Harriet O'Neill makes history -- or herstory -- on the bench
As sometimes happens, Texas Supreme
Court Justice Wallace Jefferson was traveling yesterday and could not be at
oral arguments. So, by tradition, the most senior justice on the court took his
spot in presiding over the first case on the docket. Since Justice Nathan
Hecht, the high court’s longest- serving justice, recused himself from hearing TGS-
NOPEC Geophysical Co. v. Susan Combs, et al., the job of presiding over the
court fell to the next most senior justice, Harriet O’Neill. O’Neill says she
didn’t realize it at the time, but it was a historic moment. A woman has not
presided over the Texas Supreme Court since 1925, when Gov. Pat Neff appointed
an all-woman court (click
here for a photo) to hearW. T. Johnson, et al. v. J. M. Darr, et
al., a case involving a fraternal organization called The Woodmen of the
World. At that time, all members of the then three-member high court were
members of that organization. “Isn’t that amazing? I didn’t even think about
it,” says O’Neill, who has served on the court since 1999. O’Neill checked with
Hecht about that historical fact, and he confirmed it. The only other woman who
would have had enough seniority to preside over the court in the case of a
missing chief and missing senior justice would have been Priscilla Owen, who is
now a judge on the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. And Hecht, who was senior
to Owen while on the court, says the job never fell to Owen. O’Neill said she
had no trouble remembering the formalities of performing the presiding judge
duties she’s seen it enough in her 11 years on the court. “I think I
could do that in my sleep,’’ she says.
-- John Council