The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

COVID-19 claims retired federal judge, Cobb County magistrate

- By Mark Woolsey

Judge Hugh Robinson and his close friend, Marietta attorney Steve Woodman, jokingly called their campaign work in 2008 “trench warfare.”

Two days a week for six months, the two crisscross­ed Cobb County, putting up campaign signs for Robinson’s wife, Dorothy. She was making a bid for a final term as a Cobb County Superior Court judge and faced opposition.

“Drive up, find a place to park, unload the power auger and the signposts, put them in the ground, attach the sign, tamp down the dirt, load up the truck and head to the next location” is how Woodman remembers it.

“When you spend that much time with someone, you get to know them pretty well,” he added.

A dedication to hard work, fairness and a broad and deep knowledge enabled Hugh Robinson to navigate complex cases as a federal bankruptcy judge in the 1980s and ’90s, Woodman said. His work left a lasting mark on a rapidly growing city and state.

The retired U.S. Bankruptcy and Cobb County

Magistrate Court judge died March 29 at Marietta’s Kennestone hospital of COVID19. Robinson was 82. He is survived by his nephew Stephen Robinson. No services were planned because of the ongoing pandemic.

Stephen Robinson lauded his uncle in a posted obituary, calling him “the son of Irish immigrants who rose from simple and humble beginnings to become the first member of his family to receive a college degree.”

Born in 1937 and raised poor in a tiny New York City apartment, Woodman said, his friend “developed a sense of the need for equality and equal treatment. He didn’t believe in favoritism and privilege.” That moral underpinni­ng coupled with an understate­d, respectful and even kindly demeanor won him respect from lawyers, plaintiffs and others on all sides of judicial proceeding­s

Robinson’s path to the federal and later Cobb County bench had an unusual start. Heeding the call of the open sea, he attended the State University of New York’s Maritime College. He served a Navy hitch as a lieutenant ( junior grade) followed by a stint in the Merchant Marine.

The law then caught his eye. Armed with a law degree from New York’s St. John’s University, he was accepted into the FBI.

Former U.S. congressma­n Buddy Darden met Robinson in the summer of 1967 after the FBI agent transferre­d to Atlanta. The two attended a legal refresher course as Robinson worked for admission to the State Bar of Georgia.

“He had no pretense at all,” said Darden, “Just very down to earth. He was reserved, a little hard to get to know him, but once you did, he was very easy to talk to.”

Woodman said: “He was a great conversati­onalist and a true student of history. I remember one time asking him why the Italian people didn’t speak Latin. He knew the answer right away. (Latin was the language of the upper class, not the working class.) He also knew the history of the British royals.”

Retired attorney and judge Ezra Cohen served with Robinson at the Northern District of Georgia U.S. Bankruptcy Court. He said Robinson presided over cases incorporat­ing major projects and firms, some having fallen on hard times during a recession. Serving in the district’s Rome court in the 1980s, Robinson steered several major carpet mills through bankruptcy.

The mid-1990s brought a high-profile proceeding involving pioneering modemmaker Hayes Microcompu­ter of Norcross. It was a messy, drawn-out affair involving competing stakeholde­r and takeover plans, and demands made by the founder’s ex-wife.

Cohen said that Robinson’s penchant for “rehabilita­tion and reorganiza­tion” and a vast knowledge of business law helped to redefine Atlanta and North Georgia’s business landscape.

After retirement from the federal bench, Robinson took a post in Cobb County, serving as a Magistrate Court judge from 2000 to 2017. It was a far cry from the rarified air of bankruptcy law — handling small claims, signing arrest warrants, bond revocation­s and the like. Associates said a pure love of the law drove him to continue.

 ??  ?? Hugh Robinson served in the U.S. Navy, Merchant Marine and FBI before becoming a judge.
Hugh Robinson served in the U.S. Navy, Merchant Marine and FBI before becoming a judge.

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