Paul Peek | |
Office: | Associate Justice of the California Supreme Court |
Term Start: | December 2, 1962 |
Term End: | December 16, 1966 |
Predecessor: | Thomas P. White |
Successor: | Raymond L. Sullivan |
Office2: | Presiding Justice of the California Third District Court of Appeal |
Term Start2: | October 1961 |
Term End2: | December 2, 1962 |
Predecessor2: | Benjamin F. Van Dyke |
Successor2: | Fred R. Pierce |
Office3: | Associate Justice of the California Third District Court of Appeal |
Term Start3: | January 4, 1943 |
Term End3: | October 1961 |
Predecessor3: | Raglan Tuttle |
Successor3: | Fred R. Pierce |
Order4: | 21st |
Office4: | California Secretary of State |
Term Start4: | March 1, 1940 |
Term End4: | January 4, 1943 |
Governor4: | Culbert Olson |
Predecessor4: | Frank C. Jordan |
Successor4: | Frank M. Jordan |
Order5: | 47th |
Office5: | Speaker of the California State Assembly |
Term Start5: | January 2, 1939 |
Term End5: | June 20, 1939 |
Predecessor5: | William Moseley Jones |
Successor5: | Gordon Hickman Garland |
State Assembly6: | California |
District6: | 71st |
Term Start6: | January 4, 1937 |
Term End6: | March 1, 1940 |
Predecessor6: | Harry B. Riley |
Successor6: | Frederick N. Howser |
Birth Name: | William Paul Peek |
Birth Date: | June 5, 1904 |
Birth Place: | West Union, Iowa |
Death Place: | Sacramento, California |
Party: | Democratic |
Children: | 2 |
Residence: | Long Beach and Sacramento, California |
Occupation: | Attorney |
William Paul Peek[1] (June 5, 1904 - April 7, 1987) was an American attorney, Democratic politician and jurist. Peek practiced law in southern California prior to his election in 1936 to the California Assembly, where he served as Speaker during the 1939 session. He was appointed Secretary of State in 1940 and then to the Court of Appeal, in December 1942, where he served for 20 years. In 1962, Governor Pat Brown appointed Peek to the California Supreme Court. Justice Peek retired from the bench in 1966, but continued to work as a consulting attorney and teacher. He died in Sacramento.[2] [3]
Born in West Union, Iowa, the son of William M. Peek, he moved to California at age 6. He attended Oregon State University and the University of Oregon before obtaining his legal education at Southwestern University School of Law in Los Angeles. He married Elizabeth Nash in 1930.[1]
Peek was admitted to the State Bar of California in 1930. He practiced law in Long Beach and Los Angeles and was a member of the Long Beach Junior Chamber of Commerce (president, 1935) and the State Junior Chamber of Commerce (vice-president, 1936).[4]
In 1936, Peek was elected to the California State Assembly from the 71st district, in Los Angeles County, where he served until 1940.[5] He worked with Senator Culbert Olson to oppose legislation sponsored by the administration of Republican Governor Frank Merriam to treat oil on state lands in Long Beach and Huntington Beach in a manner favored by the oil industry. "It looks very much like we're turning the oil pool over to private interests lock, stock and barrel," Peek said.[6]
At the start of his second term in the State Assembly, the Democratic-majority State Assembly elected Peek as Speaker (replacing William Moseley Jones who hadn't sought reelection in 1938). Peek's candidacy was strongly supported by his friend and patron, Governor Culbert L. Olson. As Speaker, Peek promoted a variety of liberal policies to lessen the impact of the Depression on Californians. His close alliance with the Governor alienated a number of moderate and conservative Democrats, who allied themselves with Republicans to elect Gordon Hickman Garland as Speaker in 1940.
Peek was appointed Secretary of State by Democratic Governor Culbert L. Olson in 1940, after the death of the long-time Republican incumbent, Frank C. Jordan. He did not win the general election in 1942, when Republican Frank M. Jordan won back the office that his father had held.[7] [8]
After Jordan won the 1942 election, Governor Olson appointed Peek to the California Court of Appeal's Third Appellate District in Sacramento.[9] He served as associate justice from January 1943 to October 1961 and as Presiding Justice from October 1961 to December 1962.
Peek was the author of the 1951 appellate decision overturning California's loyalty oath. According to the Daily Bruin, the Court ruled that The Regents' action to require faculty members to sign an affirmation of non-membership in any subversive organization was a violation of the State Constitution and "That the pledge is the highest loyalty that can be demonstrated by any citizen, and that the exacting of any other test of loyalty would be antithetical to our fundamental concept of freedom.... [any other decision would] approve that which from the beginning of our government has been denounced as the most effective means by which one special brand of political or economic philosophy can entrench and perpetuate itself to the eventual exclusion of all others . . ."Any "more inclusive" test of loyalty would be the "forerunner of tyranny and oppression," the document added.[10]
Peek was appointed Associate Justice of the California Supreme Court by Governor Pat Brown in 1962. He retired from the bench in 1966. After retiring from the Supreme Court, Peek practiced law in Sacramento, with the firm of Wilke & Fleury.[11]