REDEDICATION OF THE LIBRARY AND COURTS BUILDING AS THE STANLEY MOSK LIBRARY AND COURTS BUILDING
The Supreme Court of California, on Wednesday,
November 6, 2002, convened in special session
for the rededication of the Library and Courts
Building as the Stanley Mosk Library and Courts
Building.
Present: Chief Justice Ronald M. George, presiding,
and Associate Justices Kennard, Baxter, Werdegar,
Chin, Brown, and Moreno.
Officers present: Frederick K. Ohlrich, Clerk;
and Brian Clearwater, Calendar Coordinator.
Court reconvened in special session for the
rededication of the Library and Courts Building
as the Stanley Mosk Library and Courts Building.
CHIEF JUSTICE GEORGE:
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. We gather
today in honor of our esteemed and departed
colleague, Justice Stanley Mosk.
For the first time, the California Supreme Court
this week convened in what is now the Stanley
Mosk Library and Courts Building.
I am pleased that those present today include
the Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal
for the Third Appellate District, Arthur G.
Scotland, and several of his colleagues, who
hold regular sessions in this magnificent courtroom.
I am also informed that we have present–at
least he was to be here–our former colleague,
Justice William Clark. We have members of Justice
Mosk’s staff; Robert Wandruff, the former
Clerk and Court Administrator of the Supreme
Court; and numerous appellate and trial judges
from various areas in the state.
We have among our constitutional officers here
Attorney General Bill Lockyer; Insurance Commissioner
Harry Low, former justice of the Court of Appeal.
We have legislators, including John Burton,
the Present Pro Tem of the Senate, who will
be speaking at this proceeding this afternoon,
as will be Assemblymember Helen Corbett. Also,
Assemblymember Sally Havice, Bill Leonard, Anthony
Pescetti, and Darrell Steinberg.
Our resident historian, the State Librarian
Kevin Starr; James Herman, the president of
the State Bar; and, I believe, a couple of former
legislators: Phil Isenberg; Quentin Kopp, now
a judge of the San Mateo County Superior Court;
and members of legislative staff, some of whom
were very helpful in helping the Legislature
put this together.
I apologize for anyone I have omitted.
Just a few moments ago, we unveiled a magnificent
memorial to Justice Mosk -- a great likeness,
cast in bronze. And what an appropriate continuing
reminder of Stanley Mosk it will be: It is larger
than life, it is enduring, and it is forward-looking.
Stanley Mosk was a part of public life in California
for much of the last century. He has especially
been on our minds in the past two years. In
December of 1999, he became the longest serving
justice ever to sit on the California Supreme
Court, and we convened a special session of
the court in San Francisco in his honor. He
served an amazing almost 37 years on the court.
After his death in June of 2001, he was eulogized
throughout the state as a great jurist and a
great human being. Just a few months ago, the
Los Angeles County Superior Court courthouse
was renamed for Justice Mosk. Even his title
lives on, since his son, Richard, joined the
Court of Appeal and became the second Justice
Mosk on the Second Appellate District.
Like so many others, Stanley Mosk came from
elsewhere to California; in his case, from Illinois,
armed with a legal education from the University
of Chicago. He brought with him a keen intellect,
a personable manner, and a sense of a brighter
tomorrow.
Although he came to California from elsewhere,
like so many others he became a Californian.
He believed that things could be better in California,
and that he could help make them better. And
so it was that in his earliest decisions as
a superior court judge, Stanley Mosk ruled for
racial equality before the rest of the nation
began moving forward.
As Attorney General, Stanley Mosk moved beyond
the traditional law enforcement concerns of
the Department of Justice and established new
sections focusing on constitutional rights and
consumer protection.
As a justice of the California Supreme Court,
Stanley Mosk helped pioneer the doctrine of
independent state constitutional grounds to
provide greater protection of individual liberties
in California.
On a personal level, Justice Mosk was an inspiring
leader and a mentor to many. I feel fortunate
to include myself in that group. I began my
career in the Mosk Department of Justice, as
did John Burton, our Senate President Pro Tem,
who is the moving force behind this memorial
today. John and I are among the many who were
inspired into a lifetime of public service and
commitment to the greater good because of an
association with Stanley Mosk.
By his example, he inspired many of us to believe
that California was different, that things here
could be just a bit better and even somewhat
nobler, and that we had the opportunity and,
indeed, the obligation to help further along
the California dream.
Today we celebrate Stanley Mosk’s contributions
to the State of California. John Burton and
his colleagues in the Legislature have honored
Justice Mosk by placing his name on one of the
grandest and most glorious buildings in California’s
capital.
In so many ways the Library and Courts Building
fits Stanley Mosk, and I find this to be an
especially appropriate place for his memory
to live on. First of all, this building is a
fitting memorial to Stanley Mosk because it
houses a library. Stanley was a great and voracious
reader. Quite frequently he would circulate
to his colleagues articles from an astonishingly
wide range of sources. He seemed to take special
delight in passing along readings in which a
learned author supported his position, especially
if his colleagues had not had the wisdom to
agree with him.
Stanley was also a powerful and prolific writer.
In his record-setting service on the Supreme
Court, he authored almost 1,700 opinions spanning
88 volumes of the California Official Reports.
For most of his tenure he was the most productive
member of the court, writing more opinions than
any of his colleagues. He tackled some of the
most difficult and contentious issues of his
time. And he did so with a clarity of thought
and a directness of expression that guided lawyers
and judges throughout the state and, in many
cases, throughout the nation.
Second, this building is a fitting memorial
to Stanley Mosk because it is a home of the
courts. Stanley loved being a judge. For 53
years of his life he wore the black robe of
the judiciary: 16 years as a judge of the Los
Angeles Superior Court, and almost 37 years
as a justice of the Supreme Court. He was especially
proud when he established his place in history
as the longest serving member of the California
Supreme Court.
But we all recognize that Stanley Mosk’s
legacy as a jurist is even more notable for
its exceptional quality than for its quantity.
Stanley wanted to go on being a judge and resisted
retirement with all of his considerable energy
and effort. As some of you know, he had finally
and quite reluctantly come to the conclusion
that it was time for him to retire. In fact,
he had planned to mail his letter of retirement
to the Governor on the day he died. I feel certain
Stanley died just a little happier knowing that
the letter never made it to the mailbox.
Third, this building is a fitting memorial to
Stanley Mosk because of its colorful history.
Stanley loved the “old California”
feeling of the Library and Courts Building,
which had its origins in the early 1900’s
when California was not far removed from the
gold rush and the days of the wild west.
The state had grown rapidly, and the Capitol
Building was filled to overflowing. Many state
offices had been established in San Francisco,
including those of the Supreme Court. There
was some doubt about just how firmly rooted
in Sacramento the state capital was. Civic leaders
thought they could cement Sacramento’s
status as the capital city by consolidating
the state’s presence here. So the city
cleared and donated to the state the land on
which to build this building and its companion
state office building.
The first four floors of this building were
to become the home of the State Library, then
located in the Capitol. The top floor would
boast a magnificent octagonal courtroom with
a domed ceiling, surrounded by wood-paneled
chambers for the justices of the Supreme Court
and the Court of Appeal.
But as the building neared completion, a problem
developed. One of my predecessors, Chief Justice
William H. Waste, declared that the Supreme
Court would refuse to occupy the attic of this
building. So the courtroom was replicated in
all of its architectural glory, save the domed
ceiling, in this space on the first floor.
Still, San Francisco’s leaders were not
to be out-maneuvered. They arranged to donate
land for the construction of a new state office
building in San Francisco’s Civic Center,
just across from City Hall. It, too, would contain
a magnificent courtroom and chambers for the
Supreme Court. As it happens, that building
was completed in 1923 and has been the principal
chambers for the California Supreme Court ever
since.
The structure in which we are gathered today
was completed five years later, in 1928. It
has provided a splendid and historically significant
home for the State Library, and a presence in
the state capital for the Supreme Court. For
two calendar sessions each year, we travel to
Sacramento to hear arguments in this wood-paneled
courtroom that Justice Mosk found so beautiful.
Finally, this building is a fitting memorial
to Stanley Mosk because it sits in the shadow
of the State Capitol. Stanley was fascinated
by government and politics, and he was possessed
of considerable political acumen. He had served
as an important advisor to Governor Olson, and
sought and achieved high political office himself
when he was elected to serve as California’s
Attorney General.
And though his direct involvement in the political
world ended when he joined the court, his interest
did not. Nor did his keen political insights
diminish. I offer you as one example Stanley’s
actions in the mid 1980’s, when the California
Supreme Court found itself caught in a political
firestorm.
Stanley Mosk was among the justices up for retention
that year. As his colleagues were forming campaign
committees and raising money and preparing television
commercials, Stanley announced that he would
do no such thing. Instead, he declared that
his expenditures would be limited to the 22-cent
stamp then required to mail his election papers
to Sacramento and that would be only if he chose
to seek another term on the court, which he
had not yet decided to do.
That brilliant noncampaign threw any potential
foes off balance and kept him out of the campaign
cross fire. And Stanley was delighted when friends
around the state began sending him 22-cent stamps,
encouraging him to continue on the court.
There is a postscript to this story, by the
way. Like the good politician he was, he wanted
to keep his options open as long as possible.
Stanley waited until the last possible moment
to reveal whether he would seek retention for
another term. He waited so long that when he
finally decided to run, he feared his paperwork
might not make it to Sacramento on time. So
the populist plan for a 22-cent campaign went
by the wayside. Stanley’s papers were
delivered by overnight mail at a cost of $10.25.
Now all those who come to this historic home
of the library and courts, standing in the shadow
of the State Capitol, will be reminded of the
great contributions made by our highly esteemed
and much-loved colleague, Justice Stanley Mosk.
This place fits Stanley Mosk, as surely as the
inscription underneath its great pediment, which
reads, as if written as his epitaph: “Into
the highlands of the mind, let me go.”
Several speakers will comment today on the dedication
of the Stanley Mosk Library and Courts Building.
It is first my pleasure to introduce Senate
President Pro Tem John Burton.
Senator Burton.
SENATOR BURTON: Thank
you, Mr. Chief Justice.
My memories of Stanley are not going to be of
his great legal mind, although when I did work
in the Attorney General’s Office, the
old-timers there that had worked through many
Attorney General’s going back to Ulysses
Webb said that Stanley had the finest mind of
any Attorney General they ever served under.
Of course, they never had the opportunity of
serving under Bill Lockyer.
I would also like to acknowledge the widow of
a very dear friend of Stanley’s, Geri
Gonzalez, widow of Joe Gonzalez, a former colleague
of mine. They were very close to the Mosk family.
I first met Stanley when he was running for
Attorney General. My brother Philip and another
member of the Assembly named John O’Connell
were the only people north of the Tehachapes
supporting Stanley for Attorney General. And
they were supporting him against our own state
senator and a neighbor of ours in San Francisco,
Bob McCarthy.
I could not understand how Philip could support
somebody from Los Angeles against one of our
friends from O’Neil’s Drugstore,
and he explained to me that there were things
more important than playing pinball machines
at O’Neil’s Drugstore and told me,
you have to meet Stanley Mosk, which I did.
I remember his billboards, which were kind of
orange on blue with Mosk written in almost a
kind of a cuneiform lettering that just stood
out no matter where you went.
When I got out of law school, my brother informed
me that I ought to go to work in the Attorney
General’s Office because it was a good
ballot designation. He was always thinking ahead.
So I went down for an interview with a gentleman
named Ted Westfall who was the head of the Civil
Division. And for me, I was very well dressed.
I had an alpaca sweater, a pair of clean khakis,
some saddle shoes, and a nice new T-shirt. I
went in for the interview, and I thought I kind
of did all right until my brother told me that
after it was over, Ted Westfall called Stanley
and said, “General, this young Burton
you sent in, he came in without a suit, without
a tie, and with a pair of saddle shoes.
And Stanley listened to him and he said, “Well,
Ted, I am very close to his family, and I hear
he is a bright young man.” He heard that
from Philip, of course, because he didn’t
know me. And he said, “Even if he came
in a bathing suit, we are going to hire him.”
Clearly, we’ve loved Stanley ever since.
I was there when he had Franklin Williams in
the constitutional rights department, first
department ever on that; Wally Holland was in
there, antitrust and consumer protection; Charlie
O’Brien, criminal; Ted Westfall, who was
like a “career assistant attorney general”
in charge of the civil division.
But it was a wonderful – it was a wonderful
place to work in those times. He was a wonderful,
wonderful boss. But most importantly, he was
a wonderful person and he and Edna at that time
were just very, very close to Philip and Sala,
and I got to tag along.
It was my honor, when I became elected President
Pro Tem of the Senate, I was sworn in by Stanley.
Richard Mosk and I kind of grew up together.
He as the son, I as his little brother. I just
think Richard Mosk’s appointment to the
Second District was a wonderful thing and it
was actually one of the quickest appointments
that the Governor ever made. The Governor is
a little slow in making appointments to the
judiciary, as you all may figure out at some
point in time. But it took him very little time
to recognize Richard Mosk’s ability and
appoint him to the Second District Court of
Appeal where he will follow in Stanley’s
footsteps.
I would like to say about Lisa Reinertson and
the sculpture, this is the second time I tried
to get her to do something. I tried to get her
a while back to do the sculpture of George Moscone
for the San Francisco City Hall. And there had
been a problem with the first bust, if you will.
The bust was created by Lisa’s mentor,
and she just felt in all good conscience that
it would be wrong for her to try to surpass
it. I understood it; haven’t forgiven
you.
She is so great at what she does. If you can
take a look at Stanley here, or if you ever
get down to our city hall and those of you that
are old enough to have ever seen the father
of our new-to-be Secretary of State--former
mayor and congressman, former State Senator
Jack Shelley. I mean, she is as good as it gets,
and I am very pleased that she took this appointment
to do this.
I am honored that I could speak a little bit
too long for Stanley. But he was part of our
family, very close, and I am sure he and Philip
and Saul are upstairs right now saying, “Why
the hell doesn’t the kid sit down?”
So I think I will.
CHIEF JUSTICE GEORGE:
Thank you very much, Senator Burton.
It is now my pleasure to introduce Assemblymember
Ellen Corbett, Chair of the Assembly Committee
on the Judiciary.
ASSEMBLYMEMBER CORBETT:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chief Justice for granting
me the honor to make a few comments about this
wonderful jurist.
As I noted at the dedication of the statue,
it is truly fitting to name this building that
embodies our constitutional tradition after
such a legendary prizefighter for justice.
Many of you personally knew this man’s
great courage and commitment to justice. The
judicial landscape Justice Mosk painted is clear
and unambiguous. Whether writing for the majority
or teasing the majority from the back bench,
Justice Mosk always did what he felt was fair
and just, even when it could lead to painful
criticism from those he most sought to protect.
As Dr. Martin Luther King once said, the ultimate
measure of a man is not where he stands in moments
of comfort and convenience, but where he stands
at times of challenge and controversy. No one
ever doubted that Justice Mosk was always up
to that challenge and would never shy away from
the controversy.
We have all heard, and many of you have personally
experienced, the long list of nationally recognized
judicial decisions authored by this legal pioneer.
But oftentimes it is the more quiet and less
renowned opinions by judges that speak volumes
about their character and their compass.
One such opinion by Justice Mosk involved family
law. In that case almost 25 years ago a quadriplegic
father had lost custody of his two children
simply because the trial court judge thought
a normal relationship would be impossible. Justice
Mosk, as he would so many times in his legal
career, bucked the typical sentiments of the
time and, in this case regarding those with
disabilities, he wrote in strong and forceful
language an opinion reversing the trial court
and holding that a physical disability is not
in itself justification for depriving children
of time with their parent.
What a great reminder of this man’s deep
humanity. And, of course, it is not just Justice
Mosk’s human side we celebrate here today,
he had a penetrating legal mind, as well. As
many legal scholars have commented, perhaps
Justice Mosk’s most important contribution
to the development of our law was his articulation
and steadfast offense of the doctrine of independent
state grounds. This legal principle establishes
that in protecting individual liberties, the
states have the power to write and interpret
their own constitutions more expansively than
the federal Constitution.
This legal doctrine, which was pursued so tenaciously
by Justice Mosk and which was upheld and supported
by an unanimous United States Supreme Court,
is central to so much of the key civil rights,
consumer protection, and environmental reform
efforts made by the Legislature in the past
decades, and it stands as a hallmark to Justice
Mosk’s legal legacy.
With your leadership, Mr. Chief Justice, this
great building has thus found a perfect name
to reflect its great history. As Henry Miller
once said, “The real leader has no need
to lead. He is content to show the way.”
The Justice Stanley Mosk Library and Courts
Building will be a reminder to future generations
of a man who did just that and shall continue
to serve as an inspiration to all who enter
here that the heart and the soul of California’s
legal tradition is to protect those least able
to protect themselves. Thank you.
CHIEF JUSTICE GEORGE:
Thank you very much, Assemblymember Corbett.
It is now my pleasure to introduce Mrs. Kaygey
Kash Mosk, Justice Mosk’s wife.
MS. KAYGEY KASH MOSK:
Thank you, Chief Justice George, Associate Justices
of the Supreme Court, Justice Richard Mosk,
President of the Senate Pro Tem Burton, Dr.
Starr, Ms. Corbett, Ms. McEnvoy, and other very
distinguished and honored guests.
It is such a great privilege for me to be here
today as we rededicate the state Library and
Courts Building in memory of my late husband,
Justice Stanley Mosk, and unveil a statue in
his likeness.
I thank you, Chief Justice George, for your
counsel and assistance; I thank you, Senator
Burton, for authoring the state concurrent resolution
renaming the building; the Legislature for commissioning
the statue; and the artist, Lisa Reinertson,
for creating it.
Stanley was a modest man, and his thoughts about
how he would be remembered would never have
been so grand as to include the renaming of
this building and the unveiling of this remarkable
statue.
The building appropriately honors Stanley. And
I, as his wife, find it quite fitting for it
is more than just a stately edifice to be visited
and admired; it was one of the places where
Stanley labored during his distinguished 37
years on the Supreme Court authoring almost
1700 opinions. His labor did not weigh him down,
but in fact invigorated him. Fortunate man that
he was, Stanley loved the law and whatever he
accomplished.
In his lowkey manner, he provided legal scholarship
and leadership, for Stanley’s passion
was to do justice, to do everything in his power
to ensure that every man and every woman, whether
rich or poor, famous or unknown, was treated
fairly and was accorded equal dignity in the
eyes of the law.
Stanley’s passion for justice often compelled
him to take very strong positions on controversial
issues. Regardless of the outcome, Stanley’s
respect for colleagues who may have had differing
opinions never diminished. Stanley extended
great courtesy to all of them; and they, in
turn, extended great courtesy to him.
This statue appropriately honors Stanley. As
all of you may know, although Stanley was quite
a dashing fellow, he was not quite seven feet
tall! This statue is larger than Stanley was,
and I found that to be so fitting. For Stanley
himself was larger than life. His energy was
boundless, his mind far-reaching, and his heart
all-encompassing. He lived a life of honoring
humanity, protecting those in need, and fighting
for what he believed was right. And only a larger-than-life
statue could match such an achievement.
Stanley passed away on June 19, 2001. He is
missed by so very many. But I miss him every
day, for we were constant companions sharing
our innermost thoughts and feelings. In fact,
we were each other’s best friend.
Today, however, is a time to rejoice as we rededicate
this building, unveil this statue, which together
with all the opinions he authored will ensure
that Stanley’s name will, indeed, be remembered.
Stanley would be so very proud, and I am very
proud to bear his name and his memory. On Stanley’s
behalf, I thank each of you, especially the
administrative staff who have worked so diligently,
for this very great honor and tribute you do
him today. I thank you all.
CHIEF JUSTICE GEORGE:
Thank you very much, Mrs. Mosk.
It is now my pleasure to introduce Ms. Jean
McEvoy, president of the Women Lawyers of Sacramento,
who will speak on behalf of the Sacramento Bar.
MS. JEAN McENVOY:
Good afternoon, Chief Justice, Associate Justices.
It is a rare privilege for me to participate
in this rededication as the representative of
women lawyers and as a member of this legal
community.
Justice Mosk’s outspoken and sound opinions
for many years have shaped excellent legal principles
for California. His solid legal reasoning in
constitutional law will remain for years to
come and continue to keep precedent in place
to protect civil liberties. His opinions will
continue to teach lawyers in this state how
to properly represent their clients.
On a personal note, one of Justice Mosk’s
most memorable opinions for me was actually
stated in a dissent in the Times Mirror v. Superior
Court case. In that dissent, in which he also
endorsed Justice Kennard’s dissenting
opinion, he made what I believe is a very timely
statement, particularly this very day, and I
quote: “The lessons of history tell us
over and over that secrecy in government, except
as provided by law, causes lack of public confidence
and other ills. Secrecy is inconsistent with
the duty of public officials to keep the public
informed of their activities, including the
identity of those persons who have access to
them.”
Justice Mosk was never secret about his interpretation
of the law and what the law should do to protect
persons. Those of us in the Sacramento legal
community mourn his passing. We are very pleased
that he is honored by the naming of this building
and that his statue will grace our community.
Thank you.
CHIEF JUSTICE GEORGE:
Thank you, Ms. McEvoy. It is now my pleasure
to introduce our final speaker, the son of Justice
Stanley Mosk, the Honorable Richard Mosk, Justice
of the Second District Court of Appeal, Division
5.
JUSTICE RICHARD MOSK:
Chief Justice George, Associate Justices, members
of the judiciary, Senator Burton, Assemblywoman
Corbett, Attorney General Lockyer, public officials,
guests, and certainly my colleagues from the
Court of Appeal, including Justice Paul Turner
who came all the way from Los Angeles, which
I appreciate very much.
The Mosk family is proud and grateful for this
honor, and we thank Senator Burton and the Legislature.
Here today are my wife Sandy and my daughter
Julie and my father’s wife, of course,
Kaygey; two great grandchildren whom Stanley
Mosk knew, Noah and Jenna, and third, Samantha,
just born to my son Matthew. He has been covering
the Maryland gubernatorial race for The Washington
Post.
Noah, Jenna and Samantha, just born to my son
Matthew and his wife Karen, will someday point
with pride to this building. And I am sure my
mother, Edna Mosk, would have been proud.
Also here are friends of my father over many
decades.
Stanley Mosk might have been embarrassed. He
subscribed to the words of Dame Margot Fonteyn,
who said: “The one important thing I have
learned over the years is the difference between
taking one’s work seriously and taking
one’s self seriously. The first is imperative,
and the second is disastrous.”
John, I don’t want to seem ungrateful,
but I read in The New York Times that in the
small state of West Virginia over 30 public
structures are named after Senator Robert Byrd.
So if there are any other buildings around–
SENATOR BURTON: You
should chair Appropriations.
JUSTICE RICHARD MOSK:
Thomas Carlisle once said that a single picture
of a man is worth more than all the books written
of him. I hope this fine sculpture by Lisa Reinertson
will justify that opinion.
Of course, as we all noted, the statue is larger
than he was. His height reminds me of Woody
Allen, his favorite philosopher, who said, “The
government is unresponsive to the needs of the
little people. Under 5’7”, it is
impossible to get your congressman on the telephone.”
He treasured the friendship he had with such
people from all sides of the political spectrum.
He was particularly fond of the Burtons. Not
just because they were Democrats and supporters,
although that helped, but he loved their gusto,
their commitment, their loyalty, their sense
of humor and their principles.
He admired each justice of the Supreme Court
with whom he sat. He spoke of the great intellect
of the current court members. He said that each
Chief Justice brought a special quality to the
position, but Chief Justice George was the finest
administrator he had ever observed.
He treasured the friendship with each of the
justices, people like Justice William Clark.
He admired the way Judge Clark treated people
with respect, from the janitor in the state
building to the President of the United States.
Looking at his record of being undefeated in
local and statewide elections, many have considered
him a canny politician, yet he wrote in a letter
just published in Stanley Sheinbaum’s
and Frank Pierson’s recent book, A Nation
Lost and Found: “I became interested in
politics, Democratic politics in particular.
I supported the candidate for the state Assembly
for my district, he lost. I supported a candidate
for the state Senate, he lost. I supported a
candidate for Congress, he lost. I supported
a candidate for district attorney, he lost.
My record, if not effective, is at least consistent.”
Stanley Mosk lived through a tumultuous time:
Aggression, wars, McCarthyism, assassinations,
unsuccessful judicial retention elections, and
terrorism.
I am reminded of Harry Lime’s remark in
the movie The Third Man: “With 30 years
of noisy, violent, churning under the Borgia
of Italy produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da
Vinci and the Renaissance, while 500 years of
peace, quiet, and harmony in Switzerland produced
the cuckoo clock.” It took these times
to produce Stanley Mosk.
He loved being a judge. He presided over many
high-profile cases: The Bel Air socialite murder
case that went to the United States Supreme
Court; the Charlie Chaplin paternity case; the
Marilyn Monroe-Joe DiMaggio divorce; rendering
unconstitutional racial restrictive covenants.
He also married many movie stars in our home.
I always had to clean up the rice.
He wanted to be a superior court judge badly
in the final days of the Olson administration.
He wrote the final desperate letter to Governor
Olson dated December 3rd, 1942: “Yesterday
a capitol newspaper man said to me, ‘Stanley,
the staff has taken a half-dozen trips east
in the past four years and you always seem to
be the one left behind to keep the office operating.
I will bet $10 when the plums are passed out,
that you will be left behind again.’
“If I am the first executive secretary
in California history not to be appointed to
the Bench, I shall be looked upon with suspicion
for many, many years by lawyers, the Bench,
by members of our own and opposing political
party.
“I do not contend that I am qualified
to sit on the Bench solely because I have been
your executive secretary. I have the necessary
temperament and other qualifications, including
education, sufficient years of trial practice,
experience at holding hearings and writing legal
and other publications.
“If you need convincing on any of these
points, merely ask any of the judges on the
Bench, from municipal court to Chief Justice
Phil Gibson.” This showed a vulnerability
not often displayed, at least not to me.
Those who read the sports page applaud the highly
paid NFL player Pat Tilmann for recently enlisting
in the Army. But my father, exempt from the
draft as a judge and with vision of 20-800,
did likewise in World War II. The Director of
Selective Service allowed him to memorize the
eye chart.
At memorials it is often said that he or she
or their work will never be forgotten. Well,
we know that’s not true. I took a photo
of my father and President Kennedy to be copied
at a photo shop. I asked the clerk if she could
identify the person on the left, Kennedy. She
said, “No, but he sure is cute.”
Young lawyers cannot identify Earl Warren’s
picture in my office. Few could identify the
great state court judges of the past: Shaw,
Coolie, Vanderbilt, Fall, Traynor, Tobriner
or even Holmes and Cardozo. These are members
of a pantheon of great state court judges into
which some have placed Stanley Mosk.
Perhaps for a generation, as my father’s
great cases still remain in the case books,
some will be inspired not only by his work,
but will draw inspiration from his life. Stanley
Mosk proved that young people can make a mark
in law and public affairs. One can succeed in
law and politics coming from modest means and
from graduating from a local, non-Ivy League
law school. As the first Jew to be elected to
statewide office, he proved it could be done,
even with an odd last name, so that others ran
and have been elected; one can be liberal and
still, through the sheer force of reason and
pleasing personality, retain the respect and
friendship of those more conservative; one can
be highly productive in the elder years. And,
yes, older people can be trusted to recognize
when or whether to retire.
Scholars suggest that the Greeks and Romans
built their cities and civilization on the worship
of their ancestors. While those ancient religious
beliefs disappeared, the tradition remains.
The monument shall be a call to public service,
a call all of you here today have followed,
and a call to our descendents that we hope will
not go unheeded.
Toward the end, my father believed what a 90-year-old
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., said in a radio
address to the nation in 1931, words on which
we all might reflect. He said “The riders
in a race do not stop short when they reach
the goal. There is a little finishing canter
before coming to a standstill. There is time
to hear the kind voice of a friend and to say
to one’s self, ‘The work is done.’
But just as one says that, the answer comes,
the race is over. But the work never is done
while the power of the work remains. The canter
that brings you to a standstill need not be
only coming to rest. It cannot be why you still
live, for to live is to function. That is all
there is in living.”
And so I end with a line from a Latin poet who
uttered the message more than 1500 years ago,
“Death plucks my ear and says, ‘Live.
I am coming.’”
On a lighter note, to quote from Woody Allen
again: “Summing up, it is clear that the
future holds great opportunities. It also holds
pitfalls. The trick will be to avoid the pitfalls,
seize the opportunities, and get back home by
six o’clock.”
CHIEF JUSTICE GEORGE:
Thank you, Justice Mosk.
On behalf of the court, I want to express our
appreciation to all those who made this dedication
of the Stanley Mosk Library and Courts Building
possible and to those who contributed their
remarks this afternoon, as well as to Lisa Reinertson,
the artist who created the magnificent memorial
to Justice Mosk that now stands outside this
building.
In recognition of the historic nature of this
occasion, and in accordance with our custom,
it is ordered that the proceedings of this special
session be spread in full upon the minutes of
the Supreme Court and published in the Official
Reports of the opinions of this court, and that
copies of these proceedings be sent to Justice
Mosk’s family.
And in conclusion, I want to thank Cheryl Redlich,
a court reporter of the Sacramento Superior
Court, for transcribing today’s proceedings.
I also wish to announce that there will be a
reception in Room 500 immediately following
the special session. The seven of us up here
on the Bench will be unable to join you. We
have to get back to work and hear our afternoon
calendar of cases.
Thank you and good afternoon.
(Derived from Supreme Court minutes and
28 Cal.4th.)
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