As late as the 1950s, miscegenation cases continued to come
before the Alabama Court of Appeals, and they demonstrated
the continuing impossibility of securing change in the
courts. A black woman named Linnie Jackson was
convicted for her miscegenous relationship with a white man
named A. C. Burcham. E. B. Haltom, Jr., her lawyer,
relying on a long train of twentieth-century civil rights
decisions from the U.S. Supreme Court, challenged the
proceeding on Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment grounds.
Nonetheless, the Alabama Court of Appeals surveyed the
history of decisions in miscegenation cases in the Alabama
courts, declared that the nation's high court had affirmed
the Pace decision, and noted that "the decisions of the
[Alabama] Supreme Court shall govern the holdings and
decisions of this court." It upheld her
conviction.
Jackson did not give up. She took her case to
the Alabama Supreme Court, which rebuffed her as well, and
then to the U.S. Supreme Court. There she found that the
justices were by no means eager to push an equal- rights
agenda on the matter of miscegenation. Focused as they
were on the school segregation cases that had been decided
in 1954, they recognized that, were they to take on
miscegenation, they might only get in their own way.
The first decision announced in Brown v. Board of Education
came in May 1954; the second, implementing decision came in
May 1955. Linnie Jackson's case came to the Court in
between those two dates.
Early writers surmised that, as one put it, though
"[t]here is no doubt that these statutes are
unconstitutional," "the Court, or at least some of
its Justices, did not believe that airing this inflammatory
subject, of little practical significance, would be in the
public interest while strident opposition is being voiced to
less controversial desegregation because it allegedly leads
to intermarriage." The papers of various Supreme
Court justices now make it clear that such speculations were
exactly right.
Harvey M. Grossman, law clerk to Justice William O.
Douglas, expressed his conflicted response when advising his
boss on the Jackson case. "It seems clear that
the statute involved is unconstitutional," he wrote on
November 3, 1954. And yet, he continued,
review at the present time would probably
increase the tensions growing out of the school
segregation cases and perhaps impede solution to that
problem, and therefore the Court may wish to defer
action until a future time. Nevertheless, I believe
that[,] since the deprivation of rights involved here
has such serious consequences to the petitioner and
others similarly situated [,] review is probably
warranted even though action might be postponed until
the school segregation problem is solved.
Later that month, the Supreme Court dodged the
bullet. With no indication of dissent, it denied
certiorari. Seven decades had elapsed from one
miscegenation case to another before the Court, and nothing,
it seemed, had changed. The precedent, such as it was,
in Pace remained intact. Linnie Jackson went to the
penitentiary. And the next year, the Court dodged
another such case, one that came from Virginia.
On June 26, 1952, Ham Say Naim, a Chinese sailor, married
a white woman from Virginia in Elizabeth City, North
Carolina. That state, unlike Virginia, permitted
marriages between Caucasians and Asians, though not between
whites and blacks. For some months the Naims made
their home in Norfolk, Virginia. Then they
separated. On September 30, 1953, Ruby Elaine Naim
filed a petition seeking annulment on grounds of adultery,
and if that effort failed, she asked that an annulment be
granted on the basis of Virginia's ban on interracial
marriages.
Judge Floyd E. Kellam of the Portsmouth Circuit Court
knew an easy case when he saw one. Here was a marriage
between a white person and a nonwhite. The
couple had gone to North Carolina in order to evade the
Virginia law. Of course, the marriage was void and he
granted the annulment.
Now it was Mr. Naim's turn to go to court. On the
basis of his marriage to an American citizen, he had applied
for an immigrant visa, and unless he remained married he
could not hope to be successful. His immigration
attorney, David Carliner, had his own reasons for
challenging the constitutionality of Virginia's
antimiscegenation statute. He and Naim mounted a test
case. They challenged the circuit court's decision on
the grounds that the Fourteenth Amendment overrode the
Virginia statute.
Speaking for a unanimous Virginia Supreme Court of
Appeals, Justice Archibald Chapman Buchanan relied on the
Tenth Amendment to fend off the Fourteenth. "Regulation
of the marriage relation," he insisted, "is . . .
distinctly one of the rights guaranteed to the States and
safeguarded by that bastion of States' rights, somewhat
battered perhaps but still a sturdy fortress in our
fundamental law, the tenth section of the Bill of
Rights."
What about Brown v. Board of Education and its
incantation of the Equal Protection Clause? No
problem, Justice Buchanan assured Virginia
authorities. "No such claim for the intermarriage
of the races could be supported; by no sort of valid
reasoning could it be found to be a foundation of good
citizenship or a right which must be made available to all
on equal terms." He could find nothing in the
U.S. Constitution, he wrote, that would "prohibit the
State from enacting legislation to preserve the racial
integrity of its citizens, or which denies the power of the
State to regulate the marriage relation so that it shall not
have a mongrel breed of citizens." Rather than
promote good citizenship, he suggested, "the
obliteration of racial pride" and "the corruption
of blood" would "weaken or destroy the quality of
its citizenship."
Refusing to give up, Naim appealed to the U.S. Supreme
Court. Unfortunately for Naim, his case came to the
Supreme Court only one year after Jackson, and the Court was
no more eager to confront the issue then than it had been
the year before. John Marshall Harlan, a recent
appointee to the nation's high bench, brought a tormented
mind and a tortured prose to the task of writing a formal
statement that he wished to read in conference on November
5, 1955, regarding the case from Virginia. He spoke of
"moral considerations," which he proceeded to
identify as "of course, those raised by the bearing of
adjudicating this question to the Court's responsibility in
not thwarting or seriously handicapping the enforcement of
its decision in the segregation cases." He felt
certain, he said, that every member of the Court agreed with
him that "to throw a decision of this Court other than
validating this legislation into the vortex of the present
disquietude would . . . seriously, I believe very seriously,
embarrass the carrying out of the Court's decree of last
May."
The Court neither accepted nor refused the
case. Rather, it sent the case back to Virginia.
Determining the record insufficiently clear or complete to
address the question Naim raised, it directed the Virginia
Supreme Court of Appeals to remand the case to Portsmouth
for further proceedings. But that state's highest
court refused to cooperate with the high court's request --
or, rather, it acted to help the high court out of its
dilemma. It remonstrated that
the record before the Circuit Court of the City of
Portsmouth was adequate for a decision of the issues
presented to it. The record before this court was
adequate for deciding the issues on review. . . .
The decree of the trial court and the decree of this
court affirming it have become final so far as these
courts are concerned.
The Virginia statutes were sound, the Naims' marriage was
void, and the Virginia courts' decisions were final, said
the court.
We have no provision either under the rules of
practice of this court or under the statute law of this
Commonwealth by which this court may send the cause
back to the Circuit Court with directions to reopen the
cause so decided, gather additional evidence and render
a new decision. Indeed, such action would be
contrary to our fixed rules of practice and procedure
and our statute law.
The Richmond Times-Dispatch published an editorial
about the standoff. While acknowledging that the
Virginia court had "used some rather tart language in
refusing to comply," it insisted nonetheless that
"the Virginia court has not defied the nation's highest
tribunal." Rather, the paper noted that the state
court had simply declared that "it had no legal means
of conniving with the Federal court's order."
Noting many Virginians' displeasure with the Supreme Court's
recent rulings on segregation, the editorial observed that
those "[m]any Virginians . . . also applaud the
Virginia court in rebuffing the Federal court's attempt to
operate in an area of State affairs over which it has no
jurisdiction."
Naim took his case back to the Supreme Court, but
there it died. The Court simply noted that the
response of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals
"leaves the case devoid of a properly presented Federal
question." The Virginia court had helped take the
U.S. Supreme Court off the hook. No judicial
reconsideration took place in the 1950s regarding Alabama's
or Virginia's antimiscegenation laws. |