In this judgement, Judge Paul J. McCormick barred schools in Orange County, California, from segregating students on the basis of race. It comes from the landmark case
Mendez v. Westminster School District.
In the Fall of 1944, Gonzalo and Felicitas Mendez tried to enroll their children in the Main Street School in Orange County, which Gonzalo had attended as a child. However, the school district had redrawn boundary lines that excluded Mexican neighborhoods. The Mendez children were assigned to Hoover Elementary School, which was established for Mexican children.
Other Orange County Latino parents faced similar situations with their children. With the help of the United Latin American Citizens (LUCAC), they joined with the Mendez family and sued four local school districts – Westminster, Garden Grove, and El Modeno School Districts and the City of Santa Ana – for segregating their children and 5,000 others. The
petition from the parents stated that the schools were violating students' civil rights by segregating students of "Mexican and Latin" ancestry in separate schools.
U.S. District Court Judge Paul J. McCormick concurred with the petitioners, issuing this injunction against the school districts' segregation policies. He stated that there was no justification in the laws of California to segregate Mexican children and that doing so was a "clear denial of the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment."
The school districts filed an appeal, partly on the basis of a states' rights strategy. The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court upheld the District Court ruling in 1947, and the Orange County school districts dropped the case. The case resulted in the California legislature passing the Anderson bill, a measure that repealed all California school codes mandating segregation. The bill was signed by Governor Earl Warren (who would later become Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and author the
opinion in
Brown v.
Board of Education).
Mendez v.
Westminster School District landed an important blow to school segregation in California. It underscored that the struggle for civil rights in America crossed regional, racial, and ethnic lines.
This primary source comes from the Records of District Courts of the United States.
National Archives Identifier:
294946Full Citation: Judgement and Injunction; 3/21/1946; Gonzalo Mendez et al v. Westminster School District of Orange County et al, 3/2/1945 - 7/18/1947; Civil Case Files, 1938 - 1995; Records of District Courts of the United States, Record Group 21; National Archives at Riverside, Perris, CA. [Online Version, https://www.docsteach.org/documents/document/judgement-and-injunction, March 21, 2025]