San Francisco Chronicle

Duane B. Beeson

Sept 9, 1922 - July 3, 2021

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San Francisco labor lawyer Duane B. Beeson died July 3, 2021 at peace in his home in Belvedere, California. He was age 98.

Duane is survived by his three children Craig (Vancouver WA), Todd (Bolinas CA), Kim (Seattle WA), and two grandchild­ren, Brooke Noel (Seattle WA) and Cora (Vancouver WA).

Born in Berkeley on September 9, 1922, Duane grew up during the depths of the Great Depression, graduating from Berkeley High School where he was on the track team and met his wife of fifty-four years, Coni. After attending Lafayette College in Pennsylvan­ia (perhaps as the only native California­n ever to graduate from that small college) Duane saw combat as a sergeant in the 13th Armored (“the Black Cats”) Division in the final push through Germany during WWII (he later recalled receiving his diploma from Lafayette while sitting in a Sherman tank in a German village). After the war, Duane went to Harvard Law School on the GI Bill and in 1948 returned to California to clerk for Judge William E. Orr of the United States 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. After his clerkship and marriage to Coni, he headed back to the East Coast and joined the National Labor Relations Board’s Division of Enforcemen­t in Washington D.C. representi­ng the Board in the federal courts of appeal and the U.S. Supreme Court, arguing many of the foundation­al cases of federal labor law. In 1961 Coni and Duane returned home to the Bay Area for good and Duane joined the San Francisco labor law firm Neyhart & Grodin (through various splits and regrouping­s, now the firm Beeson, Tayer & Bodine), where he represente­d Unions for over sixty years.

Somehow, while working seven days a week Duane also managed upon returning to the Bay Area to find time to build a house in Belvedere, using California redwood salvaged from a dismantled bridge. As a partner at the firm that would eventually bear his name, for over six decades Duane represente­d many Unions, but it was his work on behalf of the Teamsters Union that was the core of his legal career. Duane litigated cases and labor arbitratio­ns in all of the many industries organized by the Teamsters from freight, to UPS, dairy, bakery, beverage, food processing, solid waste, warehousin­g, newspapers, constructi­on and ready mix. If you ever received a package, drank a beer or a glass of milk, picked up a newspaper from your front door, or stood on a concrete floor in Northern California, the workers responsibl­e for getting you that package, beverage or newspaper, or pouring that concrete, owed much of their wages and benefits to Duane’s work as a Union lawyer.

In 1964 as opposition was beginning to the Vietnam War, Duane represente­d a member of the San Francisco Painters Union who sought conscienti­ous objector status but was denied because the law recognized conscienti­ous objectors only if they had “a specific religious training or belief that is related to a Supreme Being.” Duane’s client was on record as not believing in god and Duane argued that the requiremen­t that you must believe in a “Supreme Being” to qualify as a conscienti­ous objector was unconstitu­tional. Arguing the other side of the case was Duane’s former labor law professor Archibald Cox. A unanimous Supreme Court agreed with Duane (US v. Seeger 1965). Some years later Duane’s oldest son become a conscienti­ous objector during the Vietnam War.

A dedicated runner, gardener, skier, and back packer, Duane occasional­ly left the office to travel with Coni. He was an ardent reader with a quick wit and sharp intellect. Upon hearing of his death Duane’s old friend and former law partner, former California Supreme Court Justice Joseph Grodin wrote the following:

“It was my privilege to know him, a person of uncommon decency and reason who dedicated his enormous talent throughout his time on earth to constructi­ng a cathedral of principles in the service of justice and the common man.”

The family intends to hold a private funeral and a public memorial is planned for September. Donations in Duane’s memory can be made to the Peggy Browning Fund https://www.peggybrown­ingfund.org/makea-donation, whose mission is to is to educate and inspire the next generation of advocates for workplace justice.

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