SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

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The domed roof of the Court

The 'Supreme Court of Pennsylvania' is the court of last resort for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. It meets in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Contents
History
Composition and rules
Supreme Court Justices
1600s and 1700s
1800s and 1900s
Since 2000
See also
External links

History


The original Pennsylvania constitutions, drafted by William Penn, established a Provincial Court under the control of his British governors. The General Assembly, however, espoused the principle of separation of powers and formally called for a third branch of government starting with the 1701 Judiciary Bill. In 1722, the appointed British governor needed the House to raise revenues. House leaders agreed to raise taxes in return for an independent Supreme Court.
Predating the United States Supreme Court by 67 years, Pennsylvania's highest court was established by the General Assembly on May 22, 1722. Interpreting the Pennsylvania Constitution, it was the first independent Supreme Court in the United States with the power to declare laws made by an elected legislative body unconstitutional.

Composition and rules


The Pennsylvania Supreme court consists of seven justices each elected to ten year terms. Supreme court judicial candidates may run on party tickets. The justice with the longest continuous service on the supreme court automatically becomes Chief Justice. Justices, like other Pennsylvania judges, are subject to mandatory retirement when they turn 70 years old.
Prior to 2002, judicial candidates in Pennsylvania were prohibited from expressing their views on disputed legal or political issues. But after a similar law in Minnesota was struck down as unconstitutional (''Republican Party of Minnesota v. White''), the Pennsylvania rules were amended and judicial candidates may now express political viewpoints as long as they do not “commit or appear to commit the candidate with respect to cases, controversies or issues that are likely to come before the court.” (PA Code of Judicial Conduct, Canon 7 (B)(1)(c)).
After the ten year term expires, a statewide YES/NO vote for retention is conducted. If the judge is retained, he/she serves another ten year term. If the judge is not retained, the governor, subject to the approval of the State Senate, appoints a temporary replacement until a special election can be held. As of 2005, only one judge has failed to win retention. Justice Russell M. Nigro received a majority of "NO" votes in the election of 2005 and was replaced by Justice Cynthia Baldwin, who was appointed by Governor Rendell in 2005.
Only one Supreme Court Justice, Rolf Larsen, has been removed from office by impeachment. In 1994, the State House of Representatives handed down articles of impeachment consisting of seven counts of misconduct. A majority of the State Senate voted against Larsen in five of the seven counts but only one charge garnered the two-thirds majority needed to convict.
Under the 1874 Constitution until the Pennsylvania state constitution of 1968, Supreme Court justices were elected to 21 year terms. At the time, it was the longest term of any elected office in the United States.

Supreme Court Justices


''Includes justices of the Provincial Court.''
1600s and 1700s


★ Capt. William Crispin, appointed Chief Justice by William Penn in 1684 but died at sea on the way to Philadelphia.

★ Dr. Nicholas Moore, Chief Justice 1684

William Welsh, 1684

Robert Turner, 1684

John Eckley, 1684

William Clarke, 1684, Chief Justice 1703

James Clapoole, 1685

Arthur Cooke, 1685, Chief Justice 1686

John Simcock, 1686, Chief Justice 1690

James Harrison, 1686

John Cann, 1686

Joseph Growden, 1690, Chief Justice 1707

Peter Alricks, 1690

Thomas Wynne, 1690

Griffith Jones (mayor), 1690

Edward Blake (justice), 1690

Andrew Robeson, 1692

William Salway, 1693

Anthony Morris, 1694

Cornelius Empston, circa 1698

Edward Shippen, circa 1699

William Biles, circa 1699

John Guest (jurist), Chief Justice 1701

Robert French, 1701

Caleb Pusey, 1701

Thomas Masters, 1701

Samuel Finney, 1702

John Guest (jurist), 1704, Chief Justice 1705

Jasper Yates, 1704

William Trent, 1704

Roger Mempesson, Chief Justice 1706

Richard Hill, 1711

Jonathan Dickinson, 1711

George Roche, 1715

Robert Assheton, 1716

David Lloyd, Chief Justice 1717

Jeremiah Langhorne, 1726, Chief Justice 1739

Dr. Thomas Graeme, 1731

James Logan, Chief Justice 1731

Thomas Griffitts, 1739

John Kinsey, 1743

William Till, 1743

William Allen, Chief Justice 1750

Lawrence Growden, 1750

Caleb Cowpland, 1750

William Coleman (justice), 1758

Alexander Steadman, 1764

John Lawrence, 1767

Thomas Willing, 1767

Benjamin Chew, Chief Justice 1774

John Morton, 1774

William Augustus Atlee, 1777

Thomas McKean, appointed Chief Justice 1777, elected 1784 and 1791

John Evans, 1777

George Bryan, 1780

Jacob Rush, 1784

George Bryan, 1787

Edward Shippen (III), 1791, Chief Justice 1799

Jasper Yates, 1791

William Bradford Jr., 1791

Thomas Smith, 1794
1800s and 1900s


Hugh Henry Brackenridge, 1800

William Tilghman, Chief Justice 1806

John Bannister Gibson, 1816, Chief Justice 1838

Thomas Duncan, 1817

Morton Cropper Rogers, appointed 1826, elected 1842

Charles Huston, 1826

John Tod, 1827

Frederick Smith, 1828

John Ross, 1830

John Kennedy, 1830

Thomas Sergeant, 1834

Thomas Burnside, 1845

Richard Coulter, appointed 1846, elected 1847

Thomas S. Bell, appointed 1846, elected 1847

Jeremiah S. Black, Chief Justice 1851

George Chambers, 1851

Ellis Lewis, 1851, Chief Justice 1855

Walter H. Lowrie, 1851, Chief Justice 1857

George W. Woodward, 1852, Chief Justice 1863

John C. Knox, 1853

James Armstrong, 1857

James Thompson, 1857, Chief Justice 1867

William Strong, 1857

William A. Porter, 1858

Gaylord Church, 1858

John M. Read, 1858, Chief Justice 1872

Daniel Agnew, 1863, Chief Justice 1873

George Sharswood, 1867, Chief Justice 1879

Henry W. Williams, 1868

Ulysses Mercur, 1872, Chief Justice 1883

Isaac G. Gordon, 1873, Chief Justice 1887

Edward M. Paxson, 1875, Chief Justice 1889

Warren I. Woodward, 1875

James P. Sterrett, 1877, Chief Justice 1893

John Trunkey, 1877

James P. Sterrett, 1878

Henry Green, 1879, Chief Justice 1900

Silas M. Clark, 1882

Henry W. Williams, 1887

Alfred Hand, 1888

J. Brewster McCollum, 1888, Chief Justice 1900

James T. Mitchell, 1888, Chief Justice 1903

Christopher Heydrick, 1891

John Dean, 1892

Samuel Gustine Thompson, 1893

D. Newlin Fell, 1894, Chief Justice 1910

J. Hay Brown, 1899, Chief Justice 1915

S. Leslie Mestrezat, 1900

William P. Potter, 1899

Samuel Gustine Thompson, 1903

John P. Elkin, 1905

John Stewart, 1905

Robert von Moschzisker, 1910, Chief Justice 1921

Robert S. Frazer, 1915, Chief Justice 1930

Emory A. Walling, 1916

Alexander Simpson Jr., 1918

Edward J. Fox, 1918

John W. Kephart, 1919, Chief Justice 1936

Sylvester B. Sadler, 1921

William I. Schaffer, 1920, Chief Justice 1940

George W. Maxey, 1930, Chief Justice 1943

James B. Drew, 1931, Chief Justice 1950

William B. Linn, 1932

Horace Stern, 1936, Chief Justice 1952

H. Edgar Barnes, appointed 1935, elected 1936

Marion D. Patterson, 1940

William M. Parker, 1941

Allen M. Stearne, 1942

Howard W. Hughes, 1943

Charles Alvin Jones, 1945, Chief Justice 1956

John C. Bell, 1950, Chief Justice 1961

Grover C. Ladner, 1950

Thomas McKeen Chidsey, 1950

Michael A. Musmanno, 1952

John C. Arnold, 1953

Benjamin R. Jones, 1957, Chief Justice 1972

Herbert B. Cohen, 1957

Thomas D. McBride, 1958

Curtis Bok, 1959

Michael J. Eagen, 1960, Chief Justice 1977

Anne X. Alpern, appointed 1961

Henry X. O'Brien, 1962, Chief Justice 1980

Earl S. Keim, appointed 1962

Samuel J. Roberts, 1963

Thomas W. Pomeroy Jr., 1968

Alexander F. Barbieri, 1971

Robert N. C. Nix, Jr., 1972, Chief Justice 1986

Louis L. Manderino, 1972

Israel Packel, appointed 1977

Rolf Larsen, 1978 (impeached and removed from office, 1994)

John P. Flaherty Jr., 1979, Chief Justice 1996

Bruce W. Kauffman, 1980

Roy Wilkinson Jr., 1981

William D. Hutchinson, 1982

James T. McDermott, 1982

Samuel J. Roberts, Chief Justice 1983

Stephen A. Zappala, 1983

Nicholas P. Papadakos, 1984

Juanita Kidd Stout, 1988

Ralph J. Cappy, 1990, Chief Justice 1998 (x)

Frank J. Montemuro Jr., 1992

Ronald D. Castille, 1994 (x)

Russell M. Nigro, 1996 (defeated for retention, 2005)

Sandra Schultz Newman, 1996

Thomas G. Saylor, 1998 (x)
Since 2000


J. Michael Eakin, 2001 (x)

William Lamb, appointed 2003

Max Baer (justice), 2004 (x)

Cynthia Baldwin, appointed 2005 (x)

James J. Fitzgerald, III, appointed 2007 (x)
(x) denotes current member of the court

See also



Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania

Superior Court of Pennsylvania

External links



Pennsylvania Unified Court System page on the Supreme Court

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