Donald Gaines Murray sought admission to the
University of Maryland School of Law on January 24, 1935, but his application was rejected on account of his
race. The rejection letter stated, "The University of Maryland does not admit
Negro students and your application is accordingly rejected." The letter noted the university's duty under the
Plessy v. Ferguson doctrine of
separate but equal to assist him in studying elsewhere, even at a law school located out-of-state. Murray appealed this rejection to the Board of Regents of the university, but was refused admittance. The nation's oldest black collegiate
fraternity,
Alpha Phi Alpha, initiated
Murray v. Pearson on June 25, 1935, as part of its widening social program, and retained
Belford Lawson to litigate the case. By the time the case reached court, Murray was represented by
Charles Hamilton Houston and
Thurgood Marshall of the Baltimore
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Houston and Marshall used
Murray v. Pearson as the NAACP's first case to test
Nathan Ross Margold's strategy to attack the '
separate but equal' doctrine using the
Equal Protection Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the
U.S. Constitution. Margold concluded "such laws administering such a system were denying equal protection of law under the
Yick Wo v. Hopkins ruling of 1886 and therefore were
unconstitutional. At the circuit court hearing, Marshall stated that Maryland failed to provide a 'separate but equal' education for Murray as required by the Fourteenth Amendment (using the legal standard at that time). and stated The circuit court judge issued a
writ of mandamus ordering Raymond A. Pearson, president of the university, to admit Murray to the law school. ==Appeal to Maryland Court of Appeals==