Spring 2020 Gavel 268650 SBAND Gavel Magazine_web | Page 13

n Justice VandeWalle is a North Dakota legend and icon! I have a 40-year practice history in North Dakota and there is no judge, at any level, I have more respect for! – Paul Oppegard n I have never, ever heard anyone suggest Justice Vandewalle has made a decision based upon or influenced by partisan considerations. – Marilyn Foss n Unlike most of the law clerks hired by the Supreme Court, I had previously worked two years as a law clerk to a federal district court judge. As such, Justice VandeWalle allowed me to pick the cases I was interested in working on, cases that would have otherwise gone up to the full-time law clerks upstairs. One of those cases was Andrews v. O’Hearn, the case in which the court “rediscovered” a rule that had not been used for over 25 years, in which a party making a motion for new trial was limited on appeal to those issues raised in the motion. In working on this case, and others, I discovered three important details about Justice VandeWalle. First, he remembers everything. One of the issues raised during oral arguments in the Andrews case was not raised in the briefs. About five weeks later, when Justice VandeWalle reviewed the draft opinion he noted I did not address that issue and referred from memory to what Attorney Axelrod had said during oral arguments. I went back and listened to the cassette tape recording of the hearing and listened in amazement as I heard Attorney Axelrod state the exact same words, word for word, that Justice VandeWalle had recalled from memory. I soon discovered Justice VandeWalle not only remembered the names of the cases he had worked on, but quite often could recite the Northwest 2nd citation from memory. The second thing I remember most about working for Justice VandeWalle is that discussing a draft opinion (or for that matter, any legal issue) with him at his desk was 10 times harder than arguing before the full court. The questions came fast and furious, all interconnected and directed to the final conclusion, which he already reached and was making his law clerk understand and then reach the same conclusion. Continued on page 14... Getting Jerry VandeWalle Elected! By Robert Wefald Justice Jerry VandeWalle was appointed to the Supreme Court by Governor Link in Aug. 1978, only to face election in Nov. 1978. He had to immediately put together a winning campaign. He chose Jack McDonald and me to advise him and to help plan a winning campaign. Why he asked me to help, I don’t know. I’m sure he chose Jack because he had media skills. I have a clear memory of the three of us sitting around the kitchen table in Jerry’s apartment. With only a little more than two months to go before the election, we sketched out a campaign plan, the key to which was Jerry’s sterling reputation. Appointed by Democrat Governor Art Link and having worked with Republican Attorney General Al Olson and his Republican predecessors Leslie Burgum and Helgi Johanneson, Jerry had excellent bipartisan support. I know the three of us subsequently discussed how to handle the complaint of another candidate that Jerry had illegally used state property for political purposes (a violation of §16.1-10-02, NDCC) by having his photo for his campaign taken in the Supreme Court courtroom, but that turned out to be an inconsequential campaign tactic for his opponent. This ended up in the North Dakota Supreme Court, which confirmed it was not a violation of §16.1-10-02 (Saefke v. VandeWalle, 279 N.W.2d 415, 1979 N.D. LEXIS 257). with the approval of a constitutional amendment to Article VI, Section 13, of the N.D. Constitution - that I call the “J. Phillip Johnson Amendment” - to not require any person appointed to a Supreme Court or district court position to stand for election until the next general election after the justice or judge had been in office for a minimum of two complete years. An interesting sidelight to this case, is that all of the sitting justices at the time – Chief Justice Ralph J. Erickstad, and Justices William Paulson, Vernon R. Pederson, Paul M. Sand and, of course, Jerry, recused themselves. The case was decided by district court judges sitting in for the recused justices. Judge Roy A. Ilvedson served as acting chief justice. The other “subs” were Judges Douglas B. Heen, Albert C. Bakken, Robert L. Eckert, and Norbert J. Muggli. I call it this, because J. Phillip Johnson, a Fargo attorney, was appointed to the Supreme Court by Gov. Arthur A. Link in June 1974 to replace Justice Obert C. Teigen, who had retired. However, because the Constitution then required an appointee run in the next general election, he had to run in November 1974 and was defeated. This unfair situation of requiring an appointed justice or judge to run for election just a few months after appointment was remedied in 1998, Gov. George Sinner appointed Johnson to the court on February 11, 1992, to replace Justice H.F. Gierke III, who resigned to take a federal position. However, he was again defeated in the November 1992 general election. SPRING 2020 13