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2003 Cal. Sup. Ct. Hist. Soc'y Newsl. 1 (2003)

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IACSU


                     S.4THE CALIFORNIA SUPREME COURT



                              IiHistorical                                 ociet

                                               NEWSLETTER - SPRING/SUMMER 2003


A  Trailblazer: Reflections on the Character and
         Career ofJnstice Mildred  Lillie
         BY  HON.  EARL  JOHNSON,   JR.


Legal giant. Legend. Institution. Trailbla:zer.
    These are the words the media - and the sources
they quoted - have used to describe Presiding Justice
Mildred Lillie and her record-setting fifty-five year
career as a judge and forty-four years as a Justice on the
California Court of Appeal. Those superlatives are all
absolutely accurate and richly deserved.
   I write from a different perspective, however - as a
colleague of Justice Lillie for the entire eighteen years
she was Presiding Justice of Division Seven. I hope to
provide some sense of what it was like to work with a
recognized giant, a legend, an institution, a trailblazer.
    Readers will be disappointed if they are expecting
what they typically see in the media. You know the
refrain - this revered public figure had a great public
persona, and treated those who could help her career
with great charm and respect, but was abusive or worse
toward those who worked with or under her on a daily
basis. Nothing could be further from the truth when it
came  to Justice Lillie. She was not only revered, but
loved, by everyone in Division Seven.
    This included the Division's staff, not just her fel-
low justices. I asked our writ attorney, Pablo Drobny,
who  worked with her daily for those eighteen years,
how  they related. He gave an answer others, research
attorneys and legal assistants alike, would echo. From
the first day I entered Justice Lillie's chambers, I real-
ized I was meeting with a legend. And we carried on
our discussions that way. But it wasn't long before
there was a twinkle in her eye, and frequently a joke to
be shared. And from then on I felt I was a friend and
not just a writ attorney. Over the years that friendship
just grew stronger and stronger.
    Justice Lillie was devoted to her personal staff -
and they to her. Evidence of this can be found in their
lengthy tenures with her. They may have had previous
jobs with others on and off the court. Yet once they


                        found  Justice Lillie they
                        tended to stay until retire-
                        ment.  One  of her former
                        judicial attorneys, Ann
                        Oustad, was with her over
                        two decades before retiring.
                        Linda Berler had been with
                        her over sixteen years and
                        Pamela  McCallum   for ten
                        when  Justice Lillie passed
                        away. Connie  Sullivan was
                        her judicial assistant for
some eighteen years before retiring and Olga Hayek
served in that role for over a decade before retiring,
too. For the many lawyers who saw  her only in the
courtroom, Justice Lillie could be an imposing, even
intimidating figure. But within the Division she was
neither intimidating nor autocratic. Instead Justice
Lillie led by example. She didn't care how other jus-
tices and their staffs did their work or when they did
that work. She cared only that they worked - and pro-
duced opinions that were on time and of high quality.
Hers were always that way. So she set the standard and
you felt compelled to do the same.
    Those who saw her only in the courtroom, or when
she delivered one of her many authoritative public
speeches, may also be surprised to learn that within
Division Seven Justice Lillie always had an open mind
toward contrary views. If you drafted a dissent - even
in a case where she had written the original majority
opinion - you knew she would read and carefully pon-
der every word you wrote. Not frequently but more
often than any outsider would ever guess, Justice Lillie
would change her mind and either sign on to the dis-
sent or modify her own opinion to incorporate that
view. Understand, I was on the other side sometimes
when  she rethought a case, although I also experienced
some shifts in my favor. But whichever way she ulti-
mately decided a close case, I knew it was based on a
principled view of the law and I had only the greatest
respect for her position.
    Justice Lillie had a special commitment to colle-


N 'SL ETE P1  SPRING./OUMMIII 2003


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