San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez explained

Litigants:San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez
Arguedate:October 12
Argueyear:1972
Decidedate:March 21
Decideyear:1973
Fullname:San Antonio Independent School District, et al. v. Demetrio P. Rodriguez, et al.
Usvol:411
Uspage:1
Parallelcitations:93 S. Ct. 1278; 36 L. Ed. 2d 16; 1973 U.S. LEXIS 91
Prior:Judgment for plaintiffs, 337 F. Supp. 280 W.D. Tex. (1971); probable jurisdiction noted, .
Subsequent:Rehearing denied, .
Holding:Reliance on property taxes to fund public schools does not violate the Equal Protection Clause even if it causes inter-district expenditure disparities. Absolute equality of education funding is not required and a state system that encourages local control over schools bears a rational relationship to a legitimate state interest. U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas reversed.
Majority:Powell
Joinmajority:Burger, Stewart, Blackmun, Rehnquist
Concurrence:Stewart
Dissent:Brennan
Dissent2:White
Joindissent2:Douglas, Brennan
Dissent3:Marshall
Joindissent3:Douglas
Lawsapplied:U.S. Const. amend. XIV

San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. 1 (1973), was a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States held that San Antonio Independent School District's financing system, which was based on local property taxes, was not a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment's equal protection clause.[1]

The majority opinion, reversing the District Court, stated that the appellees did not sufficiently prove a textual basis, within the U.S. Constitution, supporting the principle that education is a fundamental right. Urging that the school financing system led to wealth-based discrimination, the plaintiffs had argued that the fundamental right to education should be applied to the States, through the Fourteenth Amendment. The Court found that there was no such fundamental right and that the unequal school financing system was not subject to strict scrutiny.

Background

The lawsuit was brought by members of the Edgewood Concerned Parent Association representing their children and similarly situated students. The suit was filed on June 30, 1968, in the District Court for the Western District of Texas. In the initial complaint, the parents sued San Antonio ISD, Alamo Heights ISD, and five other school districts; the Bexar County School Trustees; and the State of Texas. They contended that the "Texas method of school financing violated the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U. S. Constitution." The lawsuit alleged that education was a fundamental right and that wealth-based discrimination in the provision of education (such as a fundamental right), created in the poor, or those of lesser wealth, a constitutionally suspect class, who were to be protected from the discrimination.

Eventually, the school districts were dropped from the case, leaving only the State of Texas as the defendant. The case advanced through the courts system, providing victory to the Edgewood parents until it reached the Supreme Court in 1972.

The school districts in the San Antonio area, and generally in Texas, had a long history of financial inequity. Rodriguez presented evidence that school districts in the wealthy, primarily white, areas of town, most notably the north-side Alamo Heights Independent School District, were able to contribute a much higher amount per child than Edgewood, a poor, minority area.

From the trial brief, Dr. Jose Cardenas, Superintendent of Schools, Edgewood Independent School District testified to the problem in his affidavit, the following information:

  1. Edgewood is a poor district with a low tax base. As a result, its ad valorem tax revenue falls far short of the monies available in other Bexar County school districts. With this inequitable financing of its schools, Edgewood cannot hire sufficient qualified personnel, nor provide the physical facilities, library books, equipment, and supplies afforded by other Bexar County Districts.
  2. To illustrate, the Edgewood residents are making a high tax effort, have burdened themselves with one of the highest proportion of bonded indebtedness in the county to pay for capital improvements and, never, in the history of the district have they failed to approve a bond issue.

Cardenas cites a study, "A Tale of Two Districts," which makes the following comparisons in 1967-68 between Edgewood and the North East Independent School District:

In fact, the financial disparity between Edgewood and Alamo Heights increased in the four years that it took for Rodriguez to work its way through the court system "from a $310 total per-pupil disparity in 1968 in state and local support between the districts to a $389 disparity in 1972."

Decision

In the Supreme Court, a new group of justices had been appointed since the filing of the case. The most significant new member was Justice Lewis Powell, who proved to be the swing vote in the Rodriguez case. Powell led the narrow majority in deciding that the right to be educated (as a child of school age or an uneducated adult), was neither 'explicitly or implicitly' textually found anywhere in the U.S. Constitution. It was therefore, not anywhere protected by the Constitution.

He also found that Texas had not created a suspect class related to poverty. The two findings allowed the state to continue its school financing plan as long as it was "rationally related to a legitimate state interest."

Dissent

Justices Brennan, Douglas, White, and Marshall dissented. In his dissent, Justice Marshall argued that in cases involving unenumerated rights, the Court's "task...should be to determine the extent to which constitutionally guaranteed rights are dependent on interests not mentioned in the Constitution," and "[a]s the nexus between the specific constitutional guarantee and the nonconstitutional interest draws closer, the nonconstitutional interest becomes more fundamental and the degree of judicial scrutiny applied when the interest is infringed on a discriminatory basis must be adjusted accordingly."[2]

Reaction and aftermath

In a 2015 TIME interview of over 50 legal scholars, University of California, Berkeley Law School Dean Erwin Chemerinsky and Cornell Law Professor Steven Shiffrin both named Rodriguez the "worst Supreme Court decision since 1960," with Chemerinsky noting that the decision has "played a major role in creating the separate and unequal schools that exist today."[3]

Partially in response to the Court's ruling in Rodriguez, Justice William Brennan wrote an article in the Harvard Law Review urging lawyers and litigants to turn to their State Supreme Courts — rather than the U.S. Supreme Court — to litigate their constitutional claims, as the conservative Burger Court would likely be unreceptive to claims made by racial minorities, the poor, or other "politically powerless groups whose members have historically been subjected to purposeful discrimination."[4] Since Brennan's article was published, a number of State Supreme Courts have held that substantially unequal public school funding violates their State Constitutions.[5]

In April 2020 a three judge panel of the United States Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals voted 2–1 in Gary B. v. Whitmer to recognize that children have a US constitutional right to basic literacy education. The panel decision distinguished San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez, which did not address the fundamental right to basic education.[6] [7] [8] [9] [10] After an appeal for an en banc review, the case was settled and the panel's precedential decision vacated.[11] [12]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. San Antonio Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Rodriguez, .
  2. 411 U.S. at 102-03 (Marshall, J., dissenting).
  3. News: Sachs . Andrea . The Worst Supreme Court Decisions Since 1960 . 23 June 2021 . TIME . 6 Oct 2015.
  4. William J. Brennan, State Constitutions and the Protection of Individual Rights, 90 Harv. L. Rev. 489, 491 (1977).
  5. Web site: Landmark US Cases Related to Equality of Opportunity in K-12 Education . 2023-08-20 . Stanford University . en.
  6. Web site: Journal . A. B. A. . Students have a right to a basic minimum education, 6th Circuit rules . 2022-09-02 . ABA Journal . en.
  7. Web site: Testani . Rocco E. . 2020-05-21 . A Short-Lived Constitutional Right to Education . 2022-09-02 . Education Next . en-US.
  8. Web site: 2020-05-28 . Sixth Circuit Recognizes a Fundamental Right to a Basic Minimum Education - Frost Brown Todd Full-Service Law Firm . 2022-09-02 . Frost Brown Todd . en-US.
  9. Web site: Access to Literacy Is a Fundamental Right, Sixth Circuit Finds . 2022-09-02 . www.courthousenews.com . en-US.
  10. Web site: 2020-04-24 . Sixth Circuit Ruling on 'Fundamental Right to a Basic Minimum Education' . 2022-09-02 . National Review.
  11. News: Detroit literacy case ends with no legal precedent for the right to an education . Cooper . J . World Socialist Web Site . 2020-06-15 . On Wednesday, June 10, the Sixth Circuit US Court of Appeals signed an order dismissing the Gary B. v. Whitmer case, commonly known as the Detroit literacy case, legally bringing it to a conclusion. The settlement reached last month between Governor Gretchen Whitmer and the plaintiffs in the Gary B. v. Whitmer case will stand, but a legal precedent for the constitutional right to an education has been vacated. .
  12. News: Federal Appeals Court Order Ends Detroit 'Right to Literacy' Case . Walsh . Mark . . 2020-06-12 . In a twist that appears to close the book on a nationally watched lawsuit in Detroit over a federal right to access to literacy, a federal appeals court has dismissed an appeal and recognized a settlement in the case. The June 10 order by the full U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit, in Cincinnati, in the case known as Gary B. v. Whitmer did not disturb an earlier order that set aside an April 23 decision by a panel of the court recognizing a U.S. constitutional right to a basic minimum education guaranteeing access to literacy. Thus, the groundbreaking panel decision remains wiped off the books in the 6th Circuit, though other courts may look to the reasoning of the bold opinion that recognized the federal right of access to literacy. .
  13. 179 Ariz. 233, 877 P.2d 806 (1994).
  14. 306 Kan. 1170, 402 P.3d 513 (2017).