List of justices of the Alabama Supreme Court
Following is a list of justices of the Supreme Court of Alabama.[1]
Current justices
Justice | Year service began | Next election | Party affiliation | Law school |
---|---|---|---|---|
Michael F. Bolin | Republican | Cumberland School of Law | ||
Tom Parker | Republican | Vanderbilt University School of Law | ||
Greg Shaw | Republican | Cumberland School of Law University of Virginia School of Law | ||
Alisa Kelli Wise | Republican | Thomas Goode Jones School of Law | ||
Tommy Bryan | Republican | Thomas Goode Jones School of Law | ||
Will Sellers | Republican | University of Alabama School of Law New York University | ||
Brady E. Mendheim Jr. | Republican | Cumberland School of Law | ||
Jay Mitchell | Republican | University of Virginia School of Law | ||
Sarah Hicks Stewart | Republican | Vanderbilt University School of Law |
Chief justices
Judge | Began active service | Ended active service |
Clement Comer Clay | 1820 | 1823 |
Abner Smith Lipscomb | 1823 | 1834 |
Reuben Saffold | 1834 | 1836 |
Henry Hitchcock | 1836 | 1837 |
Arthur F. Hopkins | 1837 | 1837 |
Henry W. Collier | 1837 | 1849 |
Edmund Strother Dargan | 1849 | 1852 |
William Parish Chilton | 1852 | 1856 |
George Goldthwaite | 1856 | 1856 |
Samuel F. Rice | 1856 | 1859 |
Abram Joseph Walker | 1859 | 1868 |
E. Woolsey Peck | 1868 | 1873 |
Thomas Minott Peters | 1873 | 1874 |
Robert C. Brickell | 1874 | 1884 |
George W. Stone | 1884 | 1894 |
Thomas N. McClellan | 1894 | 1906 |
Samuel D. Weakley | 1906 | 1906 |
John R. Tyson | 1906 | 1909 |
James R. Dowdell | 1909 | 1914 |
John C. Anderson | 1914 | 1940 |
Lucien D. Gardner | 1940 | 1951 |
J. Ed Livingston | 1951 | 1971 |
Howell T. Heflin | 1971 | 1977 |
C. C. Torbert Jr. | 1977 | 1989 |
Ernest C. Hornsby | 1989 | 1995 |
Perry O. Hooper Sr. | 1995 | 2001 |
Roy Moore | 2001 2013 | 2003[2] 2016[3] |
Drayton Nabers Jr. | 2004 | 2007[4] |
Sue Bell Cobb | 2007 | 2011 |
Charles R. Malone | 2011 | 2013[5] |
Lyn Stuart | 2016 | 2019 |
Tom Parker | 2019 | present |
Associate justices
Judge | Began active service | Ended active service |
Henry Y. Webb | 1820 | 1823 |
Abner Smith Lipscomb | 1820 | 1823 |
Richard Ellis | 1820 | 1831 |
Reuben Saffold | 1820 | 1834 |
Anderson Crenshaw | 1821 | 1831 |
John Gayle | 1823 | 1828 |
Henry Minor | 1823 | 1831 |
John White | 1825 | 1831 |
John M. Taylor | 1825 | 1834 |
Sion L. Perry | 1828 | 1832 |
Henry W. Collier | 1828 1836 | 1831 1837 |
Harry I. Thornton | 1834 | 1836 |
Henry Hitchcock | 1834 | 1836 |
Arthur F. Hopkins | 1836 | 1837 |
John J. Ormond | 1837 | 1847 |
Henry Goldthwaite | 1837 | 1847 |
Clement Comer Clay | 1843 | 1843 |
Edmund Strother Dargan | 1847 | 1849 |
William Parish Chilton | 1847 | 1852 |
Silas Parsons | 1849 | 1851 |
Daniel Coleman | 1851 | 1851 |
David G. Ligon | 1851 | 1854 |
George Goldthwaite | 1851 | 1856 |
Lyman Gibbons | 1852 | 1854 |
John D. Phelan | 1852 1864 | 1854 1866 |
Samuel F. Rice | 1853 | 1856 |
Richard Wilde Walker | 1856 | 1866 |
Abram Joseph Walker | 1856 1863 | 1859 1868 |
George W. Stone | 1856 1876 | 1864 1884 |
William M. Byrd | 1863 | 1867 |
Thomas J. Judge | 1863 1874 | 1867 1876 |
Thomas M. Peters | 1868 | 1873 |
Benjamin F. Saffold | 1868 | 1874 |
Robert C. Brickell | 1873 | 1874 |
Amos R. Manning | 1874 | 1880 |
Henderson M. Somerville | 1880 | 1890 |
Jonathan Haralson | 1882 | 1906 |
David Clopton | 1884 | 1892 |
Thomas N. McClellan | 1889 | 1898 |
Thomas W. Coleman | 1890 | 1898 |
Richard Wilde Walker Jr. | 1891 | 1892 |
W. S. Thorington | 1892 | 1892 |
James B. Head | 1892 | 1898 |
Henry A. Sharpe | 1898 | 1904 |
John R. Tyson | 1898 | 1906 |
James R. Dowdell | 1898 | 1909 |
N. D. Denson | 1904 | 1909 |
R. T. Simpson | 1904 | 1912 |
John C. Anderson | 1904 | 1914 |
Samuel D. Weakley | 1906 | 1907 |
J. J. Mayfield | 1908 | 1920 |
A. A. Evans | 1909 | 1910 |
Anthony D. Sayre | 1909 | 1931 |
Ormond Somerville (I) | 1911 | 1928 |
Edward deGraffenried | 1912 | 1914 |
Lucien D. Gardner | 1914 | 1940 |
William H. Thomas | 1914 | 1945 |
B. M. Miller | 1920 | 1927 |
Joel B. Brown | 1920 1927 | 1921 1953 |
Virgil Bouldin | 1923 | 1944 |
Arthur B. Foster | 1928 | 1953 |
Thomas E. Knight | 1931 | 1942 |
J. Ed Livingston | 1940 | 1951 |
Thomas S. Lawson | 1942 | 1972 |
Davis F. Stakely | 1943 | 1962 |
Robert Tennent Simpson Jr. | 1944 | 1972 |
John L. Goodwyn | 1951 | 1968 |
Preston C. Clayton | 1953 | 1954 |
Pelham J. Merrill | 1953 | 1976 |
James J. Mayfield | 1954 | 1956 |
Norman T. Spann | 1956 | 1957 |
James S. Coleman | 1957 | 1975 |
Robert B. Harwood | 1962 | 1975 |
John P. Kohn | 1968 | 1968 |
James N. Bloodworth | 1968 | 1980 |
Daniel T. McCall Jr. | 1969 | 1975 |
Alva Hugh Maddox | 1969 | 2001 |
Ormond Somerville (II) | 1972 | 1972 |
Richard L. Jones | 1972 | 1991 |
James H. Faulkner | 1973 | 1986 |
T. Eric Embry | 1975 | 1985 |
Janie L. Shores | 1975 | 1999 |
Reneau P. Almon | 1975 | 1999 |
Samuel A. Beatty | 1976 | 1989 |
Oscar W. Adams Jr. | 1980 | 1993 |
J. Gorman Houston Jr. | 1985 | 2005 |
Henry B. Steagall II | 1986 | 1995 |
Mark Kennedy | 1989 | 1999 |
Kenneth F. Ingram | 1991 | 1997 |
Ralph Cook | 1993 | 2001 |
Terry L. Butts | 1995 | 1998 |
Harold See | 1997 | 2008 |
Champ Lyons | 1998 | 2011 |
Jean Brown | 1999 | 2005 |
R. Bernard Harwood Jr. | 2001 | 2007 |
Patricia M. Smith | 2005 | 2011 |
References
- "A history of the Alabama Judicial System" (PDF). Alabama Unified Judicial System. State of Alabama. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 14, 2012. Retrieved February 10, 2012.
- Moore was removed from office on November 13. 2003, and Justice J. Gorman Houston Jr. became Acting Chief Justice, Moore was re-elected to the Court in 2012.
- On September 30, 2016, Moore was suspended from office due to ethics violations. The decision was upheld by the Alabama Supreme Court in April 2017, whereupon Alabama Governor Kay Ivey appointed Justice Lyn Stuart to fill his seat. Jeremy Gray, "Gov. Kay Ivey appoints Lyn Stuart Alabama Chief Justice," Al.com, accessed May 25, 2017.
- Governor Bob Riley appointed Nabers Chief Justice on June 22, 2004, to fill Roy Moore's unexpired term.
- Governor Robert J. Bentley appointed Malone on August 1, 2011, to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Justice Cobb, defeated for re-nomination 2012.
External links
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