Palmer v. Thompson/Concurrence Blackmun

943056Palmer v. Thompson — ConcurrenceHarry Blackmun
Court Documents
Case Syllabus
Opinion of the Court
Concurring Opinions
Burger
Blackmun
Dissenting Opinions
Douglas
White
Marshall

United States Supreme Court

403 U.S. 217

Palmer  v.  Thompson

 Argued: Dec. 14, 1970. --- Decided: June 14, 1971


Mr. Justice BLACKMUN, concurring.

I, too, join Mr. Justice BLACK's opinion and the judgment of the Court.

Cases such as this are 'hard' cases for there is much to be said on each side. In isolation this litigation may not be of great importance; however, it may have significant implications.

The dissent of Mr. Justice WHITE rests on a conviction that the closing of the Jackson pools was recially motivated, at least in part, and that municipal action so motivated is not to be tolerated. That dissent builds to its conclusion with a detailed review of the city's and the State's official attitudes of past years.

Mr. Justice BLACK's opinion stresses, on the other hand, the facially equal effect upon all citizens of the decision to discontinue the pools. It also emphasizes the difficulty and undesirability of resting any constitutional decision upon what is claimed to be legislative motivation.

I remain impressed with the following factors: (1) No other municipal recreational facility in the city of Jackson has been discontinued. Indeed, every other service-parks, auditoriums, golf courses, zoo-that once was segregated, has been continued and operates on a nonsegregated basis. One must concede that this was effectuated initially under pressure of the 1962 declaratory judgment of the federal court. (2) The pools are not part of the city's educational system. They are a general municipal service of the nice-to-have but not essential variety, and they are a service, perhaps a luxury, not enjoyed by many communities. (3) The pools had operated at a deficit. It was the judgment of the city officials that these deficits would increase. (4) I cannot read into the closing of the pools an official expression of inferiority toward black citizens, as Mr. Justice WHITE and those who join him repetitively assert, post, at 240-241, 266, and 268, and certainly on this record I cannot perceive this to be a 'fact' or anything other than speculation. Furthermore, the alleged deterrent to relief, said to exist because of the risk of losing other public facilities, post, at 269, is not detectable here in the face of the continued and desegregated presence of all other recreational facilities provided by the city of Jackson. (5) The response of petitioners' counsel at oral argument to my inquiry whether the city was to be 'locked in' with its pools for an indefinite time in the future, despite financial loss of whatever amount, just because at one time the pools of Jackson had been segregated, is disturbing.

There are, of course, opposing considerations enumerated in the two dissenting opinions. As my Brothers BLACK, DOUGLAS, and WHITE all point out, however, the Court's past cases do not precisely control this one, and the present case, if reversed, would take us farther than any before. On balance, in the light of the factors I have listed above, my judgment is that this is neither the time nor the occasion to be punitive toward Jackson for its past constitutional sins of segregation. On the record as presented to us in this case, I therefore vote to affirm.

Mr. Justice DOUGLAS, dissenting.

Notes edit

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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