The Legal Documents series follows the sequential order of court proceedings from the initial complaint filed in 1979 by Sally Frank to the New Jersey Division on Civil Rights to the conclusion in June of 1992 when the United States Supreme Court denied Tiger Inn's petition for writ of certiorari and upheld the New Jersey State Supreme Court decision to admit women. The documents within this series contain originals, drafts, and photocopies of legal briefs, motions, memoranda of law, certificates of service and affidavits that were prepared by Nadine Taub, Sally Frank, and other members of her counsel (as well as from the other parties involved) that were presented to New Jersey state and federal courts. Specifically, interrogatories and stipulations that were created and agreed upon during the fact-finding investigation and conferences; stenographic transcripts of the conferences and of other court hearings; photocopies, and in some cases originals, of court rulings rendered by the New Jersey state and federal courts; and exhibits presented by all parties are included in this series. There may be some duplication of material found in this series within Series 2: Correspondence and Subseries 3D: Exhibit Material.
Arranged chronologically by year and then chronologically within each folder.
1986, 1986
Volume 24, dates not examined
Volume 25, dates not examined
Volume 26, dates not examined
Volume 27, dates not examined
Volume I, dates not examined
Volume II, dates not examined
Volume III, dates not examined
Volume III, dates not examined
Sally Frank, 1987 November 5
Tiger Inn, 1987 October 5
Court Transcripts, 1986
1986, 1986
July 29, dates not examined
July 30, dates not examined
August 1, dates not examined
August 4, dates not examined
August 5, dates not examined
August 6, dates not examined
1979, 1979
1980, 1980
1982, 1982
1983, 1983
Interrogatories Made by Ivy Club, Tiger Inn, and the University Cottage Club, 1983 December 20
1984, 1984
Fact-Finding Conference, Accepted Stipulations and Fact-Finder's Rulings, 1984 March, April, 1984
Affidavits, 1984 May
Lewis, Howard, 1984 May
Chambers, Christopher, 1984 May
Rickerson, Stuart E, 1984 May 11
Coburn, Drew, 1984 May 21
Stinger, Kenneth, 1984 May 31
Sally Frank's Memorandum of Facts and Law, New Jersey Division on Civil Rights, 1984 September 27
Appendix of the Respondent the Tiger Inn, New Jersey Division on Civil Rights, 1984 November 15
1984-1985, 1984-1985
1985, 1985
Finding of Probable Cause, Pamela S. Doff, State of New Jersey Division on Civil Rights, 1985 May 14
Notice of Hearing, 1985 October 29
Adjournment Granted Because of the Pendency of a Motion for Summary Decision, 1985 November 20
1985-1986, 1985-1986
1986, 1986
Sally Frank's Reply to Exceptions to Initial Decision, Partial Summary Decision, 1986 January
Notice of Hearing, 1986 January 31
Order of Inactivity, Appellate Division, Rescheduled for Hearing, 1986 March 18, 31, 1986 March
Brief of Ivy Club in Response to Complainant's Motion for Summary Decision on Liability, 1986 May 2
Notice of Hearing, 1986 May 27
Order on Notice of Motion to Compel Interrogatories and Notice of Cross-Motion, 1986 June 9
Notice of Hearing, 1986 June 12
Initial Decision, Partial Summary Decision, Before Honorable Miller, Robert S, 1986 June 16
1987, 1987
Sally Frank's Exceptions to the Administrative Law Judge's Initial Decision, 1987 January 18
Order of Extension, 1987 February 13
Notice of Motion for Application for Emergent Relief, Ivy Club (Exhibits A-B), 1987 February 23
Sally Frank's Exceptions to Honorable Miller, Robert S., Initial Decision, 1987 February 27
Letter Brief Amicus Curiae on Behalf of the Department of the Public Advocate, 1987 March 4
Order of Extension, 1987 April 20
Appendix of Sally Frank in Support of Motion to Dismiss Suit of Tiger Inn, Volume II, 1987 May 26
Brief of Tiger Inn, 1987 October 2
Brief of Ivy Club, 1987 October 2
Notice of Motion for Extension of Time for Division on Civil Rights to File Brief, 1987 October 21
Motion of Extension of Time and Leave to Exceed Page Limit, 1987 October 21, 23, 1987 October
Tiger Inn's Motion to be Relieved from the Director's Order, 1987 November 18, 19, 1987 November
Certificate of Service, Letter Supporting Motion for Direct Certification, 1987 November 24
Motion for Certification of Appeal Pending Unheard in the Appellate Division, 1987 December
Appeal from the Final Determination of the Department of Law and Public Safety, 1987 December 1
Letter Brief on Behalf of Division on Civil Rights, Motion by Tiger Inn for Relief, 1987 December 2
Scheduled Appeal, 1987 December 31
1988, 1988
1989, 1989
1990, 1990
Brief in Opposition to Issuance of the Writ of Certiorari, Statement of the Facts, 1990-1991
Brief of the American Jewish Congress as Amicus Curiae in Support of Sally Frank, 1990 January 25
Decision of the Court to Reinstate the Order of the Division on Civil Rights from, 1987 May 26
Affidavit of Beatie, Russel H., Jr., in Support of Tiger Inn's Motion to Stay, 1990 July 20
Notice of Motion to Intervene, Affidavit of Sally Frank, 1990 September 5, 7, 1990 September
Ivy Club, Tiger Inn v. Edwards et al., Court Order Denying Stay, Ivy Club, 1990 September 21
Motion for Summary Judgment, Affidavit of Taub, Nadine, and Memorandum of Law, 1990 November 20
Tiger Inn v. Sally Frank, Application to Stay Mandate of Pending Writ of Certiorari, 1990 December 6
Ivy Club, Tiger Inn v. Del Tufo et al., Civil Appeal Information Statement, 1990 December 26
1991, 1991
Notice of Motion to Reopen Case and Supporting Certifications and Exhibits, Petition, 1991 October 1
Notice of Motion to Intervene, Memorandum of Law and Affidavit of Sally Frank, 1991 October 24
Brief and Appendix of State Defendants in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment, 1991 November 18
1992, 1992
Ivy Club, Tiger Inn v. Del Tufo et al., Judgment on Behalf of the State Defendants, 1992 January 22
Del Tufo et al., v. Ivy Club, Printed Booklet, Reply Brief of State Defendants, 1992 February 2
Pre-Trial Submission of Tiger Inn Regarding Evidence to be Produced at Trial, 1992 February 26
Tiger Inn v. Edwards et al., Answer of Sally Frank to the Complaint of Tiger Inn, 1992 March 27
The Correspondence series includes correspondence to and from Nadine Taub, Sally Frank, and members of her co-counsel, as well from each party's representative counsel. Generally, the correspondence consists of letters between the defending counsel members on which Nadine Taub was copied; specific administrative questions relating to filing procedures; memoranda; and motions for state and federal courts. Also included are letter briefs and memoranda prepared by Sally Frank's counsel and defending counsel representatives. Nadine Taub's personal correspondence to and from Sally Frank regarding procedural matters and strategies are also included within this series.
Arranged chronologically by year.
General, 1984-1992
1984, 1984
1986, 1986
1988-1992, 1988-1992
Russel H. Beatie, Jr, 1984-1988
Sally Frank, 1984-1986
The State of New Jersey, 1985-1992
Barbara Strapp Nelson, 1983-1992
Nadine Taub, 1983-1992
Alexander P. Waugh, Jr, 1985-1990
The Research Material series contains extensive information collected by Sally Frank's team (as well from the other parties) during the cursory investigation conducted by the Division on Civil Rights in 1980-1981, and again in 1983-1984. The investigation was intended to determine whether a relationship existed between the eating clubs and Princeton University. Thousands of pages of documents were submitted by all parties which consisted of meeting minutes and reports from the Board of Trustees and Dean of the Faculty and reports of the Committee on Student Life, the Committee on Undergraduate Life, the Undergraduate Interclub Committee (UICC), and various other student/club committees and organizations. In addition, photocopies of the deeds of Ivy Club, Tiger Inn, and University Cottage Club, charter information, certificates, and member lists are included here. Memoranda, newspaper clippings, campus publications, and specific court proceedings of other discriminatory cases are also located in this series.
Arranged into five subseries: General; Eating Clubs; Minutes and Reports; Exhibit Material; and Related Cases.
Bicker Process, 1981-1984
Taub, Nadine, Notes, 1984-1992
University Publications, 1936-1984
General, 1980, 1984
Ivy Club, 1879-1983
Tiger Inn, 1890-1987
General, 1879-1978
Committee on Student Life, 1975-1984
Dean of the College, 1929 January 9
Graduate Inter-Club Council, 1950
President's Report, 1950-1955
Student Organizations, undated
Subcommittee on Eating Clubs, 1976
Exhibit 5, Pages 4429a, Joint Appendix of Ivy Club and Tiger Inn, Volume 24, dates not examined
Ivy Club's Brief In Support of Motion for Stay, Exhibit B, Complaint by Ivy Club, 1986 February 13
General, 1921-1980
Generally, dates not examined
Drinking, dates not examined
Elections, dates not examined
- Scope and Contents
The Nadine Taub Collection documents her role as co-counsel for Sally Frank during Frank's thirteen-year legal battle against Ivy Club, Tiger Inn, University Cottage Club, and Princeton University. The majority of the collection is comprised of legal documents including legal briefs, motions, orders of the court, notices of hearings, memoranda of law, supporting appendices, affidavits, certifications of service, and depositions, which were submitted by Sally Frank and her co-counsel as well as attorneys Russell H. Beattie Jr. for Ivy Club, Peter W. Williamson for University Cottage Club, and John O'Brien for Tiger Inn. Stenographic transcripts of the fact-finding conferences and court hearings, as well as correspondence to and from Nadine Taub, Sally Frank, and other counsel can be found in this collection.
Extensive research material pertaining to Princeton University's history and its affiliation with Ivy Club, Tiger Inn, and the University Cottage Club can be found within the minutes, reports, newspaper clippings, campus publications, correspondence, deeds, memoranda, and charter information which were collected by Sally Frank's team (as well from the other parties) during the fact-finding investigation and conferences. The material collected was used in creating over two hundred stipulations of fact and law and provided evidence within legal briefs presented to the court. Also included are photocopies of legal court proceedings decided upon by the New Jersey state and federal courts relating to discrimination.
Please see series descriptions in contents list for additional information about individual series.
- Collection Creator Biography:
Taub, Nadine
In her sophomore and junior years, Sally Frank attempted to bicker into Ivy Club, Tiger Inn, and University Cottage Club and was denied membership. Frank volunteered at the American Civil Liberties Union at this time and worked with a lawyer there who believed that the eating clubs, functioning as public institutions, violated the New Jersey law against discrimination and suggested legal action. Acting upon this advice, in February of 1979 Frank filed a sex discrimination complaint with the New Jersey Division on Civil Rights against Ivy Club, Tiger Inn, University Cottage Club and Princeton University, alleging that the clubs discriminated against her because of her gender. Nadine Taub, who was at the time Director of the Women's Rights Litigation Clinic at Rutgers University, served as co-counsel along with the ACLU for Sally Frank during her thirteen-year legal battle with Ivy Club, Tiger Inn, University Cottage Club and Princeton University.
The New Jersey Division on Civil Rights twice refused to investigate Frank's complaint on the grounds that Ivy, Tiger and Cottage were private organizations functioning separately from Princeton University. Frank defended her argument that the clubs functioned as public accommodations. The Division responded by undertaking a cursory investigation into the matter to determine whether a relationship indeed existed. Following a yearlong fact-finding investigation, the Division dismissed Frank's claim in December of 1981, holding that Ivy, Tiger, and Cottage were bona fide clubs distinctly private in nature and thus not subject to the jurisdiction of the New Jersey law against discrimination.
The Division also cleared the charges against Princeton University, finding no probable cause existed to support the allegation of discrimination. Frank appealed the Division's decision to higher a court. In 1983, the New Jersey Supreme Court refused to take a position, vacating the Division's order and remanding the case back for further investigation. Without further guidance from the New Jersey State Supreme Court, the Division resumed the fact-finding investigation for the dual purpose of determining the nature and status of the clubs as well as their affiliation with Princeton University.
In March and April of 1984, James Sincaglia, Chief of the Bureau of Enforcement, Division on Civil Rights, held a two-day fact-finding conference for which all parties submitted for a second time thousands of pages of information and interrogatories and exchanged lists of proposed stipulations to be accepted and/or disputed. They discussed and agreed upon over two hundred stipulations relating to the status and nature of the clubs and Princeton University. In addition, all counsel introduced documents, presented unsworn testimony, cross-examined witnesses and presented both oral and written legal arguments. On May 31, 1984, Sincaglia found sufficient evidence existed and recommended a hearing for the case.
Pamela S. Poff, Director of the Division on Civil Rights, concluded in her Finding of Probable Cause brief that a relationship between the clubs and Princeton University is one of "integral connection and mutual benefit." Poff based her decision on eleven factual conclusions, and specifically upon three key elements, that "the clubs are held out as part of a club system which serves Princeton students; the clubs draw their membership almost exclusively from Princeton University students; and Princeton relies upon the club system to feed a majority of it [s] upper class students." In addition, she found probable cause to believe that the clubs and Princeton University discriminated on the basis of gender.
In July of 1985, the case was filed as a "contested case" with the Office of Administrative Law; however, on December 12, Administrative Law Judge Robert S. Miller found no material facts in dispute and granted the decision in favor of Frank. On February 16, 1986, Poff issued an Order of Partial Summary Decision on Jurisdiction, adopting the recommendations of Judge Miller. Furthermore, since no facts remained in dispute, Poff found that a full hearing on jurisdiction at the Office of Administrative Law would be "time consuming and wasteful" and remanded the matter back to the administrative law judge for further proceedings on the issues of liability and remedy.
On February 24, 1986, University Cottage Club settled with Frank for $20,000 in damages and attorney fees and adopted to admit women. In July of the same year, Princeton University followed suit and settled for $27,000 in damages and attorney fees.
Ivy Club and Tiger Inn continued to pursue their bona fide claim to private association, and after six days of formal hearings, Judge Miller issued an initial decision on the issues of damages and remedies. Judge Miller awarded $2,500 in personal damages to Frank; however, he denied her membership to any of the three eating clubs. In addition, Judge Miller recommended that in order for Ivy Club and Tiger Inn to remain all-male they could sever ties with Princeton University to attain "distinctly private" status.
Director Poff responded to the proposal by adopting Judge Miller's recommendation in denying club membership to Frank; however, she increased Frank's personal damages to $5,000, and rejected Judge Miller's suggestion that the clubs sever ties with Princeton University and instead ordered the clubs to admit women as members.
Ivy Club and Tiger Inn appealed the director's decision ordering them to admit women and filed a complaint with the New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division. Ivy Club reserved its federal claim; however, Tiger Inn argued its constitutional right to freedom of association had been violated. The counsel for both Tiger Inn and Frank presented their arguments on the issue, but the Appellate Division refused to make a decision and remanded the case back for a plenary hearing. Frank petitioned the New Jersey Supreme Court to review the Appellate Division's decision and in January, 1990, the New Jersey Supreme Court heard oral arguments on all the issues of the case. On July 3, 1990, the court found and reversed the Appellate Division's decision to remand the case for further hearing, and reinstated Director Poff's Order of Partial Summary Decision on Jurisdiction, awarding Frank damages and attorneys' fees and ordering the clubs to admit women as members.
The legal battle would continue for two more years. Following the New Jersey Supreme Court decision, Tiger Inn appealed and petitioned to the United States Supreme Court for a review of the case. In January 1991, the Supreme Court denied the request. The case was then heard in the Federal Circuit Court, which upheld the New Jersey Supreme Court's ruling in favor of Frank. The case officially concluded in June, 1992. As a result, Tiger Inn agreed to admit women as members (Ivy Club had begun admitting women in 1990) and both Ivy Club and Tiger Inn had to pay the ACLU $43,000 in legal fees.
Sally Frank is now a law professor at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa. She continues to practice law, specializing in family law and domestic violence. She has returned on numerous occasions to Princeton for reunion events, and has spoken to undergraduate classes about her legal battle. Nadine Taub is professor emeritus at the Rutgers School of Law, Newark, and continues to practice law in the State of New Jersey.
- Acquisition:
This collection was donated by Sally Frank on May 29, 1996 .
- Appraisal
Appraisal has been conducted in accordance with Mudd Library guidelines.
- Processing Information
This collection was processed by Rosalba D. Varallo Recchia in March 2008 with assistance from Sarah Vitali '11. Finding aid written by Rosalba D. Varallo Recchia in April 2008.
- Conditions Governing Access
The collection is open for research use.
- Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
For preservation reasons, original analog and digital media may not be read or played back in the reading room. Users may visually inspect physical media but may not remove it from its enclosure. All analog audiovisual media must be digitized to preservation-quality standards prior to use. Audiovisual digitization requests are processed by an approved third-party vendor. Please note, the transfer time required can be as little as several weeks to as long as several months and there may be financial costs associated with the process. Requests should be directed through the Ask Us Form.
- Credit this material:
Nadine Taub Collection of Sally Frank Court Documents; Princeton University Archives, Department of Special Collections, Princeton University Library
- Permanent URL:
- http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/v979v308w
- Location:
-
Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript LibrarySeeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library65 Olden StreetPrinceton, NJ 08540, USA
- Storage Note:
- Mudd Manuscript Library (scamudd): Box 1-18
- Bibliography
The following materials were consulted during the preparation of the biography section: various legal briefs and memoranduma of law submitted by Nadine Taub and Sally Frank, specifically the procedural history sections; the Syllabus written by J. Garibaldi, Office of the Clerk, 1990; Jeff Milgram's "A Bittersweet Homecoming: PU Alumna Relates Legendary Tale of Eating Club Combat," The Princeton Packet online, 3 March 2000; and Lee Wiliams's "She Took It To the 'Street,'" The Daily Princetonian, 28 February 2000.
- Subject Terms:
- Clubs -- New Jersey -- Princeton.
College Students -- New Jersey -- Princeton -- Social conditions.
College students -- New Jersey -- Princeton -- Societies and clubs.
Feminism and education.
Sex discrimination against women -- Law and legislation -- New Jersey.
Trials (sex discrimination) -- New Jersey.
Women college students -- Attitudes.
Women college students -- New Jersey -- Social conditions.
Women college students -- Services for -- New Jersey.
Women college students -- Societies and clubs -- New Jersey.
Women's rights -- New Jersey.
Women's studies. - Genre Terms:
- Clippings.
Correspondence
Legal briefs.
Memoranda.
Reports. - Names:
- Tiger Inn (Princeton, N.J.)
Tiger Inn (Princeton, N.J.)
Ivy Club
Ivy Club
Princeton University
Princeton University
Princeton University. Cottage Club.
Princeton University. Women's Center.
Frank, Sally (1959)