Court Opinion

ID: 9378016
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-09 16:02:32.93468+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:18.486823
License: Public Domain

Cite as 2023 Ark. 40
                 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS

                                                     Opinion Delivered:   March 09, 2023
 IN MEMORY OF CHIEF JUSTICE
 JACK W. HOLT, JR.

                                           PER CURIAM

       On March 5, 2023, Jack W. Holt, Jr., who served this court with distinction as its chief

justice from January 1, 1985, through August 31, 1995, died at the age of 93. The court extends its

deepest condolences to his wife, Jane Lovett Holt, and the other members of his family. We

remember Chief Justice Holt for his many accomplishments and storied legal career, but also for his

good-hearted willingness to mentor and befriend others, to appreciate and enjoy life––“in line with

this sentiment,” we publish the letter that Chief Justice Holt released at the time he announced his

retirement:

       To my fellow justices, judges, and employees of the Arkansas court system:

       This morning, I have sent to the Governor a formal notice of my plans to retire from the
       Office of Chief Justice of the Arkansas Supreme Court effective Friday, September 1, 1995.

       For more than a decade, after having been honored by the people of Arkansas with the
       election to the office, I have served as Chief Justice of the Arkansas Supreme Court. With
       the passing of years, I find that it is time for me to relinquish my office, and in line with this
       sentiment, I announce my plans for retirement. It is now time to move on to a somewhat
       different, less cloistered and less structured work and lifestyle at this time of my career, with
       more time for family, friends and personal pursuits. In entering the judiciary, I brought to
       the Court a desire to be a good judge, a pledge to evaluate all cases presented to the Court
       in a fair and impartial manner, and, commensurate with the duties of Chief Justice, a
       devotion to the mission of modernizing the Arkansas judiciary, while at the same time
       maintaining the tradition of a fair, efficient and impartial system of justice.
During my years of service on the Court, I have had the support of strong and independent
colleagues on the trial and appellate bench both past and present, and to each of them I
extend my heartfelt appreciation for their total and selfless commitment to the task which
has faced our court system for the past ten years.

In the discharge of my obligations and duties as Chief Justice, I have striven to emphasize
improvements in the administration of our state judicial system. My objective was not
improvement solely for the benefit of judges and lawyers. Rather, I continually sought to
work for a better judicial system for the good of the citizens of Arkansas through
constitutional amendments and legislative change. In this connection, I am gratified by the
adoption of Amendment 65 to the Constitution of the State of Arkansas. This amendment,
which significantly expanded the municipal court civil jurisdiction, has, in my opinion,
made access to judicial relief for civil claims easier and less costly for the average citizen. In
effect, it has truly created a “people’s court.” I am also pleased that, with the support of my
associate justices who serve with me on the Court, a Judicial Discipline and Disability
Constitutional Amendment was also adopted.

Apart from the adoption of these constitutional amendments, a variety of changes for the
better have been made in our judicial system, including the creation of a new juvenile justice
system, public defender programs, capital felony resources, drug diversion courts, and partial
state funding of court personnel. Regrettably, the workings of the judicial branch of
government still remain obscure to most citizens. Nonetheless, I am confident in my belief
that the judicial branch at all levels has made significant strides forward during the past
decade, and will continue the battles to improve the administration of justice.

I have gained enormous understanding of and respect for the judicial branch of government
for the State of Arkansas, and, in particular, those people who constitute the courts’ staff, as
they are necessary partners in making the system work. I depart hoping that, together, we
have made a contribution to the ancient and living legacy of the law. I will leave confident
about the future of our court and judicial system both because of the quality of the work
which has already been done to make our system sound and the knowledge of the desire
and energy which each of you brings to make it even better.

I close by thanking all of those who have been of assistance to me for over these many years
. . . my colleagues on the Court, my administrative assistant of longstanding, my law clerks,
the Administrative Office of the Courts and its Directors, past and present, the Director of
Court Programs, the membership of the state judiciary at all levels, and the host of judicial
employees who make up the system. I, and the Court, have benefited from the skill and
experience of these dedicated employees who provide support services for the Court, not
to mention the numerous attorneys and citizens who have chaired and served on various
committees of the Court for little, if any, compensation other than feelings of satisfaction
for the contributions to the judicial system.

For all of this, I am most grateful.