Honorific-Prefix: | The Honorable |
Bruce F. Beilfuss | |
Order: | 22nd |
Chief Justice of the | |
Term Start: | May 24, 1976 |
Term End: | July 31, 1983 |
Predecessor: | Horace W. Wilkie |
Successor: | Nathan Heffernan |
Office1: | Justice of the |
Term Start1: | January 1, 1964 |
Term End1: | July 31, 1983 |
Predecessor1: | Timothy Brown |
Successor1: | William A. Bablitch |
Office2: | Wisconsin Circuit Court Judge |
Term Start2: | April 15, 1948 |
Term End2: | January 1, 1964 |
Appointer2: | Oscar Rennebohm |
Predecessor2: | Emery Crosby |
Successor2: | Lowell D. Schoengarth |
Office3: | District Attorney of Clark County, Wisconsin |
Term Start3: | January 2, 1941 |
Term End3: | April 15, 1948 |
Predecessor3: | Hugh F. Gwin |
Successor3: | Clarence Gorsegner |
Birth Date: | 8 January 1915 |
Birth Place: | Withee, Wisconsin, U.S. |
Death Place: | Middleton, Wisconsin, U.S. |
Death Cause: | Cancer |
Restingplace: | Middleton Junction Cemetery, |
Party: | Progressive |
Profession: | Lawyer |
Allegiance: | United States |
Branch: | United States Navy |
Rank: | Lieutenant J.G. |
Serviceyears: | 1943 - 1946 |
Battles: | World War II |
Bruce Frederich Beilfuss (January 8, 1915August 18, 1986) was an American lawyer and jurist from Clark County, Wisconsin. He was the 22nd chief justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, from 1976 to 1983, and served a total of 20 years on the high court. He previously served 16 years as a Wisconsin circuit court judge, and 7 years as district attorney.
Bruce Beilfuss was born in Withee, Wisconsin, in January 1915. He spent his childhood in that area until moving to the nearby city of Neillsville, Wisconsin, with his parents and siblings in 1927; he graduated from Neillsville High School in 1932. He immediately went on to the University of Wisconsin, where he earned his bachelor's degree in economics in 1936, and his LL.B. in 1938.[1] He was admitted to the bar in July 1938, and began practicing law at Abbotsford, Wisconsin, as a member of the law firm of the former district attorney, Hugh G. Haight.[2] [3] He was helped along in his legal career by his uncle, Oscar W. Schoengarth, who was county judge of Clark County for 50 years.
As a young man, Beilfuss was involved in local highway safety efforts after the death of his brother, Wayne, in a 1935 car accident. He was elected chairman of the Clark County Safety Council in January 1939.[4]
He entered politics in 1940, challenging incumbent village president Charles Hoffman for his seat on the county board. Beilfuss won the election 132 to 119.[5] Later that year, Beilfuss entered the race for district attorney, challenging the incumbent, Hugh F. Gwin, in the Wisconsin Progressive Party primary election. He narrowly defeated Gwin, taking 54% of the primary vote,[6] and went on to win the general election in November.[7] After winning the election, Beilfuss largely relocated to Neillsville, the county seat, but still kept up his Abbotsford office, saying that his partner, the former district attorney Hugh Haight, would attend to the district attorney's business in Neillsville on the days when Beilfuss was out of town.[8]
One of his early accomplishments as district attorney was rounding up a gang that had committed several robberies in the area. Beilfuss hired Milwaukee detective Otis Gomillion to come to Clark County to solve the string of crimes. Six members of the gang were eventually arrested, confessing to 11 robberies, with stolen property valued at about $4000 (about $86,000 adjusted for inflation to 2024).[9] The next year, Beilfuss brought charges of forgery and embezzlement against the Clark County coronoer, P. C. Ludovic, who pleaded guilty in April 1942.[10]
After the outbreak of World War II, Beilfuss enrolled in the United States Navy Reserve, and he was called up for active duty in August 1943.[11] He was allowed to take a leave of absence from the district attorney's office without having to resign. The court appointed Richard Gaffney to serve as acting district attorney during his absence.[12] He was initially sent to Naval Station Great Lakes for induction and was commissioned an ensign; he was then ordered to Norfolk, Virginia, in January 1944, for further training.[13] He was later sent to Fort Pierce, Florida, where he served on the Florida Atlantic coast. Later that year he was transferred to California, where he was assigned to a flotilla for anti-submarine warfare. Despite his absence, he was re-elected without opposition as district attorney in 1944.[14]
Beilfuss was subsequently deployed to the Philippine-Japan region and served through nearly all of 1945 as a PT boat captain, screening for Pacific Fleet aircraft carriers.[1] He finally returned to the United States in January 1946, and was discharged shortly thereafter.[15] He officially resumed his duties as district attorney on February 1, 1946.[16] He was re-elected for a fourth term as district attorney that fall, facing no opposition.[17]
In 1947, Wisconsin circuit court judge Emery Crosby died in office. Beilfuss declared his candidacy for the office, which was up for election in Spring 1948. He defeated Alfred L. Devos in the April election, winning 57% of the vote.[18] A week after the election, Governor Oscar Rennebohm appointed Beilfuss to begin his term in office early, as the seat was already vacant.[19] He was re-elected in 1953 and 1959.
While a circuit judge, Beilfuss presided over a number of murder cases which gained statewide attention, including the case of Jane Dakin, a 17 year old girl who murdered both her parents with a rifle. After she was found not guilty by reason of insanity, Beilfuss ordered her committed to a state mental institution.[20] Beilfuss also served in many other courtrooms around the state as a replacement judge on such cases, when another judge was indisposed or recused.[21]
His most famous case, however, was likely the Jantz murder trial. The three defendants had murdered traffic officer James G. Jantz in a shootout after Jantz and another officer had been surveilling them. The three men had been identified as suspicious persons and were later found to have engaged in a series of robberies. As the murder occurred in Sauk County, Beilfuss was the circuit judge with jurisdiction over the case, but Beilfuss granted a change of venue to Dane County because of the inflamed passions in the community.[22] [23] After a seven-week trial, all three men were found guilty. Beilfuss sentenced them all to life imprisonment.[24]
A few months after the Jantz case, Beilfuss announced his candidacy for Wisconsin Supreme Court, seeking the seat being vacated by the expected retirement of chief justice Timothy Brown.[25] Four other candidates ultimately entered the race, but Beilfuss was the only one to field a serious campaign.[26] Beilfuss easily prevailed in the March 1963 primary, receiving 53% of the vote.[27] He prevailed with 64% of the general election vote over Douglas County attorney Harry E. Larsen.[28]
Beilfuss faced a contested re-election race in 1973, but easily defeated Robert J. Beaudry with 67% of the vote.[29] Beaudry had used the election as a platform to advocate for probate reform, no-fault auto insurance, and greater state supervision of the courts.[30]
Beilfuss became chief justice by seniority in May 1976, after the sudden death of chief justice Horace W. Wilkie.[31] He served seven years of chief justice, announcing in 1982 that he would not run for a third term in 1983.[32] [1] [33]
As chief justice, Beilfuss campaigned across the state for passage of the major constitutional amendments of 1977 which overhauled the state court system and established the Wisconsin Court of Appeals.
Bruce Beilfuss was one of three children born to Walter William Beilfuss and his wife Claudia ( Dodte). All of Beilfuss' grandparents were German immigrants. Bruce had a twin sister, Bonnie. Their elder brother, Wayne, died in a car accident while home from college in 1935.[34] Bonnie Bielfuss also volunteered for service in World War II and served as a medical dietician in the Army and achieved the rank of first lieutenant.[35]
Beilfuss' mother's sister was married to Oscar W. Schoengarth, who was county judge of Clark County, Wisconsin, for 50 years. Beilfuss' cousin, Lowell Schoengarth, was a close friend who also became a lawyer and succeeded Beilfuss as district attorney.[36]
Bruce Beilfuss married Helen Beatrice Hendrickson, of Black River Falls, on May 29, 1941.[37] They met while Beilfuss was studying at the University of Wisconsin and Hendrickson was studying nursing at the Wisconsin General Hospital. During the war, she had served as a nurse at the various stations where Beilfuss was assigned. They had one child together, Mark. She committed suicide, shooting herself in the head with a pistol on April 30, 1960. It was later reported that she had been under psychiatric care for more than a year.[38] [39]
Seventeen months after his first wife's death, on October 17, 1961, Beilfuss married De Ette Helen Knowlton, of Ellsworth. De Ette was a music teacher in St. Paul, Minnesota, at the time.[40]
Beilfuss was active in the community outside the judiciary. He served as chair on the Board of Visitors of the University of Wisconsin Law School, was a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the American Legion and a founder of the Dane County Big Brothers program.
Beilfuss died of cancer on August 18, 1986, at his home in Middleton, Wisconsin. He was survived by his wife, two children, and three grandchildren.[41]
| colspan="6" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| General Election, April 6, 1948
| colspan="6" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| Nonpartisan Primary, March 5, 1963| colspan="6" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| General Election, April 2, 1963| colspan="6" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| General Election, April 3, 1973