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Henry Friendly

Henry Jacob Friendly (July 3, 1903 – March 11, 1986) was an American jurist who served as a federal circuit judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit from 1959 until his death in 1986.[1] Friendly was one of the most prominent U.S. judges of the 20th century, and his opinions are some of the most-cited in federal jurisprudence.[2]

Henry Friendly
Senior Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
In office
April 15, 1974 – March 11, 1986
Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
In office
July 20, 1971 – July 3, 1973
Preceded byJ. Edward Lumbard
Succeeded byIrving Kaufman
Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
In office
September 10, 1959 – April 15, 1974
Appointed byDwight D. Eisenhower
Preceded byHarold Medina
Succeeded byEllsworth Van Graafeiland
Personal details
Born
Henry Jacob Friendly

(1903-07-03)July 3, 1903
Elmira, New York, U.S.
DiedMarch 11, 1986(1986-03-11) (aged 82)
New York City, U.S.
Cause of deathSuicide by drug overdose
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
Sophie Pfaelzer Stern
(m. 1930)
EducationHarvard University (AB, LLB)
AwardsPresidential Medal of Freedom (1977)

Early life edit

Friendly was born in Elmira, New York, on July 3, 1903, the only child of a middle class German-Jewish family.[3] He was descended from Southern German dairy farmers in Wittelshofen, Bavaria, that had adopted the surname of Freundlich. Josef Myer Freundlich (1803–1880), Friendly's great-grandfather, was a prosperous farmer whose estate burned down in 1831; after being denied help by his neighbors because he was Jewish, Josef grew affluent from livestock dealing. Heinrich Freundlich, Friendly's grandfather, immigrated to the United States in 1852 to avoid conscription and anglicised the surname to Friendly. Heinrich worked as a businessman in Cuba, New York, beginning as a peddler. He progressed to own a carriage factory before the birth of Friendly's father, Myer Henry Friendly, who would migrate to Elmira in his youth.[4]

Friendly demonstrated precocious abilities in reading and diction at a young age. By age seven, he could read books intended for adults. His mother, Leah Hallo, was a serious and reserved bardolater with an excellent memory who became skilled at contract bridge. She played an intimate role in his upbringing, devoting herself to raising her son and taking him to see evening performances of Gilbert and Sullivan; Friendly later recalled, "there was absolutely nothing she wouldn't have done for me."[5] His father, by contrast, was strict and distant with an inclination towards perfection, impressing high standards of work upon him. Their marriage was initially an unhappy one, with Leah leaving at one point to move in with her sister, although Myer eventually persuaded her to return.[6] Regarding their collective relationship, Friendly remarked that "we didn’t have a very close family."[7]

The Friendly family resided in the primarily Christian, western side of Elmira, opposite of the eastern Jewish community. They held various civic positions in town, lived comfortably, and were known as active members of the local German-Jewish population.[8] A monograph in Elmira commemorates Friendly's grandfather, who donated generously to the Jewish community, as "one of the leading men of Elmira in the late nineteenth century."[5] Though not devoutly religious, the family attended a Reform temple alongside other German Jews, and they held a bar mitzvah for Friendly. Myer believed that anti-semitism was commonplace in Elmira, though his son could not remember any instances of prejudice except for the lack of Jews in the country club and their exclusion from Christian neighbors. Friendly himself had predominantly Christian friends, a quality which was uncharacteristic of other Jews.[9]

As a child, Friendly was docile and obedient, gaining a reputation for his earnest behavior.[7] Outside of school, he frequented the outdoors, often walking to Mark Twain's study,[a] and visited a great-aunt who played scores of Richard Wagner. He committed himself to reading avidly and enjoyed playing baseball, though he was also overweight and bore unathletic traits. Myer, a sportsman and fisherman, took his son on forays that Friendly would ultimately come to reject, which disappointed him. Friendly also lacked dexterity; after puncturing his hand with a pencil, he lost function of his left-hand little finger and contracted a serious case of blood-poisoning. Eye problems developed during boyhood, which would advance to retinal detachment in 1936, further complicated his health. These difficulties with vision would follow him into adulthood, necessitating surgeries accompanied by multiple hospitalizations.[11]

Education edit

The Friendlys wintered in Florida, causing him to miss periods of school. Nonetheless, Friendly skipped multiple grades and took an interest in American history and English literature, though avoided science; his particular interests were in English writers George Eliot and William Makepeace Thackeray. He attended the Elmira Free Academy, excelling academically as an involved student, and came to praise the system there. He fondly remembered the school as a place with "very devoted and dedicated teachers who worked for a pittance."[10] Friendly was the editor-in-chief of the academy's newspaper, The Vindex, in addition to having engagements on the student council, debate team, and its "Class Song and Motto Committee."[12]

 
Friendly (topmost right) pictured in 1917 with other members of the Elmira Free Academy Debate Society

At the onset of World War I, Friendly eagerly supported the German cause, but switched sides when the United States entered the war. He abandoned his initial support for Germany and began soliciting war bonds in nearby towns while still enrolled at Elmira. In 1919, he graduated from the academy as the class valedictorian, attaining the highest scores ever recorded in the New York Regents Examinations.[13][14] It was at Elmira that Friendly developed core personal values, learning to value culture and responsibility. However, his reclusivity, combined with a lack of close relationships, contributed to emotional issues that would persist over the course of his life. During this period, he experienced his first serious exposure to law as a young teenager while serving as an expert witness in a trial brought by his father for a breach of warranty. By means of a friend's father, a lawyer, he learned to respect law and societal boundaries.[15]

Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, had been the most convenient choice for college, though Friendly opted instead to matriculate at Harvard College, drawn by the school's expansive catalogue. Emergent challenges with his vision nearly delayed his college entry by a year, but he gained a doctor's approval to begin. He enrolled in the fall of 1919 at age sixteen and passed a competitive examination which allowed him to skip a basic English course.[16]

In college, Friendly was a taciturn student who lacked social skills. The university's only student from Elmira, he was alienated from other freshman students, who were two years his senior. Despite this absence of fellowship, Friendly continued to excel in his studies with a focus in history, philosophy, and government, faulting only in a physical training course where he obtained a B grade. He cherished the intellectual challenges of understanding history, a pursuit reinforced by Harvard's modern approach that emphasized intellectual and political history. A. Lawrence Lowell, the president of Harvard at the time, taught his freshman course in government. In his sophomore year, Friendly enrolled in classes consisting of literature, economics, philosophy, psychology, and three history courses, achieving superlative grades in all subjects with the same result throughout following years.[17] His successes in the classroom were noticed by his peers. Future attorney Albert L. Gordon, a classmate of Friendly's at Harvard, later reflected upon his reputation: "we thought of him not only as the smartest in the class but the smartest at Harvard College."[18]

In 1923, Friendly graduated with an A.B., summa cum laude, and was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa honor society. During his junior year, he had received the prestigious Bowdoin Prize for a paper entitled "The Fall of Naples: An Episode in the Risorgimento" which examined Italian statesmen Camillo Benso and Giuseppe Garibaldi.[19] It was at Harvard that Friendly developed a passion for European history through courses with Charles Homer Haskins, Archibald Cary Coolidge, and Frederick Jackson Turner. He was also exposed to European diplomatic history under William L. Langer.[20] In his senior year, Friendly took inspiration from Charles Howard McIlwain, whose course in medieval England he credited with being "by all odds the greatest educational experience I had at Harvard College."[21] The historian broadened his knowledge of Latin and stressed the need to interpret documents as they were originally understood, a lesson adopted by Friendly when he ascended to the bench years later.[22]

Postgraduate study edit

Inspired by McIlwain, Friendly intended to pursue a Ph.D. in medieval history after graduation. He aspired to be a historian, a goal which conflicted with his parents' hopes for him to enroll in Harvard Law School, and was assured by professor Frederick Merk that he would be appointed to the university's faculty.[23] Merk had judged an answer given by Friendly in one examination as worthy of being published in an academic journal.[20] Frightened by the prospect of losing their son's legal career, the family steered connections to contact Judge Julian Mack "about this dreadful thing that was about to occur."[24] Following his recommendation, they arranged for Friendly to meet law professor Felix Frankfurter with the aim of dissuading him from pursuing a career in history. Frankfurter convinced Friendly to take up a Shaw Fellowship, which enabled postgraduate studies in Europe for a year,[b] then attend the Law School.[26] Frankfurter reasoned he could study "medieval history, civil law, or nothing at all" during the fellowship, then leave to study medieval history should he dislike the experience.[27]

From 1923 until 1924, Friendly sojourned in Europe. He witnessed the alarming inflation and social unrest that grappled the Weimar Republic, then traveled to Amsterdam and thirdly to Paris, where he attended the École pratique des hautes études for a few months. He found the lectures on law there unimpressive, admitting that "between the two, I much preferred history...if anything could give one a distaste for law that was it."[28] Much of his time was spent on reading, attending operas, and walking. After stopping in Italy, his studies led him to the universities of Oxford and Cambridge in England. His parents accompanied him to celebrate his twenty-first birthday in Nuremberg. By the time the year ended, Friendly still found himself aimless, but returned to the United States to enter law school.[29]

Law school edit

In 1925, Harvard Law School was a growing institution which expanded to house 1,440 students. Under dean Christopher Columbus Langdell, the school devised the "case method" of teaching which concentrated on actively engaging students in a Socratic dialogue. Given stories of laborsome work and a third of first-year students withdrawing, Friendly arrived unsure of success, cautiously dedicating only one or two nights a week to social activities to manage the pressure. But on his first day at the Law School, he made a tangible impact that affirmed his confidence and gained him recognition.[30] Manley Ottmer Hudson, his torts professor, asked in a lecture in what language an early English case was written. After students guessed wrongly, Hudson then prompted Friendly, who successfully identified it as Law French, an archaic language. A skeptical Hudson went to the archives and produced the original medieval text, which Friendly proceeded to translate for the class. "So that really made my reputation at the Harvard Law School, on the first day," he recalled.[31][c]

 
Friendly, seen while still a Harvard Law student, pictured in a 1927 edition of The Boston Globe

Although he was not enrolled in any of his classes, Friendly was frequently invited by Frankfurter to join him. The professor made the young student one of his favorites, and it was due to Frankfurter that Friendly became interested in federal jurisdiction and emerging field of administrative law. Other professors, struck by Friendly's command over the material, praised his ability.[33] They included Thomas Reed Powell, a proponent of legal realism, as well as formalists Samuel Williston and Joseph Beale, who often had to contend with the novel theories of Zechariah Chafee and Roscoe Pound.[34] After one examination, Calvert Magruder, Friendly's first-year teacher in contract law, left him a congratulatory note: "[I have] never run across as beautiful [an exam] book as yours in Contracts... [nor one with your] sense of values and emphasis, the logical construction of your answers, your compactness & facility of expression."[35]

Friendly finished first in his class his first year and was honored to be a member of the Harvard Law Review. He was elected the journal's president his second year,[d] writing to his parents, "it is certainly the greatest honor in the Law School, except for the Fay Diploma—which is awarded at the end of three years, and I am particularly gratified in that very few Jews have ever held the office."[37] As president, he spent long hours working from morning to evening, interrupted only by classes and occasional breaks to eat. Never before had he worked harder than during his time on the Law Review. Weekdays he dedicated to editing and the weekends on coursework. With Herbert Brownell Jr., the editor-in-chief of the Yale Law Journal, he drafted the first edition of The Bluebook.[38]

Along with the existing commitments to the law review, Friendly was an active member of the Ames Moot Court Competition, where he won the Marshall Prize for its best brief. He came first in his class his second year despite investing less time to schoolwork.[39] That summer, he received an invitation from Frankfurter, who was teaching at Columbia Law School, to join him in New York City. Frankfurter had been living there with Emory Buckner; feeling that teaching would not sufficiently occupy him, he arranged for Friendly, along with classmates James Landis and Thomas Corcoran, to room together in the city. The group would make acquaintances with distinguished jurists Learned Hand, Augustus Noble Hand, Julian Mack, and Charles Culp Burlingham. After Buckner requested the assistance of two "bright young men," Frankfurter sent Friendly and Corcoran to aid him with his prosecution of Harry Daugherty at the New York U.S. Attorney's office.[40]

In 1927, Friendly graduated from Harvard Law as class president with an LL.B., summa cum laude.[41] His academic record was one of the best in the history of the school, with the achievements he amassed earning him a legendary status that became part of the university's folklore.[42] Every honor the school had to offer was bestowed upon him.[43] He achieved the highest grade point average of any Harvard Law student in the 20th century,[44] and was the first graduate of the university to receive his law degree with such high honors.[e] The Fay Diploma,[f] the Law School's most distinguished decoration, was also awarded to him.[48] Although his performance suggested otherwise, Friendly found his experience at Harvard Law School unrewarding. He thought highly of the case method but never enjoyed the faculty instruction. Criminal law, taught by Pound, bored him, as did Beale. "After a few thrilling months with Williston and Hudson at the beginning of the first year, everything seemed to slide," he wrote to Frankfurter.[49] For the rest of his life, Friendly doubted his decision choosing law over history.[50]

 
Editors of the Harvard Law Review, volume 39, pictured 1925–1926 at Austin Hall. Friendly is standing center, in the row behind David Farquhar Cavers (center, sitting)  
 
Editors of the Harvard Law Review, volume 40, pictured 1926–1927. Friendly is sitting center as president, with Erwin Griswold standing in the back row

Clerkship edit

In Friendly's second year, Frankfurter notified him of his decision to appoint him as a law clerk to Justice Louis Brandeis on the Supreme Court.[51] Brandeis was aware of Friendly's intellectual achievements at Harvard; both he and Frankfurter foresaw a career for Friendly in the legal academy.[51] In Friendly's third year, Frankfurter changed course. He suggested that Friendly delay the clerkship to remain at Harvard for a fourth year to study, teach, and research for him.[52] Friendly declined, tired of law school. Buckner advised him to immediately proceed to the clerkship then be a practitioner.[53] The competing interests of Brandeis, Frankfurter, and Buckner ensued in a struggle over the future of Friendly's career.[54] They quarreled over a life for Friendly in the academy or in the private practice of law.[54] Frankfurter saw Buckner's intrusion as obstructing the true purpose of the clerkship: to prepare Friendly for academia.[53] The professor wrote to Buckner:

 
As a newly appointed law clerk to Justice Louis Brandeis, Friendly is portrayed in a 1927 issue of The Columbia Record

What surprises me about all the lawyers with whom Friendly talked in New York, and even about your comments to him, is that you did not treat Friendly as a very special case - a man of truly extraordinary talents, under no pressure of immediacies, still very young and potential of very great things in all sorts of ways.... Don't you think it is terribly important that there be deposited in an unusually talented person like Friendly thoughts and reflections, not merely with reference to his success in New York during the next five or ten years, but that he should keep in mind what would equip him for the rest of his life as a civilized, reflective mind, with a deep inner life, instead of becoming as narrow and as sterile as are all but a negligible few of the leading members of the present day bar?[54]

The incident ultimately ended with the decision for Friendly not to undergo a postgraduate year.[55] His parents had intervened within the year, siding with Buckner.[53] They went to visit Brandeis in Washington and the justice diffused their apprehensions. "The only definite advice I gave them was to leave their son alone; to let him make up his own mind & not merely to say so, but let him see & know that they will be happy in whatever decision he makes. I put this as strongly as I could; & think they understood me."[52] Friendly began the clerkship in the fall of his graduation.[56][57]

Friendly's relationship with Brandeis began tumultuously, owing to a newspaper which overzealously titled the clerkship as having "The two highest Harvard Law men to work together." He considered abandoning his clerkship due to the potential embarrassment which might have followed, though Brandeis never saw the headline and never read newspapers. The two maintained a tentative relationship afterwards. Brandeis did the bulk of the writing and was largely absent for the day, while Friendly saw him twice a day in short periods.[58]

The clerkship with Brandeis had a lasting impact on Friendly.[59] Notwithstanding the little time they spent together, both he and the justice viewed each other highly.[60] Brandeis, in a telephone with Frankfurter, declared, "If I had another man like Friendly, I would not have to do a lick of work myself."[61] Friendly praised Brandeis as knowing "more law than almost the rest of the Court together"[60] and placed him highest in his rating of judges—above both Learned Hand and Frankfurter—later in his life.[58][45]

Private practice edit

Between a choice to assume a professorship offer at Harvard Law School or enter private practice, Friendly became an associate in the white-shoe law firm of Root, Clark, Buckner, Howland & Ballantine in September 1928. Brandeis had pressed him to enter the legal academy at Harvard, alternatively suggesting for him to take up practice in Omaha, Nebraska, to avoid the elites of New York City; Friendly was willing to sacrifice pay for a career in history, though did not share the same enthusiasm for legal scholarship and declined the professorship. A practice in law offered independence and financial stability—qualities which he yearned.[62]

Elitism and antisemitism were pervasive in law firms. Root, Clark was among the few firms in Wall Street to hire Jews in addition to having a Jewish partner, a characteristic which attracted Friendly. He interviewed also at Sullivan & Cromwell, which also permitted Jews, though turned down an offer after undergoing a series of interviews, suspecting it to be predicated on antisemitic beliefs and due only to his having been president of the Harvard Law Review.[63]

 
Harvard professor and future-Justice Felix Frankfurter (pictured) served as a mentor to Friendly during both his undergraduate and graduate years, arranging for him positions at Harvard Law School.[64]

Friendly stayed in private practice for 31 years; on January 2, 1937, he was made a partner of Root, Clark.[65][1] The firm first assigned him as an assistant to Grenville Clark, a senior partner who had suffered a nervous breakdown, with the intent that Friendly's aid and experience might reinvigorate him. Clark had been a prominent corporate lawyer, a fellow graduate of Harvard Law School, and nominee[66] of the Nobel Peace Prize.[67] Friendly's assistance, however, failed to improve his health. After months of uneventful work under Clark, Elihu Root Jr.[g] reassigned Friendly to a case representing Pan American-Grace Airways and its president, Juan Trippe. Friendly would assume control of the company's legal affairs with Root's consent not long afterward, primarily tasked with handling its contracts and diplomatic relationships. In 1929, he began a romantic relationship with Sophie Stern, daughter of future-Judge Horace Stern, and the couple married on September 4, 1930.[69]

In 1931, Brandeis once again urged Friendly to join the faculty of Harvard Law School, this time with the additional support of Frankfurter, Roscoe Pound, Calvert Magruder, and Edward Morgan. When Friendly refused in order to remain in private practice, Brandeis and Frankfurter attempted to get him to join the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC) as its assistant general counsel the next year at the invitation of Eugene Meyer. He turned down this office also, a decision which came as a disappointment to Frankfurter.[70] The Law School continued to make repeated requests for Friendly to join its faculty, all of which were ultimately unsuccessful.[71]

From 1931 until 1933, John Marshall Harlan II, a senior associate[72] at Root, Clark, was embroiled with a case representing the will of the late heirless Ella Virginia von Echtzel Wendel. Wendel, a wealthy recluse who was the sole owner of about $100 million of real estate,[73] left a substantial fortune of $40–50 million to unknown next of kin. Hundreds of claimants—many fraudulent—arose to inherit a part of the estate. Friendly was a prime assistant to Harlan, proving false the claim of a prominent candidate, and whose extensive research into the claimant's forgeries led to the dissolve of several other parties' cases.[74] He would recall of the case:

John Harlan and I often remarked to each other that the Wendel Estate litigation was the most enjoyable forensic experience of our lives. It combined the elements of drama with—what is not always available—the financial resources needed to do a thoroughly professional job.[75]

Pan Am and Cleary, Gottlieb edit

Friendly was responsible for Pan Am's congressional affairs, spending much of his time in Washington, D.C., litigating contracts. He accompanied Trippe in his role as a legal advisor and sat adjacent to him in conference meetings. During World War II, Pan Am underwent rapid expansion, some of which were facilitated by Congressional funds appropriated in an agreement to use the company's airfields as a staging ground for the war effort. Friendly and Pan Am lawyer John Cobb Cooper sought to gain an advantage over the U.S. Department of War in dictating its terms—their effective efforts later came under scrutiny in a Senate investigation led by Missouri Senator Harry S. Truman, one which ultimately found no wrongdoing.[76]

With fellow associate Leo Gottlieb, Friendly began considering leaving Root, Clark to start a new firm. The two left in 1945, forming Cleary, Gottlieb, Friendly & Cox (now Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton), and were joined by a number of the firm's associates and partners.[14] The departure of a substantial portion of its lawyers caused a serious split in Root, Clark; though the firm was damaged, it left on good terms with the newly-formed Cleary, Gottlieb.[77] Cleary, Gottlieb's immediate success dispelled Friendly's initial financial fears amidst a declining postwar economy.[78]

Friendly brought Pan Am and New York Telephone to the new firm. In 1946, the former appointed Friendly as its general counsel and vice president, a position he would serve in until 1959.[79][80] In working for both Cleary, Gottlieb and Pan Am simultaneously, he was split between commuting to the firm in Wall Street and the Pan Am headquarters located in the Chrysler Building. Cleary, Gottlieb grew quickly, and it would attract high-profile clients such as Bing Crosby, Albert Einstein,[81] the French government, and Sherman Fairchild. George W. Ball, who had joined the firm at its invitation, left to serve as United States Under Secretary of State and, later, United States Ambassador to the United Nations. Elihu Root Jr. and Grenville Clark, formerly of Dewey, Ballantine, resigned their positions to join Cleary, Gottlieb as of counsel.[82]

While working for Pan Am, Friendly proved himself to be a skilled litigator, adept in cross-examination. In a case involving the company, Trans World Airlines (TWA), and American Overseas Airlines (AOA),[83] Friendly's cross-examination of multiple airline executives revealed contradictory statements which were refuted by internal data. On one occasion, his employment of a sometimes aggressive, unapologetic approach in questioning led to an objection by counsel, though Friendly refused to recant his methods. The case, which concerned Pan Am's acquisition of the AOA,[84] also involved James M. Landis, former Dean of Harvard Law School, who had a personal feud with both Friendly and Trippe; Landis represented the TWA in its efforts to compete against Pan Am for the purchase of the AOA. Friendly's cross-examination of Landis led to the upholding of Pan Am's acquisition by the Civil Aeronautics Board, and President Harry Truman's signed approval on July 10, 1950, unexpectedly gave Pan Am the benefit of additional access to airways which it did not ask for. TWA appealed the controversial decision by Truman to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, which in turn upheld Friendly's arguments and struck down the appeal.[85]

The majority of Friendly's appellate litigation would be in the service of Pan Am, though in 1956 he won a New York Court of Appeals case for the New York Telephone Company against the Public Service Commission. He also successfully distinguished himself in oral argument at the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, where he argued before Judge Calvert Magruder, who had previously been among those to recommend Friendly to join the Harvard Law faculty. In 1959, Trippe approached Friendly to strike a contract with Howard Hughes for the purchase of six Boeing jets. With Raymond Cook,[86] Hughes' lawyer, Friendly's efforts to clear the contract ensured its survival amidst a bond issue with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The $40 million deal was one of the hastiest Friendly drafted and would be one of his last acts in private practice.[87]

Nomination to the Second Circuit edit

Upon the election of President Dwight D. Eisenhower's in 1952, Friendly sought a possible judicial appointment. Decades of having been in private practice had begun to take a toll on his mental health; cases for Pan Am before the CAB grew monotonous and unsatisfying. Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr., with whom Friendly worked with during his days at Harvard Law, began searching for potential candidates to the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. It was recommended that Friendly take up a preliminary appointment on the district court, but he eschewed a position, having previously attended it in secret as a disappointed spectator.[88]

I think there have been not more than two occasions during the long period I have served as a judge when I have felt it permissible to write a letter in favor of anyone for judicial appointment. However, I feel so strongly that the Second Circuit would be greatly benefitted by the appointment of Mr. Henry J. Friendly that I cannot forbear writing you to express my hope that you may see fit to fill the vanacy now existing in the Circuit by selecting him. I have not the slightest doubt that as a Circuit Judge he would be an addition to our court, as great as, if not greater than, anyone else you could choose; not only because of his unblemished reputation and high scholarship, but because of his balanced wisdom and wide outlook.

Learned Hand, in a letter to President Dwight Eisenhower[89][90]

Friendly's performance in private practice bore little influence on his being a viable candidate. His specialized practice in administrative law was known only to a select group of fellow lawyers in New York, and he had appeared before the U.S. Supreme Court twice, losing both cases. Additionally, the legal bouts against Landis and TWA received limited media coverage, nor was he an active member of academia, having turned a career as a professor down years prior. He was primarily distinguished by his exceptional performance at Harvard Law School, his clerkship for Justice Brandeis, and the reputation he accrued during his years in practice.[91]

In 1954, John Marshall Harlan II was appointed by Eisenhower to the U.S. Supreme Court to replace Justice Robert Jackson, leaving his position on the Second Circuit vacant. Felix Frankfurter and Learned Hand soon emerged as vocal supporters of Friendly to fill the seat, though ultimately the position went to J. Edward Lumbard. Friendly lobbied friends, colleagues, and close aides—including Louis M. Loeb and State Senator Thomas C. Desmond—in the case another vacancy arose. The unexpected development of a cataract in his left eye nearly endangered his candidacy, though symptoms abated following a successful eye surgery.[92] He was once again passed over when Judge Jerome Frank died in 1957. In spite of Frankfurter's vehement support for Friendly, Frank's seat was filled by Leonard P. Moore.[93]

On October 23, 1957, Brownell Jr. resigned as Attorney General and was replaced by William P. Rogers,[94] who soon received letters from Frankfurter when Judge Harold Medina announced his retirement in January 1958. The Association of the Bar of the City of New York supported Friendly's candidacy to take Medina's seat and the American Bar Association appraised him as "exceptionally well qualified."[95] The candidates to fill the seat of Medina also included Irving Kaufman, who had the bipartisan backing of both the state's Democrats and prominent Republicans, which Friendly lacked. Kaufman attempted to reinforce his platform by seeking the additional endorsement of Learned Hand, but Hand avoided doing so, using his law clerk, Ronald Dworkin, as a means of evading a potential meeting. In 1959, political support shifted towards Friendly as a compromise candidate and he was further bolstered by a public endorsement by Learned Hand soon after. On March 10, 1959, Eisenhower nominated Friendly to the U.S. Senate. Frankfurter's voiced support to Minority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson, who in turn convinced Senator Thomas Dodd to send the hearing notice, ensured Friendly's confirmation on September 9.[96]

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit edit

Friendly received his commission to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals on September 10, 1959, at the age of 56.[79][97] Justice John Marshall Harlan II swore him in on September 29, 1959, at the United States Courthouse (now the Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse) in Manhattan.[98] Friendly joined just four other active judges on the court—Charles Edward Clark, J. Edward Lumbard, Sterry R. Waterman, and Leonard P. Moore—who were all Republicans and shared similar careers in private practice as he had.[99] He established himself as being complaisant and sensitive to his colleagues, incorporating suggestions from the other judges whenever possible.[100]

Friendly was apprehensive about his judicial ability and was initially beset by self-doubt in writing opinions. He first arrived on the bench on October 6, 1959, and erroneously ruled in favor of the government in United States v. New York, New Haven & Hartford R.R. The case, which was on appeal, concerned the Interstate Commerce Commission and fell under the Expediting Act, which in turn required the case to bypass the court of appeals directly to Supreme Court.[101] Wary of another mistake, Friendly began taking a strictly literal interpretation of laws. Regarding his indecisiveness over one decision, he told Learned Hand of his fears; Hand exclaimed, "Damn it, Henry, make up your mind. That's what they're paying you to do!"[102]

He would continue to serve as a judge for the rest of his life, assuming senior status on April 15, 1974. He served as a member of the Judicial Conference of the United States, where he was its chief judge from 1971 to 1973, and was also a presiding judge of the Special Railroad Court from 1974 to 1986. His judicial service was terminated on March 11, 1986, due to his death.[79]

During his tenure, Friendly would pen over 1,000 judicial opinions while remaining active as a scholarly writer.[103] He wrote extensively in law reviews, publishing works that were considered seminal in multiple fields and extraordinary in combination with his existing workload as an appellate judge.[104][3]

Legacy edit

External videos
  Legacy of Judge Henry Friendly, March 10, 2017, C-SPAN

In a ceremony following Friendly's death, then-Chief Justice Warren E. Burger said, "In my 30 years on the bench, I have never known a judge more qualified to sit on the Supreme Court." At the same ceremony, Justice Thurgood Marshall called Friendly "a man of the law."[105] In a letter to the editor of The New York Times following Friendly's obituary, Judge Jon O. Newman called Friendly "quite simply the pre-eminent appellate judge of his era" who "authored the definitive opinions for the nation in each area of the law that he had occasion to consider."[57] In a statement after Friendly's death, Wilfred Feinberg, the 2nd Circuit's chief judge at the time, called Friendly "one of the greatest Federal judges in the history of the Federal bench."[57] Judge Richard A. Posner described Friendly as "the most distinguished judge in this country during his years on the bench" and "the most powerful legal reasoner in American history."[106][57] Akhil Amar called Friendly the greatest American judge of the 20th century. Amar also cited Friendly as a major influence on Chief Justice John Roberts.[107]

Honors edit

Friendly was a member of the Harvard Board of Overseers from 1964 to 1969, and was also a member of the executive committee of the American Law Institute. He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1977 and the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Award in Law in 1978.[108]

Harvard Law School has a professorship named after Friendly. Paul C. Weiler, a Canadian constitutional law scholar, held it from 1993 to 2006;[109] William J. Stuntz, a scholar of criminal law and procedure, held it from 2006 until his death in March 2011.[110] The professorship is currently held by Carol S. Steiker, a specialist in criminal justice policy and capital punishment.[111] The Federal Bar Council awarded Friendly a Certificate of Distinguished Judicial Service posthumously in 1986.[112] The Henry Friendly Medal, established by the American Law Institute, was named in memory of Friendly and endowed by his former law clerks;[113] Justice Sandra Day O'Connor received the award in 2011.[114]

Personal life edit

Friendly was a member of the Republican Party.[115][116][117]

Family and marriage edit

Sophie Pfaelzer Stern, Friendly's wife, was a member of a Philadelphia Jewish family and educated at Swarthmore College and Fordham University. Following their marriage, the newly-wed couple traveled to Italy and Paris for their honeymoon.[118] Both Friendly and Stern shared a close relationship, and they had two children—David and Joan—by January 1937 and a third, Ellen, soon after.[119] As their marriage progressed, it became complicated and grew unintimate later in his life.[120]

Work engrossed Friendly, and he had a largely estranged relationship with his children, seeing them only during the summer.[121] He was also extremely reserved, showed both little emotion and signs of physical affection to his children, and was uninterested in their personal affairs. He sought to maintain an excessively formal environment, often retiring to study alone.[122] Joan Friendly Goodman, his second-eldest child,[123][124] remembered Friendly's tentative bond:

What he experienced he had difficulty expressing and because he expressed so little the feelings never were shaped, modulated, refined. . . . I knew what he wanted, but couldn't express himself [...] He was slightly gruff, too loud, used his voice rather than a caress to wake me, but I knew it was his way of saying I want to care for you. I saw the intent behind the deed when the gesture failed. He was always on the verge of giving vent to tenderness but, except in his letters, rarely able to do so.[125]

Health edit

Friendly was a natural pessimist and demonstrated some symptoms consistent with major depressive disorder. He harbored feelings of hopelessness in addition to experiencing bouts of extreme sadness, though not to the extent of impairing his diligence.[126]

Friendly's father, Myer, died at age 76 on December 28, 1938,[127] in a local hospital at St. Petersburg, Florida; he was a longtime winter resident in the city.[128][h] His father's death of a blood clot precipitated Friendly's lifelong fear of a stroke and concern for his own health.[129] Friendly's wife died of cancer in 1985.[130]

Death edit

Friendly died by suicide at age 82 on March 11, 1986, in his Park Avenue apartment in New York City;[116] multiple prescription bottles were at his side.[131] Police said they found three notes in the apartment: one addressed to his resident maid and two unaddressed notes. In all three notes, Friendly talked about his distress at his wife's death, his declining health and his failing eyesight, according to a police spokesman.[116] His wife, the former Sophie M. Stern, had died a year earlier. They had been married for 55 years. He was survived by a son and two daughters.[116]

Selected list of former law clerks edit

 
Philip Bobbitt, 1975–76
 
Merrick Garland, 1977–78
 
John Roberts, 1979–80
Name Term Notes Ref.
David P. Currie 1960–1961 Edward H. Levi Distinguished Service Professor, University of Chicago Law School [132]
Peter Edelman 1961–1962 Carmack Waterhouse Professor of Law and Public Policy, Georgetown University Law Center [132]
Stephen Barnett 1962–1963 Elizabeth Josselyn Boalt Professor of Law Emeritus, University of California, Berkeley [132]
Pierre N. Leval 1963–1964 Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit [133]
Michael Boudin 1964–1965 Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit [133]
Bruce Ackerman 1967–1968 Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science, Yale Law School [133]
Richard Daynard 1967–1968 University Distinguished Professor, Northeastern University School of Law [133]
A. Raymond Randolph 1969–1970 Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit [134]
Walter Hellerstein 1970–1971 Francis Shackleford Distinguished Professor of Taxation Law, University of Georgia School of Law [134]
Martin Glenn 1971–1972 Chief Judge of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York [134]
Frederick T. Davis 1972–1973 Lecturer, Columbia Law School; Partner, Debevoise & Plimpton [134]
William Curtis Bryson 1973–1974 Senior Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit; Acting Solicitor General of the United States [135]
Gregory Palm 1974–1975 Executive Vice President, Goldman Sachs [135]
James R. Smoot 1974–1975 Dean of the Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law, The University of Memphis [135]
Philip Bobbitt 1975–1976 Herbert Wechsler Professor of Jurisprudence, Columbia Law School [135]
Todd Rakoff 1975–1976 Byrne Professor of Administrative Law, Harvard Law School [135]
Ruth Wedgwood 1976–1977 Edward B. Burling Professor of International Law and Diplomacy, Johns Hopkins University [135]
Merrick Garland 1977–1978 Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit; 86th United States Attorney General [135]
Walter R. Stern 1978–1979 Partner, Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz; Member, American Law Institute [136]
John Roberts 1979–1980 17th Chief Justice of the United States; Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit [136]
Reinier Kraakman 1979–1980 Ezra Ripley Thayer Professor of Law, Harvard Law School [136]
Gary Born 1981–1982 Partner, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr [136]
Louis Kaplow 1981–1982 Finn M.W. Caspersen & Household International Professor of Law & Economics, Harvard Law School [137]
Jonathan R. Macey 1982–1983 Sam Harris Professor of Corporate Law, Corporate Finance and Securities Law, Yale Law School [137]
Michael P. Madow 1982–1983 Professor, Brooklyn Law School [137]
David J. Seipp 1982–1983 Professor, Boston University School of Law [137]
Larry Kramer 1984–1985 12th Dean of Stanford Law School; President of the London School of Economics [137]

Scholarly writings edit

Books edit

  • Friendly, Henry J. (January 1, 1962). The Federal Administrative Agencies: The Need for a Better Definition of Standards (1st ed.). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674295506.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1967). Benchmarks. University of Chicago Press. ASIN B0007DL1G2. ISBN 978-0226265308.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1968). "Remarks by Judge Henry J. Friendly". In Sutherland, Arthur E. (ed.). The Path of Law from 1967. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674657854.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1971). The Dartmouth College Case and the Public-Private Penumbra. Vol. 12. University of Texas Press. ASIN B0006C3JQY. LCCN 71-627370.
  • Schwartz, Bernard; Wade, H. W. R. (1972). Legal Control of Government: Administrative Law in Britain and the United States. Foreword by Henry J. Friendly. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0019825313.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1973). Federal Jurisdiction: A General View. New York, NY: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231037419.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1975). "Grenville Clark: Legal Preceptor". In Dimond, Mary Clark; Cousins, Norman; Clifford, J. Garry (eds.). Memoirs of a Man: Grenville Clark. W.W. Norton. ISBN 978-0393087161.

Journals edit

  • Friendly, Henry J. (February 1928). "The Historic Basis of Diversity Jurisdiction". Harvard Law Review. 41 (4): 483–510. doi:10.2307/1330049. JSTOR 1330049.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (March 1932). "Review of The Interstate Commerce Commission by I. L. Sharfman, Vols. I, II". Harvard Law Review. 45 (5): 941–945. doi:10.2307/1332048. JSTOR 1332048.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (November 1934). "Some Comments on the Corporate Reorganizations Act". Harvard Law Review. 48 (1): 39–81. doi:10.2307/1331740. JSTOR 1331740.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (November 1935). "Review of The Interstate Commerce Commission by I. L. Sharfman, Part III. Volume A". Harvard Law Review. 49 (1): 163–166. doi:10.2307/1333250. JSTOR 1333250.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (January 1936). "Amendment of the Railroad Reorganization Act". Columbia Law Review. 36 (1): 27–59. doi:10.2307/1116239. JSTOR 1116239.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (January 1937). "Review of Brandeis: The Personal History of an American Ideal by Alfred Lief". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 85 (3): 330–332. doi:10.2307/3309092. JSTOR 3309092.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (January 1939). "Review of Chapter Ten: Corporate Reorganization under the Federal Statute by Luther D. Swanstrom". Harvard Law Review. 52 (3): 540–542. doi:10.2307/1334371. JSTOR 1334371.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (March 1939). "Review of A Treatise on Aviation Law by Henry G. Hotchkiss". Harvard Law Review. 52 (5): 860–862. doi:10.2307/1333462. JSTOR 1333462.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (November 1940). "Review of La Responsabilité Civile Dans les Transports Aériens Intérieurs et Internationaux by Jean van Houtte". Harvard Law Review. 54 (1): 169–171. doi:10.2307/1333389. JSTOR 1333389.
  • Friendly, Henry J.; Tondel Jr., Lyman M. (1940). "Relative Treatment of Securities in Railroad Reorganizations under Section 77". Law & Contemporary Problems. Duke Law School. 7 (3): 420–437.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (January 1943). "Review of International Air Transport and National Policy by Oliver James Lissitzyn". Harvard Law Review. 56 (4): 656–659. doi:10.2307/1334437. JSTOR 1334437.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (January 1947). "Review of Brandeis: A Free Man's Life by Alpheus Thomas Mason". Yale Law Journal. 56 (2): 423–426. doi:10.2307/793018. JSTOR 793018.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (May 1960). "Mr. Justice Brandeis: The Quest for Reason". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 108 (7): 985–999. doi:10.2307/3310209. JSTOR 3310209.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (April 1960). "A Look at the Federal Administrative Agencies". Columbia Law Review. 60 (4): 429–446. doi:10.2307/1120305. JSTOR 1120305.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (December 1961). "Reactions of a Lawyer Newly Become Judge" (PDF). Yale Law Journal. 71 (2): 218–238. doi:10.2307/794327. JSTOR 794327.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (May 1961). "Review of The Common Law Tradition Deciding Appeals by Karl N. Llewellyn". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 109 (7): 1040–1056. doi:10.2307/3310673. JSTOR 3310673.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1961). "Review of The Law and Its Compass, 1960 Rosenthal Lectures, Northwestern University School of Law by Cyril J. Radcliffe". Journal of Legal Education. Association of American Law Schools. 14 (2): 275–277. JSTOR 42891433.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (December 1962). "Judge Learned Hand: An Expression from the Second Circuit". Brooklyn Law Review. 29 (1): 6–15.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (May 1962). "The Federal Administrative Agencies: The Need for Better Definition of Standards". Harvard Law Review. 75 (7): 1263–1318. doi:10.2307/1338547. JSTOR 1338547.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (May 1963). "The Gap in Lawmaking—Judges Who Can't and Legislators Who Won't". Columbia Law Review. 63 (5): 787–807. doi:10.2307/1120530. JSTOR 1120530.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (August 11, 1963). "Review of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes—The Proving Years, 1870–1882 by Mark de Wolfe Howe". The New York Times Book Review.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1964). "Mr. Justice Frankfurter and the Reading of Statutes". In Mendelson, Wallace (ed.). Felix Frankfurter, the Judge. Reynal & Hitchcock. ASIN B00178T5I2.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (May 1964). "In Praise of Erie—And of the New Federal Common Law". New York University Law Review. 39 (3): 383–422.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (October 1965). "The Bill of Rights as a Code of Criminal Procedure" (PDF). California Law Review. 53 (4): 929–956. doi:10.2307/3478984. JSTOR 3478984.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (Winter 1965). "On Entering the Path of the Law". University of Chicago Law School Record. University of Chicago Law School. 13 (1): 17–22.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (August 1965). "Satisfaction, Yes — Complacency, No!". American Bar Association Journal. 51 (8): 715–720. JSTOR 25723310.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (May 1965). "Mr. Justice Frankfurter". Virginia Law Review. 51 (4): 552–556. JSTOR 1071549.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1965). "Review of The Courts, the Public and the Law Explosion by Harry W. Jones, ed". New York Law Forum. New York Law School. 11.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1965). "Review of The Commission and the Common Law: A Study in Administrative Interpretation by Arnold H. Bennett". Syracuse Law Review. 16.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (Summer 1966). "Review of The American Jury by Harry Kalven, Jr., Hans Zeisel, Thomas Callahan, Philip Ennis". University of Chicago Law Review. 33 (4): 884–889. doi:10.2307/1598515. JSTOR 1598515.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1967). "The Idea of a Metropolitan University Law School". Case Western Reserve Law Review. 19 (1): 7–16.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (Fall 1968). "The Fifth Amendment Tomorrow: The Case for Constitutional Change". University of Cincinnati Law Review. 37 (4): 671–726.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (November 1968). "The 'Limited Office' of the Chenery Decision". Administrative Law Review. American Bar Association. 21 (1): 1–9. JSTOR 40691094.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (1968). "Review of The Unpublished Opinions of Mr. Justice Brandeis by Alexander Bickel, ed". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 106 (5): 766–769. doi:10.2307/3310388. JSTOR 3310388.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (1968). "Review of Anatomy of the Law by Lon L. Fuller". Duquesne Law Review. 7.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (1969). "A Federal Court of Administrative Appeals?". Case & Comment. Rochester, New York. 74.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (April 1969). "Chenery Revisited: Reflections on Reversal and Remand of Administrative Orders". Duke Law Journal. 1969 (2): 199–225. doi:10.2307/1371428. JSTOR 1371428.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (Winter 1969–70). "Time and Tide in the Supreme Court". Connecticut Law Review. 2 (2): 213–221.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (Autumn 1970). "Is Innocence Irrelevant? Collateral Attack on Criminal Judgments". University of Chicago Law Review. 38 (1): 142–172. doi:10.2307/1598963. JSTOR 1598963.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (December 1971). "Mr. Justice Harlan, as Seen by a Friend and Judge of an Inferior Court". Harvard Law Review. 85 (2): 382–389. JSTOR 1339738.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (1970). "Judicial Control of Discretionary Administrative Action". Journal of Legal Education. Association of American Law Schools. 23 (1): 63–69. JSTOR 42892042.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (September 1971). "Review of Learned Hand's Court by Marvin Schick". Political Science Quarterly. Oxford University Press. 86 (3): 470–476. doi:10.2307/2147916. JSTOR 2147916.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (October 24, 1972). "Remarks of Chief Judge Friendly". In Memoriam: Honorable John Marshall Harlan. Washington, D.C.: Proceedings of the Bar and Officers of the Supreme Court of the United States. pp. 13–17.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (March 1972). "Judge Paul R. Hays". Columbia Law Review. 72 (3): 445–446. doi:10.2307/1121408. JSTOR 1121408.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (March 1972). "The "Law of the Circuit" and All That". St. John's Law Review. 46 (3): 406–413.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (September 1972). "Review of History of the Supreme Court of the United States by Paul A. Freund; Vol. I: Antecedents and Beginnings to 1801 by Julius Goebel Jr.; Vol. VI: Reconstruction and Reunion, 1864-88, Part One by Charles Fairman". Political Science Quarterly. Oxford University Press. 87 (3): 439–447. doi:10.2307/2149210. JSTOR 2149210.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (June 1973). "Erwin N. Griswold—Some Fond Recollections". Harvard Law Review. 86 (8): 1365–1368. JSTOR 1340027.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (January 1973). "Review of Judgments: Essays on American Constitutional History by Leonard W. Levy". Columbia Law Review. 73 (1): 179–182. doi:10.2307/1121345. JSTOR 1121345.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (1973). "Empirical Approaches to Judicial Behavior: Of Voting Blocs, and Cabbages and Kings". University of Cincinnati Law Review. 42 (4): 673–678.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (1973). "The United States Courts of Appeals 1972–73 Term—Criminal Law and Procedure" (PDF). Georgetown Law Journal (Preface). 62 (2): 401–403.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (April 1974). "Averting the Flood by Lessening the Flow". Cornell Law Review. 59 (4): 634–657.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (April 1974). "New Trends in Administrative Law". Maryland Bar Journal. 61 (3): 9–16.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (June 1975). "Some Kind of Hearing". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 123 (6): 1267–1317. doi:10.2307/3311426. JSTOR 3311426.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1975). "Edward Weinfeld, The Ideal Judge". New York University Law Review. 50.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1976). "Review of Administrative Law by Bernard Schwartz". New York University Law Review. 51.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1976). "Review of Police Discretion by Kenneth Culp Davis". University of Chicago Law Review. 44 (1): 255–259.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1976). "The Federal Courts". N.Y.U. Bicentennial Conference of American Law.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (May 1977). "Federalism: A Foreword" (PDF). The Yale Law Journal. 86 (6): 1019–1034. doi:10.2307/795701. JSTOR 795701.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (November 1, 1978). "The Courts and Social Policy: Substance and Procedure". University of Miami Law Review. Meyer Lecture Series. 33 (1): 21–42.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (June 1978). "In Praise of Herbert Wechsler". Columbia Law Review. 78 (5): 974–981. doi:10.2307/1121888. JSTOR 1121888.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1980). "Review of Administrative Law Treatise by Kenneth Culp Davis". Hofstra Law Review. 8 (2): 471–484.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (March 1981). "Thoughts about Judging". Michigan Law Review. 79 (4): 634–641. doi:10.2307/1288287. JSTOR 1288287.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (Fall 1982). "Indiscretion About Discretion". Emory Law Journal. 31 (4): 747–784.
  • Henry, Friendly J. (June 1982). "The Public-Private Penumbra—Fourteen Years Later". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 130 (6): 1289–1295. doi:10.2307/3311971. JSTOR 3311971.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (July 1983). "Ablest Judge of His Generation". California Law Review. 71 (4): 1039–1044. JSTOR 3480188.
  • Friendly, Henry J. (1985). "From a Fellow Worker on the Railroads". Tulane Law Review. 60 (2): 244–255.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Twain's octagonal study, located in Elmira, was his place of work for Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn. The writer had married Olivia Langdon Clemens, a native of Elmira, and the two owned a house in the town. After her death, Twain no longer inhabited his Elmira retreat.[10]
  2. ^ The Shaw traveling fellowship allowed a student 14 months of study in European universities.[25]
  3. ^ Friendly would later learn that Frankfurter had orchestrated Hudson's questioning beforehand.[32]
  4. ^ Friendly was president of Volume 40 of the Harvard Law Review during the 1926–1927 term. The following year, he was succeeded by Erwin Griswold, whom he mentored, for Volume 41.[36]
  5. ^ Justice Louis Brandeis graduated from Harvard Law School in 1877 with approximately a 95 average, compared to Friendly's average of 86. Comparatively, a student who received an 80 average was expected to be first in their class with highest honors.[45] However, in the 46 years between Brandeis' and Friendly's tenure at the law school, the university had changed its grading system. Friendly biographer David M. Dorsen notes "some controversy over whether Friendly or Brandeis had the highest average in the history of the law school".[46]
  6. ^ Awarded based on the law student with the highest combined grade point average during the three years of study.[47]
  7. ^ Son of 41st U.S. Secretary of War and 38th U.S. Secretary of State Elihu Root. He was the principal founder of Root, Clark & Bird (expanded later to Root, Clark, Buckner, Howland & Ballantine).[68]
  8. ^ Myer left a sizeable inheritance to his children and relatives upon his death. Among them, Friendly received the largest share at $305,156.[127]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Harvard Law Review 1986, p. 1721.
  2. ^ Davis 2012, p. 339.
  3. ^ a b Davis & Gladden 2014, p. 64.
  4. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 1, 5–6.
  5. ^ a b Dorsen 2012, p. 6.
  6. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 6–7.
  7. ^ a b Dorsen 2012, p. 7.
  8. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 5–6, 8.
  9. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 8–9.
  10. ^ a b Dorsen 2012, p. 10.
  11. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 6, 9–10.
  12. ^ Dorsen 2012, pp. 9–10; Keeffe 1968–1969, p. 316; Keeffe 1961, p. 319
  13. ^ Hare, Jim (November 16, 2019). "Elmira History: EFA grad went on to have a distinguished career on the federal bench". Star-Gazette. Retrieved May 29, 2023.
  14. ^ a b "Henry Friendly Partner in New Law Firm". Star-Gazette. January 5, 1946. p. 3. Retrieved June 1, 2023.
  15. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 10–12.
  16. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 11–13.
  17. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 11–14.
  18. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 13.
  19. ^ "HONORARY MEMBERS OF HARVARD PHI BETA KAPPA: Chapter Honors Louis A. Coolidge and Several Professors—New Members in Course". The Boston Globe. June 19, 1922. p. 4. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
  20. ^ a b Harvard Law Review 1986, p. 1716.
  21. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 13–17.
  22. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 16–17.
  23. ^ Harvard Law Review 1986, p. 1715; Dorsen 2011, p. 602; Boudin, Dorsen & DeJulio 2013, p. 169–170
  24. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 20; Siegel 2017, p. 116
  25. ^ "YOUTH WINS HIGH HONORS: Henry Friendly of St. Petersburg Is Graduated from Harvard". St. Petersburg Times. August 9, 1923. p. 9. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
  26. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 20.
  27. ^ Snyder 2010, p. 1168.
  28. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 20–21.
  29. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 21.
  30. ^ Snyder 2010, p. 1168–1169.
  31. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 20–24; Davis 2012, p. 342; Boudin, Dorsen & DeJulio 2013, p. 170
  32. ^ Snyder 2010, p. 1169.
  33. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 23.
  34. ^ Boudin, Dorsen & DeJulio 2013, p. 170.
  35. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 23–24.
  36. ^ Harvard Law Review 1986, p. 1720.
  37. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 24.
  38. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 25, 71.
  39. ^ Dorsen 2012, pp. 1, 24; Lucas 2017, pp. 430–431
  40. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 25; Harvard Law Review 1986, p. 1717
  41. ^ "WON HARVARD'S FIRST LLB SUMMA CUM LAUDE: Henry J. Friendly of Elmira, N Y, Had Marvelous Record in College and Law School". The Boston Globe. June 24, 1927. p. 14. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
  42. ^ Davis & Gladden 2014, p. 64; Dorsen 2012, p. xiii; Harvard Law Review 1986, pp. 1713, 1716; Kahn 2003, p. 273; Leval 2012, p. 258; Boudin 2007, p. 977; Siegel 2017, p. 116, 126
  43. ^ Snyder 2010, p. 1170.
  44. ^ Subrahmanyam, Divya (November 26, 2012). "A conversation on the legal legacy of Judge Henry Friendly". Harvard Law Today. Harvard Law School. Retrieved July 12, 2022.
  45. ^ a b "Brains—Both Have Plenty: U. S. Supreme Court Gets Harvard Law School's Two Best Scholars". The Columbia Record. Columbia, South Carolina. September 28, 1927. p. 6. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
  46. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 27, xiii.
  47. ^ Caplan, Lincoln (January–February 2016). "Rhetoric and Law: The double life of Richard Posner, America's most contentious legal reformer". Harvard Magazine. Harvard University. Retrieved January 1, 2024.
  48. ^ "Over 200 Undergraduates Gain Honors in Graduation Awards: Number of Degrees Awarded Is Largest Ever—Law School for First Time Gives Summa". The Harvard Crimson. Harvard University. June 23, 1927. Retrieved December 15, 2012.
  49. ^ Harvard Law Review 1986, p. 1716–1717; Snyder 2010, p. 1169
  50. ^ Snyder 2010, p. 1169; Dorsen 2012, p. 27
  51. ^ a b Snyder 2010, p. 1171.
  52. ^ a b Dorsen 2012, p. 26.
  53. ^ a b c Snyder 2010, p. 1172.
  54. ^ a b c Harvard Law Review 1986, p. 1717.
  55. ^ Harvard Law Review 1986, p. 1717–1718.
  56. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 25–26.
  57. ^ a b c d Newman, Jon O. (March 24, 1986). "From Learned Hand To Henry Friendly". The New York Times.
  58. ^ a b Dorsen 2012, p. 27–29.
  59. ^ Biskupic 2019, p. 48–49.
  60. ^ a b Lucas 2017, p. 431.
  61. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 29.
  62. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 31–32, 34.
  63. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 32–33.
  64. ^ Siegel 2017, p. 124.
  65. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 44, 81.
  66. ^ "Nomination Database on Grenville Clark". nobelprize.org. Nobel Prize. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
  67. ^ Clifford, John Garry. "Clark, Grenville (1882-1967)". Harvard Square Library. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
  68. ^ "Elihu Root Jr., Lawyer, Is Dead; Statesman's Son a Civic Leader; Arts Patron and Yachtsman Received Truman Medal — Leading La Guardia Backer". The New York Times. August 28, 1967. p. 31. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
  69. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 32, 34–37.
  70. ^ Harvard Law Review 1986, p. 1718.
  71. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 37–38; Siegel 2017, p. 116
  72. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 34.
  73. ^ "Ella Wendel Dies; Last of Her Family: Huge Realty Holdings Valued at $100,000,000 Are Left With No Kin to Claim Them". The New York Times. March 15, 1931. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 31, 2023.
  74. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 38–41.
  75. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 41.
  76. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 47–48, 60.
  77. ^ "George Cleary, 90, Law Firm Founder". The New York Times. March 27, 1981.
  78. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 50–52.
  79. ^ a b c Henry Friendly at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges, a publication of the Federal Judicial Center.
  80. ^ Harvard Law Review 1986, p. 1712.
  81. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 68.
  82. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 60, 66–67.
  83. ^ "Debate An Air Merger: The CAB Hears Attorneys For Two Lines". The Kansas City Times. March 2, 1950. p. 23. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  84. ^ "Overseas Airline Dispute Aired". Albuquerque Journal. March 2, 1950. p. 19. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  85. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 61–66.
  86. ^ "Hughes Tool Co, Divests Itself Of Northeast Airline Holdings; Miami Lawyer Is Nominated for 3 Fears as Trastee of Slock in the Carrier". The New York Times. October 8, 1964. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 13, 2023.
  87. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 67–69.
  88. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 71–72.
  89. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 75.
  90. ^ Gunther 1994, p. 650.
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  92. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 73.
  93. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 73–74.
  94. ^ "Mr. Brownell Resigns". The New York Times. October 25, 1957. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  95. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 74.
  96. ^ Dorsen 2012, pp. 74–77; Gunther 1994, pp. 651–652
  97. ^ Harvard Law Review 1986, p. 1713.
  98. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 85.
  99. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 114–115.
  100. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 84.
  101. ^ Dorsen 2012, p. 82.
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  103. ^ Brecher 2014, p. 1181.
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  105. ^ Johnson, Kirk (June 10, 1986). "A Solemn Tribute To Henry Friendly, A Quiet Giant Of The Appeals Bench". The New York Times.
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  107. ^ Akhil Amar (June 29, 2021). "Amarica's Constitution: Know the Nine You Will". PodBean (Podcast). Publisher. Event occurs at 31:30. Retrieved December 14, 2021.
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  109. ^ "Paul C. Weiler, Henry J. Friendly Professor of Law, Emeritus". Harvard Law School. Retrieved March 8, 2010.
  110. ^ . Harvard Law School. Archived from the original on September 13, 2008. Retrieved March 8, 2010.
  111. ^ "Carol S. Steiker". Harvard Law School.
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  116. ^ a b c d Norman, Michael (March 12, 1986). "Henry J. Friendly, Federal Judge In Court Of Appeals, Is Dead At 82". The New York Times.
  117. ^ Grunwald, Michael; Goldstein, Amy (July 24, 2005). "Few have felt beat of Roberts's political heart". NBC News. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
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Bibliography edit

Journals edit

External links edit

  • Henry Jacob Friendly at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges, a publication of the Federal Judicial Center.
  • Reminiscences of Henry Jacob Friendly 1960 — Columbia University
  • Merrick Garland receives the 2022 Henry J. Friendly Medal
  • Remarks on Henry Friendly on the award of the Henry Friendly Medal to Justice Sandra Day O’Connor
Legal offices
Preceded by Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
1959–1974
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
1971–1973
Succeeded by

henry, friendly, henry, jacob, friendly, july, 1903, march, 1986, american, jurist, served, federal, circuit, judge, united, states, court, appeals, second, circuit, from, 1959, until, death, 1986, friendly, most, prominent, judges, 20th, century, opinions, so. Henry Jacob Friendly July 3 1903 March 11 1986 was an American jurist who served as a federal circuit judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit from 1959 until his death in 1986 1 Friendly was one of the most prominent U S judges of the 20th century and his opinions are some of the most cited in federal jurisprudence 2 Henry FriendlySenior Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second CircuitIn office April 15 1974 March 11 1986Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second CircuitIn office July 20 1971 July 3 1973Preceded byJ Edward LumbardSucceeded byIrving KaufmanJudge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second CircuitIn office September 10 1959 April 15 1974Appointed byDwight D EisenhowerPreceded byHarold MedinaSucceeded byEllsworth Van GraafeilandPersonal detailsBornHenry Jacob Friendly 1903 07 03 July 3 1903Elmira New York U S DiedMarch 11 1986 1986 03 11 aged 82 New York City U S Cause of deathSuicide by drug overdosePolitical partyRepublicanSpouseSophie Pfaelzer Stern m 1930 wbr EducationHarvard University AB LLB AwardsPresidential Medal of Freedom 1977 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Education 1 2 Postgraduate study 1 3 Law school 1 4 Clerkship 2 Private practice 2 1 Pan Am and Cleary Gottlieb 3 Nomination to the Second Circuit 4 U S Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit 5 Legacy 6 Honors 7 Personal life 7 1 Family and marriage 7 2 Health 7 3 Death 8 Selected list of former law clerks 9 Scholarly writings 9 1 Books 9 2 Journals 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Bibliography 13 1 Journals 14 External linksEarly life editFriendly was born in Elmira New York on July 3 1903 the only child of a middle class German Jewish family 3 He was descended from Southern German dairy farmers in Wittelshofen Bavaria that had adopted the surname of Freundlich Josef Myer Freundlich 1803 1880 Friendly s great grandfather was a prosperous farmer whose estate burned down in 1831 after being denied help by his neighbors because he was Jewish Josef grew affluent from livestock dealing Heinrich Freundlich Friendly s grandfather immigrated to the United States in 1852 to avoid conscription and anglicised the surname to Friendly Heinrich worked as a businessman in Cuba New York beginning as a peddler He progressed to own a carriage factory before the birth of Friendly s father Myer Henry Friendly who would migrate to Elmira in his youth 4 Friendly demonstrated precocious abilities in reading and diction at a young age By age seven he could read books intended for adults His mother Leah Hallo was a serious and reserved bardolater with an excellent memory who became skilled at contract bridge She played an intimate role in his upbringing devoting herself to raising her son and taking him to see evening performances of Gilbert and Sullivan Friendly later recalled there was absolutely nothing she wouldn t have done for me 5 His father by contrast was strict and distant with an inclination towards perfection impressing high standards of work upon him Their marriage was initially an unhappy one with Leah leaving at one point to move in with her sister although Myer eventually persuaded her to return 6 Regarding their collective relationship Friendly remarked that we didn t have a very close family 7 The Friendly family resided in the primarily Christian western side of Elmira opposite of the eastern Jewish community They held various civic positions in town lived comfortably and were known as active members of the local German Jewish population 8 A monograph in Elmira commemorates Friendly s grandfather who donated generously to the Jewish community as one of the leading men of Elmira in the late nineteenth century 5 Though not devoutly religious the family attended a Reform temple alongside other German Jews and they held a bar mitzvah for Friendly Myer believed that anti semitism was commonplace in Elmira though his son could not remember any instances of prejudice except for the lack of Jews in the country club and their exclusion from Christian neighbors Friendly himself had predominantly Christian friends a quality which was uncharacteristic of other Jews 9 As a child Friendly was docile and obedient gaining a reputation for his earnest behavior 7 Outside of school he frequented the outdoors often walking to Mark Twain s study a and visited a great aunt who played scores of Richard Wagner He committed himself to reading avidly and enjoyed playing baseball though he was also overweight and bore unathletic traits Myer a sportsman and fisherman took his son on forays that Friendly would ultimately come to reject which disappointed him Friendly also lacked dexterity after puncturing his hand with a pencil he lost function of his left hand little finger and contracted a serious case of blood poisoning Eye problems developed during boyhood which would advance to retinal detachment in 1936 further complicated his health These difficulties with vision would follow him into adulthood necessitating surgeries accompanied by multiple hospitalizations 11 Education editThe Friendlys wintered in Florida causing him to miss periods of school Nonetheless Friendly skipped multiple grades and took an interest in American history and English literature though avoided science his particular interests were in English writers George Eliot and William Makepeace Thackeray He attended the Elmira Free Academy excelling academically as an involved student and came to praise the system there He fondly remembered the school as a place with very devoted and dedicated teachers who worked for a pittance 10 Friendly was the editor in chief of the academy s newspaper The Vindex in addition to having engagements on the student council debate team and its Class Song and Motto Committee 12 nbsp Friendly topmost right pictured in 1917 with other members of the Elmira Free Academy Debate SocietyAt the onset of World War I Friendly eagerly supported the German cause but switched sides when the United States entered the war He abandoned his initial support for Germany and began soliciting war bonds in nearby towns while still enrolled at Elmira In 1919 he graduated from the academy as the class valedictorian attaining the highest scores ever recorded in the New York Regents Examinations 13 14 It was at Elmira that Friendly developed core personal values learning to value culture and responsibility However his reclusivity combined with a lack of close relationships contributed to emotional issues that would persist over the course of his life During this period he experienced his first serious exposure to law as a young teenager while serving as an expert witness in a trial brought by his father for a breach of warranty By means of a friend s father a lawyer he learned to respect law and societal boundaries 15 Cornell University in Ithaca New York had been the most convenient choice for college though Friendly opted instead to matriculate at Harvard College drawn by the school s expansive catalogue Emergent challenges with his vision nearly delayed his college entry by a year but he gained a doctor s approval to begin He enrolled in the fall of 1919 at age sixteen and passed a competitive examination which allowed him to skip a basic English course 16 In college Friendly was a taciturn student who lacked social skills The university s only student from Elmira he was alienated from other freshman students who were two years his senior Despite this absence of fellowship Friendly continued to excel in his studies with a focus in history philosophy and government faulting only in a physical training course where he obtained a B grade He cherished the intellectual challenges of understanding history a pursuit reinforced by Harvard s modern approach that emphasized intellectual and political history A Lawrence Lowell the president of Harvard at the time taught his freshman course in government In his sophomore year Friendly enrolled in classes consisting of literature economics philosophy psychology and three history courses achieving superlative grades in all subjects with the same result throughout following years 17 His successes in the classroom were noticed by his peers Future attorney Albert L Gordon a classmate of Friendly s at Harvard later reflected upon his reputation we thought of him not only as the smartest in the class but the smartest at Harvard College 18 In 1923 Friendly graduated with an A B summa cum laude and was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa honor society During his junior year he had received the prestigious Bowdoin Prize for a paper entitled The Fall of Naples An Episode in the Risorgimento which examined Italian statesmen Camillo Benso and Giuseppe Garibaldi 19 It was at Harvard that Friendly developed a passion for European history through courses with Charles Homer Haskins Archibald Cary Coolidge and Frederick Jackson Turner He was also exposed to European diplomatic history under William L Langer 20 In his senior year Friendly took inspiration from Charles Howard McIlwain whose course in medieval England he credited with being by all odds the greatest educational experience I had at Harvard College 21 The historian broadened his knowledge of Latin and stressed the need to interpret documents as they were originally understood a lesson adopted by Friendly when he ascended to the bench years later 22 Postgraduate study edit Inspired by McIlwain Friendly intended to pursue a Ph D in medieval history after graduation He aspired to be a historian a goal which conflicted with his parents hopes for him to enroll in Harvard Law School and was assured by professor Frederick Merk that he would be appointed to the university s faculty 23 Merk had judged an answer given by Friendly in one examination as worthy of being published in an academic journal 20 Frightened by the prospect of losing their son s legal career the family steered connections to contact Judge Julian Mack about this dreadful thing that was about to occur 24 Following his recommendation they arranged for Friendly to meet law professor Felix Frankfurter with the aim of dissuading him from pursuing a career in history Frankfurter convinced Friendly to take up a Shaw Fellowship which enabled postgraduate studies in Europe for a year b then attend the Law School 26 Frankfurter reasoned he could study medieval history civil law or nothing at all during the fellowship then leave to study medieval history should he dislike the experience 27 From 1923 until 1924 Friendly sojourned in Europe He witnessed the alarming inflation and social unrest that grappled the Weimar Republic then traveled to Amsterdam and thirdly to Paris where he attended the Ecole pratique des hautes etudes for a few months He found the lectures on law there unimpressive admitting that between the two I much preferred history if anything could give one a distaste for law that was it 28 Much of his time was spent on reading attending operas and walking After stopping in Italy his studies led him to the universities of Oxford and Cambridge in England His parents accompanied him to celebrate his twenty first birthday in Nuremberg By the time the year ended Friendly still found himself aimless but returned to the United States to enter law school 29 Law school editIn 1925 Harvard Law School was a growing institution which expanded to house 1 440 students Under dean Christopher Columbus Langdell the school devised the case method of teaching which concentrated on actively engaging students in a Socratic dialogue Given stories of laborsome work and a third of first year students withdrawing Friendly arrived unsure of success cautiously dedicating only one or two nights a week to social activities to manage the pressure But on his first day at the Law School he made a tangible impact that affirmed his confidence and gained him recognition 30 Manley Ottmer Hudson his torts professor asked in a lecture in what language an early English case was written After students guessed wrongly Hudson then prompted Friendly who successfully identified it as Law French an archaic language A skeptical Hudson went to the archives and produced the original medieval text which Friendly proceeded to translate for the class So that really made my reputation at the Harvard Law School on the first day he recalled 31 c nbsp Friendly seen while still a Harvard Law student pictured in a 1927 edition of The Boston GlobeAlthough he was not enrolled in any of his classes Friendly was frequently invited by Frankfurter to join him The professor made the young student one of his favorites and it was due to Frankfurter that Friendly became interested in federal jurisdiction and emerging field of administrative law Other professors struck by Friendly s command over the material praised his ability 33 They included Thomas Reed Powell a proponent of legal realism as well as formalists Samuel Williston and Joseph Beale who often had to contend with the novel theories of Zechariah Chafee and Roscoe Pound 34 After one examination Calvert Magruder Friendly s first year teacher in contract law left him a congratulatory note I have never run across as beautiful an exam book as yours in Contracts nor one with your sense of values and emphasis the logical construction of your answers your compactness amp facility of expression 35 Friendly finished first in his class his first year and was honored to be a member of the Harvard Law Review He was elected the journal s president his second year d writing to his parents it is certainly the greatest honor in the Law School except for the Fay Diploma which is awarded at the end of three years and I am particularly gratified in that very few Jews have ever held the office 37 As president he spent long hours working from morning to evening interrupted only by classes and occasional breaks to eat Never before had he worked harder than during his time on the Law Review Weekdays he dedicated to editing and the weekends on coursework With Herbert Brownell Jr the editor in chief of the Yale Law Journal he drafted the first edition of The Bluebook 38 Along with the existing commitments to the law review Friendly was an active member of the Ames Moot Court Competition where he won the Marshall Prize for its best brief He came first in his class his second year despite investing less time to schoolwork 39 That summer he received an invitation from Frankfurter who was teaching at Columbia Law School to join him in New York City Frankfurter had been living there with Emory Buckner feeling that teaching would not sufficiently occupy him he arranged for Friendly along with classmates James Landis and Thomas Corcoran to room together in the city The group would make acquaintances with distinguished jurists Learned Hand Augustus Noble Hand Julian Mack and Charles Culp Burlingham After Buckner requested the assistance of two bright young men Frankfurter sent Friendly and Corcoran to aid him with his prosecution of Harry Daugherty at the New York U S Attorney s office 40 In 1927 Friendly graduated from Harvard Law as class president with an LL B summa cum laude 41 His academic record was one of the best in the history of the school with the achievements he amassed earning him a legendary status that became part of the university s folklore 42 Every honor the school had to offer was bestowed upon him 43 He achieved the highest grade point average of any Harvard Law student in the 20th century 44 and was the first graduate of the university to receive his law degree with such high honors e The Fay Diploma f the Law School s most distinguished decoration was also awarded to him 48 Although his performance suggested otherwise Friendly found his experience at Harvard Law School unrewarding He thought highly of the case method but never enjoyed the faculty instruction Criminal law taught by Pound bored him as did Beale After a few thrilling months with Williston and Hudson at the beginning of the first year everything seemed to slide he wrote to Frankfurter 49 For the rest of his life Friendly doubted his decision choosing law over history 50 nbsp Editors of the Harvard Law Review volume 39 pictured 1925 1926 at Austin Hall Friendly is standing center in the row behind David Farquhar Cavers center sitting nbsp Editors of the Harvard Law Review volume 40 pictured 1926 1927 Friendly is sitting center as president with Erwin Griswold standing in the back row Clerkship editIn Friendly s second year Frankfurter notified him of his decision to appoint him as a law clerk to Justice Louis Brandeis on the Supreme Court 51 Brandeis was aware of Friendly s intellectual achievements at Harvard both he and Frankfurter foresaw a career for Friendly in the legal academy 51 In Friendly s third year Frankfurter changed course He suggested that Friendly delay the clerkship to remain at Harvard for a fourth year to study teach and research for him 52 Friendly declined tired of law school Buckner advised him to immediately proceed to the clerkship then be a practitioner 53 The competing interests of Brandeis Frankfurter and Buckner ensued in a struggle over the future of Friendly s career 54 They quarreled over a life for Friendly in the academy or in the private practice of law 54 Frankfurter saw Buckner s intrusion as obstructing the true purpose of the clerkship to prepare Friendly for academia 53 The professor wrote to Buckner nbsp As a newly appointed law clerk to Justice Louis Brandeis Friendly is portrayed in a 1927 issue of The Columbia RecordWhat surprises me about all the lawyers with whom Friendly talked in New York and even about your comments to him is that you did not treat Friendly as a very special case a man of truly extraordinary talents under no pressure of immediacies still very young and potential of very great things in all sorts of ways Don t you think it is terribly important that there be deposited in an unusually talented person like Friendly thoughts and reflections not merely with reference to his success in New York during the next five or ten years but that he should keep in mind what would equip him for the rest of his life as a civilized reflective mind with a deep inner life instead of becoming as narrow and as sterile as are all but a negligible few of the leading members of the present day bar 54 The incident ultimately ended with the decision for Friendly not to undergo a postgraduate year 55 His parents had intervened within the year siding with Buckner 53 They went to visit Brandeis in Washington and the justice diffused their apprehensions The only definite advice I gave them was to leave their son alone to let him make up his own mind amp not merely to say so but let him see amp know that they will be happy in whatever decision he makes I put this as strongly as I could amp think they understood me 52 Friendly began the clerkship in the fall of his graduation 56 57 Friendly s relationship with Brandeis began tumultuously owing to a newspaper which overzealously titled the clerkship as having The two highest Harvard Law men to work together He considered abandoning his clerkship due to the potential embarrassment which might have followed though Brandeis never saw the headline and never read newspapers The two maintained a tentative relationship afterwards Brandeis did the bulk of the writing and was largely absent for the day while Friendly saw him twice a day in short periods 58 The clerkship with Brandeis had a lasting impact on Friendly 59 Notwithstanding the little time they spent together both he and the justice viewed each other highly 60 Brandeis in a telephone with Frankfurter declared If I had another man like Friendly I would not have to do a lick of work myself 61 Friendly praised Brandeis as knowing more law than almost the rest of the Court together 60 and placed him highest in his rating of judges above both Learned Hand and Frankfurter later in his life 58 45 Private practice editBetween a choice to assume a professorship offer at Harvard Law School or enter private practice Friendly became an associate in the white shoe law firm of Root Clark Buckner Howland amp Ballantine in September 1928 Brandeis had pressed him to enter the legal academy at Harvard alternatively suggesting for him to take up practice in Omaha Nebraska to avoid the elites of New York City Friendly was willing to sacrifice pay for a career in history though did not share the same enthusiasm for legal scholarship and declined the professorship A practice in law offered independence and financial stability qualities which he yearned 62 Elitism and antisemitism were pervasive in law firms Root Clark was among the few firms in Wall Street to hire Jews in addition to having a Jewish partner a characteristic which attracted Friendly He interviewed also at Sullivan amp Cromwell which also permitted Jews though turned down an offer after undergoing a series of interviews suspecting it to be predicated on antisemitic beliefs and due only to his having been president of the Harvard Law Review 63 nbsp Harvard professor and future Justice Felix Frankfurter pictured served as a mentor to Friendly during both his undergraduate and graduate years arranging for him positions at Harvard Law School 64 Friendly stayed in private practice for 31 years on January 2 1937 he was made a partner of Root Clark 65 1 The firm first assigned him as an assistant to Grenville Clark a senior partner who had suffered a nervous breakdown with the intent that Friendly s aid and experience might reinvigorate him Clark had been a prominent corporate lawyer a fellow graduate of Harvard Law School and nominee 66 of the Nobel Peace Prize 67 Friendly s assistance however failed to improve his health After months of uneventful work under Clark Elihu Root Jr g reassigned Friendly to a case representing Pan American Grace Airways and its president Juan Trippe Friendly would assume control of the company s legal affairs with Root s consent not long afterward primarily tasked with handling its contracts and diplomatic relationships In 1929 he began a romantic relationship with Sophie Stern daughter of future Judge Horace Stern and the couple married on September 4 1930 69 In 1931 Brandeis once again urged Friendly to join the faculty of Harvard Law School this time with the additional support of Frankfurter Roscoe Pound Calvert Magruder and Edward Morgan When Friendly refused in order to remain in private practice Brandeis and Frankfurter attempted to get him to join the Reconstruction Finance Corporation RFC as its assistant general counsel the next year at the invitation of Eugene Meyer He turned down this office also a decision which came as a disappointment to Frankfurter 70 The Law School continued to make repeated requests for Friendly to join its faculty all of which were ultimately unsuccessful 71 From 1931 until 1933 John Marshall Harlan II a senior associate 72 at Root Clark was embroiled with a case representing the will of the late heirless Ella Virginia von Echtzel Wendel Wendel a wealthy recluse who was the sole owner of about 100 million of real estate 73 left a substantial fortune of 40 50 million to unknown next of kin Hundreds of claimants many fraudulent arose to inherit a part of the estate Friendly was a prime assistant to Harlan proving false the claim of a prominent candidate and whose extensive research into the claimant s forgeries led to the dissolve of several other parties cases 74 He would recall of the case John Harlan and I often remarked to each other that the Wendel Estate litigation was the most enjoyable forensic experience of our lives It combined the elements of drama with what is not always available the financial resources needed to do a thoroughly professional job 75 Pan Am and Cleary Gottlieb edit Friendly was responsible for Pan Am s congressional affairs spending much of his time in Washington D C litigating contracts He accompanied Trippe in his role as a legal advisor and sat adjacent to him in conference meetings During World War II Pan Am underwent rapid expansion some of which were facilitated by Congressional funds appropriated in an agreement to use the company s airfields as a staging ground for the war effort Friendly and Pan Am lawyer John Cobb Cooper sought to gain an advantage over the U S Department of War in dictating its terms their effective efforts later came under scrutiny in a Senate investigation led by Missouri Senator Harry S Truman one which ultimately found no wrongdoing 76 With fellow associate Leo Gottlieb Friendly began considering leaving Root Clark to start a new firm The two left in 1945 forming Cleary Gottlieb Friendly amp Cox now Cleary Gottlieb Steen amp Hamilton and were joined by a number of the firm s associates and partners 14 The departure of a substantial portion of its lawyers caused a serious split in Root Clark though the firm was damaged it left on good terms with the newly formed Cleary Gottlieb 77 Cleary Gottlieb s immediate success dispelled Friendly s initial financial fears amidst a declining postwar economy 78 nbsp Juan Trippe founder of Pan American World Airways nbsp James M Landis former Dean of Harvard Law School Friendly brought Pan Am and New York Telephone to the new firm In 1946 the former appointed Friendly as its general counsel and vice president a position he would serve in until 1959 79 80 In working for both Cleary Gottlieb and Pan Am simultaneously he was split between commuting to the firm in Wall Street and the Pan Am headquarters located in the Chrysler Building Cleary Gottlieb grew quickly and it would attract high profile clients such as Bing Crosby Albert Einstein 81 the French government and Sherman Fairchild George W Ball who had joined the firm at its invitation left to serve as United States Under Secretary of State and later United States Ambassador to the United Nations Elihu Root Jr and Grenville Clark formerly of Dewey Ballantine resigned their positions to join Cleary Gottlieb as of counsel 82 While working for Pan Am Friendly proved himself to be a skilled litigator adept in cross examination In a case involving the company Trans World Airlines TWA and American Overseas Airlines AOA 83 Friendly s cross examination of multiple airline executives revealed contradictory statements which were refuted by internal data On one occasion his employment of a sometimes aggressive unapologetic approach in questioning led to an objection by counsel though Friendly refused to recant his methods The case which concerned Pan Am s acquisition of the AOA 84 also involved James M Landis former Dean of Harvard Law School who had a personal feud with both Friendly and Trippe Landis represented the TWA in its efforts to compete against Pan Am for the purchase of the AOA Friendly s cross examination of Landis led to the upholding of Pan Am s acquisition by the Civil Aeronautics Board and President Harry Truman s signed approval on July 10 1950 unexpectedly gave Pan Am the benefit of additional access to airways which it did not ask for TWA appealed the controversial decision by Truman to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit which in turn upheld Friendly s arguments and struck down the appeal 85 The majority of Friendly s appellate litigation would be in the service of Pan Am though in 1956 he won a New York Court of Appeals case for the New York Telephone Company against the Public Service Commission He also successfully distinguished himself in oral argument at the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit where he argued before Judge Calvert Magruder who had previously been among those to recommend Friendly to join the Harvard Law faculty In 1959 Trippe approached Friendly to strike a contract with Howard Hughes for the purchase of six Boeing jets With Raymond Cook 86 Hughes lawyer Friendly s efforts to clear the contract ensured its survival amidst a bond issue with the U S Securities and Exchange Commission The 40 million deal was one of the hastiest Friendly drafted and would be one of his last acts in private practice 87 Nomination to the Second Circuit editUpon the election of President Dwight D Eisenhower s in 1952 Friendly sought a possible judicial appointment Decades of having been in private practice had begun to take a toll on his mental health cases for Pan Am before the CAB grew monotonous and unsatisfying Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr with whom Friendly worked with during his days at Harvard Law began searching for potential candidates to the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit It was recommended that Friendly take up a preliminary appointment on the district court but he eschewed a position having previously attended it in secret as a disappointed spectator 88 I think there have been not more than two occasions during the long period I have served as a judge when I have felt it permissible to write a letter in favor of anyone for judicial appointment However I feel so strongly that the Second Circuit would be greatly benefitted by the appointment of Mr Henry J Friendly that I cannot forbear writing you to express my hope that you may see fit to fill the vanacy now existing in the Circuit by selecting him I have not the slightest doubt that as a Circuit Judge he would be an addition to our court as great as if not greater than anyone else you could choose not only because of his unblemished reputation and high scholarship but because of his balanced wisdom and wide outlook Learned Hand in a letter to President Dwight Eisenhower 89 90 Friendly s performance in private practice bore little influence on his being a viable candidate His specialized practice in administrative law was known only to a select group of fellow lawyers in New York and he had appeared before the U S Supreme Court twice losing both cases Additionally the legal bouts against Landis and TWA received limited media coverage nor was he an active member of academia having turned a career as a professor down years prior He was primarily distinguished by his exceptional performance at Harvard Law School his clerkship for Justice Brandeis and the reputation he accrued during his years in practice 91 In 1954 John Marshall Harlan II was appointed by Eisenhower to the U S Supreme Court to replace Justice Robert Jackson leaving his position on the Second Circuit vacant Felix Frankfurter and Learned Hand soon emerged as vocal supporters of Friendly to fill the seat though ultimately the position went to J Edward Lumbard Friendly lobbied friends colleagues and close aides including Louis M Loeb and State Senator Thomas C Desmond in the case another vacancy arose The unexpected development of a cataract in his left eye nearly endangered his candidacy though symptoms abated following a successful eye surgery 92 He was once again passed over when Judge Jerome Frank died in 1957 In spite of Frankfurter s vehement support for Friendly Frank s seat was filled by Leonard P Moore 93 On October 23 1957 Brownell Jr resigned as Attorney General and was replaced by William P Rogers 94 who soon received letters from Frankfurter when Judge Harold Medina announced his retirement in January 1958 The Association of the Bar of the City of New York supported Friendly s candidacy to take Medina s seat and the American Bar Association appraised him as exceptionally well qualified 95 The candidates to fill the seat of Medina also included Irving Kaufman who had the bipartisan backing of both the state s Democrats and prominent Republicans which Friendly lacked Kaufman attempted to reinforce his platform by seeking the additional endorsement of Learned Hand but Hand avoided doing so using his law clerk Ronald Dworkin as a means of evading a potential meeting In 1959 political support shifted towards Friendly as a compromise candidate and he was further bolstered by a public endorsement by Learned Hand soon after On March 10 1959 Eisenhower nominated Friendly to the U S Senate Frankfurter s voiced support to Minority Leader Lyndon B Johnson who in turn convinced Senator Thomas Dodd to send the hearing notice ensured Friendly s confirmation on September 9 96 U S Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit editFriendly received his commission to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals on September 10 1959 at the age of 56 79 97 Justice John Marshall Harlan II swore him in on September 29 1959 at the United States Courthouse now the Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse in Manhattan 98 Friendly joined just four other active judges on the court Charles Edward Clark J Edward Lumbard Sterry R Waterman and Leonard P Moore who were all Republicans and shared similar careers in private practice as he had 99 He established himself as being complaisant and sensitive to his colleagues incorporating suggestions from the other judges whenever possible 100 Friendly was apprehensive about his judicial ability and was initially beset by self doubt in writing opinions He first arrived on the bench on October 6 1959 and erroneously ruled in favor of the government in United States v New York New Haven amp Hartford R R The case which was on appeal concerned the Interstate Commerce Commission and fell under the Expediting Act which in turn required the case to bypass the court of appeals directly to Supreme Court 101 Wary of another mistake Friendly began taking a strictly literal interpretation of laws Regarding his indecisiveness over one decision he told Learned Hand of his fears Hand exclaimed Damn it Henry make up your mind That s what they re paying you to do 102 He would continue to serve as a judge for the rest of his life assuming senior status on April 15 1974 He served as a member of the Judicial Conference of the United States where he was its chief judge from 1971 to 1973 and was also a presiding judge of the Special Railroad Court from 1974 to 1986 His judicial service was terminated on March 11 1986 due to his death 79 During his tenure Friendly would pen over 1 000 judicial opinions while remaining active as a scholarly writer 103 He wrote extensively in law reviews publishing works that were considered seminal in multiple fields and extraordinary in combination with his existing workload as an appellate judge 104 3 Legacy editExternal videos nbsp Legacy of Judge Henry Friendly March 10 2017 C SPANIn a ceremony following Friendly s death then Chief Justice Warren E Burger said In my 30 years on the bench I have never known a judge more qualified to sit on the Supreme Court At the same ceremony Justice Thurgood Marshall called Friendly a man of the law 105 In a letter to the editor of The New York Times following Friendly s obituary Judge Jon O Newman called Friendly quite simply the pre eminent appellate judge of his era who authored the definitive opinions for the nation in each area of the law that he had occasion to consider 57 In a statement after Friendly s death Wilfred Feinberg the 2nd Circuit s chief judge at the time called Friendly one of the greatest Federal judges in the history of the Federal bench 57 Judge Richard A Posner described Friendly as the most distinguished judge in this country during his years on the bench and the most powerful legal reasoner in American history 106 57 Akhil Amar called Friendly the greatest American judge of the 20th century Amar also cited Friendly as a major influence on Chief Justice John Roberts 107 Honors editFriendly was a member of the Harvard Board of Overseers from 1964 to 1969 and was also a member of the executive committee of the American Law Institute He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1977 and the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Award in Law in 1978 108 Harvard Law School has a professorship named after Friendly Paul C Weiler a Canadian constitutional law scholar held it from 1993 to 2006 109 William J Stuntz a scholar of criminal law and procedure held it from 2006 until his death in March 2011 110 The professorship is currently held by Carol S Steiker a specialist in criminal justice policy and capital punishment 111 The Federal Bar Council awarded Friendly a Certificate of Distinguished Judicial Service posthumously in 1986 112 The Henry Friendly Medal established by the American Law Institute was named in memory of Friendly and endowed by his former law clerks 113 Justice Sandra Day O Connor received the award in 2011 114 Personal life editFriendly was a member of the Republican Party 115 116 117 Family and marriage edit Sophie Pfaelzer Stern Friendly s wife was a member of a Philadelphia Jewish family and educated at Swarthmore College and Fordham University Following their marriage the newly wed couple traveled to Italy and Paris for their honeymoon 118 Both Friendly and Stern shared a close relationship and they had two children David and Joan by January 1937 and a third Ellen soon after 119 As their marriage progressed it became complicated and grew unintimate later in his life 120 Work engrossed Friendly and he had a largely estranged relationship with his children seeing them only during the summer 121 He was also extremely reserved showed both little emotion and signs of physical affection to his children and was uninterested in their personal affairs He sought to maintain an excessively formal environment often retiring to study alone 122 Joan Friendly Goodman his second eldest child 123 124 remembered Friendly s tentative bond What he experienced he had difficulty expressing and because he expressed so little the feelings never were shaped modulated refined I knew what he wanted but couldn t express himself He was slightly gruff too loud used his voice rather than a caress to wake me but I knew it was his way of saying I want to care for you I saw the intent behind the deed when the gesture failed He was always on the verge of giving vent to tenderness but except in his letters rarely able to do so 125 Health edit Friendly was a natural pessimist and demonstrated some symptoms consistent with major depressive disorder He harbored feelings of hopelessness in addition to experiencing bouts of extreme sadness though not to the extent of impairing his diligence 126 Friendly s father Myer died at age 76 on December 28 1938 127 in a local hospital at St Petersburg Florida he was a longtime winter resident in the city 128 h His father s death of a blood clot precipitated Friendly s lifelong fear of a stroke and concern for his own health 129 Friendly s wife died of cancer in 1985 130 Death edit Friendly died by suicide at age 82 on March 11 1986 in his Park Avenue apartment in New York City 116 multiple prescription bottles were at his side 131 Police said they found three notes in the apartment one addressed to his resident maid and two unaddressed notes In all three notes Friendly talked about his distress at his wife s death his declining health and his failing eyesight according to a police spokesman 116 His wife the former Sophie M Stern had died a year earlier They had been married for 55 years He was survived by a son and two daughters 116 Selected list of former law clerks edit nbsp Philip Bobbitt 1975 76 nbsp Merrick Garland 1977 78 nbsp John Roberts 1979 80Name Term Notes Ref David P Currie 1960 1961 Edward H Levi Distinguished Service Professor University of Chicago Law School 132 Peter Edelman 1961 1962 Carmack Waterhouse Professor of Law and Public Policy Georgetown University Law Center 132 Stephen Barnett 1962 1963 Elizabeth Josselyn Boalt Professor of Law Emeritus University of California Berkeley 132 Pierre N Leval 1963 1964 Judge of the U S Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit 133 Michael Boudin 1964 1965 Chief Judge of the U S Court of Appeals for the First Circuit 133 Bruce Ackerman 1967 1968 Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science Yale Law School 133 Richard Daynard 1967 1968 University Distinguished Professor Northeastern University School of Law 133 A Raymond Randolph 1969 1970 Judge of the U S Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 134 Walter Hellerstein 1970 1971 Francis Shackleford Distinguished Professor of Taxation Law University of Georgia School of Law 134 Martin Glenn 1971 1972 Chief Judge of the U S Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York 134 Frederick T Davis 1972 1973 Lecturer Columbia Law School Partner Debevoise amp Plimpton 134 William Curtis Bryson 1973 1974 Senior Judge of the U S Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit Acting Solicitor General of the United States 135 Gregory Palm 1974 1975 Executive Vice President Goldman Sachs 135 James R Smoot 1974 1975 Dean of the Cecil C Humphreys School of Law The University of Memphis 135 Philip Bobbitt 1975 1976 Herbert Wechsler Professor of Jurisprudence Columbia Law School 135 Todd Rakoff 1975 1976 Byrne Professor of Administrative Law Harvard Law School 135 Ruth Wedgwood 1976 1977 Edward B Burling Professor of International Law and Diplomacy Johns Hopkins University 135 Merrick Garland 1977 1978 Chief Judge of the U S Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 86th United States Attorney General 135 Walter R Stern 1978 1979 Partner Wachtell Lipton Rosen amp Katz Member American Law Institute 136 John Roberts 1979 1980 17th Chief Justice of the United States Judge of the U S Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 136 Reinier Kraakman 1979 1980 Ezra Ripley Thayer Professor of Law Harvard Law School 136 Gary Born 1981 1982 Partner Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr 136 Louis Kaplow 1981 1982 Finn M W Caspersen amp Household International Professor of Law amp Economics Harvard Law School 137 Jonathan R Macey 1982 1983 Sam Harris Professor of Corporate Law Corporate Finance and Securities Law Yale Law School 137 Michael P Madow 1982 1983 Professor Brooklyn Law School 137 David J Seipp 1982 1983 Professor Boston University School of Law 137 Larry Kramer 1984 1985 12th Dean of Stanford Law School President of the London School of Economics 137 Scholarly writings editBooks edit Friendly Henry J January 1 1962 The Federal Administrative Agencies The Need for a Better Definition of Standards 1st ed Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674295506 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Friendly Henry J 1967 Benchmarks University of Chicago Press ASIN B0007DL1G2 ISBN 978 0226265308 Friendly Henry J 1968 Remarks by Judge Henry J Friendly In Sutherland Arthur E ed The Path of Law from 1967 Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674657854 Friendly Henry J 1971 The Dartmouth College Case and the Public Private Penumbra Vol 12 University of Texas Press ASIN B0006C3JQY LCCN 71 627370 Schwartz Bernard Wade H W R 1972 Legal Control of Government Administrative Law in Britain and the United States Foreword by Henry J Friendly Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0019825313 Friendly Henry J 1973 Federal Jurisdiction A General View New York NY Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231037419 Friendly Henry J 1975 Grenville Clark Legal Preceptor In Dimond Mary Clark Cousins Norman Clifford J Garry eds Memoirs of a Man Grenville Clark W W Norton ISBN 978 0393087161 Journals edit Friendly Henry J February 1928 The Historic Basis of Diversity Jurisdiction Harvard Law Review 41 4 483 510 doi 10 2307 1330049 JSTOR 1330049 Friendly Henry J March 1932 Review of The Interstate Commerce Commission by I L Sharfman Vols I II Harvard Law Review 45 5 941 945 doi 10 2307 1332048 JSTOR 1332048 Friendly Henry J November 1934 Some Comments on the Corporate Reorganizations Act Harvard Law Review 48 1 39 81 doi 10 2307 1331740 JSTOR 1331740 Friendly Henry J November 1935 Review of The Interstate Commerce Commission by I L Sharfman Part III Volume A Harvard Law Review 49 1 163 166 doi 10 2307 1333250 JSTOR 1333250 Friendly Henry J January 1936 Amendment of the Railroad Reorganization Act Columbia Law Review 36 1 27 59 doi 10 2307 1116239 JSTOR 1116239 Friendly Henry J January 1937 Review of Brandeis The Personal History of an American Ideal by Alfred Lief University of Pennsylvania Law Review 85 3 330 332 doi 10 2307 3309092 JSTOR 3309092 Friendly Henry J January 1939 Review of Chapter Ten Corporate Reorganization under the Federal Statute by Luther D Swanstrom Harvard Law Review 52 3 540 542 doi 10 2307 1334371 JSTOR 1334371 Friendly Henry J March 1939 Review of A Treatise on Aviation Law by Henry G Hotchkiss Harvard Law Review 52 5 860 862 doi 10 2307 1333462 JSTOR 1333462 Friendly Henry J November 1940 Review of La Responsabilite Civile Dans les Transports Aeriens Interieurs et Internationaux by Jean van Houtte Harvard Law Review 54 1 169 171 doi 10 2307 1333389 JSTOR 1333389 Friendly Henry J Tondel Jr Lyman M 1940 Relative Treatment of Securities in Railroad Reorganizations under Section 77 Law amp Contemporary Problems Duke Law School 7 3 420 437 Friendly Henry J January 1943 Review of International Air Transport and National Policy by Oliver James Lissitzyn Harvard Law Review 56 4 656 659 doi 10 2307 1334437 JSTOR 1334437 Friendly Henry J January 1947 Review of Brandeis A Free Man s Life by Alpheus Thomas Mason Yale Law Journal 56 2 423 426 doi 10 2307 793018 JSTOR 793018 Friendly Henry J May 1960 Mr Justice Brandeis The Quest for Reason University of Pennsylvania Law Review 108 7 985 999 doi 10 2307 3310209 JSTOR 3310209 Friendly Henry J April 1960 A Look at the Federal Administrative Agencies Columbia Law Review 60 4 429 446 doi 10 2307 1120305 JSTOR 1120305 Friendly Henry J December 1961 Reactions of a Lawyer Newly Become Judge PDF Yale Law Journal 71 2 218 238 doi 10 2307 794327 JSTOR 794327 Friendly Henry J May 1961 Review of The Common Law Tradition Deciding Appeals by Karl N Llewellyn University of Pennsylvania Law Review 109 7 1040 1056 doi 10 2307 3310673 JSTOR 3310673 Friendly Henry J 1961 Review of The Law and Its Compass 1960 Rosenthal Lectures Northwestern University School of Law by Cyril J Radcliffe Journal of Legal Education Association of American Law Schools 14 2 275 277 JSTOR 42891433 Friendly Henry J December 1962 Judge Learned Hand An Expression from the Second Circuit Brooklyn Law Review 29 1 6 15 Friendly Henry J May 1962 The Federal Administrative Agencies The Need for Better Definition of Standards Harvard Law Review 75 7 1263 1318 doi 10 2307 1338547 JSTOR 1338547 Friendly Henry J May 1963 The Gap in Lawmaking Judges Who Can t and Legislators Who Won t Columbia Law Review 63 5 787 807 doi 10 2307 1120530 JSTOR 1120530 Friendly Henry J August 11 1963 Review of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes The Proving Years 1870 1882 by Mark de Wolfe Howe The New York Times Book Review Friendly Henry J 1964 Mr Justice Frankfurter and the Reading of Statutes In Mendelson Wallace ed Felix Frankfurter the Judge Reynal amp Hitchcock ASIN B00178T5I2 Friendly Henry J May 1964 In Praise of Erie And of the New Federal Common Law New York University Law Review 39 3 383 422 Friendly Henry J October 1965 The Bill of Rights as a Code of Criminal Procedure PDF California Law Review 53 4 929 956 doi 10 2307 3478984 JSTOR 3478984 Friendly Henry J Winter 1965 On Entering the Path of the Law University of Chicago Law School Record University of Chicago Law School 13 1 17 22 Friendly Henry J August 1965 Satisfaction Yes Complacency No American Bar Association Journal 51 8 715 720 JSTOR 25723310 Friendly Henry J May 1965 Mr Justice Frankfurter Virginia Law Review 51 4 552 556 JSTOR 1071549 Friendly Henry J 1965 Review of The Courts the Public and the Law Explosion by Harry W Jones ed New York Law Forum New York Law School 11 Friendly Henry J 1965 Review of The Commission and the Common Law A Study in Administrative Interpretation by Arnold H Bennett Syracuse Law Review 16 Friendly Henry J Summer 1966 Review of The American Jury by Harry Kalven Jr Hans Zeisel Thomas Callahan Philip Ennis University of Chicago Law Review 33 4 884 889 doi 10 2307 1598515 JSTOR 1598515 Friendly Henry J 1967 The Idea of a Metropolitan University Law School Case Western Reserve Law Review 19 1 7 16 Friendly Henry J Fall 1968 The Fifth Amendment Tomorrow The Case for Constitutional Change University of Cincinnati Law Review 37 4 671 726 Henry Friendly J November 1968 The Limited Office of the Chenery Decision Administrative Law Review American Bar Association 21 1 1 9 JSTOR 40691094 Henry Friendly J 1968 Review of The Unpublished Opinions of Mr Justice Brandeis by Alexander Bickel ed University of Pennsylvania Law Review 106 5 766 769 doi 10 2307 3310388 JSTOR 3310388 Henry Friendly J 1968 Review of Anatomy of the Law by Lon L Fuller Duquesne Law Review 7 Henry Friendly J 1969 A Federal Court of Administrative Appeals Case amp Comment Rochester New York 74 Henry Friendly J April 1969 Chenery Revisited Reflections on Reversal and Remand of Administrative Orders Duke Law Journal 1969 2 199 225 doi 10 2307 1371428 JSTOR 1371428 Friendly Henry J Winter 1969 70 Time and Tide in the Supreme Court Connecticut Law Review 2 2 213 221 Henry Friendly J Autumn 1970 Is Innocence Irrelevant Collateral Attack on Criminal Judgments University of Chicago Law Review 38 1 142 172 doi 10 2307 1598963 JSTOR 1598963 Henry Friendly J December 1971 Mr Justice Harlan as Seen by a Friend and Judge of an Inferior Court Harvard Law Review 85 2 382 389 JSTOR 1339738 Henry Friendly J 1970 Judicial Control of Discretionary Administrative Action Journal of Legal Education Association of American Law Schools 23 1 63 69 JSTOR 42892042 Henry Friendly J September 1971 Review of Learned Hand s Court by Marvin Schick Political Science Quarterly Oxford University Press 86 3 470 476 doi 10 2307 2147916 JSTOR 2147916 Friendly Henry J October 24 1972 Remarks of Chief Judge Friendly In Memoriam Honorable John Marshall Harlan Washington D C Proceedings of the Bar and Officers of the Supreme Court of the United States pp 13 17 Henry Friendly J March 1972 Judge Paul R Hays Columbia Law Review 72 3 445 446 doi 10 2307 1121408 JSTOR 1121408 Henry Friendly J March 1972 The Law of the Circuit and All That St John s Law Review 46 3 406 413 Henry Friendly J September 1972 Review of History of the Supreme Court of the United States by Paul A Freund Vol I Antecedents and Beginnings to 1801 by Julius Goebel Jr Vol VI Reconstruction and Reunion 1864 88 Part One by Charles Fairman Political Science Quarterly Oxford University Press 87 3 439 447 doi 10 2307 2149210 JSTOR 2149210 Henry Friendly J June 1973 Erwin N Griswold Some Fond Recollections Harvard Law Review 86 8 1365 1368 JSTOR 1340027 Henry Friendly J January 1973 Review of Judgments Essays on American Constitutional History by Leonard W Levy Columbia Law Review 73 1 179 182 doi 10 2307 1121345 JSTOR 1121345 Henry Friendly J 1973 Empirical Approaches to Judicial Behavior Of Voting Blocs and Cabbages and Kings University of Cincinnati Law Review 42 4 673 678 Henry Friendly J 1973 The United States Courts of Appeals 1972 73 Term Criminal Law and Procedure PDF Georgetown Law Journal Preface 62 2 401 403 Henry Friendly J April 1974 Averting the Flood by Lessening the Flow Cornell Law Review 59 4 634 657 Henry Friendly J April 1974 New Trends in Administrative Law Maryland Bar Journal 61 3 9 16 Friendly Henry J June 1975 Some Kind of Hearing University of Pennsylvania Law Review 123 6 1267 1317 doi 10 2307 3311426 JSTOR 3311426 Friendly Henry J 1975 Edward Weinfeld The Ideal Judge New York University Law Review 50 Friendly Henry J 1976 Review of Administrative Law by Bernard Schwartz New York University Law Review 51 Friendly Henry J 1976 Review of Police Discretion by Kenneth Culp Davis University of Chicago Law Review 44 1 255 259 Friendly Henry J 1976 The Federal Courts N Y U Bicentennial Conference of American Law Friendly Henry J May 1977 Federalism A Foreword PDF The Yale Law Journal 86 6 1019 1034 doi 10 2307 795701 JSTOR 795701 Friendly Henry J November 1 1978 The Courts and Social Policy Substance and Procedure University of Miami Law Review Meyer Lecture Series 33 1 21 42 Friendly Henry J June 1978 In Praise of Herbert Wechsler Columbia Law Review 78 5 974 981 doi 10 2307 1121888 JSTOR 1121888 Friendly Henry J 1980 Review of Administrative Law Treatise by Kenneth Culp Davis Hofstra Law Review 8 2 471 484 Friendly Henry J March 1981 Thoughts about Judging Michigan Law Review 79 4 634 641 doi 10 2307 1288287 JSTOR 1288287 Friendly Henry J Fall 1982 Indiscretion About Discretion Emory Law Journal 31 4 747 784 Henry Friendly J June 1982 The Public Private Penumbra Fourteen Years Later University of Pennsylvania Law Review 130 6 1289 1295 doi 10 2307 3311971 JSTOR 3311971 Friendly Henry J July 1983 Ablest Judge of His Generation California Law Review 71 4 1039 1044 JSTOR 3480188 Friendly Henry J 1985 From a Fellow Worker on the Railroads Tulane Law Review 60 2 244 255 See also editList of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States Seat 4 Notes edit Twain s octagonal study located in Elmira was his place of work for Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn The writer had married Olivia Langdon Clemens a native of Elmira and the two owned a house in the town After her death Twain no longer inhabited his Elmira retreat 10 The Shaw traveling fellowship allowed a student 14 months of study in European universities 25 Friendly would later learn that Frankfurter had orchestrated Hudson s questioning beforehand 32 Friendly was president of Volume 40 of the Harvard Law Review during the 1926 1927 term The following year he was succeeded by Erwin Griswold whom he mentored for Volume 41 36 Justice Louis Brandeis graduated from Harvard Law School in 1877 with approximately a 95 average compared to Friendly s average of 86 Comparatively a student who received an 80 average was expected to be first in their class with highest honors 45 However in the 46 years between Brandeis and Friendly s tenure at the law school the university had changed its grading system Friendly biographer David M Dorsen notes some controversy over whether Friendly or Brandeis had the highest average in the history of the law school 46 Awarded based on the law student with the highest combined grade point average during the three years of study 47 Son of 41st U S Secretary of War and 38th U S Secretary of State Elihu Root He was the principal founder of Root Clark amp Bird expanded later to Root Clark Buckner Howland amp Ballantine 68 Myer left a sizeable inheritance to his children and relatives upon his death Among them Friendly received the largest share at 305 156 127 References edit a b Harvard Law Review 1986 p 1721 Davis 2012 p 339 a b Davis amp Gladden 2014 p 64 Dorsen 2012 p 1 5 6 a b Dorsen 2012 p 6 Dorsen 2012 p 6 7 a b Dorsen 2012 p 7 Dorsen 2012 p 5 6 8 Dorsen 2012 p 8 9 a b Dorsen 2012 p 10 Dorsen 2012 p 6 9 10 Dorsen 2012 pp 9 10 Keeffe 1968 1969 p 316 Keeffe 1961 p 319 Hare Jim November 16 2019 Elmira History EFA grad went on to have a distinguished career on the federal bench Star Gazette Retrieved May 29 2023 a b Henry Friendly Partner in New Law Firm Star Gazette January 5 1946 p 3 Retrieved June 1 2023 Dorsen 2012 p 10 12 Dorsen 2012 p 11 13 Dorsen 2012 p 11 14 Dorsen 2012 p 13 HONORARY MEMBERS OF HARVARD PHI BETA KAPPA Chapter Honors Louis A Coolidge and Several Professors New Members in Course The Boston Globe June 19 1922 p 4 Retrieved May 30 2023 a b Harvard Law Review 1986 p 1716 Dorsen 2012 p 13 17 Dorsen 2012 p 16 17 Harvard Law Review 1986 p 1715 Dorsen 2011 p 602 Boudin Dorsen amp DeJulio 2013 p 169 170 Dorsen 2012 p 20 Siegel 2017 p 116 YOUTH WINS HIGH HONORS Henry Friendly of St Petersburg Is Graduated from Harvard St Petersburg Times August 9 1923 p 9 Retrieved May 30 2023 Dorsen 2012 p 20 Snyder 2010 p 1168 Dorsen 2012 p 20 21 Dorsen 2012 p 21 Snyder 2010 p 1168 1169 Dorsen 2012 p 20 24 Davis 2012 p 342 Boudin Dorsen amp DeJulio 2013 p 170 Snyder 2010 p 1169 Dorsen 2012 p 23 Boudin Dorsen amp DeJulio 2013 p 170 Dorsen 2012 p 23 24 Harvard Law Review 1986 p 1720 Dorsen 2012 p 24 Dorsen 2012 p 25 71 Dorsen 2012 pp 1 24 Lucas 2017 pp 430 431 Dorsen 2012 p 25 Harvard Law Review 1986 p 1717 WON HARVARD S FIRST LLB SUMMA CUM LAUDE Henry J Friendly of Elmira N Y Had Marvelous Record in College and Law School The Boston Globe June 24 1927 p 14 Retrieved May 30 2023 Davis amp Gladden 2014 p 64 Dorsen 2012 p xiii Harvard Law Review 1986 pp 1713 1716 Kahn 2003 p 273 Leval 2012 p 258 Boudin 2007 p 977 Siegel 2017 p 116 126 Snyder 2010 p 1170 Subrahmanyam Divya November 26 2012 A conversation on the legal legacy of Judge Henry Friendly Harvard Law Today Harvard Law School Retrieved July 12 2022 a b Brains Both Have Plenty U S Supreme Court Gets Harvard Law School s Two Best Scholars The Columbia Record Columbia South Carolina September 28 1927 p 6 Retrieved May 30 2023 Dorsen 2012 p 27 xiii Caplan Lincoln January February 2016 Rhetoric and Law The double life of Richard Posner America s most contentious legal reformer Harvard Magazine Harvard University Retrieved January 1 2024 Over 200 Undergraduates Gain Honors in Graduation Awards Number of Degrees Awarded Is Largest Ever Law School for First Time Gives Summa The Harvard Crimson Harvard University June 23 1927 Retrieved December 15 2012 Harvard Law Review 1986 p 1716 1717 Snyder 2010 p 1169 Snyder 2010 p 1169 Dorsen 2012 p 27 a b Snyder 2010 p 1171 a b Dorsen 2012 p 26 a b c Snyder 2010 p 1172 a b c Harvard Law Review 1986 p 1717 Harvard Law Review 1986 p 1717 1718 Dorsen 2012 p 25 26 a b c d Newman Jon O March 24 1986 From Learned Hand To Henry Friendly The New York Times a b Dorsen 2012 p 27 29 Biskupic 2019 p 48 49 a b Lucas 2017 p 431 Dorsen 2012 p 29 Dorsen 2012 p 31 32 34 Dorsen 2012 p 32 33 Siegel 2017 p 124 Dorsen 2012 p 44 81 Nomination Database on Grenville Clark nobelprize org Nobel Prize Retrieved May 30 2023 Clifford John Garry Clark Grenville 1882 1967 Harvard Square Library Retrieved May 30 2023 Elihu Root Jr Lawyer Is Dead Statesman s Son a Civic Leader Arts Patron and Yachtsman Received Truman Medal Leading La Guardia Backer The New York Times August 28 1967 p 31 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 30 2023 Dorsen 2012 p 32 34 37 Harvard Law Review 1986 p 1718 Dorsen 2012 p 37 38 Siegel 2017 p 116 Dorsen 2012 p 34 Ella Wendel Dies Last of Her Family Huge Realty Holdings Valued at 100 000 000 Are Left With No Kin to Claim Them The New York Times March 15 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 31 2023 Dorsen 2012 p 38 41 Dorsen 2012 p 41 Dorsen 2012 p 47 48 60 George Cleary 90 Law Firm Founder The New York Times March 27 1981 Dorsen 2012 p 50 52 a b c Henry Friendly at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges a publication of the Federal Judicial Center Harvard Law Review 1986 p 1712 Dorsen 2012 p 68 Dorsen 2012 p 60 66 67 Debate An Air Merger The CAB Hears Attorneys For Two Lines The Kansas City Times March 2 1950 p 23 Retrieved June 11 2023 Overseas Airline Dispute Aired Albuquerque Journal March 2 1950 p 19 Retrieved June 11 2023 Dorsen 2012 p 61 66 Hughes Tool Co Divests Itself Of Northeast Airline Holdings Miami Lawyer Is Nominated for 3 Fears as Trastee of Slock in the Carrier The New York Times October 8 1964 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 13 2023 Dorsen 2012 p 67 69 Dorsen 2012 p 71 72 Dorsen 2012 p 75 Gunther 1994 p 650 Dorsen 2012 pp 72 73 Lucas 2017 p 433 Dorsen 2012 p 73 Dorsen 2012 p 73 74 Mr Brownell Resigns The New York Times October 25 1957 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 17 2023 Dorsen 2012 p 74 Dorsen 2012 pp 74 77 Gunther 1994 pp 651 652 Harvard Law Review 1986 p 1713 Dorsen 2012 p 85 Dorsen 2012 p 114 115 Dorsen 2012 p 84 Dorsen 2012 p 82 Dorsen 2012 p 82 83 Brecher 2014 p 1181 Dorsen 2012 p 86 Johnson Kirk June 10 1986 A Solemn Tribute To Henry Friendly A Quiet Giant Of The Appeals Bench The New York Times Dorsen 2012 p xiii Akhil Amar June 29 2021 Amarica s Constitution Know the Nine You Will PodBean Podcast Publisher Event occurs at 31 30 Retrieved December 14 2021 Harvard Law Review 1986 p 1721 1722 Paul C Weiler Henry J Friendly Professor of Law Emeritus Harvard Law School Retrieved March 8 2010 William J Stuntz Harvard Law School Archived from the original on September 13 2008 Retrieved March 8 2010 Carol S Steiker Harvard Law School Metro Datelines November 27 1986 Honors for 4 Judges And Ex Prosecutor The New York Times Retrieved March 8 2010 Henry J Friendly Medal The American Law Institute Archived from the original on April 20 2015 Retrieved July 24 2014 Law school s namesake Justice O Connor receives Friendly Medal ASU News October 21 2011 Retrieved May 29 2023 Dorsen 2012 p 75 242 250 a b c d Norman Michael March 12 1986 Henry J Friendly Federal Judge In Court Of Appeals Is Dead At 82 The New York Times Grunwald Michael Goldstein Amy July 24 2005 Few have felt beat of Roberts s political heart NBC News Retrieved May 30 2023 Dorsen 2012 p 37 Dorsen 2012 p 36 37 44 Dorsen 2012 p 56 Dorsen 2012 p 44 57 Dorsen 2012 p 53 55 Goodman 1984 p 10 Dorsen 2012 p 57 Dorsen 2012 p 53 54 Dorsen 2012 p 52 54 342 a b M J Friendly Estate Valued At 530 028 Star Gazette February 16 1940 p 3 Retrieved June 11 2023 M H Friendly Succumbs Here Winter Resident of City 19 Years St Petersburg Times December 29 1938 p 2 Retrieved May 31 2023 Dorsen 2012 p 44 Dorsen 2012 p 1 Elkin Larry March 11 1986 Veteran Appeals Court Judge Found Dead With Suicide Note AP NEWS Archived from the original on May 29 2023 Retrieved May 29 2023 a b c Dorsen 2012 p 361 a b c d Dorsen 2012 p 362 a b c d Dorsen 2012 p 363 a b c d e f g Dorsen 2012 p 364 a b c d Dorsen 2012 p 365 a b c d e Dorsen 2012 p 366 Bibliography editGunther Gerald 1994 Learned Hand The Man and the Judge New York Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 58807 0 Kahn Ronald 2003 Henry Jacob Friendly 1903 1986 in Vile John R ed Great American Judges An Encyclopedia vol 1 Santa Barbara ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 989 8 Dorsen David M 2012 Henry Friendly Greatest Judge of His Era Foreword by Richard Posner Harvard University Press doi 10 4159 harvard 9780674064935 ISBN 9780674064935 S2CID 159335898 Posner Richard A October 7 2013 Reflections on Judging Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674725089 Boudin Michael 2013 Judge Henry Friendly and the Mirror of Constitutional Law In Dorsen Norman DeJulio Catherine eds The Embattled Constitution New York NY New York University Press doi 10 18574 nyu 9780814770122 001 0001 ISBN 9780814770122 Domnarski William 2016 Richard Posner 1st ed New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199332311 Biskupic Joan 2019 The Chief The Life and Turbulent Times of Chief Justice John Roberts New York Basic Books ISBN 9780465093274 Snyder Brad August 23 2022 Democratic Justice Felix Frankfurter the Supreme Court and the Making of the Liberal Establishment New York N Y W W Norton ISBN 978 1324004875 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Journals edit Keeffe Arthur John March 1961 Practicing Lawyer s guide to the current Law Magazines American Bar Association Journal 47 3 319 320 JSTOR 25721532 Keeffe Arthur John 1968 1969 In Praise of Joseph Story Swift v Tyson and The True National Common Law American University Law Review 18 2 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Leventhal Harold June 1975 Federal Jurisdiction A General View Columbia Law Review Review 75 5 1009 1019 doi 10 2307 1121560 JSTOR 1121560 Currie David P 1984 On Blazing Trials Judge Friendly and Federal Jurisdiction University of Pennsylvania Law Review 133 1 5 9 Wisdom John Minor 1984 Views of a Friendly Observer University of Pennsylvania Law Review 133 1 63 77 Goodman Frank 1984 Judge Friendly s Contributions to Securities Law and Criminal Procedure Moderation is All University of Pennsylvania Law Review 133 1 Pollak Louis H 1984 In Praise of Friendly University of Pennsylvania Law Review 133 1 39 62 McGowan Carl December 1984 The Judges Judge University of Pennsylvania Law Review 133 1 34 38 JSTOR 3311861 Boudin Michael December 1984 Memoirs in a Classical Style University of Pennsylvania Law Review 133 1 1 4 Ackerman Bruce A Feinberg Wilfred Freund Paul Griswold Erwin N Loss Louis Posner Richard A Rakoff Todd June 1986 In Memoriam Henry J Friendly Harvard Law Review 99 8 1709 1727 JSTOR 1341207 Gewirtz Paul 1986 1987 Commentary A Lawyer s Death PDF Harvard Law Review 100 2053 2053 2056 doi 10 2307 1341200 JSTOR 1341200 Irene Merker Rosenberg Irene Rosenberg Yale L December 1991 Guilt Henry Friendly Meets the MaHaRaL of Prague Michigan Law Review 90 3 604 625 doi 10 2307 1289465 JSTOR 1289465 Randolph A Raymond April 1999 Administrative Law and the Legacy of Henry J Friendly PDF New York University Law Review 74 1 1 17 A Raymond Randolph 2006 Before Roe v Wade Judge Friendly s Draft Abortion Opinion PDF Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy 29 3 1035 1062 Breen Daniel 2007 Avoiding Wild Blue Yonders The Prudentialism of Henry J Friendly and John Roberts South Dakota Law Review 52 1 73 135 Boudin Michael October 2007 Madison Lecture Judge Henry Friendly and the Mirror of Constitutional Law PDF New York University Law Review 82 4 975 996 Peppers Todd C 2009 Isaiah and His Young Disciples Justice Brandeis and His Law Clerks Journal of Supreme Court History 34 75 75 97 doi 10 1353 sch 2009 0022 Snyder Brad December 8 2010 The Judicial Genealogy and Mythology of John Roberts Clerkships from Gray to Brandeis to Friendly to Roberts Ohio State Law Journal 71 1149 SSRN 1722362 Boudin Michael December 2010 Judge Henry Friendly and the Craft of Judging University of Pennsylvania Law Review 159 1 1 15 JSTOR 41039020 Domnarski William July 2011 The Correspondence of Henry Friendly and Richard A Posner 1982 86 The American Journal of Legal History 51 3 395 416 doi 10 1093 ajlh 51 3 395 JSTOR 41345371 Dorsen David M 2011 Judges Henry J Friendly and Benjamin Cardozo A Tale of Two Precedents Pace Law Review 31 599 626 doi 10 58948 2331 3528 1778 Boudin Michael 2012 Friendly J Dissenting Duke Law Journal 61 881 901 Davis Frederick T 2012 On Becoming a Great Judge The Life of Henry J Friendly PDF Texas Law Review 91 8 339 343 Leval Pierre N 2012 Remarks on Henry Friendly On the Award of the Henry Friendly Medal to Justice Sandra Day O Connor PDF The Green Bag 15 257 Coombs Mary I 2012 Henry Friendly The Judge the Man the Book PDF Texas Law Review 91 331 331 345 Edelman Peter 2012 Henry Friendly As Brilliant as Expected but Less Predictable PDF Texas Law Review 91 331 345 351 Brecher Aaron P 2014 Some Kind of Judge Henry Friendly and the Law of Federal Courts Michigan Law Review 112 6 Sippel Richard L December 2014 Review of Henry Friendly Greatest Judge of His Era by David M Dorsen PDF The Federal Lawyer 76 82 Davis John J Gladden Lesley B 2014 The Bill of Rights as a Code of Criminal Procedure Judge Henry Friendly s Prescient Prediction PDF Cumberland Law Review 45 9 63 90 Dorf Michael C Autumn 2016 Divergent Paths The Academy and the Judiciary Review Journal of Legal Education Association of American Law Schools 66 1 186 202 JSTOR 26402426 Lucas Tory L June 20 2017 Henry J Friendly Designed to Be a Great Federal Judge Drake Law Review 65 422 SSRN 2989733 Siegel Andrew M 2017 The Myth of Merit The Garland Nomination the Friendly Legacy and the Slipperiness of Appellate Court Qualifications Savannah Law Review 4 1 113 128 Witt John Fabian 2017 Adjudication in the Age of Disagreement Fordham Law Review 86 1 149 162 Halper Thomas December 30 2019 Henry Friendly and the Incorporation of the Bill of Rights British Journal of American Legal Studies 8 2 236 247 doi 10 2478 bjals 2019 0012 External links editHenry Jacob Friendly at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges a publication of the Federal Judicial Center Reminiscences of Henry Jacob Friendly 1960 Columbia University Merrick Garland receives the 2022 Henry J Friendly Medal Remarks on Henry Friendly on the award of the Henry Friendly Medal to Justice Sandra Day O ConnorLegal officesPreceded byHarold Medina Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit1959 1974 Succeeded byEllsworth Van GraafeilandPreceded byJ Edward Lumbard Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit1971 1973 Succeeded byIrving Kaufman Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Friendly amp oldid 1207003737, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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