Los Angeles Times

Supreme Court nominee is OKd

Joshua P. Groban, an L.A. lawyer, has been advisor to governor.

- By Maura Dolan maura.dolan @latimes.com Twitter: @mauradolan

Joshua P. Groban, who was an advisor to Gov. Brown, gives the state high court its first Democratic majority in decades.

Joshua P. Groban, a Los Angeles lawyer who advised Gov. Brown on judicial appointmen­ts, high-profile litigation, prison issues and immigratio­n, became the newest member of the California Supreme Court on Friday.

The three-member state Commission on Judicial Appointmen­ts unanimousl­y confirmed Groban’s appointmen­t after a short hearing in which there was no opposition.

Groban, 45, gives the seven-member court a majority of Democratic appointees for the first time in decades.

And, as was the case with Brown’s other three appointees on the state high court, Groban has no previous judicial experience.

J. Anthony Kline, presiding justice on the state’s 1st District Court of Appeal and a member of the appointmen­ts commission, recalled that Groban once told him he thought Brown’s fourth appointee to the court should come from the judicial ranks, a view Kline said he endorsed.

“There are people in the judicial and legal community who don’t think it is healthy for a court to be dominated ... by people who have never sat in the judicial trenches,” Kline said.

Even so, Kline added, he believed Groban would be a “good judge.”

He said he was simply asking whether “it is healthy to have a court on which only a minority of members” have presided over a trial or served on the intermedia­te courts of appeal.

Witnesses who testified in Groban’s favor noted that Groban has vetted hundreds of judicial candidates for the governor and knows what qualities a good judge must possess.

Groban told the commission that the three justices with the most seniority on the court, all Republican appointees, have a combined 89 years of judicial experience, “a staggering­ly impressive number.” He said he was sure he would be “enriched” by their experience as well as the background­s of Brown’s other appointees.

“The court really has the luxury, quite frankly, in this raucous political climate of being duty-bound to distance itself from political considerat­ions,” he said. Still, he added, “each justice brings with him or her a sense of who they are and their values.”

A state bar evaluation committee found Groban to be exceptiona­lly well qualified, the bar’s highest rating.

“Raters uniformly support his appointmen­t to the court and describe him as having a sharp mind, keen powers of observatio­n, effective listening skills and an uncommon ability to communicat­e,” the bar committee reported.

Groban received his bachelor’s degree from Stanford University in 1995 and his law degree from Harvard Law School in 1998.

As a law student, he assisted Harvard professor Charles Ogletree on deathpenal­ty appeals and served as a member of the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review. After graduation, he worked as a commercial litigator.

Groban served as general counsel for Brown’s gubernator­ial campaign in 2010 and after the election became a senior advisor. In addition to evaluating judicial candidates for Brown, Groban has advised him on criminal-justice and court matters, regulatory reform, consumer protection and correction­s.

Brown has appointed nearly 600 judges in his last two terms, and the bar committee described them as “the most diverse group of appointees” in state history in terms of race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientatio­n and practice background.

First District Court of Appeal Justice Therese M. Stewart, addressing the commission, said that Brown, with Groban’s help, had strongly increased the number of minority and LGBTQ judges on the California bench.

Groban will make up what he lacks in judicial experience “because that is the kind of guy Josh is,” she said.

He assumes the seat left vacant by the retirement of Justice Kathryn Mickle Werdegar in 2017.

Brown took nearly two years to fill the vacancy, the longest in court history. Legal analysts speculated that Brown had long considered appointing Groban but wanted to keep him as an advisor until the end of the governor’s term.

Brown leaves office next month.

‘The court really has the luxury, quite frankly, in this raucous political climate of being duty-bound to distance itself from political considerat­ions.’ — Joshua P. Groban, newest California Supreme Court justice

 ?? Office of the Governor ?? JOSHUA GROBAN gives high court a majority of Democratic appointees for the first time in decades.
Office of the Governor JOSHUA GROBAN gives high court a majority of Democratic appointees for the first time in decades.

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