Rose Spector
Rose Spector is a respected Texas lawyer and judge.
Early life and education
She was born in San Antonio, Texas, on July 9, 1933. She attended Barnard College of Columbia University in New York, receiving her B.A. in 1954. She attended St. Mary's University School of Law, one of only a few women in her law school class, receiving her J.D., magna cum laude, in 1965 and was admitted to the Texas bar.
Career as judge
She became a judge on the Municipal Court of the city of Olmos Park, Texas, in 1969 and of the Bexar County Court of Law in 1975. She served as District Judge of the 131st Judicial District of Texas from 1981 to 1992. She was elected Justice of the Texas Supreme Court in 1992 and served from 1993 to until 1998. She was the first woman to be elected to the state's highest court.[1] She served until 1998, when she lost her re-election during a sweep of judicial elections in Texas by Republican candidates.
Among her many judicial opinions, her dissent in Twyman v. Twyman is often studied in family law. In that case the majority opinion was authored by then-justice John Cornyn, adopting the Restatement of Torts standard for intentional infliction of emotional distress, but Justice Spector dissenting, arguing that in this case, award of damages to the wife for the proven abuse of the wife by her husband should be upheld under the standards for negligent infliction of emotional distress that had been thought to apply at the time of the lower court's verdict.
References
- Twyman v. Twyman, 855 S.W.2d 619 (Texas 1993).
- An Unusual History of Women Serving on the Texas Supreme Court
- Interview with Rose Spector, UTSA Oral History Project
- Cossman's The Story of Twyman v. Twyman: Politics, Tort Reform, and Emotional Distress in a Texas Divorce, in Carol Sanger, Family Law Stories