Moyer in 2008Preceded by
Frank Celebrezze
Chief
Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court
1987-2010 Succeeded by
Eric Brown
Thomas Joseph Moyer (April 18,
1939 - April two, 2010) was an American jurist along with the chief justice of
the Ohio Supreme Court from 1987 to 2010. A
member in the Republican Party,
Tiffany Key Chain, he
died abruptly on April 2, 2010, at age 70.
[1]
Contents:
one. Pre-Supreme Court
2. As judge
three. References
four. External links
1. Pre-Supreme Court
Until his death, Moyer was the longest-serving
state chief justice in the U.s.. Born in Sandusky, Ohio, he attended Sandusky Higher College and went on to
receive the two his undergraduate and legislation degree through the Ohio State University. He
served as chairman of the board of directors with the O.S.U. Alumni
Association, at the same time as being the board of directors of Franklin University.[citation
needed]
From 1979 to 1987,
Tiffany Co, Moyer served on the Tenth
District Court of Appeals for Ohio,
Tiffany Juwelier, which addresses Franklin County. Just before his
appointment, he served since the president in the Columbus Board of Schooling.
Throughout his tenure there,
Tiffany Key Ring, the board found itself while in the middle of
desegregation fights, chronicled while in the book Finding All around
Brown. He also served for four a long time being an executive assistant
to Governor James A. Rhodes (R-Ohio) and 8 many years in private
practice in Sandusky.[citation
needed]
Moyer was married and lived in Columbus. He was re-elected in 1992,
Tiffany Key, 1998,
and 2004.
2. As judge
Moyer presided more than the DeRolph decision dealing with
college funding,
Tiffany Key Necklace, also as the late 1990s' legal battle over
tort reform.[citation
needed]
Although a Republican, Moyer's strong belief in
the principles of stare
decisis. In 2001, he created a task force on guardians ad
litem in Ohio. In 2004, when the court moved into new quarters,
some controversy ensued more than the cost involved. On May 15, 2004,
the building was dedicated by U.S. Chief Justice William Rehnquist. The court now posts
its oral arguments online through RealPlayer.[citation
needed]
Under Moyer's leadership,
Tiffany Uk, the court:
Started the Off-Site Court program after taking office in 1987.
The Court visits two local counties per year, and educates large
college students about the judiciary. The Court has visited 50
counties, offering a chance to view proceedings to 28,000 Ohioans -
22,000 of whom are large school students. Revamped, in 1989, the statistical case reporting system for
judges within the Rules of Superintendence (Sup.R. 37 Appendix A) to
increase the accuracy and efficiency of reporting. Created a
separate statistical case reporting section at the Court. Amended, in 1996, the Rules for the Government with the Bar to
create a process requiring lawyer referral services to register
with the Court so the Court can facilitate public access to lawyers
by placing this information on its Web site (see [1]). Revamped, in 2002,
Unos alumnos hablan de la pobreza en la Cámara de, the rules governing the Rules for the Reporting of Opinions in Ohio to
standardize the publication of opinions from your Supreme Court and
the courts of appeals to increase public access and availability
written opinions. Began, in March 2004, broadcasting live all Supreme Court Oral Arguments on cable TV and on
the Internet. The cable signal reaches more than 5 million homes
across Ohio. Ohio's courts are among only a small number of
courts in the United states that broadcast all arguments live. All
cases are also archived within the Internet. Put the Attorney Registration Database online
in 2004 so citizens can access information about any Ohio attorney,
including business address and phone number, date of birth, date of
admission to apply, disciplinary history and CLE status. Put the entire docket online in 2005, allowing
anyone at anytime to check the status of a case,
Tiffany Engagement, learn about new
filings, and locate counsel information. Began, in 2006, the closed-captioning of all oral arguments to
facilitate access by deaf and hard-of-hearing citizens and to
enable public access to unofficial transcripts of all proceedings
in a searchable database. Ohio is one of only two state courts in
the country with this service.[citation
needed] In October 2009 declined to hear the ramifications of a lawsuit
written by Ohio Special Counsel against a sole family provider of
care of the appellant's mother. This arose in Ohio probate and
concerned a cabin more than which Ohio Probate lacks jurisdiction. three. References
Notice of demise of Thomas J. Moyer four. Exterior links Chief Justice Moyer's official
biography