John Weimer

From Judgepedia

(Redirected from John L. Weimer)
Jump to: navigation, search
Louisiana Supreme Court
Sitting Justices
Pascal Calogero
Jeffrey Victory
Jeannette Theriot Knoll
Chet Traylor
Catherine Kimball
John Weimer
Bernette Johnson
2008 challengers
Greg Guidry
Jimmy Kuhn
Roland Belsome
Jeff Hughes
Former justices
Louisiana on Judgepedia

Justice John L. Weimer has served on the Louisiana Supreme Court since 2001.

Justice Weimer received a B.S. degree in 1976 from Nicholls State University, graduating with academic honors, and his Juris Doctor from Louisiana State University in 1980. Prior to his election to the Supreme Court, Justice Weimer served as Judge pro tempore of the 17th Judicial District Court, Division D. He was elected Judge for the 17th Judicial District Court, Division A, in 1995 and re-elected in 1996 without opposition. In 1998, he was elected Judge of the 1st Circuit Court of Appeal, District 1, Division B, and served until his election to the Louisiana Supreme Court in 2001. He was subsequently elected unopposed to a full ten-year term in 2002.

For fifteen years, 1980-1995, Justice Weimer was an attorney in the private practice of law.

Weimer was also both an Adjunct Professor of Law and a Professor of Law at Nicholls State University during the years from 1982-1997.

Contents

In the News: Articles

Supreme Court hears arguments over whether Katrina's waters constituted a "flood" (2/26/08)

Louisiana Supreme Court justices aren't linguists, but their definition of one solitary word, "flood," will decide the fate of thousands of insurance claims worth millions of dollars to New Orleans area homeowners. The state's high court heard its first Hurricane Katrina insurance payment case Tuesday, and the crux of the policyholder's argument--one that mirrors many others still trudging through the lower state courts and the federal court system--is that the inundation of 80 percent of New Orleans after the 2005 storm was not a "flood."[1]

"The question really is a simple one: whether the massive inundation of 80 percent of New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina was a flood, and the answer is clearly 'yes,'" said Ralph Hubbard.

The justices offered several questions suggesting they were skeptical of Hubbard's argument. Associate Justice John Weimer noted that some insurance companies clarified the term in their policies after 2004. Associate Justice Bernette J. Johnson asked if a broken water main could lead to a flood, which would be covered by the homeowner's policy. Associate Justice Jeffrey P. Victory offered that someone can "flood" a car's engine or one's eye with water to wash out particles. Policyholders may have lost a sympathetic ear when Chief Justice Pascal Calogero recused himself because he owns property in New Orleans that had a hurricane claim with Lafayette. He was replaced by Appeals Court Judge Lemmie Hightower of Shreveport.

United States Chamber of Commerce Hails Weimer's Election (11/19/01)

The United States Chamber of Commerce hailed the election this weekend of Democratic Judge John Weimer to the Louisiana Supreme Court, representing the Sixth Judicial District. Weimer, a State Circuit Court of Appeals Judge, defeated State District Court Judge Mary Hotard Becnel in a special run-off election. “Judge Weimer has an excellent record and a reputation for being an independent thinker,” said James Wootton, president of the Chamber’s Institute for Legal Reform. “We believe Judge Weimer will enforce the law and resist the temptation to legislate from Louisiana’s highest bench.” The United States Chamber of Commerce is the world’s largest business federation representing more than three million businesses and organizations of every size, sector and region.[2]

Seven years later, the United States Chamber of Commerce ranks Louisiana's judicial system 48th overall and 49th on judges' impartiality.[3]

On the Issues

On Contract Enforcement

2007


On Discrimination and Equal Protection

2007

Cook v. Cook (2007)


  • Justice Weimer concurred in the majority opinion of the Court, which concluded that a mother who exposed her children to her lesbian relationship was not entitled to keep custody of those children.


State v. Bailey (2007), aka "the Jena 6" Case


  • Justice Weimer concurred in the majority opinion of the Court, which concluded a white district attorney should have recused himself from the prosecution of "The Jana 6," six African-American highschool students who attacked a white student, because his past behavior indicated a bias towards vigorous prosecution of blacks, and insufficient prosecution of whites.


State v. Coleman (2007)


  • Justice Weimer concurred in the majority opinion, written by Justice Bernette J. Johnson, which found that a prosecutor consciously and impermissibly took race into account where he, in a death penalty case with a black defendant who was convicted of first degree murder, failed to select a black juror who had filed a discrimination lawsuit against the state for "institutional discrimination."



On Education

2007


On Election Law

ISSUES:


HOLDING:


REASONING:


POTENTIAL FLAWS IN THE COURT'S REASONING:

  • (1)

On Employer and Employee Rights


On Government Accountability

2007

In re Justice of the Peace Alfonso (2007)


  • Justice Weimer concurred in majority opininion, which imposed a 30 day suspension on Justice of the Peace Myrty Alfonso for her extreme abuse of power in having a neighbor against whom she harbored ill-will arrested and incarcerated for a night without probable cause.



On Negligence


On Personal Responsibility

State ex rel. A.T.(2006)


  • Justice Weimer concurred in majority opinion of Justice Jeffrey P. Victory, which held, over the dissent of Justices Chet D. Traylor and Jeannette Theriot Knoll, that the State of Louisiana Department of Social Services was required to "make reasonable efforts to assist [a] parent in finding suitable housing before it may seek to terminate parental rights."



On Property Rights


On Taxes

Voicestream GSM I Operating Co., LLC v. Louisiana Public Service Commission (2006)


  • Justice Weimer concurred in the majority opinion of Justice Bernette J. Johnson, which held that a Government Agency Order requiring cell phone providers to pay into a fund for setting up rural phone service was a permissible "fee" rather than an unconstitutionally impermissible "tax," even though the eventual effect of these fees would be to pass on the costs to cell phone users rather than the general public.



On Tax Increment Financing (TIF)

Board of Directors of the Industrial Development Board of the City of Gonzales, Louisiana v. All Taxpayers, Property Owners, Citizens of the City of Gonzales, Louisiana (2006)


  • Justice Weimer concurred in the majority opinion, written by Justice Catherine D. Kimball, which, over the strong dissenting opinion of Justice Chet D. Traylor, held that a Tax Increment Financing (TIF) plan (1) did not constitute a gratuitous handout, loan, or donation of public funds to a private entity where it used public funds to construct a retail development and accompanying infrastructure for Cabela's Retail Center; (2) could be funded through the issuance of municipal bonds pursuant to Louisiana's TIF statute; and (3) did not violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution where it handed out public funds to Cabela's, a private retailer, but not to already-existing, smaller local retailers.



On Term Limits

2007

Deculus v. Welborn (2007)


  • The majority opinion of Justice Catherine D. Kimball, which, over the dissent of Bernette J. Johnson held that, under Louisiana's Term Limits law, Article 3, Section 4(E) of the Louisiana Constitution, Democrat state senator Cleo Fields was precluded from running for re-election where he had been elected to finish the term of a resigned predecessor in office, and then elected to two subsequent terms, since he had served long enough to constitute the maximum "two and one-half terms," under Louisiana's term limits laws. In reaching this conclusion, the court explicitly refused to apply a statute, passed by the legislature, intended to circumvent Article 3, Section 4(E) of the Louisiana Constitution and keep Mr. Fields in office.



On Tort Reform

2007

Lacoste v. Pendleton Methodist Hospital, LLC (2007)


  • Over the strong dissenting opinion of Justice Jeannette Theriot Knoll, in which Justice Weimer joined, the majority opinion, written by Justice Pascal Calogero, held (1) that limitations on the legal liability of Lousiana healthcare providers, as set forth in the Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act could be circumvented by an ordinary negligence cause of action; and (2) that such a cause of action was permissible where a New Orleans hospital lost power during Hurricane Katrina, resulting in the death of a patient on life support.



Associations

Justice Weimer is a member of the Louisiana State Bar Association, the Lafourche Parish Bar Association, the Rotary Club, the Thibodaux Volunteer Fire Department, the Nicholls State University Alumni Board and former Volunteer Legal Counsel, the Thibodaux Chamber of Commerce, the Houma-Terrebonne Chamber of Commerce, and the Assumption Chamber of Commerce. He has served as a Delegate to the Louisiana State Bar Association, as the 1997 Regional Co-Chairman of the Citizens' Summit for Justice Reform, and he established and is the coordinator of the Lafourche Parish Student Government Day Program.

Awards

Justice Weimer has been the recipient of numerous awards and honors including: Victims & Citizens Against Crime Outstanding Judicial Award; Crimefighter's Outstanding Jurist Award; the 2002 Nicholls State University Outstanding Alumni Award and the 50th Anniversary Golden Graduate Award; Who's Who Among American Teachers; and the Nicholls State University Presidential Award for Teaching Excellence. Justice Weimer was recognized for the significant assistance he provided in establishing the Lafourche Parish Drug Treatment Court.

Political Affiliation

See Also

Louisiana Supreme Court


Current Justices

External Links

References

Louisiana Supreme Court Biography