Arthur T. Vanderbilt | |
Office: | Chief Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court |
Term Start: | 1948 |
Term End: | June 16, 1957 |
Predecessor: | Clarence E. Case |
Successor: | Joseph Weintraub |
Office1: | Dean of New York University School of Law |
Term Start1: | 1943 |
Term End1: | 1948 |
Predecessor1: | Frank Sommer |
Successor1: | Russell D. Niles |
Office2: | President of the American Bar Association |
Term Start2: | 1937 |
Term End2: | 1938 |
Predecessor2: | Frederick Harold Stinchfield |
Successor2: | Frank J. Hogan |
Birth Date: | July 7, 1888 |
Birth Place: | Newark, New Jersey, U.S.[1] |
Death Place: | Summit, New Jersey, U.S. |
Education: | Wesleyan University (BA) Columbia Law School (LLB) |
Arthur T. Vanderbilt (July 7, 1888 – June 16, 1957) was an American judge and judicial reformer.[2] He served as Chief Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court from 1948 to 1957, the first Chief Justice under the revamped New Jersey court system established by the Constitution of 1947, in which the Supreme Court replaced the Court of Errors and Appeals as the highest court. He also was an attorney, legal educator and proponent of court modernization.[3]
Vanderbilt was born on July 7, 1888, in Newark, New Jersey, to Louis and Ellen H. (Leach) Vanderbilt. He had one sibling, a younger brother named Leslie.[4] He attended Newark (now Barringer) High School where he was class president, editor of the newspaper, and a member of two fraternal groups, The Ramblers (later Omega Gamma Delta) and Lambda Tau. Following high school he took off a year to work on the railroad to earn money for college.
He attended Wesleyan University, where he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon, president of the student body, and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. A sidelight of his Wesleyan career was the inauguration of President William A. Shanklin. Vanderbilt was one of the inauguration speakers, along with U. S. President William Howard Taft, and then startled Taft by showing up later as a waiter at the inaugural dinner. Vanderbilt then attended Columbia University School of Law, graduating in 1913 with a LL.B.
Many of Vanderbilt's ideas for court reform had been incorporated into the new judicial article of the New Jersey Constitution. One of those innovations was the designation of the Chief Justice as the administrative head of all courts in the state, replacing the previous system of almost completely autonomous courts. As Chief Justice, he created the first state Administrative Office of the Courts in the nation.[5]
An appreciation of the changes brought to the New Jersey judicial system can be gained from a comparison between the structure of the courts before the new constitution and after. There were over 20 different courts in the system (e.g.-superior court, supreme court, court of errors and appeals, chancery, oyer & terminer, orphan's court, county court, general sessions, quarter sessions, etc.) which were replaced by the New Jersey Supreme Court, the Superior Court (Law, Chancery and Appellate Divisions), County Court, County District Court and the Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court. The County Courts were merged into the Superior Court, Law Division, as were the County District Courts, now known as the Special Civil Part of the Superior Court, and the Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court, now the Family Part of the Chancery Division. These were joined by the Tax Court. In addition, there are Municipal Courts which handled minor criminal and ordinance violations.
In the new practice, if an action is filed in the wrong court there is a procedure to transfer the matter to the proper court. Previously, filing the action in the wrong court was a fatal defect if the matter was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. Professor John Lynch, who taught Constitutional Law and New Jersey Practice at the Seton Hall School of Law in the 1970s and 1980s, told the apocryphal story of a politically sensitive case in the 1930s or 1940s, in which the plaintiffs feared that the court would find it had no jurisdiction in order to avoid the political consequences of ruling in the plaintiff's favor. To avoid this, the plaintiff filed the action separately in all 20+ courts, only to have each court rule that it lacked jurisdiction to hear the matter. Professor Lynch claimed to be constantly in search of the actual case; it is not known if he was ultimately successful.
Vanderbilt was President of the American Bar Association in 1937–38. He also served for many years as Dean of New York University Law School, currently housed in a building that bears his name. Vanderbilt was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1936, 1940 and 1944. On two separate occasions he declined to be considered for nominations to the U.S. Supreme Court.[6] Vanderbilt was the principal mentor to William J. Brennan Jr. when Brennan was a member of the New Jersey Supreme Court and played an instrumental role in Dwight D. Eisenhower's nomination of Brennan to the United States Supreme Court.[7]
Vanderbilt authored many articles and a number of books, including:[8] [9]
For his work in law reform, he was awarded 32 honorary degrees and the American Bar Association Medal.[10] [11]
A resident of Millburn, New Jersey,[12] Vanderbilt had a heart attack while parking his car at the Lackawanna Railroad station in Short Hills, New Jersey, on June 14, 1957. He lingered for two days, and died at 1:20 A.M. at Overlook Hospital in Summit, New Jersey.[5] His funeral was held at Christ Protestant Episcopal Church in Short Hills,[13] and he was buried at Restland Memorial Park in East Hanover, New Jersey.[14]
Vanderbilt married Florence J. Althen in 1914. They had five children: William, Robert, Jean, Virginia, and Lois.
His grandson, Arthur T. Vanderbilt, II, is an attorney, author, avid gardener, partner in a New Jersey law firm, and former deputy attorney general of New Jersey.[15] One of his books is Fortune's Children: The Fall of the House of Vanderbilt (1989)[16] [17]