John G. Stabler | |
---|---|
Chief Justice of South Carolina | |
In office March 15, 1935 –January 3, 1940 | |
Preceded by | Eugene Satterwhite Blease |
Succeeded by | Milledge Lipscomb Bonham |
Associate Justice of South Carolina | |
In office January 1926 –March 15,1935 | |
Preceded by | Thomas B. Fraser |
Succeeded by | Edward Ladson Fishburne |
Personal details | |
Born | October 3,1871 |
Died | January 3,1940 68) [1] | (aged
Alma mater | Wofford College (1905) University of South Carolina (J.D.,1908) |
John G. Stabler (1871-1940) was an associate justice and later chief justice on the South Carolina Supreme Court. He graduated from Wofford in 1905 and then taught Latin in Bamberg County,South Carolina. He graduated in 1908 from the law school at the University of South Carolina and practiced law in St. Matthews,South Carolina. From 1920 to 1926,he served in the South Carolina Senate until being elected to the South Carolina Supreme Court in 1926,taking his position in January 1926. On March 15,1935,he was elevated to chief justice [2] and served until his death in 1940. [3]
Mark D. Martin is an American jurist who served as the chief justice of the Supreme Court of North Carolina from 2014 through 2019. He was appointed by North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory to become Chief Justice on September 1,2014 upon the retirement of Sarah Parker. Martin was already running for the seat in the 2014 general election.
Wofford College is a private liberal arts college in Spartanburg,South Carolina. It was founded in 1854. The 175-acre (71 ha) campus is a national arboretum and one of the few four-year institutions in the southeastern United States founded before the American Civil War that still operates on its original campus.
The Supreme Court of the State of North Carolina is the state of North Carolina's highest appellate court. Until the creation of the North Carolina Court of Appeals in the 1960s,it was the state's only appellate court. The Supreme Court consists of six associate justices and one chief justice,although the number of justices has varied. The primary function of the Supreme Court is to decide questions of law that have arisen in the lower courts and before state administrative agencies.
Olin DeWitt Talmadge Johnston was an American politician from the US state of South Carolina. He served as the 98th governor of South Carolina,from 1935 to 1939 and again from 1943 to 1945. He represented the state in the United States Senate from 1945 until his death from pneumonia in Columbia,South Carolina in 1965.
Jean Hoefer Toal is a former chief justice of the Supreme Court of South Carolina. She was the first woman and the first Roman Catholic to serve as chief justice. In 2013,she became the first chief justice on the Supreme Court of South Carolina since the 1800s to run opposed in their reelection. Toal has continued to serve in the judiciary as a senior judge since her retirement from the Supreme Court.
Samuel Jones Nicholls was a United States representative from South Carolina. He was born in Spartanburg,South Carolina. He attended Bingham Military Institute in Asheville,North Carolina;Wofford College,in Spartanburg,South Carolina;Virginia Polytechnic Institute in Blacksburg,Virginia;and the University of Chicago Law School. He was admitted to the bar in 1906 and commenced practice in Spartanburg.
Edward Ladson Fishburne was a South Carolina state supreme court justice and grandson of Lieutenant Governor Merrick E. Carn. He graduated from The Citadel in 1904 and taught school for two years afterwards. He later entered the legal profession of his father,William Josiah Fishburne,a distinguished South Carolina lawyer. After his father's death,he took a partner named Major Madison P. Howell,a longtime friend. He also served as Walterboro mayor,like his grandfather,and as a state militia officer. He was appointed to the office of associate justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court on April 17,1935,which he held for some 19 years until 1954.
Costa Pleicones is an American jurist who served as the chief justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court. He has served on the court since being elected in February 2000 to replace Justice Toal. He was sworn in on March 29,2000. Before being elected to the court,his judicial experience included serving on the courts for the city of Columbia and as a Circuit Court Judge. On May 27,2015,Justice Pleicones was elected to replace Chief Justice Jean Toal. His term began January 1,2016,and his investiture as Chief Justice of South Carolina took place on January 7,2016.
Julius Ness was the Resident Circuit Judge for the Second Judicial Circuit of South Carolina. He was born in Manning,South Carolina,the eldest of five children of Morris and Rae Levy Ness,on February 27,1916. His family moved to Denmark,South Carolina,when he was a young boy,and his mother and father lived there until their deaths. He had two brothers,Harold and Arthur,and two sisters,Sylvia and Rita. His friends and family knew him as "Bubba",a name given him by one of his younger sisters because she could not pronounce Julius.
Daniel Edward Hydrick Sr. was an associate justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court. He was born in Orangeburg,South Carolina on August 6,1860,and attended Wofford College before transferring to Vanderbilt University in 1880. He began practicing law in Spartanburg,South Carolina and was twice elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives and then twice to the South Carolina Senate. He resigned during his second term in the South Carolina Senate to become a state trial court judge. His term began on December 15,1905. He was a trial judge until 1909 when he was elected to a seat on the South Carolina Supreme Court. He was elected by the General Assembly to take the position left vacant when Ira B. Jones was elevated to the chief justice position,and he was commissioned on April 15,1909. He was reelected to a full term in 1918. He died on January 15,1921,in Washington,D.C.;he had been travelling from Baltimore,Maryland to Spartanburg,South Carolina to visit his son for Christmas and contracted pneumonia during the trip. He is buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Spartanburg,South Carolina.
Milledge Lipscomb Bonham was a chief justice on the South Carolina Supreme Court. On October 16,1854,he was born to Milledge Luke Bonham and Ann Patience Griffin. From 1863 to 1864,Bonham was educated at Sachlaben's Academy,Edgefield Academy between 1866 and 1872,and Carolina Military Institute (Charlotte) from 1875 to 1876. He was admitted to the South Carolina bar in 1877 following his tutoring of the law under Colonel Robert Aldrich. He married Daisy Aldrich on October 24,1878,with whom he had three children. After Daisy died,Bonham remarried to Dr. Lillian L. Carter on March 2,1925.
Joseph Rodney Moss was an associate justice and chief justice on the South Carolina Supreme Court.
Cameron Bruce Littlejohn was a chief justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court. He served as an associate justice on the same court from 1967 to 1984.
James Woodrow Lewis (1912-1999) was a chief justice on the South Carolina Supreme Court.
Eugene Satterwhite Blease (1877-1963) was the chief justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court from 1931 to 1934.
George Tillman Gregory Jr. (1921-2003) was an associate justice and chief justice on the South Carolina Supreme Court. He began practicing law in 1944,served in the 1950s in the South Carolina Statehouse,and became a state trial court judge in 1956. He was sworn in as the chief justice on February 26,1988. Although his term was to expire in 1994,Gregory gave notice of his retirement in 1991. Gregory died on January 23,2003,and is buried at the Evergreen Cemetery in Chester,South Carolina.
Thomas Patrick Bussey (1905-1981) was an associate justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court.
David Garrison Hill is a justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court. He previously served as a judge of the South Carolina Court of Appeals from 2017 to 2023.