Main Page | Recent changes | View source | Page history

Printable version | Disclaimers | Privacy policy

Not logged in
Log in | Help
 

Ronald T. Y. Moon

From dKosopedia

Hawaii State Supreme Court Chief Justice Ronald T.Y. Moon.

Contents

Born:

Term:

Education:

Legal career:

Judicial career:

Family:



According to a Honolulu Advertiser article by Lynda Arakawa, entitled Top jurists represent diverse backgrounds and dated 11-23-03:

"It was almost a fluke that Ronald Moon went into law. <p>After having taken little interest in school — he attended three different high schools — Moon wound up at college in Iowa, where a talk with a cousin attending law school and experiences of racial discrimination would pique his interest in the law. <p>Years later he would become Hawai'i's fourth Supreme Court chief justice since statehood and the first Korean American in the country to serve on a state supreme court. <p>Moon, who has a background as a prosecutor and as a defender of business and insurance companies, has been considered by some to have a conservative bent. But the former Republican dismisses labels.

He noted that attending church about three times a week as he was growing up made the 1993 same-sex marriage case a "real struggle for me." He was among the three justices who questioned the constitutionality of state laws banning same-sex marriage.

Moon, who has a penchant for telling a joke or two during judicial swearing-in ceremonies, has written his share of high-profile and controversial opinions.

He wrote the unanimous ceded- lands opinion in September 2001, which dismissed the state Office of Hawaiian Affairs' 1994 lawsuit seeking ceded-lands revenues, kicking the issue back to the Legislature.

Moon also wrote the 2002 opinion that Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris could remain in office until the candidate filing deadline, overturning a Circuit Court ruling that Harris should have resigned when he filed campaign organizational papers.

The chief justice also wrote a 1997 opinion allowing employees who suffer stress from disciplinary actions for misconduct to collect workers' compensation. The next year the Legislature passed a bill banning such claims for nonunion employees when the action was taken in "good faith" by the employer." [1]



External Links

Retrieved from "http://localhost../../../r/o/n/Ronald_T._Y._Moon_9261.html"

This page was last modified 05:35, 25 January 2007 by dKosopedia user Jbet777. Based on work by dKosopedia user(s) Allamakee Democrat. Content is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.


[Main Page]
Daily Kos
DailyKos FAQ

View source
Discuss this page
Page history
What links here
Related changes

Special pages
Bug reports