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District 8: Appointed to Oklahoma Supreme Court in 1920. Resigned April 1, 1924 to become Federal Judge for Northern District of Oklahoma C. H. Elting: 1920: 1922: District 2: Died December 3, 1922 George M. Nicholson: 1920: 1926: District 5: Chief Justice 1925–27 George S. Ramsey: 1920: 1920: District 7: Appointed May 1, 1920; resigned ...
Supreme Court District 3: Noma D. Gurich. Supreme Court District 4: Yvonne Kauger. ... SQ 834 would change Article 3, Section 1 of the Oklahoma Constitution to say "only" citizens of the United ...
Yvonne Kauger (born August 3, 1937) is an American attorney and judge who served as a justice of the Oklahoma Supreme Court from 1984 to 2024. She is the third longest serving Oklahoma Supreme Court justice and served as chief justice from 1997 to 1998. She was appointed by Governor George Nigh
The Supreme Court of Oklahoma is a court of appeal for non-criminal cases, one of the two highest judicial bodies in the U.S. state of Oklahoma, and leads the judiciary of Oklahoma, the judicial branch of the government of Oklahoma. [1] The Oklahoma Supreme Court meets in the Oklahoma Judicial Center, having previously met in the Oklahoma State ...
Oklahoma Supreme Court Justice Noma Gurich, shown here in February, was appointed to the bench in 2011. She is one of three justices facing a retention vote Nov. 5.
A Senate panel on Tuesday passed a bill that could give Gov. Kevin Stitt five appointees on the nine-member Oklahoma Supreme Court. Senate Bill 1672, by Sen. Julie Daniels, R-Bartlesville, would ...
Daniel J. Boudreau (born 1947), a native of Massachusetts and a graduate of the University of Tulsa College of Law, is an Oklahoma attorney who was a justice of the Oklahoma Supreme Court from 1999 to 2004. After retiring from the Supreme Court, he is now in private practice as a specialist in Alternative Dispute Resolution, which he has also ...
The Oklahoma Supreme Court is Oklahoma’s court of last resort in all civil matters and all matters concerning the Oklahoma Constitution. It consists of nine justices appointed by the governor to serve life terms, but unlike U.S. Supreme Court justices, they are subject to an election every six years in which voters choose whether or not to ...