Bennett Boskey

Last updated • 6 min readFrom Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Bennett Boskey
Bennett Boskey USA WWII photo.jpg
Born(1916-08-14)August 14, 1916
New York City, New York, U.S.
DiedMay 11, 2016(2016-05-11) (aged 99)
Alma mater Williams College (BA)
Harvard University (LLB)
OccupationAttorney
Known forClerk for Judge Learned Hand
SpouseShirley Ecker
Parent(s)Meyer Boskey, Janet Lauterstein
RelativesBetty Jane Boskey

Bennett Boskey (August 14, 1916 – May 11, 2016) was an American lawyer who clerked for Judge Learned Hand and for two U.S. Supreme Court justices, Stanley Reed and Chief Justice Harlan F. Stone. He helped to craft the standing doctrine in Ex parte Quirin which enabled the U.S. Supreme Court to hear a case against German military saboteurs, which has had legal implications during the War on Terror in the first two decades of the 21st century.

Contents

Early life and education

Bennett Boskey was born in New York City and grew up on Central Park West in the Upper West Side of Manhattan, the son of Janet Lauterstein (July 12, 1890 – May 26, 1983), and a prosperous lawyer, Meyer Boskey (July 24, 1883 – February 10, 1969). Bennett's younger sister, Betty Jane Boskey (November 9, 1918 – December 28, 1984), married Lloyd Stanley Snedeker (May 27, 1916 – December 14, 1977) and lived in Great Neck, Long Island, New York. He was raised in a household committed to equality. In 1899, his father co-founded the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity at New York's City College. [1] The fraternity admitted Christians and Jews at a time when others refused to mix religions. In 1914, two years before Bennett's birth, Meyer Boskey withdrew as National Secretary of the fraternity when it limited its membership to white Christians.

In 1916, Meyer Boskey advertised his legal services in the firm of Brown & Boskey as "general practice in all courts." [2] His son, Bennett, would later describe his law practice in the same way. [3]

After arriving at Williams College at age 15, Boskey was graduated in 1935 and then studied economics for a year at the University of Chicago at the height of the Great Depression. [4] In 1939, he graduated from Harvard Law School, where he came to the attention of then Professor Felix Frankfurter and was a member of the Board of Editors of the Harvard Law Review.

In 1940, Bennett Boskey married Shirley Ecker (January 15, 1918 – October 13, 1998), who had also grown up on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. [5] She graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Vassar College, attended Columbia Law School, and received her law degree from George Washington University. She was the daughter of two successful real estate attorneys, Judge Samuel Ecker (August 21, 1882 – March 30, 1970) [6] and Frances Schuman (January 14, 1891 – July 16, 1979), [7] and shared her husband's childhood immersion in law. In Washington, D.C., Shirley Boskey worked at the World Bank, rising to become its first female head of department as Director of the International Relations Department, where "she was responsible for managing the...relationship with other intergovernmental organizations such as the United Nations." [8] The Shirley Ecker Boskey Chair in International Studies at Vassar is endowed in her memory, [9] and her papers are archived at Princeton University.

Judicial clerkships

Learned Hand circa 1910 Learned Hand urn-3 HLS.Libr 1148132a.jpg
Learned Hand circa 1910

Bennett Boskey was a law clerk for a year (1939–1940) for Judge Learned Hand of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York. As the story goes, "Hand accepted Boskey sight unseen after Felix Frankfurter...recommended the student." [10]

In 1940, Boskey came to Washington, where he clerked at the U.S. Supreme Court for Justice Stanley Reed from 1940 to 1941, and Chief Justice Harlan F. Stone from 1941 to 1943. [11]

In October 1941, Justice Robert H. Jackson joined the Court, an event Boskey recalled fondly in a 2005 essay. [12]

Ex parte Quirin: Saboteurs case standing doctrine

Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone circa 1925 to 1932. Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone photograph circa 1927-1932.jpg
Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone circa 1925 to 1932.

During Boskey's clerkship for Chief Justice Stone, the Court decided Ex parte Quirin , 317 U.S. 1 (1942), a case that upheld the jurisdiction of a United States military tribunal during WW II over the trial of eight German saboteurs in the United States. Quirin has been cited as a precedent for the trial by military commission of any unlawful combatant against the United States.

Boskey played a pivotal role in shaping the case's reasoning. "Writing to Boskey about the Fifth and Sixth Amendments challenge..., Stone admitted that 'I think [my statement in the draft opinion] is right but my authorities are meager.'" [13] With a creative flair, Boskey proposed to Stone the so-called "satisfactory alternative method" to give the Court the standing to review the Saboteurs Case. [14]

After Army service in World War II, where Boskey achieved the rank of first lieutenant, he worked for several federal agencies. Boskey was special assistant to the Attorney General in the U.S. Department of Justice in 1943, and an adviser on enemy property in the U.S. Department of State from 1946 to 1947, in an office led by economist John Kenneth Galbraith. [15] Boskey was an attorney for the Atomic Energy Commission ("AEC") from 1947 to 1949; he served as deputy general counsel for the AEC from 1949 to 1951, where he worked under agency counsel, Joseph Volpe Jr. (October 18, 1913 – January 26, 2002). [16]

General Leslie Groves (left), military head of the Manhattan Project, with Professor Robert Oppenheimer (right). Groves Oppenheimer.jpg
General Leslie Groves (left), military head of the Manhattan Project, with Professor Robert Oppenheimer (right).

From 1951 to 1996, Boskey was a partner in the firm that became Volpe, Boskey and Lyons. During WW II, Volpe had assisted Gen. Leslie Groves (August 17, 1896 – July 13, 1970) in negotiations to "secure uranium and other material from Great Britain." [17] In 1954, physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer (April 22, 1904 – February 18, 1967) asked Volpe to represent him against charges of treason. The U.S. Government had bugged Volpe's law office and secretly recorded the conversations. [18]

At the firm, Boskey represented non-profit organizations, individuals in probate cases, and companies in matters of nuclear energy licensing. [19] On December 12, 1961, Boskey argued Coppedge v. United States [20] before the U.S. Supreme Court, winning a 5–2 majority for his in forma pauperis client appealing a criminal conviction. [21] In 1973, Boskey helped Columbia University defend its license to operate a nuclear reactor on campus for research purposes, though it was never used. [22] When the firm dissolved in 1996, Boskey maintained a solo practice for an additional nineteen years.

ALI headquarters, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. ALI.headquarters.JPG
ALI headquarters, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Following the model set by Judge Hand, Boskey devoted substantial effort to law reform. Judge Hand was an early member of the American Law Institute ("ALI"), [23] and had chaired the committee that established ALI's method of involving a mix of private practitioners, law professors and judges to publish recommendations. As with Hand, Boskey believed law should adapt to changes in society. [24] The ALI's recommended reforms and publishing Restatements of law furthered that goal. From 1975 to 2010, Boskey was treasurer of ALI. [25] Since at least 1971, his so-called "Boskey motion", precisely capturing a draft's procedural status, has preceded its approval at the ALI Annual Meeting.

In 1975, during the administration of President Gerald Ford, Boskey was on the short list of possible nominations to the Supreme Court. [26]

The position of the Bennett Boskey Professor of Law at Harvard Law School was first held by Lani Guinier. There is also a Bennett Boskey fellowship in Extra-European History since 1500 endowed by legacy at Exeter College, Oxford and Williams College. [27]

Boskey was a member of the New York bar for more than seventy-five years (making him among the top five longest tenured members), and the Washington, D.C., bar for sixty-seven. [28]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gordon Dean (lawyer)</span> American lawyer and government official (1905–1958)

Gordon Evans Dean was a Seattle-born American lawyer and prosecutor who served as chairman of the United States Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) from 1950 to 1953.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Harlan F. Stone</span> Chief justice of the United States from 1941 to 1946

Harlan Fiske Stone was an American attorney and jurist who served as an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court from 1925 to 1941 and then as the 12th chief justice of the United States from 1941 until his death in 1946. He also served as the U.S. Attorney General from 1924 to 1925 under President Calvin Coolidge, with whom he had attended Amherst College as a young man. His most famous dictum was that "Courts are not the only agency of government that must be assumed to have capacity to govern."

Ex parte Quirin, 317 U.S. 1 (1942), was a case of the United States Supreme Court that during World War II upheld the jurisdiction of a United States military tribunal over the trial of eight German saboteurs, in the United States. Quirin has been cited as a precedent for the trial by military commission of unlawful combatants.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">J. Harvie Wilkinson III</span> American judge (born 1944)

James Harvie Wilkinson III is an American jurist who serves as a United States circuit judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. His name has been raised at several junctures in the past as a possible nominee to the United States Supreme Court.

Cramer v. United States, 325 U.S. 1 (1945), was a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States reviewed the conviction of Anthony Cramer, a German-born naturalized citizen, for treason.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Operation Pastorius</span> 1942 failed German sabotage in the U.S. during WWII

Operation Pastorius was a failed German intelligence plan for sabotage inside the United States during World War II. The operation was staged in June 1942 and was to be directed against strategic American economic targets. The operation was named by Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, chief of the German Abwehr, for Francis Daniel Pastorius, the organizer of the first organized settlement of Germans in America. The plan involved eight German saboteurs who had previously spent time in the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lists of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States</span>

The lists of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States cover the law clerks who have assisted the justices of the Supreme Court of the United States in various capacities since the first one was hired by Justice Horace Gray in 1882. The list is divided into separate lists for each position in the Supreme Court.

Lauson Harvey Stone, son of US Chief Justice Harlan Stone, was an American lawyer and civic leader.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wendy Long</span> American attorney from New York (born 1960)

Wendy Elizabeth Long is an American attorney from New Hampshire. A member of the Republican Party, Long was the Republican and Conservative parties’ nominee for U.S. Senate in New York in 2012 and 2016, losing in landslides to incumbent Democrats Kirsten Gillibrand and Chuck Schumer, respectively. She was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in support of Donald Trump in 2016.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stone Court</span> Period of the US Supreme Court from 1941 to 1946

The Stone Court refers to the Supreme Court of the United States from 1941 to 1946, when Harlan F. Stone served as Chief Justice of the United States. Stone succeeded the retiring Charles Evans Hughes in 1941, and served as Chief Justice until his death, at which point Fred Vinson was nominated and confirmed as Stone's replacement. He was the fourth chief justice to have previously served as an associate justice and the second to have done so without a break in tenure. Presiding over the country during World War II, the Stone Court delivered several important war-time rulings, such as in Ex parte Quirin, where it upheld the President's power to try Nazi saboteurs captured on American soil by military tribunals. It also supported the federal government's policy of relocating Japanese Americans into internment camps.

Clarence Melville York was an American attorney who, in the 1890s, was one of the first law clerks to the justices of the Supreme Court of the United States.

References

  1. The City College Quarterly, Vol. 9 (New York: 1913), at 159.
  2. The Mercantile Adjuster and the Lawyer and Credit Man: A Monthly Magazine Devoted to Credits and Collections, Vol. 31 (1916), at 119.
  3. Entry for "Bennett Boskey Firm," Martindale-Hubble Legal Directory, Martindale.com (2016).
  4. "Interview with Bennett Boskey" (July 5, 2005). Williams College Oral History Project.
  5. "Shirley Ecker is Bride; Daughter of Justice Married to Bennett Boskey," NY Times, July 4, 1940.
  6. "Samuel Ecker on Swann's Staff," New-York Tribune, March 15, 1916, p. 12, Image 12 ("District Attorney Swann announced yesterday that that he had appointed former Deputy Attorney General Samuel Ecker, of 30 Broad Street, as Assistant Attorney General. Mr. Ecker was graduated from the New York University Law School and has practiced in this city twelve years."); and "Samuel Ecker, 87, Once City Justice," NY Times, March 31, 1970.
  7. Ecker, Allan B. (2009). "Playwright of the Law: Elmer Rice," 12 Green Bag, An Entertaining Journal of the Law (George Mason Law School) 2D 277, 280–281 ("Admitted to practice in 1915, one of the first-ever women members of the New York bar, Frances [Shuman Ecker] became one of Manhattan’s best-known Real Estate lawyers. She claimed to have 'bought and sold every property in the Yorkville neighborhood of New York.'"); "Mayor Mitchell and Secretary of War Garrison Take Honorary Degrees at N.Y. University," The Sun (New York, NY), June 11, 1914, p. 16 (Frances Schuman awarded graduation honorable mention in Evening Division at N.Y.U. Law School).
  8. "Shirley Boskey – The First Female Department Director of the World Bank," The World Bank. Retrieved July 29, 2016.
  9. Department of International Studies, Vassar College.
  10. Alumni Notes, "Profile – Bennet Boskey ’39: Not Shy, Not Retiring," Harvard Law Bulletin, Fall 2000.
  11. Barnes, Bart, "Bennett Boskey, Washington lawyer, dies at 99," Washington Post, June 1, 2016; Boskey, Bennett, "Mr. Chief Justice Stone," 59 Harv. L. Rev. 1200 (1946).
  12. Boskey, Bennett, "Bob Jackson Remembered," 68 Albany L. Rev. 5–7. Robert H. Jackson Center, Jan. 9, 2005.
  13. Wiecek, William M. (2006). The History of the Supreme Court of the United States, at 316 and fn 35. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
  14. Davies, Ross E. (June 13, 2016), "Some Clerical Contributions to Ex Parte Quirin." SSRN; and Boskey, Bennett, "A Justice's Papers: Chief Justice's Stone's Biographer and the Saboteur's Case," 14 Sup. Ct. H. Soc. Q. 10 (1993).
  15. U.S., Register of Civil, Military, and Naval Service, 1863–1959, vol. 1, 1946 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Gov’t Printing Ofc.), at 39 (Department of State, Office of Economic Security Policy (John K. Galbraith, Director), Division of Economic Security Controls, Special Advisor, Bennett Boskey). Retrieved from Ancestry.com July 30, 2016.
  16. U.S., Register of Civil, Military, and Naval Service, 1863–1959, vol. 1, 1950, at 531; "AEC Appoints New Yorker," NY Times, July 10, 1949 ("The Atomic Energy Commission announced today the appointment of Bennett Boskey of New York as a deputy to Joseph Volpe Jr., AEC general counsel. 'Mr. Boskey [is] 33 years old."); and Boskey, Bennett, "Inventions and the Atom," 50 Colum. L. Rev. 433 (1950); At the AEC, Boskey worked with Frederick Aley Allen, who had clerked for Judge Hand and then Justice Reed, as had Boskey.
  17. Zielinski, Graeme, "Obituary for Joseph Volpe, Jr.," Washington Post, February 1, 2002.
  18. WaPo Feb. 1, 2002. ("During the 1954 proceedings on the matter, Oppenheimer asked Mr. Volpe to represent him, but Mr. Volpe demurred, citing his previous work for the AEC. Neither knew that their conversations, in Mr. Volpe's private offices, had been bugged by the government, according to historical accounts.")
  19. In the Matter of Alabama Power Company, Docket No. 50-348A, 50-364A, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n (June 24, 1977) (Boskey representing Alabama Electric Cooperative); and Allied-General Nuclear Services v. United States, 839 F. 2d 1572 (Fed. Cir. 1988)(Boskey on brief for Allied-General).
  20. Coppedge v. United States, 369 US 438 (1962), Bennett Boskey for the Petitioner, Mark Coppedge.
  21. Coppedge v. United States Oyez. Chicago-Kent College of Law at Illinois Tech, n.d. Jan 8, 2017.
  22. Morningside Renewal Council, Inc. v. U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, 482 F.2d 234 (2d Cir. 1973), cert. denied, 417 U.S. 951 (1974); and United States and Trustees of Columbia Univ. v. City of New York, 463 F. Supp. 604 (S.D.N.Y. 1978) (Boskey representing Columbia Univ.); and "History of the Nuclear Reactor at Columbia University" Department of Applied Physics and Applied Mathematics, Columbia University (2007)("1974: The Supreme Court denied the petition that June and Columbia's position was upheld. The University only needed to reapply to the AEC in order to receive the operating license. At that time, Columbia was in the process of re-evaluating the Nuclear Science and Engineering program and the need for the nuclear reactor. With changes in upper management and financial considerations, the project was put on indefinite hold."). Retrieved September 4, 2016.
  23. "Creation of ALI," ALI Website Archived 2016-08-30 at the Wayback Machine (2016)("ALI's incorporators included Chief Justice and former President William Howard Taft, future Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, and former Secretary of State Elihu Root. Judges Benjamin N. Cardozo and Learned Hand were among its early leaders.").
  24. Boskey, Bennett (May 17–19, 2010). Speech, American Law Institute 87th Annual Meeting, Washington, D.C. 28 mins., at 11:00–13:00 mins.
  25. "In Memoriam: Bennet Boskey," American Law Institute (May 2016).
  26. O'Brien, David M., "Filling Justice William O. Douglas's Seat: President Gerald R. Ford's Appointment to Justice John Paul Stevens," 1989 SCOTUS Historical Society Yearbook 20, at 30.
  27. "Bennett Boskey Fellowship in Extra-European History since 1500" (PDF). Exeter College Oxford. Retrieved 14 July 2020.
  28. New York State Bar, date of admission: 1940; and Washington, D.C. Bar Archived 2016-07-02 at the Wayback Machine , date of admission: July 1, 1949.

Sources

Selected writings