The Topeka NAACP argued the Brown case in the Kansas state courts.
John Scott, Charles Scott, and Charles Bledsoe were the three attorneys, while McKinley Burnett (then President of Topeka NAACP) and Lucinda Todd (NAACP secretary and one of the plaintiffs) helped organize the case.
Future US Supreme Court justice Thurgood Marshall, then Chief Legal Counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, argued the four consolidated segregation cases (under the name Brown v. Board of Education) before the US Supreme Court.
Case Citation:
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 US 483 (1954)
For more information, see Related Questions, below.
Marshall was the first African American justice and spent his life fighting for equality. As a young man he had experienced discrimination first hand. He was the lawyer for Brown v Topeka and argued that separate but equal was not equal at all. He was a great man and powerful ally for equality and civil rights for all. .
Future US Supreme Court justice Thurgood Marshall, then Chief Legal Counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, argued the four consolidated segregation cases (under the name Brown v. Board of Education) before the US Supreme Court.
Case Citation:
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 US 483 (1954)
Brown
they sued brown vs. board of education because they didnt want they're daughterto grow up in a segregated school.
The Brown vs Board of Education court case occurred four years after Sweatt vs Painter court case. In the Brown case, laws establishing racial segregation were deemed unconstitutional. In the Sweatt case, one man sued due to not being accepted into a law school based on the color of his skin.
It's not Board v, it's Brown v. Board of Education. During the civil rights movement, civil right leaders decided to integrate whites and blacks in school and the Brown man sent his kids to white schools. He got sued, and he won.
Linda Brown's parents, Oliver and Leola Brown, were plaintiffs in the landmark civil rights case of Brown v. Board of Education. They challenged the segregation of public schools in Topeka, Kansas, which led to the Supreme Court ruling that segregation in public schools was unconstitutional.
Brown v. Board of Education- Linda Brown had to walk 21 blocks to the nearest black school because her neighborhood school was only for white students. Her parents sued and the Supreme Court ruled that segregation in schools violated the equal protection clause.
it was when a litle girl had to take a bus ride to a black only school when a white only school was a block away and the brown family ( the family of the little girl ) and 12 other parents sued to topeka board of education
The Brown's daughter was not allowed to enroll in the all white school, so they sued. Thourgood Marshall was their attorney and he argued that "separate but equal" was not equal at all, but segration . A person can not be kept apart and still be equal. They won the case, but Louise was not allowed to join her 2nd grade class. The school placed her in a room alone with a teacher.
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 US 483 (1954)Oliver Brown was the nominal (named) petitioner in Brown v. Board of Education, (1954); however, Brownwas a class action suit against segregation brought on behalf of thirteen plaintiffs and their children in the Topeka, Kansas, school district. The other plaintiffs in the case were Darlene Brown (no relation), Lena Carper, Sadie Emmanuel, Marguerite Emerson, Shirley Fleming, Zelma Henderson, Shirley Hodison, Maude Lawton, Alma Lewis, Iona Richardson, and Lucinda Todd.Contrary to popular belief, Oliver Brown did not initiate the suit against the Board of Education; the NAACP did. The civil rights organization then recruited African-American families who were willing to join the case.At the Supreme Court level, Brown v. Board of Education was consolidated (put together with) with three other cases that were collectively referred to as Brown: Briggs v. Elliott(South Carolina); Davis v. County School Board of Prince Edward County (Virginia); and Gebhart v. Belton (Delaware). The NAACP also brought a companion case heard the same day, Bolling v. Sharpe, that had to be considered separately because it concerned a school in Washington, DC, which operates under federal, not state, laws.For more information, see Related Questions, below.
Rihanna never sued Chris Brown.
no the plaintiff can not be sued after the case was dissmised by settalment
the seller can be sued by the individual if they were injured