphis, Tennessee 38103
NATHANIEL JONES
1790 Broadway
New York, New York 10019
PAUL R. DIMOND
210 E. Huron
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108
J. HAROLD FLANNERY
Center for Law and Education
Larsen Hall
14 Appian Way
Cambridge, Mass. 02138
JACK GREENBERG
NORMAN J . CHACHKIN
10 Columbus Circle
New York, New York 10019
Dated: October 8, 1973
mjh
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
The foregoing Motion and Proposed Order
has been served upon all counsel of record by United States
Mail, postage prepaid, this 8th day of October, 1973.
/k u j? /? . Uo^c^-c/ f )
PAUL R. DIMOND
210 E. Huron
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108
! ! j t! I
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
SOUTHERN DIVISION
|-j
} i
RONALD BRADLEY, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
vs.
Civil Action
No. 35257
jl* |M
WILLIAM G. MILLIKEN, et al. ,
Defendants.
/
ORDER TO AMEND NUNC PRO TUNC
II
At a session of said Court held
in the Federal Building, City of
Flint, County of Genesee, on
PRESENT! HONORABLE STEPHEN J. ROTH
United States District Judge
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It is ordered that the September 10, 1973
Order of this Court is hereby amended nunc pro tunc to add
as parties defendant in this cause the Boards of Education,
their members and the Superintendents of the Inuervening
School District:
Allen Park Public Schools, School District of the
City of Berkley, Brandon Schools, Centerline Public
Schools, Cherry Hill School District, Chippewa Valley
Public Schools, School District of the City of Clawson,
Crestwood School District, Dearborn Public Schools,
Dearborn Heights School District No. 7, East Detroit
Public Schools, School District of the City of
Ferndale, Flat Rock Community Schools, Garden City
Public Schools, Gibraltar School District, School District
■
\
I
of the City of Harper Woods, School District of
the City of Hazel Park, Intermediate School District
of the County of Macomb, Lake Shore Public Schools,
Lakeview Public Schools, The Lamphere Schools,
Lincoln Park Public Schools, Madison District
Public Schools, Melvindale-North Allen Park School
District, School District of North Dearborn Heights,
Novi Community School District, Oak Park School
District, Oxford Area Community Schools, Redford
Union School District No. 1, Richmond Community
Schools, School District of the City of River Rouge,
Riverview Community School District, Roseville
Public Schools, South Lake Schools, Taylor School
District, Warren Consolidated Schools, Warren Woods
Public Schools, Wyandotte Public Schools, South-
field Public Schools, School District of the City of
Royal Oak, and the Grosse Pointe Public School System,.
Wayne-Westland Community Schools, Woodhaven School District.
j
I
DATED: