Priscilla Richman Owen (born in Palacios, Texas, October 4, 1954) is a judge in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. She previously was a Justice on the Supreme Court of Texas.
Early career
Prior to her election to the Texas Supreme Court in
1994, Owen was a partner in the
Houston office of Andrews & Kurth L.L.P. where she practiced commercial litigation for seventeen years. She received a
Bachelor of Arts degree,
cum laude, from
Baylor University, and graduated in the top of her class from Baylor
Law School in
1977, receiving a
Juris Doctor degree,
cum laude. She was a member of the
Baylor Law Review. Owen also received the highest score on the Texas
Bar examination for that year.
In private practice, Owen handled a broad range of civil matters at the trial and appellate levels. She was admitted to practice before various state and federal trial courts and appellate courts. She is a member of the American Law Institute, the American Judicature Society, the American Bar Association, and a Fellow of the American and Houston Bar Foundations.
Owen served as the liaison to the Supreme Court of Texas’ Court-Annexed Mediation Task Force and to statewide committees regarding legal services to the poor and pro bono legal services. She was part of a committee that successfully encouraged the Texas Legislature to enact legislation that has resulted in millions of dollars per year in additional funds for providers of legal services to the poor. Owen also serves as a member of the board of the A.A. White Dispute Resolution Institute and is on the boards of advisors of the Houston and Austin Chapters of the Federalist Society. Owen was instrumental in organizing a group known as Family Law 2000 that seeks to find ways to educate parents about the effect that divorce can have on their children and to lessen the adversarial nature of legal proceedings when a marriage is dissolved.
Federal nomination and filibuster
In
2001, Owen was nominated by
President George W. Bush to her current post on a federal appellate court that hears appeals arising in several
states, including Owen's home state of
Texas. However, due to Senate disagreement over the issue of appointees considered to be too
conservative, Democrats (who controlled the
U.S. Senate at the time) did not let her come up for a vote. In
2003, after Republicans had taken the Senate back, Democrats filibustered her. Only in
2005, after Republicans picked up four more seats in the Senate did she again come up for a vote.
Support
Supporters called Owen a no-nonsense, "consistent conservative" with long experience as a state-court judge.
Opposition
Opponents criticized Owen for her conservative positions on contentious social and economic issues, pro-
corporate decisions and her anti-
abortion stance. Democratic Senator
Ted Kennedy noted that even Bush's appointee as
Attorney General,
Alberto Gonzales, during his service with Owen on the Texas Supreme Court had frequently criticized Owen; Gonzales argued, for example, that one of Owen's positions taken in dissent would "judicially amend" a statute for the benefit of manufacturers selling defective products.
On abortion, Democrats criticized Owen for consistently voting against judicial overrides of Texas's parental-notification abortion law. On a court with nine Republican appointees, Owen joined a majority decision on overrides only once. [http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=20020805&s=zengerle080502
Gang of 14 and the Supreme Court
Democratic Party senators had
filibustered her nomination until May
2005 when a compromise was arranged by the "
Gang of 14," which were a group of moderate senators from both the Republican and Democratic Parties. She was finally confirmed by a vote of
55-43 on
May 25,
2005 and was sworn in on
June 6,
2005. She was often cited as a
potential Bush Supreme Court nominee for the
O'Connor vacancy. On
September 17 of that year Minority Leader
Harry Reid informed Majority Leader
Bill Frist that Democrats would filibuster Owen if she were nominated for the Supreme Court.
* However, on
October 31, President Bush nominated
Samuel Alito to fill the Justice O'Connor vacancy following the withdrawal of nominee
Harriet Miers.
Attribution
Material on this page is taken from the website of the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Legal Policy. As a product of the United States government, this material is in the public domain.
External links
1954 births | American lawyers | Judges of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit | Jurists | Living people | People from Texas | Texas Supreme Court justices | Women lawyers