Did You Know?
With the TCBA offices newly remodeled and repurposed spaces, you have the opportunity to rent the meeting rooms for mediations, depositions, staff meetings & classes…or whatever you may need!
Each room upstairs will accommodate various size needs from 2 – 26 and most have A/V capabilities. We also have the Seminar Room downstairs that will accommodate a classroom size of 80. We have rates for both Members and non-members of the Association. If you would like to check the availability, contact Heather Heck at heatherh@tulsabar.com.
Boardroom Deposition Room Past President's Room Benefactor's Room Seminar Room (shown as classroom set up)Philip D. Hixon
A Message from the President 2022-2023
WE HOLD THESE TRUTHS …
Every U.S. president since Gerald R. Ford in 1976 has declared February as Black History Month, also sometimes referred to as National African American History Month, to celebrate the historic achievements of African Americans. The annual commemoration’s history dates to 1915—fifty years following ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which formally abolished slavery in the United States:
Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.
February has been home to the commemoration from the beginning because it is the birth month of President Abraham Lincoln (February 12, 1809) and noted former-slave turned abolitionist, orator, author, and statesman, Frederick Douglas (estimated February 1817 or 1818 and observed on February 14).
This month’s issue of the Tulsa Lawyer is dedicated to the achievements of pioneering African American attorneys who were members of the Association and/or practiced in the Tulsa community. I hope you will enjoy their stories.
In the February 2014 edition of this publication, former TCBA president and current OBA past-president, Jim Hicks, authored an encyclopedic article in this space regarding several of these attorneys. With attribution to Jim’s well-researched article, I offer the following synopsis of his work. (I also recommend Robert M. Jarvis, Remembering Isaiah: Attorney I.H. Spears and the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, 57 Tulsa L. Rev. 429 (2022), which was also used in preparing this article.)
In February 1921, Buck Colbert “B.C.” Franklin— namesake of the legal clinic at the University of Tulsa College of Law—moved to Tulsa to open a law practice with Isaiah “I.H.” Spears and Peter “P.A.” Chappelle. After destruction of the building during the chaos, terror, and conflagration of May/June 1921, the practice temporarily operated from a tent before relocating to an office on Greenwood Avenue.
In Lockett v. City of Tulsa, the firm defeated a city ordinance that would have required all new construction in Greenwood to be fireproof with the District Court finding the ordinance amounted to a taking without due process. Before dissolving the firm in 1924, the firm achieved two published decisions of the Oklahoma Supreme Court in which the firm was also a named defendant. See Howard v. Southwestern Mortg. Co., 1924 OK 467, 226 P.80; Howard v. Ketcham, 1923 OK 1078, 221 P.25.
Following dissolution of the firm, Mr. Spears eventually moved to California with a detour through Arkansas; the final years of his life are recounted in Professor Jarvis’s Tulsa Law Review article. Closer to home, Mr. Franklin and Mr. Chappelle continued as positive influences on the Tulsa community both directly and indirectly. In 1934, Mr. Franklin seated the first black juror in an Oklahoma criminal case; and of course, he is remembered as the father of celebrated historian, John Hope Franklin, a Harvard graduate and recipient of numerous, prestigious awards, including a Presidential Medal of Freedom. Mr. Chappelle was the grandfather of the Hon. Carlos J. Chappelle, who became the first African American Presiding Judge of the Tulsa County District Court in 2014, and Danny C. Williams, who served as the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Oklahoma from August 2012 until March 2017.
Amos T. Hall and Primus C. Wade, another pair of accomplished attorneys, appear in the Association’s membership photograph for 1946-1947. Mr. Hall was counsel of record in several published opinions of the U.S. Supreme Court, appearing in several of them with co-counsel Thurgood Marshall. See, e.g., McLaurin v. Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Ed., 339 U.S. 637 (1950); Fisher v. Hurst, 333 U.S. 147 (1948); Sipuel v. Board of Regents of Univ. of Okla., 332 U.S. 631 (1948). Notably, the Sipuel case was a precursor of, and cited with approval in, Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, 347 U.S. 483, (1954). (In remembrance of Mr. Hall’s impressive body of work and at the suggestion of Bench and Bar Chair Kevinn Matthews, the Association is considering institution of an Amos T. Hall Award as part of the annual award ceremonies. Hopefully, we’ll be able to share additional details in coming weeks.)
Mr. Wade appeared as counsel of record in twentyseven published opinions of the Oklahoma Supreme Court and the Court of Criminal appeals between 1937 and 1962, appearing in several of those as co-counsel with Amos Hall, P.A. Chappelle, and B.C. Franklin. See, e.g., Bayouth v. Howard, 1948 OK 34, 190 P.2d 793; Franklin v. World Pub. Co., 1938 OK 501, 83 P.2d 401; Johnson v. Bearden Plumbing & Heating Co., 1937 OK 495, 71 P.2d 715.
As Jim Hicks did in his 2014 article, I will close this one with an oft-quoted portion of the Declaration of Independence:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
Because of brave people like Abraham Lincoln, Frederick Douglas, B.C. Franklin, I.H. Spears, P.A. Chappelle, Amos Hall, Primus Wade, and numerous others who have come before and after them, we’re able to affirm these truths and celebrate all those who have embodied them.
Please take time to read the other celebrations of pioneering African American attorneys appearing in this issue.
Philip D. Hixon TCBA President, 2022-2023Cullem Family
Riter Family
Moore Family
Stafford Family
Charney-Brown, LLC
Clement Legal
Franden | Farris | Quillin |
Goodnight & Roberts
TCBF Outreach Committee
Emily Duensing
Coffey Senger & Woodard, PLLC
Hunt Family
Aycock | Aussenberg
GableGotwals
McDaniel Acord, PLLC
Sears Family
Welsh & McGough, PLLC
Univ of Tulsa College of Law
Student Bar Association
Scott Family
TCBA Staff
Barber & Bartz, PC
Taubman Family
Nesser Family
Jones, Gotcher & Bogan, PC
Carl & Kara Vincent
Thank you to all of the Holiday Challenge participants!
The Juvenile Law Section and Children & the Law Committee
Lizzie Riter, Chair
A Special Note of Thanks...
Dear
TCBA Holiday Gift Challenge Participants and Donors, Legal Aid Services of Oklahoma, Parent Representation Defense Program extends our heartfelt gratitude to you for your support of our clients and their families during the Holiday season. Your recognition of our vulnerable, yet strong families’ heroic efforts to survive and thrive while exiting the child welfare system and reunifying together as a family was overwhelming! The holiday gifts you donated to our clients and their children brought sheer joy, delight, and cheer. Your generosity brought tears of happiness to our families and
exclamations of emotions! The words “thank you” do not convey our enormous gratitude to you for the blessings you have bestowed! From all of us, you have truly blown us away with your kindness!
Thank you!
LASO, Parent Representation Defense Program Staff, Contractors and Parents!
Gwendolyn Clegg , Program Director Parent Representation Defense Program at Legal AidMEMBER SPOTLIGHT Ruth Addison Martin
Firm/Organization: Addison Martin Law, LLC
Family: Married with three boys
How long have you been practicing law and what are your practice areas? I started practicing in 2007. I generally focus on: Business law, Criminal law, Labor & Employment Law, and Landlord/Tenant law to name a few
What do you like most about being a lawyer? Every day represents a new opportunity to help someone in need
What has been your biggest professional achievement? Passing the bar exam at 21 years old
What is your passion outside of work and the law? Traveling around the world
What is the best advice you have ever received? Don’t assume you know the answer, simply ask the question, and see what you learn
How long have you been a TCBA member? Since 2007
Has your career benefited from being a member of the TCBA? If so, please share. Yes, I served as the Chair of the Diversity Development Committee several years ago. I was able to meet and mentor several middle and high school children. Some of them have decided to pursue careers in law and law enforcement
If you could spend the day with one attorney/judge, dead or alive, who would it be and why?
RBG. She is a trailblazer that knows how to get a seat at the table and get people to listen
What is your favorite book, movie, or television show?
Les Misérables by Victor Hugo
Tell us a fun fact that no one knows about you! I was once accidentally bitten by a family pet, Xena, an albino boa constrictor
What is your favorite food? Fried plantains (my family is from Ghana, West Africa)
2023 Lynn Miller Law Day Book Club Books and Discussion Leaders
The 2023 Lynn Miller Law Day Book Club announces its book discussion leaders and selected books, in time for holiday reading and gift-giving. As is tradition, the book discussion leaders select the books, dates and locations for their discussions. Registration is limited to the first fifteen persons with pre-registration required.
The traditional book club opens in January with Judge Rebecca Nightingale leading discussion of John Grisham’s Suspect on January 19, 2023, at 5:30 p.m. at the Tulsa Bar Center. February’s book, Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens, will be discussed with Wendy Drummond on February 7, 2023, at 5:30 p.m. at Drummond Law, 1500 South Utica, Suite 400. Rick Eagleton will lead the March book discussion of In Love: A Memoir of Love and Loss by Amy Bloom with date and location to be determined. Larry Yadon will lead April’s discussion of Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann on April 27 at noon at a location to be determined.
Registration is to be made through Judge Martha Rupp Carter at mruppcarter@yahoo.com and is limited to fifteen persons. TCBA members may register themselves
and up to one friend to accompany and participate with them. Judge Carter will confirm registration and provide necessary additional details for each session. TCBA members may register for any one or more or all sessions.
As requested by previous participants of the Law Day Book Club, this year the opportunity to participate in book club discussions throughout the year, running from May to December following the traditional book club, is offered. If you are interested, email Judge Carter at mruppcarter@yahoo.com indicating your interest, and, recommending book title(s) you would like to discuss. The Law Day Book Club members participating in this program will select the books to be discussed and volunteer to be the discussion leaders for each selected book. A meeting will be scheduled in January to select books, determine discussion leaders and schedule dates and locations for these meetings.
Happy reading to all in 2023!
Judge Martha Rupp Carter, 2023 Law Day Co-ChairFebruary - Where the Crawdads Sing
Author - Delia Owens
Discussion Leader - Wendy Drummond
Date - Tuesday, February 7 at 5:30 p.m., Location - Drummond Law, 1500 S. Utica, Suite 400, Tulsa.
Wendy Drummond specializes in employment and entertainment law. Additionally, Wendy served as CEO of a wireless company for seven years and founded a Human Resources outsourcing company. Wendy is passionate about community involvement and focuses on non-profits serving women, children and the arts.
Participants for February are asked to read this article: https://www.theatlantic.com/books/archive/2022/07/ where-the-crawdads-sing-delia-mark-owens-zambiamurder/670479/
March - In Love: A Memoir of Love and Loss
Author - Amy Bloom
Discussion Leader - Richard Eagleton
Date/Location - TBD
Richard (“Rick”) Eagleton practices general civil litigation, with an emphasis in Family Law--divorce, separation, custody, visitation, child support, alimony, and complex business and property division, as well as mediation services. He will lead a discussion of the memoir In Love: A Memoir of Love and Loss, by Amy Bloom in March 2023 on a date and location to be determined.
April - Killers of the Flower Moon
Author - David Grann
Discussion Leader - Larry Yadon
Date - April 27th, Noon
Location - TBD
A Crime Writer’s Perspective
Larry currently serves on the Oklahoma mediation panel of Dispute Resolution Consultants. He has authored numerous articles about the American West and co-authored or authored fourteen books of true crime and military history. Larry appeared in two episodes of the History Channel Series Natural Born Outlaws profiling Pretty Boy Floyd, Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker. A recent Golf Channel segment about the May 26, 1981 murder of Telex CEO Roger Wheeler at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa is the subject of a book being finalized and possible TV series.
Register by emailing
Judge Martha Rupp Carter at mruppcarter@yahoo.com
Each session is limited to fifteen persons.
TCBA members may register themselves and up to one friend to accompany and participate with them.
February
Where the Crawdads Sing, Delia Owens
March
In Love: A Memoir of Love and
Loss, Amy Bloom
April
Killers of the Flower Moon, David Grann
TCBF Annual Golf Tournament May 8, 2023 The Club at Forest Ridge
Dear TCBA Membership:
The Tulsa County Bar Foundation is excited to announce its 2023 Charity Golf Tournament is scheduled for Monday, May 8th, 2023, at The Club at Forest Ridge’s par-72, 7,012-yard championship golf course. We hope you can join us for this long-standing event that has benefitted so many local charities.
As you are planning your budget for 2023, we would sincerely appreciate your support for our tournament which provides critical financial funding for worthy charitable beneficiaries. Proceeds from the 2023 tournament will benefit the Tulsa County Veterans Treatment Court, Tulsa Lawyers for Children, First Step Male Diversion Program, TCBF’s Community Outreach, and Emergency Infant Services.
As a leader in the community, we know you understand the need to take an active role in supporting area non-profits. Participating in this golf tournament will not only see your sponsorship go back into the community
but also allow you the opportunity to network with other players, sponsors, and guests. Sponsors are also recognized in the Tulsa Lawyer magazine, the official publication of the Tulsa County Bar Association, which is shared with approximately 2,000 attorneys. Sponsor information will also be posted on the TCBA website and all event signage. Please contact Tami Williams at the Tulsa County Bar Association at 918-584-5243 or tamiw@tulsabar. com for more information. We hope to see you, your employees, friends, and colleagues for a game of golf, food, and fellowship . . . all for the betterment of the Tulsa community.
Sincerely,
Brian Keester, TCBF 2023 Golf Tournament ChairmanHow Did Presidents' Day Come to Be?
Monday, February 20, 2023 is Presidents' Day.
In the late 1870s, Senator Steven Wallace Dorsey proposed the idea of adding Washington's birth date, February 22, to the four existing bank holidays previously approved in 1870. Signed into law January 31, 1879, by President Rutherford B. Hayes, the law was implemented in 1880 and applied only to District federal workers. Washington's Birthday had become the first Federal holiday to single out an individual's birth date, and the honor lasted for less than a century.
In 1968, Congress passed the Uniform Monday Holiday Bill which moved a number of Federal holidays
to Mondays. In 1971, with the implementation of the Uniform Monday Holiday Law (82 Stat. 250 ), the third Monday in February became the date on which Washington's Birthday is celebrated.
Some reformers had wanted to change the name of the holiday as well to Presidents' Day, in honor of both Lincoln and Washington, but that proposal was rejected by Congress and the holiday remained officially Washington's Birthday. While the name change has never been authorized by Congress, it has gained a strong hold on the public consciousness to honor all U.S. Presidents, and is generally used on calendars, in advertising, and even by many government agencies.
(govingo.gov)
VP'S CORNER Stephanie
Jackson TCBA Vice President 2022-2023Make Your Move
Oh, how I love February. I enjoy seeing all of the social media posts of people getting engaged on Valentine’s Day or simply outwardly expressing their love for a significant other. It brings welcomed warmth to a cold month, especially in Oklahoma, that typically brings in blustery cold temperatures, and even snow flurries. Also, it is a wonderful time to celebrate African American History Month. If you have not already been, I would encourage members to visit one of our national museums, Tulsa Historical Society, Greenwood Rising, or simply visit John Hope Franklin’s Reconciliation Park to experience riveting collections and interactive experiences. I promise that you will not regret it.
This month we also celebrate President’s Day and Abraham Lincoln’s birthday. One of the most inspirational moments in my life came in 2008, when our family was visiting Washington, D.C., during National Police Week. Although I was there to receive an honor, I was more inspired by the actions of my then six year old daughter. As we walked around the National Mall, upon reaching the Lincoln Monument I pointed out the place where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. stood to deliver his “I Have A Dream” speech. She immediately bent down, threw up her arms to make the biggest muscles she could, and smiled the biggest smile. It was not until later when I developed the film that I saw the power in that moment. The words “I Have a Dream” below her little feet with President Lincoln sitting behind her smiling. That picture continues to inspire me to be a movement in my community.
I hope this February brings you inspiration from the love surrounding you. I hope it inspires you to also be a movement and not a monument in our Tulsa
community. To my hardworking TCBA leadership, committees, members, and Tulsa area law firms, thank you for all of the love, leadership, and tenacity you showed over the holidays to ensure all of the families were adopted during the 2022 Holiday Challenge. Lizzie Riter you answered the call and went above and beyond with your team during TCBA’s partnered event with the Parent Defense Team at Legal Aid Services of Oklahoma. Let’s keep the love and warmth going in February!
As always, if you have ideas to share, would like to serve on a committee, or have a TCBA project or program you would like to see highlighted, please reach out to me or Tami Williams.
Stephanie Jackson TCBA Vice President, 2022-2023TCBA Seeking Liberty Bell Award Nominations
The Liberty Bell Award was established more than 50 years ago to acknowledge outstanding community service. The Liberty Bell is presented to a non-lawyer who has promoted better understanding of the rule of law, encouraged greater respect for law and the courts, stimulated a sense of civic responsibility, or contributed to good government in the community. The Liberty Bell Award is one of the most prestigious awards the Tulsa County Bar Foundation can bestow on an individual or group of individuals.
Please forward all nominations to Tami Williams,
TCBA Executive Directortamiw@tulsabar.com
Nominees may be an individual or a group that has:
• Promoted better understanding of the rule of law
• Encouraged a greater respect for law and the courts
• Stimulated a sense of civic responsibility
• Contributed to good government in the community
Previous Recipients
1984 Lois McIlroy
1988 Mary Jo Speaker
1989 Nancy McDonald
1990 Lynn Jones
1991 George Singer
1992 Jill Tarbel
1993 Ha Thi Crick
1994 Steven Dow
1995 Michael Reggio
1996 Marty Mundell
1997 Winona Tanaka
1998 Kim Camp
1999 Harriet Morgan
2000 Sally Howe-Smith
2001 Sandra K. Cousins
2003 Chester Cadieux
2004 Jane Kolesnik
2005 Channel 2
2006 Tuesday Morning Miracle Workers
2007 Hamilton 6th Grade Teachers
2008 Community Service Council of Greater Tulsa
2009 Theresa Hansen
2010 Sherri Carrier
2011 Cortez Tunley & Tava Slocum
2012 Ralph Schaefer
2013 Cheryl Conklin
2014 Disabled American Veterans
2015 Bill Braun
2016 Julie Delcour
2017 Suzane Stewart
2018 Amley "Popsey" Floyd
2019 Christine Po
2019 Karen Keith
2020 Not Awarded
2021 Candace Pierce
2022 Michael Willis
Deadline for nominations is Friday ~ March 31, 2023
MEMBER SPOTLIGHT Valerie J. Evans
Firm/Organization: LAW OFFICES OF VALERIE EVANS
Family:
Married to Walter Evans, Campus Police Chief of OU-Tulsa, son Brad who has given me a beautiful bonus daughter, five granddaughters and one grandson, and my daughter Melanie.
How long have you been practicing law and what are your practice areas? I have been practicing law 30 years this coming April. (Where does the time go?) My practice areas are primarily Workers Compensation, some personal injury and general practice.
What do you like most about being a lawyer? Helping my clients achieve the desired result of course! I also like the fact the law exposes you to so many different subjects that I must learn.
What has been your biggest professional achievement?
I’m still waiting…
What is your passion outside of work and the law?
My family and checking out great restaurants.
What is the best advice you have ever received? “Just do YOU”
How long have you been a TCBA member? Off and on for about 12-15 years.
Has your career benefited from being a member of the TCBA? If so, please share. Hopefully I can be an asset to the TCBA.
What is your favorite book, movie, or television show?
That question is always a moving target… but right now I really enjoy the Tulsa King!
Tell us a fun fact that no one knows about you! I was one of the flag corps captains back in the 80's. It was so long ago, I’m sure that those who did know have forgotten!
What is your favorite food? Pizza!!
Left to Right: Stephanie Jackson, TCBA Vice president and Valerie Evans at the Spring 2022 Expungement ExpoState of Oklahoma Legislature Forum Held
The Judges of the 14th Judicial District and the Tulsa County Bar Association and the TCBA Bench and Bar Committee welcomed members of the State of Oklahoma Legislature at the Tulsa County Courthouse on December 15, 2022. The event offered an opportunity to Legislators, Judges and TCBA leadership to meet and discuss judicial concerns and goals for 2023. All of the Tulsa County judges attended the breakfast portion of the event, and some of those Judges led tours and answered questions for the legislators.
The Oklahoma Appellate Courts were also represented by Justice Dana Kuehn and Judge Stacey Hixon. Also in attendance were Court Administrator Kim Hall, and members of the TCBA, including President Phil Hixon, Past President Kara Vincent, Executive Director Tami Williams, TCBF President Judge Ann Keele, TCBA YLD Member Mary Clement, TCBA Members Ashley Webb and Tulsa Lawyer Chair Michael Taubman, TCBA Bench & Bar Chair Kevinn Matthews and committee member Diana Cupps.
Following opening presentations by Presiding Judge Doug Drummond and Judge Kelly Greenough, the legislators were broken into groups for tours. Members of the Oklahoma House and Senate attending included:
• Sen. Dave Rader
• Sen. Jo Ann Dossett
• Sen. John Haste
• Sen. Dana Prieto
• Rep. Terry O’Donnell
• Rep. Todd Gollihare
• Rep. Melissa Provenzano
• Rep. Chris Banning
• Rep. Suzanne Schreiber
• Rep. John Waldron
TCBA Hosts Judicial Panel at Bar Center
On December 20th, the TCBA hosted a two-hour Judicial Panel with judges from both Tulsa and Oklahoma counties. The panel, moderated by Bill Leach of McAfee & Taft, explored the differences in the local rules and practices in the two largest volume venues in our state. Participating judges included Oklahoma Supreme Court Justice Noma Gurich, Tulsa County District Court Judges Daman Cantrell and Judge Kelly Greenough, and Oklahoma County District Court Judge Aletia Timmons. The event was a members-only affair with 100 members attending. Half of those attended remotely and several more stopped by for the reception that was held after the presentation and sponsored by McAfee & Taft.
Oklahoma Supreme Court Justice Noma Gurich, Oklahoma County District Court Judge Aletia Timmons, and Mary Quinn Cooper, Shareholder and Practice Group Leader with McAfee & Taft.
Lawyers Helping Lawyers
If you need support... reach
out!
Oklahoma City Meetings 6-7:30 p.m. on the dates listed below.
In-person meetings in Oklahoma City are held at the office of Tom Cummings, 701 NW 13th St., Oklahoma City. The group will also meet virtually at the same time using BlueJeans. Email debraj@okbar.org for login information.
Meeting Dates: Vitsit okbar.org/
Tulsa Meetings are held 5:30-6:30 p.m. on the second Thursday of each month at the office of Scott Goode, 1437 S. Boulder Ave., Ste. 1200, Tulsa. scottbgoode@gmail.com
Meeting Dates: Feb. 9, Mar. 9, Apr. 13, May 11, June 8, July 13, Aug. 19, Sept. 14.
See What CAP Can Do!
Stories of Black History in the Tulsa Legal Community
Amos T. Hall 1896-1971
Born in 1896 in Bastrop, Louisiana, and graduated from Gilbert Industrial College in Baldwin, Louisiana, Hall arrived in Tulsa in 1921. While working as a custodian of First Methodist Church, he obtained a set of law books from which he taught himself the law. Admitted to the practice of law in Oklahoma in 1925, Hall was the attorney for the State Conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) for a number of years, was a member of the National Legal Committee of that organization and of the Tulsa chapter of the NAACP for twelve years. He appeared in many cases where the civil rights of minorities were infringed, and actively pursued causes to protect voting rights, challenge restrictive covenants, ensure equality in teacher salaries, and protect against racial discrimination in the prosecution of black criminal defendants. For his efforts in raising funds to build the Carver Youth Center on Pine Street, Hall was honored as an Outstanding Citizen of Tulsa by the Tulsa Chamber of Commerce.
He was chairman of the First Baptist Church in North Tulsa, a 33rd degree Mason, a Grand Master of the Prince Hall Masonic Lodge, served on the boards and committees of organizations such as YMCA, St. Johns Hospital and National Conference for Christians and Jews. Hall acquired honorary doctorate degrees from Langston University school of religion and one in Law from Wiley College in Marshall, Texas. He was appointed as a special district judge in Tulsa, January 1969 and elected as an associate district judge in September 1970.
In early legal battles for civil rights, Tulsa lawyer Amos T. Hall joined NAACP lawyer Thurgood Marshall in suing the University of Oklahoma Law School for refusing to admit Ada Lois Sipuel, a black woman who was otherwise qualified for admission. In 1947, it was “a crime for the authorities of any white school to admit a negro pupil” and a crime for a teacher to give instruction to a student of another race. The Oklahoma Supreme Court upheld the state's policy of segregating black students, and held that the state did not have a duty to admit a black student in a white school, nor did it have to create a separate law school for black students until sufficient demand for such an institution was established. Hall and Marshall successfully appealed the decision. The United States Supreme Court held that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution required Oklahoma to provide black law students with the same opportunity for legal education at the same time as it did for any other group. Lacking a "black" law school, the University of Oklahoma, as the only public law school, was required to admit Sipuel. Sipuel graduated from OU law school in 1951. In 1992, Sipuel was appointed to the OU Board of Regents.
Based upon the Sipuel decision, the Oklahoma legislature amended the criminal statutes to permit admission of black students to universities and colleges attended by white students, but only in cases where such institutions offered courses not available in the black schools, and further provided that in such cases instruction "shall be given at such colleges or institutions of higher education upon a segregated basis." Following the law, the University of Oklahoma admitted black students but segregated them from white students within the school.
In 1950, Hall was again before the United states Supreme Court challenging the state’s action in requiring his client, G.W. McLaurin, to sit apart from white students. These separate seats and rows in the classroom library and cafeteria were marked “reserved for colored.” In this landmark civil rights case, Hall convinced the United States Supreme Court that state institutions of higher learning could not constitutionally
deprive black students of the opportunities for interaction offered to students of other races. This decision provided the basis for the Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v. Board of Education that segregation of black children was detrimental too their educational and psychological development, and that the doctrine of “separate but equal” education had no place in the field of public education. Thus, Tulsa Lawyer Amos T. Hall influenced some of the most farreaching civil rights decisions in the last 100 years.
Amos T. Hall passed away at the age of 75 in November 1971. A Chapter of the American Inns of Court in Tulsa bears his name.
Primus Wade
1906-1963
Tulsa attorney Primus Wade served honorably as a staff sergeant with an Army truck company during WWII. After his passing the Tulsa County Bar Association acknowledged his importance in the September 1963 issue of Tulsa Lawyer with the following:
Alvin Hayes, Jr.
1932-2005
Alvin Hayes, Jr. was the City of Tulsa's second African-American city prosecutor, serving from 1989 until 1997. He also served as an Assistant Public Defender for the City from 1985-1989 and then was in private practice. He was a member of the Greenwood Chamber of Commerce, the Business and Industrial Development Corp., the Tulsa County Bar Association, the Tulsa Urban League and the Tulsa Civil Service Commission. Mr. Hayes passed away April 20, 2005 at the age of 73.
These stories and more can be found in the book
Building Tulsa Lawyers at Work published by the Tulsa County Bar Association in celebration of the 100th Anniversary of TCBA (1903-2003). Copies available for members at the Bar Center.
ATTORNEY - LEADER DIES
Attorney Primus Wade leaves a hard-tofill spot in our profession. He was indeed a credit to his profession, his race, his family and his death is a great loss to Tulsa. The association will miss the dedication and enthusiasm which he brought to his work on the innumerable civic and charitable activities in which he participated or directed, All the members of the Tulsa County Bar Association extend their sympathy to the Primus Wade family for the loss of this fine gentleman and brother attorney.
Reprinted with permission of the Tulsa County Bar Association.
Oren Griffin, Ph.D., JDDean of TU College of Law
Oren Griffin, Ph.D., J.D. became the first African American to lead the University
of Tulsa College of Law on January 1, 2022. Dean Griffin completed his undergraduate education at Southern University in New Orleans and received a master’s degree from the University of Northern Iowa. He earned his law degree from Washington and Lee University School of Law and his Ph.D. from the University of Iowa. He is a nationally recognized leader in the field of higher education law and policy. Dean Griffin is a frequent speaker at regional and national conferences for organizations such as the National Association for Student Personal
Administrators, the National Association of College and University Attorneys, Stetson University College of Law National Conference on Law and Higher Education, the Alabama College System, and the International Association of Campus Law Enforcement Officers. In addition, his scholarly work has appeared in the Journal of College and University Law, the Law and Psychology Review, the Seattle Law Review, the West Education Law Report, and The Chronicle of Higher Education. Dean Griffin is also the author of Investigating College Student Misconduct published by the Johns Hopkins University Press in 2018.Citing info: Oren Griffin named Dean of TUs College of Law. The University of Tulsa. (2021, August 31).
Retrieved January 3, 2023, from https://utulsa.edu/orengriffin-dean-law/
Street Law LessonTriggers Skills for Managing Anger
Support students, support the community... join us as a Street Law Program Sponsor
Something to Celebrate!By being a member of the TCBA, you are also a member of the Tulsa County Bar Foundation. As a general rule, the funds that come into the Foundation are the result of a fundraising event for our community, and the monies raised are immediately distributed back out into the community through non-profit organizations.
In an effort to assist the Foundation, we have implemented a monthly “Fund the Foundation” program. To participate we are asking each member who has a birthday this month to consider making a donation to the Foundation. You can do so with the QR Code shown here.
If
Sincerely,
the Fellows
New Year & Happy Birthday!
Philip Hixon TCBA President
February Fun Facts
• January and February were the last two months to be added to the Roman calendar (c. 713 BC); originally, winter was considered a month-less period.
• Originally, February was made the last month of the calendar year. Eventually (c. 450 BC), February was moved to its place as the second month.
almanac.com
Are you looking for new client opportunities in 2023?
The TCBA Lawyer Referral & Information Service may be just what you need!
The Lawyer Referral and Information Service is always excited to welcome new TCBA members to its panel of attorneys. Contact Jeril Haug at JerilH@tulsabar.com or 918-587-6014 for information or to sign up. To join is $37.50 the first year and $75 each year after. Areas currently needing more attorneys in rotation are marked in red below.
Things to consider on how the LRIS may benefit your practice...
• Has your practice seen a decline in clients since the pandemic began? Great way to break into new practice area, especially for those litigation lawyers whose practice may have seen a decrease in numbers in recent months.
• "Retired" but just want to keep a foot in the door and work in the mix of things without carrying a large client base?
• New attorneys looking to increase client base?
• Word of Mouth! Every client you assist is the potential for another "word of mouth" client coming your way!
Areas that always need increased participation:
• Spanish speaking attorneys in all areas of law
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The shareholders of McAfee & Taft, Oklahoma’s largest law firm, have elected Tulsa-based attorneys Katie Gant Crane, William J. Holland, and Dru A. Prosser, as well as Oklahoma City-based attorneys Kaitlyn Schrick Chaney, Alex Duncan, Christian S. Huckaby, Jeffrey L. Vogt, and Chase C. Webb as fellow shareholders, effective January 1, 2023. The announcement was made by managing director Michael Lauderdale.
Katie Gant Crane is a trial lawyer whose commercial litigation practice encompasses complex business disputes, class actions, securities litigations, internal and government investigations, and whitecollar criminal defense. Prior to joining McAfee & Taft, she practiced in the New York offices of Levine Lee LLP and Cahill Gordon & Reindel LLP, and clerked for the Honorable Vincent L. Briccetti of the U.S. Court for the Southern District of New York. Crane earned her law degree from Fordham University in 2013.
William J. Holland’s practice is primarily focused on the resolution of complex business disputes, with a focus on public and private companies in the financial services sector. Holland earned his Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP/US) from the International
Association of Privacy Professionals and his achievements have earned him inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America: Ones to Watch, as well as Oklahoma Super Lawyers’ list of “Oklahoma Rising Stars”. Prior to joining McAfee & Taft, Holland served at a publicly traded Texas-based financial services company. He is a 2013 graduate of the University of Oklahoma College of Law.
Dru A. Prosser is a trial lawyer whose state and federal litigation practice encompasses a broad range of complex business litigation. He has dedicated his practice to cultivating a comprehensive understanding of the civil litigation process. His achievements have earned him inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America: Ones to Watch. Prosser is a 2015 honors graduate of the University of Tulsa College of Law.
With more than 175 attorneys, McAfee & Taft is one of the nation’s 250 largest law firms as ranked by the National Law Journal.
Crowe & Dunlevy attorney J. Christopher Davis has been inducted into the Oklahoma Chapter of the National Academy of Distinguished Neutrals (NADN).
NADN is America’s foremost professional organization for experienced mediators and arbitrators practicing in the field of civil & commercial conflict resolution. Membership is by invitation only and requires a minimum of 200 successful mediations.
“This is a tremendous honor for Chris,” said Roger A. Stong, Crowe & Dunlevy’s president and CEO. “Chris has been very active in alternative dispute resolution, in addition to his trial practice, and well-deserves this recognition.”
A shareholder and director in the firm’s Tulsa office, Davis represents clients as a member of the firm’s Alternative Dispute Resolution, Insurance, Intellectual Property, Litigation & Trial, and Product Liability Practice Groups. With more than 27 years of experience in the courtroom, Davis represents businesses and individuals throughout Oklahoma in state and federal courts. A
seasoned litigator and mediator, Davis is Oklahoma’s only active paraplegic trial attorney.
Davis is a former federal law clerk, serves as an Adjunct Settlement Conference Judge, is a member of the Committee on Local Rules and Court Operations, and is a former member of the Admissions and Grievances Committee for the U.S. Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma.
Davis received his Juris Doctor from the University of Oklahoma College of Law. He graduated cum laude from Oral Roberts University (ORU) with a Bachelor’s Degree in Theology, and holds a Master of Arts in Biblical Literature as well as a Master of Education in Applied Linguistics from ORU.
GableGotwals is pleased to announce that Carrie McNeer has been promoted to Shareholder, effective January 1, 2023. Carrie’s practice focuses on defending corporate and individual clients in a wide variety of complex litigation in state and federal courts. Her experience includes representing insurance companies in a wide range of claims, including bad faith and medical malpractice defense. She currently serves on the Board of Directors for the Oklahoma Association of Defense Counsel.“Carrie is a valuable member of our litigation team. Her extensive experience in insurance and health care litigation has been an asset to those practice groups,” said John Dale, CEO of GableGotwals. Carrie received her J.D. from The University of Tulsa College of Law and her BSBA in marketing at The University of Tulsa.
Best & Sharp is pleased to announce that Emily K. Wilson has been elected as a Partner with the firm. Emily joined the firm in 2020 bringing an extensive background in civil litigation, civil rights litigation, employment law, administrative law, and municipal and governmental liability litigation. In addition to being licensed in Oklahoma, Emily is also licensed in Kansas and holds an inactive license in Colorado having previously worked for both the City of Colorado Springs, Colorado, and the City of Wichita, Kansas.
Emily is originally from Tulsa and a graduate of Booker T. Washington High School but moved away to attend college at the University of Denver during which time she met and married an Air Force Academy graduate who loves to fly. Emily has spent over twenty years moving to various duty locations with her husband and expanding her legal practice in each of the locations except for Hawaii. Having returned to Tulsa after her husband’s retirement, Best & Sharp is looking forward to her future with the firm.
2022-2023 TCBA CONTACTS, COMMITTEE & SECTION CHAIRS
www.tulsabar.com
PHONE: 918-584-5243 FAX: 918-592-0208
1446 South Boston, Tulsa, OK 74119-3612
Executive Director
Tami Williams
tamiw@tulsabar.com
Ext. 1002
Membership Director CLE, Sections & Committees
Heather Heck heatherh@tulsabar.com
Ext. 1001
Front Desk Coordinator General Inquiries
frontdesk@tulsabar.com
Ext. 1000
Accounting accounting@tulsabar.com
Lawyer Referral & Community Resource Navigator
Jeril Haug jerilh@tulsabar.com
Ext. 1003
Tulsa Lawyer Editor - Michael Taubman michael@tulsafirm.com
Associate Editor - Milly Dunlap
Tulsa Lawyer Submissions - tulsabarnews@yahoo.com
TCBA OFFICERS
President ......................................................................Philip Hixon
Past President...............................................................Kara Vincent
President-Elect............................................................Mike Esmond
Vice President......................................................Stephanie Jackson
Secretary....................................................................... Lizzie Riter
Treasurer.............................................................. Michael Taubman
Budget/Internal Operations.........................................Austin Birnie
Foundation President ............................................Hon. Ann Keele
Director at Large (1) Large Firm.................................Natalie Sears
Director at Large (2) Large Firm.......................... Austin Birnie
Director at Large (1) Medium Firm..................................Kara Pratt
Director at Large (2) Medium Firm.................. Jennifer Struble Director at Large (1) Small Firm.................................. Mark Smith
Director at Large (2) Small Firm...........................Linda Morrissey
Director at Large (2) Public Sector.........................Hon. Ann Keele
ABA Delegate............................................................. Molly Aspan
OBA Delegate................................................................Rick White
Library Trustee (1)........................................................ Julie Evans
Library Trustee (2)..................................................... Kim Vojvoda
Presiding Judge .......................................... Hon. Doug Drummond
Chief Judge, U.S. District Court ...................Hon. John F. Heil, III
Chief Judge, Tulsa Municipal Court..........Hon. Gerald Hofmeister
TU Law School Student Representative .. Stephanie Acquario
FOUNDATION APPOINTMENTS
Law Day ................................................Hon. Martha Rupp Carter
Law Day Co-Chair....................................................Mary Clement
Community Outreach................................................ Ashley Webb
Golf Chair...................................................................Brian Keester
Scholarship Chair.......................................................Randy Lewin
Submission, Grapevine & Advertising- Visit www.tulsabar.com
Subscriptions to Tulsa Lawyer are available for $40.00 a year to those who are not Tulsa County Bar Association members or others who do not currently receive the publication. Contact tamiw@tulsabar.com
Tulsa Lawyer is a monthly publication of the TCBA. The TCBA does not necessarily share or endorse the opinions expressed in the materials published. The views are those of thoughtful contributors. Similarly, advertising does not imply endorsement by the TCBA of products or services or any statements concerning them.
FOUNDATION President.................................................................Hon. Ann Keele
Foundation Vice President...........................................Justin Munn
Treasurer......................................................................Philip Hixon
Trustee.................................................................... Hon. Ann Keele
Trustee........................................................................ Justin Munn
Trustee......................................................................... Philip Hixon
Trustee...........................................................................Lizzie Riter
Trustee.......................................................................Chad McLain
Trustee ......................................................................Jim Gotwals
Trustee Catherine Hoopert
Trustee................................................................ Michael Taubman
TCBA President......................................................Philip D. Hixon
TCBA Pres. Elect.......................................................Mike Esmond
COMMITTEE CHAIRPERSONS
Access to Justice..........................................Pansy Moore-Shrier
Animal Law ..........Katy Inhofe
Bench & Bar Kevinn Matthews
Children & the Law....................................................Lizzie Riter
Children & the Law Vice Chair..........Timothy Michaels-Johnson
CLE...............................................................Pansy Moore-Shrier
Diversity
Fee Arbitration............................................................Gary Crews
Law Related Education................................................................
Lawyer Referral .......Karen Wilkins
Membership Services....................................................Kara Pratt
Mentoring ........................................................ ......Shena Burgess
Military/Veterans ............................................ ...Mitchell Garrett
Military/Veterans Co-Chair Hon. David Guten
Nominations & Awards ........Kara Vincent
Pro Bono............................................................... Mac Finlayson
Pro Bono Co-Chair......................................................Aaron Tift
Professionalism ...........Rick White
Public Relations....................................................Steve Layman
Social Media.................................................... ....Collaborative
Special Events ................................................. .......Natalie Sears
Street Law ....................................................... ..............Co-chairs
................................................>. Pierre Robertson , Kara Vincent
Tulsa Lawyer Michael Taubman
Young Lawyers Division...........................................Billy Duncan
SECTION CHAIRPERSONS
ADR/Mediation..........................................................Melissa Fell
ADR/Mediation Co-Chair ....Lauren Lindsey
Bankruptcy Hon. Paul Thomas
Business/Corporate...........................................Kevinn Matthews
Criminal Law .................................................. ........Daniel Levy
Energy & Mineral Law...........................................Buford Pollett
Employment Law ....Jonathan Shook
Family Law ..................................................... ..Jordan Dalgleish
Juvenile Law. ..........Lizzie Riter
Juvenile Law Co-Chair.......................Timothy Michaels-Johnson
Litigation...............................................................Mark A. Smith
Litigation Co-Chair......................................Mbilike Mwafulirwa
Municipal Law............................................................Cassia Carr
Paralegals/Legal Assistant....................................Kathryn Keener
Paralegal /Legal Assistants Vice Chair.....................Gloria Jones
Probate/Estate/Elder.......................................................Co-chairs
................................Kelley Hunt, Phillip Jennings, John Gotwals
Solo/Small Firm .............................................Colton Richardson
Tax ......................................................... ..........Ashlee Hall
Technology ...................................................Pansy Moore-Shrier Workers Comp.........................................................Valerie Evans
* Section Chairs will be updated as positions are filled