Tanya Gee Explained

Tanya Gee
Office:At–Large Judge of the South Carolina Circuit Court
Term Start:January 2015
Term End:September 28, 2016
Appointer:South Carolina General Assembly
Birth Date:15 July 1977
Birth Place:Grand Rapids, Michigan, U.S.
Death Place:Columbia, South Carolina, U.S.
Death Cause:chondrosarcoma
Education:Winthrop University (BA)
University of South Carolina (JD)

Tanya Amber Gee (July 15, 1977 – September 28, 2016) was a judge of the South Carolina Circuit Court.

Early life, education

Gee was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan.[1] Her mother was originally from Germany, and her parents met while her father was serving in the army overseas.[2] Gee was educated in public schools in Michigan until her family moved to Rock Hill, South Carolina, when she was sixteen.  She graduated from Northwestern High School in 1995.

Gee earned her Bachelor of Arts, magna cum laude, from Winthrop University. In 2002, she graduated from the University of South Carolina School of Law, where she served as president of both the Pro Bono Board and the Public Interest Law Society.  Upon graduation, she was awarded the Bronze Compleat Lawyer award, the most prestigious award chosen by the law school faculty and administration, as well as the Claude Sapp Award, chosen by her classmates “as possessing the best combination of scholarship, leadership and industry.”

Legal career

Gee began her legal career as law clerk to Kaye Gorenflo Hearn, who was then chief judge of the South Carolina Court of Appeals.  Gee was eventually appointed chief staff attorney for the Court, and in 2010, she was elected clerk of court.  In 2012, she left the court to practice law at Nexsen Pruet, where she worked for several years in business litigation and on appellate work.[3]  Among her clients were state senators Paul Thurmond and Clementa Pinckney, who faced ballot challenges in 2012.  In 2015, the South Carolina legislature elected Gee, at the age of 37, to a seat on the South Carolina Circuit Court.

Awards

Gee was selected one of The State newspaper's 2010 “20 Under 40” class of young professionals. She was a member of the Liberty Fellowship Class of 2012. She also was awarded the Silver Compleat Lawyer Award (awarded to three selected young alumni) and making her one of only two attorneys to have been awarded both the Bronze and Silver Compleat Lawyer Awards.[4]  She also served as a board member for Sarcoma Warriors.  After her death, a judicial portrait was presented to a joint session of the South Carolina Supreme Court and the South Carolina Court of Appeals.  The portrait currently hangs in the state's Court of Appeals. Gee was also posthumously awarded the Judge Matthew J. Perry Civility Award from the Richland County Bar.[5]

Death and legacy

Late in her life, Gee was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer called chondrosarcoma.  She was first treated in 2013 while practicing law at Nexsen Pruet.  After appearing to recover, Gee was elected to the bench.  However, the cancer returned in 2016, and she died on September 28, 2016.

State Supreme Court Chief Justice Costa Pleicones appointed Gee to sit on some S.C. Court of Appeals cases because she was familiar with that court’s practices and she had “an incredible work ethic.” “She was one of the best and brightest,” Pleicones said, adding that had she lived, her career would have gone upward, perhaps “ultimately to the Supreme Court.” Chief Judge James Lockemy wrote in the Court's case opinion that she was the only individual to ever serve as a law clerk, chief staff attorney, and clerk of court, “culminating at the time of her death as a member of the South Carolina Court of Appeals.”[6]  He noted that “Judge Gee was filled with pride and happiness, as were her colleagues.”

The University of South Carolina School of Law maintains a "Tanya A. Gee Warriors for Justice Fund," which facilitates scholarships.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: September 29, 2019 . Tanya Gee . The Rock Hill Herald.
  2. Web site: Monk . John . September 28, 2016 . Beloved SC circuit Judge Tanya Gee dies after long battle with cancer . The State Newspaper- Columbia, SC.
  3. Web site: Liberty Fellowship. April 2, 2012. Liberty Fellowship.
  4. Web site: USC School of Law. USC School of Law.
  5. Web site: Richland County Bar.
  6. Web site: Forfeited Land Commission v. Beard. June 20, 2018. S.C. Court of Appeals.
  7. Web site: Nexsen Pruet Law Firm. September 28, 2016. Nexsen Pruet.