ROMINGER LEGAL
Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Opinions - 5th Circuit
Need Legal Help?
LEGAL RESEARCH CENTER
LEGAL HEADLINES - CASE LAW - LEGAL FORMS
NOT FINDING WHAT YOU NEED? -CLICK HERE
This opinion or court case is from the Fifth Circuit Court or Appeals. Search our site for more cases - CLICK HERE

LEGAL RESEARCH
COURT REPORTERS
PRIVATE INVESTIGATORS
PROCESS SERVERS
DOCUMENT RETRIEVERS
EXPERT WITNESSES

 

Find a Private Investigator

Find an Expert Witness

Find a Process Server

Case Law - save on Lexis / WestLaw.

 
Web Rominger Legal

Legal News - Legal Headlines

 

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 94-20570
WILLIE J. ROLLINS, and
ERVIN O. GRICE,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
and
LEAGUE OF UNITED LATIN
AMERICAN CITIZENS # 188,
Movant-Appellant,
versus
FORT BEND INDEPENDENT
SCHOOL DISTRICT, ET AL.,
Defendants-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Texas
( )
Before KING, DEMOSS, and STEWART, Circuit Judges.
CARL E. STEWART, Circuit Judge:
In this voting rights case, Willie J. Rollins and Ervin O. Grice, plaintiffs-appellants, appeal the
district court's judgment that they failed to prove that the at-large voting system used in the Fort
Bend Independent School District dilutes the voting strength of black voters under section 2 of the
Voting Rights Act and under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. They also appeal the
district court's denial of their motion to supplement the record with evidence of the May 1994

election occurring after trial but before the district court rendered its judgment. For the following
reasons, we affirm the district court's judgment.
FACTS
The plaintiffs, two black residents and registered voters who live in the Fort Bend
Independent School District (hereinafter "FBISD"), filed suit in November, 1992 alleging that the at-
large voting system dilutes the voting strength of black voters under section 2 of the Voting Rights
Act and under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. Plaintiff Willie J. Rollins
unsuccessfully ran for election to the FBISD in 1987. Although Ervin O. Grice, the other plaintiff,
has never sought election to the school board, he assisted on a few school board election campaigns.
FBISD has a seven-member board of trustees elected on an at-large basis for a three-year
staggered term, which results in yearly elections of either two or three trustees. FBISD uses a
plurality system rather than a majority system; thus, a candidate wins if he has the most votes even
if his total falls below fifty percent. The system allows each qualified voter to cast one vote for each
position, and no slating process is employed. The plaintiffs claim that the at-large plurality election
system was instituted t o deny blacks and Hispanics the right to participate equally in the political
process.
During the four day bench trial, the plaintiffs presented statistics to establish that the present
system violates their constitutional rights and to show that their proposed plan would better serve
FBISD. The plaintiffs sought the creation of seven single-member districts, including three "safe"
2

districts.1 The safe districts in the plaintiffs' single-member district plan are comprised of three
minority districts: two black majority districts and a combination black/Hispanic district.
The population in the FBISD has grown dramatically since 1960. The population has
increased from roughly 1,500 people to about 151,601 people. Consequently, school enrollment has
increased 400 percent since the late 1970s.2 Similarly, the black population in the FBISD more than
doubled between 1980 and 1990. Blacks comprise approximately 25.3 percent of the total FBISD
population and about 24 percent of the voting age population.3 The plaintiffs' statistical evidence
showed that most of the black population is concentrated around the Houston area, while the white
populations are concentrated in the cities of Sugarland and Missouri City. Additionally, the statistics
showed that overall the black population in the FBISD area is highly concentrated. Three voting
precincts were comprised of minority populations exceeding ninety percent during the 1993 election.
Historical discrimination in FBISD is undisputed. Until 1953, an organization called the
Jaybirds prevented blacks from voting and participating in politics in FBISD. Further, the schools
were segregat ed until the 1960s. However, the parties dispute whether some vestiges of
discrimination continue to exist in FBISD. The plaintiffs presented testimony suggesting that some
vestiges of discrimination still exist in FBISD. For example, although the last formally segregated
black school closed in 1969, the schools in the FBISD still are not fully integrated. The plaintiffs also
1A "safe" district is one which has a sixty-five percent minority makeup.
2A 1992-93 survey indicated that of the 40,761 students enrolled in the FBISD system, the
majority are non-white. The statistics are as follows: black -- 11,538, white -- 11,538, Asian -- 4,574,
Hispanic -- 5,877, and Native American -- 21.
3The white and Hispanic percentages for the total population and voting age population were
also similar. Respectively, the percentages were 52.5 percent and 54.7 percent for white and 13.8
percent and 13.2 percent for Hispanics.
3

presented statistics from the United States census showing that blacks and Hispanics
disproportionately are high school drop outs and victims of unemployment. Further, blacks and
Hispanics represent fewer people in FBISD with college, graduate school, or professional degrees.
FBISD's evidence presented a more optimistic picture for blacks and Hispanics. Moreover, FBISD
asserts that this Court's declaration in Fort Bend Indep. Sch. Dist. v. City of Stafford, 594 F.2d 73
(5th Cir. 1979), after remand, 651 F.2d 1133 (5th Cir. 1981), that FBISD is "unitary" means that
FBISD no longer harbors historical vestiges of discrimination, no policies are in place to perpetuate
vestiges of discrimination, and that there is no need for federal intervention or remediation. Plaintiffs
offered only limited anecdotal evidence based on their own personal experiences to show the
continual presence of vestiges of racial discrimination in the FBISD despite its unitary status
regarding the employment of minority members and professional staff. Moreover, the plaintiffs
offered no evidence to challenge FBISD's evidence that the Board had been responsive to the
particular needs of minority students.
Although eighty-six school board trustee positions have been opened and filled since 1960,
and although blacks have run in nineteen of these elections, only two blacks have been elected. David
Collins, was elected in 1986 during his fourth election attempt to win a seat on the board. Janelle
Cherry was elected in 1991. The plaintiffs' expert explained that Cherry won because two strong
non-black candidates split the votes in the four-candidate race and allowed Cherry to get the plurality.
Although Collins was re-elected for a second term, in 1992 he was defeated by a first-time white
candidate. However, Collins ran for another trustee seat in 1993 and won. There have been only
four black victories within the present election scheme since 1966. No black has won in a head-to-
4

head election or won when an election involved fewer than four candidates. The only Hispanic to
ever serve as a trustee was elected in a contested election in 1966.4
The plaintiffs' expert's analysis involved the following: (1) evaluating precinct by precinct
data, (2) looking at extreme case analysis,5 (3) restructuring each election from 1986 through 1993
using a demonstration single-member district plan rather than the at-large system, and (4) using
ecological, statistic regression analysis.6 First, the plaintiffs' expert testified that no black candidate
had ever received a majority of the votes in a precinct with more than seventy percent white
population. Second, the expert found that in white-majority precincts blacks generally received only
ten to twenty percent of the vote while in precincts heavily populated with blacks, they received
seventy to ninety percent of the votes. Third, the election reconstruction showed that the black
candidates consistently won one, sometimes both, of the districts containing greater than fifty percent
black voting age population. Also, unless an Hispanic was running, the black candidate also carried
4We mention the 1966 victory only in passing. Because demographic data is not available
before 1986, it is impossible to determine the proportion of minorities in the FBISD prior to 1986 and
impossible to calculate the polarization demonstrated in pre-1986 elections. Additionally, because
of the undisputed rapid population growth in the district, pre-1986 election data has little bearing on
recent elections. Further, FBISD used a different election system until 1972, and FBISD changed
its precinct numbering system after 1986.
5In an extreme case analysis, polling places containing predominantly white populations are
combined and then compared with the combination of precincts heavily populated with blacks.
6Statistical regression analysis is a mat hematical technique which looks at the relationship
between two variables. In the present voting rights case, the experts analyzed the relationship
between racial composition per vo ting box or precinct and the percent of votes for a specific
candidate. Both the Supreme Court and Fifth Circuit have sanctioned the use of regression analysis
to prove voting rights violations. See Thornburg v. Gingles, 478 U.S. 30, 52-53, 106 S. Ct. 2752,
2761 (1986); and Houston v. Lafayette County, 56 F.3d 606, 612 (5th Cir. 1995).
5

the combined black/Hispanic district. Finally, the statistical regression supported the testimony that
black candidates received more votes in majority black voting areas.
Determined to shatter the statistical picture of voting rights violations presented by the
plaintiffs, FBISD sought (1) to expo se significant flaws in the plaintiffs' experts' analyses and
statistical methodologies, and (2) to present to the district court plausible non-discriminatory
explanations for the paucity of African American trustees in the FBISD.
Because the district court did not render a decision before the May 1994 elections, the
plaintiffs sought to supplement the reco rd with evidence from the May elections, namely that the
black incumbent, Cherry, did not run for re-election and that the two black candidates seeking to
replace her did not win. The court denied the request to supplement and entered judgment for the
defendants because t he plaintiffs failed to prove their case. The plaintiffs appealed,7 arguing that
minimal black success, occurring under special circumstances, does not demonstrate that blacks can
consistently elect candidates of their choice. Additionally, the plaintiffs challenge the district court's
findings and conclusions.
DISCUSSION
A.
STANDARD OF REVIEW.
We review de novo the district court's interpretations of law. However, the district court's
findings of facts regarding vote dilution are subject to the clearly erroneous standard. Thornburg v.
Gingles, 478 U.S. 30, 78-79, 106 S. Ct. 2752, 2780-81 (1986) (noting that Supreme Court precedent
demonstrates that the Court has "treated the ultimate finding of vote dilution as a question of fact
7League of United Latin American Citizens #188 (LULAC), was also a plaintiff below;
however, it did not appeal independently. LULAC apparently has abandoned the action.
6

subject to the clearly-erroneous standard of Rule 52(a)" and then reaffirming that this is the
appropriate standard the Court explained: "application of the clearly erroneous standard to the
ultimate findings of vote dilution preserves the benefit of the trial court's particular familiarity with
the indigenous political reality without endangering the rule of law"); see also, Overton v. City of
Austin, 871 F.2d 529, 533 (5th Cir. 1989); and LULAC v. Clements, 999 F.2d 831 (5th Cir. 1993),
cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 878 (1994).
B.
STANDARD TO DETERMINE THE EXISTENCE OF LEGALLY SIGNIFICANT
WHITE BLOC VOTING.
The plaintiffs argue that the district court applied the wrong legal standard when evaluating
the existence of a significant white voting bloc. Instead of viewing the few black victories as an
explainable exception to the general rule of white bloc voting domination, the district court erred in
deeming these black successes as convincing proof that white bloc voting had only a negligible effect,
if any, on the candidacy of African Americans. The plaintiffs maintain that the four black victories
can be explained by "special circumstances." In one election, an incumbent ran unopposed. Further,
in the other three elections the black candidate ran against three or m ore candidates where the
multiple non-black candidates split the vote of the white voting community.8 The plaintiffs contend
that the district court effectively changed the test under Gingles III from the white community's
8We observe that the plaintiffs frame their argument slightly different on appeal than they did
at the trial court level. The plaintiffs' witness testified that all but one minority victory resulted from
a split by strong white candidates who split the vote of the white voting community. However, on
appeal the plaintiffs carefully assert that non-black candidates split the vote of the white voting
community.
7

cohesive voting practices usually defeat the minority candidate to the white community's cohesive
voting practices always defeat the minority candidate.9
By contrast, FBISD contends that the district court asked the plaintiffs for the appropriate
legal standard, and the plaintiffs declined to provide the court with this information. When the district
court asked the plaintiffs' voting rights expert, Attorney George Korbel, for the standard, Korbel
provided only evasive answers suggesting only that the "I know it when I see it" standard (as used
in pornography cases) was appropriate.10
9George Korbel, the plaintiffs' voting rights expert, testified that he had been involved with
several Texas cases in which courts invalidated at large systems despite the existence of some
minority successes. For example, in Graves v. Barnes, 446 F. Supp. 560 (W.D. Tex. 1977), aff'd,
435 U.S. 901 (1978), five Hispanics had been elected to the state legislature through the at large
system. In Houston, one black had been elected in the at large system. In San Antonio, 14 Hispanics
had been elected to the city council under an at large system.
10The district court asked Korbel whether there is a point at which an expert can say that there
are enough whites voting for minorities so as to preclude a finding of polarized voting. After
obtaining several evasive answers, Korbel attempted to answer by discussing Collins' 1992 election.
The district court's questioning proceeded as follows:
Q
So what you're telling me, if I understand you correctly, Mr. Korbel, is that if we just
look -- and I know there is a hazard of looking just at one election, but if we look at the 1992 head
to head Collins/Wooten race, which yo u told me is among the most significant to your findings
because it's the head to head races that are your test in essence your litmus test almost?
A
It's the worse case scenario.
Q
Right. Or it's the case that proves your point?
A
Yes.
Q
In order for this race to have precluded a finding of legally significant racially polarized
voting, Mr. Collins would have had to win?
A
No, Your Honor, I don't think that's correct.
Q
How many more White votes would Mr. Collins have had to get in order for us to say
he could still lose and there not be a legally significant racially polarized voting finding?
A
Well, in the circumstance where you have a multi-term incumbent, I think he probably
would have had to get an awful lot more votes.
. . .
Q
And how many of those votes would have to be Collins' votes in order for us to say
yes, he lost, but he lost because of who the candidates were rather than because of what their racial
8

Further, FBISD argues that federal courts use "the Senate Committee Factors," or the
"Zimmer Factors" when evaluating whether the totality of the circumstances establish a violation
under section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. FBISD asserts that the district court in this case applied
the correct legal standard; the plaintiffs simply failed to present sufficient, unimpeached evidence
which could demonstrate under the totality of the circumstances that the FBISD at-large election
system resulted in unequal access to the political process.
The plaintiffs' arguments regarding the special circumstances stem directly from Supreme
Court language in Thornburg v. Gingles, 478 U.S. 30, 57, 106 S. Ct. 2752, 2770 (1986). The
Gingles Court established the three requirements that the plaintiffs must satisfy to present a section
2 claim: (1) Gingles I: that the black voters are sufficiently numerous and populous to constitute a
majority of the voting age population in at least one single district; (2) Gingles II: that the black
community tends to vote in a cohesive manner to support black candidates; and (3) Gingles III: that
in contested elections involving white and black candidates, the white community votes cohesively
and that as a result the candidates supported by the minority community are usually defeated. See
Gingles, 478 U.S. at 51, 106 S. Ct. at 2766, 2767.
makeup was?
A
I don't know that I'd quantify that, Judge. I don't know that even that ought to be
the test. The test is ----
Q
I'm just trying to find out where the lines get drawn?
A
I understand, Judge. I mean, I know it when I see it, but I'm not sure that I can
reconstruct the election to show where it wouldn't be.
Q
Okay. I can just see what the Fifth Circuit would do with the finding that said I know
it when I see it.
Mr. Rios: That's what the Supreme Court does in pornography cases, Your Honor.
The Court:They're allowed.

9

In clarifying the analysis of the third Gingles requirement the Supreme Court articulated the
definition of polarized voting: If black voters are cohesive and consistently support black candidates,
but those candidates are usually submerged when votes from white areas are counted, significant
racially polarized voting exists. 478 U.S. at 56, 106 S. Ct. at 2769. The Gingles Court noted that
the success of a minority candidate does not automatically disprove the existence of white bloc
voting. The Court listed several alternate explanations or "special circumstances" that "may explain
minority electoral success in a polarized contest:" (1) the absence of an opponent, (2) incumbency,
or (3) utilization of bullet voting. See id. (emphasis added). The plaintiffs maintain that because
alternative explanations account for the Collins and Cherry victories, those isolated victories do not
discredit the polarized white bloc voting in FBISD.
We must review de novo the district court's interpretation of the standard under Gingles. The
district court was required to specifically discuss the special circumstances because the plaintiffs'
evidence raised the issue of whether special circumstances explained the four victories. Heretofore,
the Fifth Circuit has treated the special circumstances inquiry as an essential part of the Gingles III
requirement. The Court consistently lists the requirement as follows: "the white majority votes
sufficiently as a bloc to enable it -- in the absence o f special circumstances -- usually to defeat the
minority preferred candidate." See, e.g., Houston v. Lafayette County, 56 F.3d 606, 609 (5th Cir.
1995); Clark v. Calhoun County, 21 F.3d 92, 94 (5th Cir. 1994); Magnolia Bar Ass'n v. Lee, 994
F.2d 1143, 1146 (5th Cir. 1993), cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 555 (1993); see also Rangel v. Morales, 8
F.3d 242, 245 (5th Cir. 1993); Monroe v. City of Woodville, 881 F.2d 1327, 1329 (5th Cir. 1989),
cert. denied, 498 U.S. 822 (1990); Overton v. Austin, 871 F.2d 529, 532 (5th Ci r. 1989); and
Campos v. City of Baytown, 840 F.2d 1240, 1243 (5th Cir. 1988), cert. denied, 492 U.S. 905 (1989).
10

The issue is, therefore, whether the district court properly considered and analyzed the applicable
special circumstances in the present case.
We find that the district court expressly discussed the special circumstances when addressing
the black victories. The district court indicated that the evidence did not support the plaintiffs' claims
regarding the special circumstances. The district court explained:
Plaintiffs claim that white bloc voting defeats the preferred candidate of the minority
community unless there are "special circumstances" present. Plaintiffs define such
circumstances as a multi-candidate race in which two or more strong Anglo
candidates split the white vote and thereby enable the minority candidate to succeed.
The analysis of the races, using statistics and other factors, does not bear out this
claim. . . . The evidence demonstrates that minority candidates have been elected to
the FBISD school board without special circumstances, such as a candidate running
unopposed or opposed by two strong Anglo candidates.11
11The district court made express findings that it was not persuaded by the plaintiffs' experts
and identified the facts that contradicted the plaintiffs' conclusions. The court's memorandum
opinion explains as follows:
The court finds that this conclusion is not supported by the election results
presented and does not explain either minority success or failure in the FBISD
elections. Black candidates have won elections in which there was only one strong
white candidate. (Collins won the 1986 race in which one white candidate, Copsy,
received 90 percent of the Anglo vote.) Black candidates have lost elections in which
there were multiple strong non-black candidates. (Rollins lost in the 1987 race in
which two white candidates, Ellis and Howell, split the majority of the vote between
them). Undercutting the validity of Korbel's conclusions are the following points:
* Less than 15 percent of the contested races are head-to-head black versus
white contests. Eighty percent of all the races since 1980 have been multi-candidate
races decided by a plurality.
* There have been two instances in which incumbent school board members
have lost reelection bids. Both occurred in 1992; one candidate was black (Collins)
and one was white (Cordes). The success of incumbents explains the election
outcomes with greater consistency than any other single factor. The anti-incumbency
mood in 1992 explains Collins's defeat in 199[2], not racially based voting.
First-time candidates, black, white, and Hispanic, tend not to win the FBISD
elections. This helps explain the election outcomes involving first time candidates
who happened to be black, including Beard's 1993 loss; Rollins' 1990 loss; and
Collins [sic] 1986 loss.
11

The plaint iffs expressly raised issues regarding victories caused by incumbency and by white
candidates splitting the white vote. The district court impliedly acknowledged the applicability of the
"running unopposed" special circumstance to Collins' 1989 reelection. Additionally, the district court
concluded that Cherry's victory in 1991 was the only one that resulted from white candidates splitting
the vote. The district court rejected the plaintiffs' argument that Collins' 1986 and 1993 victories
resulted from a split by white candidates. The plaintiffs offered no other theory or special
circumstance to explain Collins' 1986 and 1993 victories.
Interestingly enough, in 1986, Collins ran against two white candidates receiving 89 and 1,161
votes, an Hispanic candidate receiving 200 votes, and a black candidate receiving no documented
votes. The results do not reflect a voting split by the white candidates or any candidates for that
matter. Dr. Alford testified that the election does not reflect a white split because one white
candidate received in excess of ninety percent of the white votes. Dr. Alford further noted that
"[Collins was] elected in spite of the fact that the splitting here is a split among minority candidates."
The district court explained that because the Hispanic and black candidates opposing Collins were
weak, Collins effectively defeated a white candidate in a head-to-head race. We agree. Collins
appears to have won the election despite the absence of a white split.
Similarly, in 1993 when a trustee seat became vacant after his 1992 election defeat, Collins
ran against one white candidate receiving 3,334 votes, and two Hispanic candidates receiving 4,867
and 651 votes respectively. Dr. Alford testified that there could not be a splitting by white candidates
The court does not find Korbel's conclusions that the outcomes of the FBISD
elections are determined by the race of the candidates to be persuasive. Dr. Alford,
defendants' expert, acknowledged that there is a racial pattern to the voting, but it is
not a pattern of white bloc voting in opposition to minority candidates. Dr. Alford
supported his opinion by examining the individual races, as outlined above.
12

because only one white candidate ran. He explained that "[i]f the Anglos wanted to vote cohesively
for an Anglo, there [was] an Anglo there for them."
Though an Hispanic and a white candidate split the votes in the 1993 election, the plaintiffs
cite no authority to show that the mere presence of multiple candidates in an election qualifies as a
special circumstance as described by the Supreme Court in Gingles. There is nothing special about
an election in which a minority candidate splits the vote with either a white candidate or a minority
candidate which allows another minority candidate to be elected. In this particular case, the minority
victory which resulted from a voting split caused by another minority candidate cannot be attributed
to a special circumstance. Dr. Alford testified that Collins would have won the 1993 election even
if none of the minority boxes had voted. Plaintiffs did not persuasively rebut FBISD's evidence
concerning the 1993 election. Accordingly, the district court simply did not believe that any special
circumstances could explain away the other two victories Collins achieved. On this record, we cannot
say that the district court erred.
Moreover, the district court's analysis appears consistent with the handling of the special
circumstances in Gingles. The Gingles Court's comment regarding circumstances that may explain
a single minority candidate's victory cannot be transformed into a legal standard which requires the
court to force each and every victory of several minority candidates to fit within a prescribed special
circumstance. Every victory cannot be explained away as a fortuitous event. The Supreme Court's
mandate to the district court is to analyze the district's voting practice by evaluating the three Gingles
factors and then by looking at the totality of the circumstances. This directive did not compel the
district court in the present case to automatically pigeonhole the four minority victories into the
prescribed special circumstances. If the victories could be explained with the special circumstances,
13

the district court was free to do so; however, because the special circumstances did not fit, the district
court was not required to force it. We hold that based on the treatment of special circumstances in
Gingles, the district court did not misapply the legal standard simply because it did not find special
circumstances where none existed. After thoroughly reviewing the record, we cannot say that this
finding was clearly erroneous.12
C.
VOTING DILUTION CLAIM UNDER SECTION 2 OF THE VOTING RIGHTS ACT.
The plaintiffs alternatively argue that if we find that the correct legal standard was employed,
the district court's factual findings were clearly erroneous. They contend that the district court
inappropriately discounted undisputed evidence that racially polarized voting occurs in the FBISD
area. The plaintiffs also argue that the district court reached erroneous conclusions because it
incorrectly interpreted the evidence.
A.
Evaluation of the district court's findings.
The plaintiffs criticize the district court's evaluation of their election statistics. By contrast,
FBISD maintains that it impeached and made questionable most of the plaintiffs' substantive
evidence. After thoroughly reviewing the testimony and evidence, we agree with FBISD.
Though we agree that the district court probably discredited much of the evidence presented
by the plaintiffs in this particular case, we must acknowledge the sensitivity of the issues involved.
We do find it curious that only three minorities in the last twenty years have successfully been elected
to the board of trustees for the FBISD. The parties cannot and do not dispute that FBISD's history
12The plaintiffs contend that the district court's discussion of the Zimmer factors was affected
by the misapplied legal standard. Our conclusion that the district court applied the correct legal
standard and reached appropriate findings obviates the need to address the plaintiffs' argument that
the district court failed to discuss several of the Zimmer factors.
14

is blemished by past racial discrimination. In addition to being cognizant of FBISD's past, we are
well aware of the difficulty minority candidates generally face when seeking elections in at-large
systems. See Westwego Citizens for Better Gov't v. City of Westwego, 872 F.2d 1201, 1204 (5th
Cir. 1989), after remand, 906 F.2d 1042 (5th Cir. 1990) (noting that it is well recognized that at-large
voting schemes may operate to dilute minorities' voting strength). Nevertheless, we cannot ignore
that the record before us is replete with examples of contradicted testimony, inadequate evidence,
errors, and concessions that permitted the district court to discount the plaintiffs' evidence and,
consequently, their legal theories.
FBISD severely impeached the testimony of the plaintiffs and their experts. For example,
FBISD exposed numerous contradictions between Rollins' and Grice's testimony at trial and their
deposition testimony. Likewise, it revealed errors in Korbel's exhibits13 as well as a questionable
methodology employed by Korbel when researching vestiges of discrimination.14 Further, FBISD
demonstrated inconsistencies in Dr. Flores' data15 and showed that some of Dr. Flores'
13Korbel testified that plan C of plaintiffs' exhibit 6 mistakenly showed a top to bottom
deviation of three percent instead of ten percent.
14Korbel testified that although he analyzed exogenous elections statewide he failed to
evaluate endogenous elections in the FBISD area. Further, Korbel testified that he gathered
information to analyze the Zimmer factors by interviewing several people living in the FBISD area.
However, the pool of interviewees was derived from people he haphazardly met in coffee shops and
in an office in which he had an appointment with a businessman. Korbel failed to ask the interviewees
several questions that probably affected his data base: how long the interviewees had lived in FBISD,
whether they had children who were attending or had attended FBISD schools, whether they had
attended FBISD schools, or whether they had relatives who were attending or had attended FBISD
schools.
15Dr. Flores admitted that he treated Collins' 1993 election differently than the other elections.
Unlike the other elections, Dr. Flores did not combine all of the minority candidates for that election;
Collins was separated from the other minorities. Consequently, Dr. Flores obtained a different y-
intercept value for the 1993 election. Dr. Flores had previously testified that he had combined all of
15

methodologies made his results inaccurate or unreliable.16 Dr. Flores manually corrected exhibits
while testifying and admitted to other errors FBISD and the district court identified.17 Dr. Flores'
testimony also indicated that his analysis was incomplete and slanted in support of the black
the minority candidates. When questioned, he conceded as follows: "Your Honor, I was mistaken
on that one because -- I am sorry."
Similarly, Dr. Flores did not consistently evaluate Hispanic candidates. He included an
Hispanic candidate when analyzing the 1993 election but not when evaluating the other elections.
FBISD asked why he varied his methodology. Dr. Flores responded: "It was just a mistake I made.
There was no intent to mislead anybody."
16FBISD showed that the plaintiffs failed to analyze issues peculiar to blacks and Hispanics.
The plaintiffs did not evaluate several elections involving Hispanic and black successes. FBISD
demonstrated that the plaintiffs had not analyzed head-to-head elections between Hispanics and white
candidates, Hispanic defeats of blacks, successes by Hispanics and black, and races in which black
candidates defeated other black candidates. Because Dr. Flores combined Hispanics and blacks to
create minority statistics, FBISD's expert, Dr. John Alford, explained that it was impossible for the
plaintiffs to do a regression analysis of just black voters and then to do a separate analysis of just
Hispanic voters. Korbel also testified that it is impossible to determine cohesiveness if the data
combines blacks and Hispanics.
Further, the plaintiffs' extreme case analyses of each precinct were unreliable because they
did not involve precincts containing populations with a particular race comprising ninety percent of
the precinct.
17For example, the plaintiffs manually corrected Plaintiffs' Exhibit 28 because it failed to list
Hispanics on the "Y axis," which reversed the variables. Dr. Flores also manually corrected Summary
Table 2 on Exhibit 28 because the year 1990 appeared instead of 1988. Dr. Flores notified the court
that the word "slope" should read "y-intercept" on Tables 3 and 4 on plaintiffs' Exhibit 29. Further,
Dr. Flores failed to create a chart comparing the percentages of white voting age population for the
1992 election. When the district court asked why those percentages were not presented, Dr. Flores
replied: " Maybe I over -- I didn't -- maybe it is an oversight on my part. I am sorry." Moreover,
the district court's opinion indicates that Dr. Alford testified that Dr. Flores made a clerical error in
his regression analysis of the 1990 election and that the actual R value was .4847 and the actual y-
intercept was 15.05. Because of the disputed figures, the district court did not rely on either set of
numbers for the 1990 election.
16

plaintiffs.18 Consequently, both Dr. Flores and Korbel were forced to concede that several of their
opinions were either suspect or incorrect.
FBISD further impeached the plaintiffs' evidence by injecting into the case the issue of the
minority candidates' viability. Based on the opinion of defendants' expert, Dr. John Alford, a serious
candidate must raise and expend considerable sums of money for his campaign; the failure to do so
renders the candidate non-serious and non-viable. Plaintiff Grice and Korbel were forced to concede
that several minority candidates who lost were not "serious" candidates either because they spent little
money or were not supported by the minority community.19
18On direct examination Dr. Flores testified without hesitation that blacks and Hispanics voted
cohesively. On cross, when his conclusion was dissected, FBISD asked Dr. Flores whet her he
examined Hispanics' votes independently of black votes. Dr. Flores said yes but then hedged and
effectively admitted that he had not adequately examined this issue:
Q
Now, did you examine the vote of the Hispanics independently of the
vote of the blacks?
A
On occasion I did.
Q
Which occasions did you do that Dr. Flores?
A
I can't remember. I was doing it real rough form. But that is not
what I was hired to do. I was just doing it out of curiosity sake.
. . .
Q
Is there any particular reason why you did not analyze any elections
in which a Hispanic sought to be elected to the Fort Bend ISD board?
A
I was not asked to. That is not why I was retained.
Q
Well, they are one of the parties of the plaintiffs in this lawsuit, aren't they?
A
I was not asked to do that.
Q
But don't you have to do that though to determine cohesiveness?
A
No, all you have to do is combine the two. You don't have to look
at them separately.
19FBISD submitted financial reports of various minority candidates, which demonstrated that
the only serious candidates were Collins and Cherry, who won. We are not persuaded that FBISD's
explanation which defines a candidate's "seriousness" by the amount of money raised and spent on
the campaign necessarily holds true in all cases. First, FBISD failed to offer financial reports of the
white candidates who defeated the allegedly non-serious black candidates. Second, the emphasis on
the money raised and spent ignores other serious campaign efforts that involve little or no money.
17

In addition to impeaching the plaintiffs' evidence, FBISD also presented evidence regarding
the white cross-over vote. The third prong of the test established in Gingles requires proof that the
white community votes consistently as a bloc to defeat minority candidates. FBISD demonstrated
that the minorities collectively received large percentages of the white vote. It argues that if the
statistics proved that the white community actually voted for minorities on a regular basis, there could
be no voting "bloc" in the white community systematically being used to defeat the preferred minority
candidate.
The district court expressly found that the statistical results presented by the parties were very
similar. The part ies' experts depart primarily on the interpretations drawn from the results. The
plaintiffs argue that the small number of minority victories, coupled with proof that minority
candidates cannot carry white precincts, prove that minorities cannot effectively elect representatives
of their choosing. FBISD argues that several minorities ran against each other in many of the
elections, and in those cases the minority candidates collectively received over fifty percent of the
votes in the white precincts. FBISD asserts that the ability of the minorities to obtain such a large
percentage of the white vote disproves the existence of white bloc voting and demonstrates that
minorities might be successful if they did not split the vote among each other.
We conclude that the parties presented two viable theories to explain the few minority
successes in school board elections; however, we find that the district court chose to believe FBISD's
theory rather than the plaintiffs' theory because it discredited much of the plaintiffs' evidence. The
district court expressly adopted FBISD's method of interpreting the statistics:
Though funding and defeat at the polls are correlated, nothing in the record establishes that a causal
connection between the two variables exists in the present case.
18

Dr. Alford emphasized that in interpreting the regression results, the R and R2 values,
the slope, and the y-intercept point must all be examined. Applying this approach, the
R values show significant polarization in the black community. However, the slope
and y-intercept show that the white vote is much more randomly distributed with
respect to race. Voters in predominantly Anglo precincts or boxes regularly give
substantial votes to minority candidates, even in a head-to-head race. White voters
do not vote consistently or cohesively for minority candidates -- or for nonminority
candidates.
The court finds this analysis correct. This analysis alone recognizes the
frequent presence of reasons other than a candidate's race to explain the defeat of
that candidate. This analysis alone explains why some minority candidates in the
FBISD have done well in both minority and Anglo boxes, and have won, and why
other candidates have done less well in both minority and Anglo boxes, and have been
defeated. This analysis alone explains the voting patterns in the FBISD.
The district court also revealed its dissatisfaction with the plaintiffs' evidence in numerous places in
its opinion.20
20On the issue of black/Hispanic cohesive voting, the district court commented:

This court finds that the testimony lacks a sufficient basis and that the regression
analysis did not support African-American/Hispanic cohesion . . . . [T]he court finds
that the conclusion as to Hispanic voters supporting black candidates is not supported
by the record. . . . No concrete, reliable, or credible evidence was presented at trial
that Hispanic and African-American communities work together to accomplish
common goals in the FBISD. . . . The facts that [Rollins] relied upon [to prove that
African-Americans and Hispanics work together] contradict his own conclusions.
The district court also identified deficiencies in other areas, such as the vestiges of discrimination in
the FBISD:
Rollins offered nothing but speculation to justify [his] belief [that the Board
disassociated from the community college which had a black-controlled board]. The
court does not find this credible evidence that vestiges of official discrimination or
intentional discrimination remain in the FBISD board. . . . Rollins testified that his
knowledge [that private country clubs in FBISD had no minority members] was based
on occasional visits to three clubs, during which he observed no blacks among the
golfers. This limited, anecdotal evidence, even if true, is not credible proof that
vestiges of discrimination remain that hinder the ability of minority groups to
participate in the political process. . . . [Regarding the plaintiffs' belief that whites
orchestrate opponents to strong black candidates not acceptable to the Anglo
community,] Grice and Rollins both admitted that they had no facts to support this
19

Because FBISD impeached or made questionable most of the plaintiffs' evidence, it is not surprising
that the district court found FBISD's interpretation of the statistics more reliable. We believe that
the district court's implicit credibility assessments necessarily affect the conclusions it reached
regarding the many elections discussed at trial. With this in mind, we will discuss each of the
plaintiffs' contentions.
First, the plaintiffs challenge the district court's inconsistent use of the term incumbency.21 The
court first discounted Collins' defeat in 1992 because of an alleged anti-incumbent sentiment generally
affecting the citizens. Then, the district court seemingly contradicted this reasoning when it
discounted the 1993 loss of black candidate Beard because he had low name recognition and was
belief, and themselves characterized it as "hearsay" and "speculation." This court
does not find this to be credible evidence of organized efforts in the white community
to target black candidates for defeat. Neither Rollins nor Grice, nor any other
witness, testified as to any overt or subtle racial appeals in the FBISD school board
campaigns. No evidence was presented at trial that political campaigns within the
FBISD have been characterized by either overt or subtle racial appeals. . . . Rollins'
testimony [that the Board discriminated when it refused to allow Collins to serve as
president though he had seniority on the Board] is . . .speculation with no factual
basis. . . . There was no evidence at trial that official barriers [to voting] continued to
exist [after the Jaybird Party disbanded in 1953]. . . . The record contains details of
the programs that the FBISD has implemented to meet the particularized needs of
minority students. Plaintiffs did not challenge the breadth and depths of the FBISD's
efforts to respond to educational needs of minority students [despite their claims that
the Board at times demonstrates insensitivity to minority concerns]. . . . No evidence
was presented at trial that establishes that institutional remnants of racial
discrimination still exist within the FBISD. . . . No evidence was presented at trial that
any entity or person within the FBISD intended to discriminate against any minorities
in the FBISD Board of trustees elections.
21The plaintiffs maintain that the anti-incumbent feeling penetrated the white population only.
Further, the plaintiffs dispute the district court's explanation that black candidates were defeated
because they were first-time candidates. Twenty first-time white candidates have won since 1978,
only one black, Cherry, won during that period. First-time Caucasian candidates ran against first-time
black candidates ten times since 1978, and only one black won. Finally, a first-time white defeated
black incumbent Collins in 1992.
20

defeated by an incumbent. Similarly, in explaining Plaintiff Rollins' 1987 defeat, the district court
attributed the loss to his being a first-time candidate running against a long-time incumbent.
We cannot agree with the plaintiffs' arguments. The record supports the district court's
conclusions regarding the use of the term incumbency as well as the court's treatment of FBISD's
first-time candidates. The district court's conclusions must be measured against the deficiencies the
district court identified in the plaintiffs' evidence. For example, as we discuss in much more detail
later in this opinion, the district court expressly limited the probative value of the plaintiffs' statistics22
and discounted evidence about several elections the plaintiffs presented.23 After reviewing the record,
we cannot say that the conclusions regarding incumbency and first time candidates are clearly
erroneous.
22The district court noted the following problems with the plaintiffs' statistical evidence:
No evidence of multi-variate regression analysis was presented to the court. The
parties did not present the court with any statistical analysis that attempted to isolate
the impact of race on election results as compared to other potential factors entering
into a citizen's voting decision. . . . This court finds that the probative value of the
regression analysis is limited by the failure to identify "serious" candidates. . . . No
evidence was presented to this court as to the number of registered voters within the
FBISD.
23The district limited the weight given to the following elections:
Dr. Alford testified that Dr. Flores had made a clerical error in the regression analysis
and that the actual R was .4847 and the actual y-intercept was 15.05. The R for all
minorit[ies] voting for the minority candidates was .792 and the y-intercept was .071.
Due to the disputed facts, the court declines to rely on either set of numbers. . . . No
evidence was presented to the court regarding the number of exogenous elections held
during the relevant time period, the demographic make-up of the constituencies, the
percentage vote received by a candidate, and/or the success of the preferred minority
candidates. No evidence was presented to the court as to why or how the exogenous
elections are considered probative as to whether the white community of the FBISD
sufficiently votes as a bloc in order to defeat the preferred minority candidate for the
FBISD board of trustees.
21

Second, the plaintiffs dispute the district court's explanation that Plaintiff Rollins' defeat
occurred because Rollins lacked minority support, not because of white bloc voting. The plaintiffs
further argue that the district court failed to discuss the plaintiffs' undisputed evidence that Rollins
would have won at least one, if not both, of the black districts under the plaintiffs' redistricting
proposal. The district court reasoned that Rollins did not carry two major voting areas; he was
defeated by a black in an election for County Commissioner, and was a first-time candidate for a
school board trustee position.
We conclude that the record supports the district court's findings. Rollins conceded that he
failed to carry the Hunters Glen precinct which was at least seventy percent minority when he sought
election to the Board. He also admitted that another minority defeated him in the election for county
commissioner. Sufficient evidence exists in the record to support the conclusion that Rollins was not
the preferred candidate of the black community. Error has not been committed simply because the
district court does not discuss the evidence in terms of the plaintiffs' theory (i.e., that Rollins would
have won in a single district election scheme), when the district court deliberately and reasonably
rejects that theory. Evaluating Rollins' election with the other elections and evidence considered by
the district court, the conclusion regarding Rollins' election is not clearly erroneous.
Moreover, the Supreme Court has reaffirmed that the district court's findings regarding voting
dilution should not be disturbed unless clearly erroneous because of the district court's "familiarity
with the indigenous political reality." Gingles, 478 U.S. at 59, 106 S. Ct. at 2781. Here, the district
court's particular familiarity with the politics in FBISD cannot be ignored. The opinion reflects that
the district court considered and weighed the evidence presented by the parties. The district court
exercised its prerogative to question the witnesses for both sides where necessary in order to be sure
22

that it fully understood the evidence presented. After doing so, the district court reached the
conclusion that the plaintiffs did not prove their claim of voting dilut ion. Specifically, there is
evidence in the record to support the conclusion that the plaintiffs failed to prove the second and third
prongs of the Gingles test. Therefore, we cannot say that any of these findings are clearly erroneous
when considered under the totality of the circumstances.
B.
Evaluation of the plaintiffs' statistical evidence.
The plaintiffs maintain that they presented a strong case of racially polarized voting. They
introduced statistical analyses regarding every black candidate running between 1986 and 1993.
Although the district court found that the statistical evidence was not helpful, the plaintiffs contend
that their statistical evidence is consistent with the type of evidence found by this court to be
adequate. Accordingly, the plaintiffs contend that the district court had to discuss its reasons for
rejecting the plaintiffs' evidence.
Regarding the adequacy of evidence needed to prove voting dilution, this Court has noted that
statistics alone are not sufficient to prove impermissible voting dilution. See Parnell v. Rapides Parish
Sch. Bd., 563 F.2d 180, 184 (5th Cir. 1977), cert. denied, 438 U.S. 915 (1978). However, statistics,
such as extreme case analysis, and ecological regressions have been approved by the Supreme Court
and the Fifth Circuit to prove racially polarized voting patterns. Gingles, 478 U.S. at 52-53, 106 S.
Ct. at 2761; and Houston, 56 F.3d at 612. The plaintiffs' evidence is among the types of evidence
approved for voting dilution claims. While the type of evidence is satisfactory, it is the quality of the
plaintiffs' evidence that the district court found to be satisfactory. Under the clearly erroneous
standard of review, we cannot easily reverse the district court's factual findings regarding the lack
of racially polarized voting in FBISD.
23

Though the plaintiffs presented facially persuasive statistics, the statistics were not presented
by convincing witnesses. The record establishes that FBISD challenged the plaintiffs' evidence to
a degree that rendered its potency questionable. Moreover, the district court had ample room to find
the FBISD witnesses to be more credible than the plaintiffs' witnesses. The plaintiffs attempt to
dismiss the errors of their experts as minor mistakes, typographical errors, and ambiguous
questioning; however, we find that when assessing a witness's credibility regarding methodologies
and statistics, numerous minor errors can make all of an expert's findings and theories unbelievable.
Accordingly, the district court was well within its considerable discretion to conclude that the
plaintiffs' evidence was unreliable and their theories unpersuasive.
Nevertheless, we will address the other specific challenges regarding the plaintiffs' evidence.
First, the plaintiffs contend that there is no authority requiring them to offer statistics that isolated the
impact of race on election results as compared to other factors affecting voting. When discussing the
absence of a legally significant voting bloc, the district court cites Brewer v. Ham, 876 F.2d 448, 454
(5th Cir. 1989) to explain that the plaintiffs did not present multi-variate analysis considering other
factors. As discussed above, the plaintiffs' own experts and the district court identified several
shortcomings of the statistical analyses and the evidence on which the analyses were based. We find
that although the plaintiffs were not required under existing case law to present a multi-variate
regression analysis comparing the impact of other factors affecting voting, had they done so this
evidence may have helped them to prove the existence of a significant bloc vote in the present case.
Second, the plaintiffs assert that the district court placed undue reliance on the plaintiffs'
failure to prove the registration levels in the FBISD. It is true that this Court has indicated that voter
registration data is not the sole criteria in the voting rights analysis. Wyche v. Madison Parish Police
24

Jury, 635 F.2d 1151, 1162 (5th Cir. 1981). However, the plaintiffs misconstrue Wyche by taking the
statement out of context. In Wyche, we actually recognized the importance of voter registration data:
"[N]either the Supreme Court nor this court has ever held that voter registration is irrelevant: it is
simply not the sole criterion. . . . As we have noted, that is an important factor, perhaps the single
most significant one in determining vote dilution." Wyche, 635 F.2d at 1162 (emphasis added); see
also Rangels v. Morales, 8 F.3d 292, 295 (5th Cir. 1993) (citing Gingles, the court noted that the
number of registered voters affects the inquiry regarding white bloc voting); Westwego, 906 F.2d at
1046 (acknowledging that minority voter registration data is relevant to evaluating the first Gingles
factor); and Overton v. City of Austin, 871 F.2d 529, 539 (5th Cir. 1989) (recognizing the limitations
of statistical analysis where the expert's extrapolations ignored voter registration). The district court
merely commented that the plaintiffs failed to present evidence regarding voter registration data. This
comment, in view of the significance that this Court places on voter registration information, does
not demonstrate that the district court placed undue reliance on the plaintiffs' failure to present
registration data.
In reaching these conclusions, we cannot say unequivocally that the FBISD system does not
in fact violate the Voting Rights Act. We hold only that the plaintiffs failed to establish a violation
with the evidence they presented in this case.
D.
SUFFICIENCY OF THE DISTRICT COURT'S DETAIL IN ITS FINDINGS.
The plaintiffs ask this Court to remand the case because the district court failed to make
detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law as required by the Fifth Circuit. The plaintiffs contend
that the district court had to make specific findings regarding all the factors considered by the court,
especially where the factors are resolved against the plaintiffs.
25

First, the plaintiffs question the district court's failure to discuss their evidence regarding two
races, in which black candidates were involved with head-to-head elections with white candidates,
because the races show the improbability of a black being successful in a head-to-head race with a
white. We find no merit to the plaintiffs' contention regarding the two head-to-head elections.
The district court presented a detailed discussion of Collins' 1992 and Beard's 1993 defeats.
The discussions, however, reflect that the district court believed FBISD's theory. The district court
explained that Collins was an incumbent running during a period of anti-incumbent sentiment
sweeping at least the white community in FBISD. Further, the district court recounted Hal Jay's
testimony that Collins "did not run a very good campaign in 1992 because Collins was overconfident
about his reelection and did not take the challenge from Wooten seriously." Similarly, the district
court detailed the raw scores and statistics regarding the 1993 head-to-head race between Beard (a
black) and Block (a white). The court even mentioned that Beard received essentially the same raw
votes as Co llins in 1993 yet Collins won and Beard lost. Later, the district court mentioned that
"[a]lthough Beard was running in a head-to-head race against a white candidate, the Hispanic
community tended to vote for his Anglo opponent, Block." That the district court failed to discuss
the head-to-head contests is not supported by the record. The district court simply did not discuss
the races as the plaintiffs wished.
The plaintiffs also assert that the district court erro neously discounted the eight elections
before 1986. The district court explained why it analyzed only the elections occurring after 1986.
The district court found that "because of the dramatic changes in population size in the FBISD, the
election results before 1986 are of such limited probative value that they need not be examined here."
The record supports this conclusion and also presents additional reasons that cast doubt on the
26

reliability of pre-1986 election data. Because demographic data is not available before 1986, it is
impossible to determine the proportion of minorities in the FBISD prior to 1986 and impossible to
calculate the polarization demonstrated in pre-1986 elections. Additionally, FBISD used a different
election system until 1972, and FBISD changed its precinct numbering system after 1986.
The plaintiffs also contend that the district court failed to discuss the plaintiffs' evidence when
considering the totality of the circumstances. For example, the court dismissed the history of
discrimination in Texas by saying that after the Jaybird party, which was organized to prevent blacks
from voting and participating in local politics, was disbanded in 1953, there was no indication that
barriers to voting continued to exist. We disagree with the plaintiffs' suggestion that the district court
ignored the history of political problems in Texas.
We find that the district court adequately discussed the plaintiffs' evidence in light of the
conclusions it reached. Under the circumstances, there was no need for further discussion of the
history of discrimination in FBISD. First, the district court acknowledged that " [t]he historical
evidence presented at trial established that blacks in the FBISD were subject to official discrimination
in the past." Second, the district court expressly accepted the Fifth Circuit's conclusion in Fort Bend
Indep. Sch. Dist. v. City of Stafford, supra, that FBISD had achieved "unitary status." Third, plaintiff
Rollins admitted that the Jaybird party was disbanded in 1953 before the school district was formed
in 1959. The district court mentioned the Jaybird organization and detailed the plaintiffs' evidence
regarding socio-economic factors before concluding that official barriers to voting do not exist in
FBISD and that socio-economic differences between minorities and whites do not prevent meaningful
participation in the political process. We find that the district court satisfied its duty to discuss the
evidence and the basis for its conclusions.
27

Further, the plaintiffs question the limitation the district court placed on the probative value
of the plaintiffs' statistical data. The district court, citing Campos, 840 F.2d at 1245 n.7, complained
that the plaintiffs did not distinguish the serious candidates from non-serious candidates. In Campos,
this Court noted t hat "[i]f the minority candidate is not serious and gains little support from any
segment of the community, it cannot be said that the minority community "sponsored" the candidate
and that election need not be examined." Campos, 840 F.2d at 1245 n.7. The plaintiffs argue that
because in every election the black candidate would have won under a single district voting scheme,
the candidates were serious. However, the plaintiffs' expert, Korbel, explained that a candidate is
not serious if he receives less than twenty-five percent of the vote in a precinct and then conceded
that Montez, Garcia, Peterson, Woodard, and Clark were not serious candidates. The district court
discussed the plaintiffs' statistical data in great detail before it explained its reservations regarding the
evidence. Considering this Court's pronouncement in Campos along with the admissions of the
plaintiffs' own expert, we cannot say that the district court was mistaken in the limitation it placed
on the plaintiffs' statistics. Moreover, we cannot conclude that the district court inadequately
discussed either the statistics or its limitation on the probative value.
Finally, the plaintiffs criticize the district court's consideration of the plaintiffs' evidence
regarding statewide elections involving minority candidates only to the extent probative of whether
the white community of FBISD votes as a bloc to defeat minority candidates. The plaintiffs contend
that the evidence of statewide elections was relevant because of the consistent relationship between
race and voting, which the plaintiffs' expert found. It is true that Dr. Flores testified to a very high
correlation between race and voting in the exogenous elections. He specifically evaluated only
FBISD precincts for the statewide and county wide elections he examined. However, when
28

questioned by the district court, Korbel admitted that the exogenous elections that he examined did
not accurately reflect the voting habits of FBISD24 and that he had not examined endogenous
elections within FBISD. Moreover, the district court specifically identified deficiencies in all of the
exogenous elections, which reduced their probative value:
All of the elections are partisan elections, with a candidate needing a majority to win.
No evidence was presented to the court regarding the number of exogenous elections
held during the relevant time period, the demographic make-up of constituencies, the
percentage vote received by a candidate, and/or the success of the preferred minority
candidates.
The plaintiffs failed to furnish enough data for the district court to adequately compare and evaluate
the exogenous elections. We find that the district court provided sufficient reasons for limiting its
use o f the exogenous elections, and we cannot say that the district court erred in limiting the
probative value of the exogenous elections.
Even assuming that the district court did not discuss and/or should have discussed evidence
which the plaintiffs identify, we note that this Court does not require the district court to expressly
mention all the evidence in its opinion. We have instructed the district court to thoroughly discuss
the statistics offered by making specific references to the evidence. Houston, 56 F.3d at 612. Also,
we have warned the district court not to make broad and general statements which are not specifically
tied to the evidence. Id. Although the district court is not required to recount every bit of evidence
adduced at trial, it must discuss all "substantive" evidence contrary to its opinion. Velasquez v. City
of Abilene, 725 F.2d 1017, 1022 (5th Cir. 1984). Further, this Court has remanded cases in order
24For example, in Texas elections outside of FBISD, there is a higher voter turnout in the
Hispanic community. Further, Hispanics and blacks vote together. However, when analyzing the
exogenous elections, Korbel assumed that the voting patterns in the exogenous elections occurred
in FBISD. The statistics did not support this assumption.
29

for the district court to "explain specifically which evidence it finds credible and which it does not,
to provide reasons for its conclusions and then to evaluate the strength of that evidence[.]"
Westwego, 872 F.2d at 1210 n.12. We find that the district court provided very detailed discussions
regarding the Gingles and Zimmer factors, its findings, and conclusions. The plaintiffs arguments
are without merit.
E.
SUPPLEMENTATION OF POST-TRIAL ELECTION DATA.
Although the plaintiffs concede that this is not a serious error of l aw, they argue that data
from the May 1994 election is important because the two black candidates who sought to replace
Cherry were defeated. Now, only one black, Collins, remains on the FBISD Independent School
Board.
FBISD responds that the motion and supporting affidavit to supplement the record contained
matters already before the court. FBISD also contends that the information was not dispositive and
actually buttressed the FBISD position that non-serious candidates consistently lose in the FBISD
elections. Finally, FBISD claims that the plaintiffs fail to assert how this error affects their case and
fails to cite authority in support of the error.
Rules 59(e) or 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides authority for the
plaintiffs to seek supplementation. Accordingly, we must review the district court's denial of the
motion for abuse of discretion. Midland West Corp. v. FDIC, 911 F.2d 1141, 1145 (5th Cir. 1990).
Although the plaintiffs did not allege the proper grounds and necessary proof required for reopening
the record under rule 59(e) or rule 60(b), t his Court has emphasized the relevance of elections
occurring subsequent to trial and has even remanded cases to allow the plaintiffs an opportunity to
30

supplement the record with evidence of subsequent elections. See Westwego, 906 F.2d at 1045.
Nevertheless, neither supplementation nor remand is justified in the present case.
First, the results do not alter the evidence presented at trial . The results of the May 1994
election show that Liz McLean, a white candidate, defeated two black candidates. McLean received
2,696 votes, while the black candidates, Arthur L. Pace, Sr., and James Beard, received 1,511 and
1,474 respectively. Collectively, the minorities received 2,985 votes. The election results are
consistent with the defendants' theory of the case. This is the reasoning which the district court
apparently adopted; therefore, this evidence standing alone would not have changed the outcome of
this case.
Second, the plaintiffs' proffer came from a witness whom the district court apparently
discredited. The plaintiffs attached a copy of the summary regression analysis prepared by their
testifying expert, Dr. Flores, to their response to the defendants' opposition. The precinct by precinct
analysis indicated that Beard, who carried sixty-eight percent of the votes in majority-minority
precincts, was the overwhelming choice in the black community. Flores concluded that Beard would
have prevailed in a single district system. Because the district court probably discredited this expert
due to inadequate testimony and flawed trial exhibits, the court probably would not have found this
supplemental analysis persuasive.
Finally, remand probably would waste judicial resources because the election data would not
alter the district court's decision. Although the district court did not reopen the record or conduct
a hearing, the court's memorandum opinion clearly indicates that it evaluated the quality of the
proffered evidence. The district court noted that "the evidence presented at trial was sufficient for
th[e] court to determine whether the at-large method for the FBISD school board elections violated
31

the Voting Rights Act or the United States Constitution." Additionally, the court commented that
the plaintiffs failed to show that the proffered new evidence required reopening the record or changes
in the factual or legal findings already made by the court. Based on these statements, we are
convinced that the district court did, in fact, consider the May 1994 elections and concluded that the
data did not change or impact the evidence presented at trial. Because the district court considered
the evidence to some extent before rendering its decision, we cannot say that the district court's
decision represents an abuse of discretion.
Moreover, because the result would not likely change, this case is distinguishable from
Westwego. In that case, the expert presenting the supplemental analysis was previously found
credible by the district court. 906 F.2d at 1044. Also, the district court had noted in its first opinion
that it was "significant" that no black had ever run for the alderman position at issue. The post-trial
election involved a black who was defeated when running for this position. It was possible that
because the subsequent election in Westwego involved the first alderman race with black candidate,
the district court's decision might change. This is not the case here. The evidence from the May
1994 election is duplicative of the mountain of evidence adduced at trial. The race mirrored the many
other races analyzed by the three experts. Remand is not necessary under these circumstances.
Therefore, we hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the plaintiffs' request
to supplement the record.
F.
MOTION TO CONSIDER 1996 ELECTION RESULTS.
Pending this appeal, FBISD filed a motion asking us to consider the results of the school
board elections occurring in May, 1996. It argues that the elections demonstrate the electability of
black candidates because two blacks were elected. The plaintiffs oppose the motion because the
32

defendants present the results absent any statistical analysis. The plaintiffs contend that remand
would be appro priate in order for both the 1995 and 1996 election results to be considered. We
disagree with both parties.
As framed, we cannot independently evaluate the May 1996 election results. FBISD asks us
to consider the evidence; it does not request a remand of the case in order for the district court to
evaluate the evidence. We have previously indicated that this Court may not consider election results
that the district court did not have before it when making its decision. See Zimmer v. McKeithen,
485 F.2d 1297, 1307 (former 5th Cir. 1973) (en banc) ("The significance attached to success at the
polls in the instant case is unavailing. . . First, these results were not before the district court when
it rendered the opinion we are presently reviewing. It is axiomatic that an appellate court cannot take
cognizance of matters not passed upon by the trial court.") (election occurred after trial but before
entry of the district court's judgment); and Monroe, 881 F.2d at 1329 n.2 (after noting that two
blacks were elected in an election subsequent to trial the court explained that "[t]he district court did
not have the results of this election before it; accordingly, these results play no part in our review of
the court's conclusions") (election occurred after entry of the district court's judgment). See also
Salas v. Southwest Texas Junior College District, 964 F.2d 1542, 1544-45 n.7 (5th Cir. 1992)
(although noting that the results of an election occurring after trial would alter the district court's
factual findings, that court cited Monroe and commented as follows: "We simply note these facts;
they do not affect `our review of the [district] court's conclusions'") (election occurred after entry
of the district court's judgment).
Accordingly, we hold that it is not within our province to evaluate election results not
contained within the record when the district court ruled. We further note that under the
33

circumstances of this case, which has remained unresolved since its filing in November 1992, we are
hesitant to prolong this case by remand when the significance of the offered evidence could only be
determined after additional trial proceedings.
CONCLUSION
It is undeniable that FBISD's past is scarred with racial discrimination. That so few blacks
have been elected as trustees of the Fort Bend Independent School District over such a long time span
does give us pause. Nonetheless, section 2 of the Voting Rights Act could only dissipate that pause
where the plaintiffs present a record on appeal that convincingly shows their burden of proof was
carried. Having failed to satisfy the trial court that the requisite elements of a Voting Rights Act
violation were proven and having similarly failed to show us that the trial court clearly erred in either
its factual findings or its legal conclusions, we are constrained to uphold the judgment below.
For the foregoing reasons, we find no merit to the plaintiffs' assignments of error regarding
the legal standard employed by the district court, the district court's interpretation of the evidence
before it, or the adequacy of the detail in the district court's opinion. We also find that the district
court did not abuse its discretion by refusing to consider evidence from the May 1994 election.
Therefore, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court holding that the plaintiffs failed to establish
a violation of the Voting Rights Act. Additionally, we DENY FBISD's motion asking us to consider
the May 1996 election results.
34

Ask a Lawyer

 

 

FREE CASE REVIEW BY A LOCAL LAWYER!
|
|
\/

Personal Injury Law
Accidents
Dog Bite
Legal Malpractice
Medical Malpractice
Other Professional Malpractice
Libel & Slander
Product Liability
Slip & Fall
Torts
Workplace Injury
Wrongful Death
Auto Accidents
Motorcycle Accidents
Bankruptcy
Chapter 7
Chapter 11
Business/Corporate Law
Business Formation
Business Planning
Franchising
Tax Planning
Traffic/Transportation Law
Moving Violations
Routine Infractions
Lemon Law
Manufacturer Defects
Securities Law
Securities Litigation
Shareholder Disputes
Insider Trading
Foreign Investment
Wills & Estates

Wills

Trusts
Estate Planning
Family Law
Adoption
Child Abuse
Child Custody
Child Support
Divorce - Contested
Divorce - Uncontested
Juvenile Criminal Law
Premarital Agreements
Spousal Support
Labor/Employment Law
Wrongful Termination
Sexual Harassment
Age Discrimination
Workers Compensation
Real Estate/Property Law
Condemnation / Eminent Domain
Broker Litigation
Title Litigation
Landlord/Tenant
Buying/Selling/Leasing
Foreclosures
Residential Real Estate Litigation
Commercial Real Estate Litigation
Construction Litigation
Banking/Finance Law
Debtor/Creditor
Consumer Protection
Venture Capital
Constitutional Law
Discrimination
Police Misconduct
Sexual Harassment
Privacy Rights
Criminal Law
DUI / DWI / DOI
Assault & Battery
White Collar Crimes
Sex Crimes
Homocide Defense
Civil Law
Insurance Bad Faith
Civil Rights
Contracts
Estate Planning, Wills & Trusts
Litigation/Trials
Social Security
Worker's Compensation
Probate, Will & Trusts
Intellectual Property
Patents
Trademarks
Copyrights
Tax Law
IRS Disputes
Filing/Compliance
Tax Planning
Tax Power of Attorney
Health Care Law
Disability
Elder Law
Government/Specialty Law
Immigration
Education
Trade Law
Agricultural/Environmental
IRS Issues

 


Google
Search Rominger Legal


 


LEGAL HELP FORUM - Potential Client ? Post your question.
LEGAL HELP FORUM - Attorney? Answer Questions, Maybe get hired!

NOW - CASE LAW - All 50 States - Federal Courts - Try it for FREE


 


Get Legal News
Enter your Email


Preview

We now have full text legal news
drawn from all the major sources!!

ADD A SEARCH ENGINE TO YOUR PAGE!!!

TELL A FRIEND ABOUT ROMINGER LEGAL

Ask Your Legal Question Now.

Pennsylvania Lawyer Help Board

Find An Attorney

TERMS OF USE - DISCLAIMER - LINKING POLICIES

Created and Developed by
Rominger Legal
Copyright 1997 - 2010.

A Division of
ROMINGER, INC.