Tyler C. Lockett: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 19:58, 13 May 2021
Tyler C. Lockett | |
---|---|
Justice of the Kansas Supreme Court | |
In office February 11, 1983 – January 13, 2003 | |
Appointed by | John W. Carlin |
Preceded by | Alex M. Fromme |
Succeeded by | Robert L. Gernon |
Personal details | |
Born | Tyler Charles Lockett December 7, 1932 Corpus Christi, Texas |
Died | November 28, 2020 Topeka, Kansas | (aged 87)
Spouse |
Sue Warburton (m. 1961) |
Children | 2 sons |
Education | Washburn University (B.A., J.D.) |
Tyler Charles Lockett (December 7, 1932 – November 28, 2020) was an attorney, jurist and Justice of the Kansas Supreme Court from 1983 to 2003.
Early life and career
Lockett was born in Corpus Christi, Texas to Tyler and Evelyn LeMond Lockett, and moved to Wichita, Kansas at a young age. His father, Tyler "Ty" C. Lockett (1908–1960), was the Sheriff of Sedgwick County, Kansas from 1951 to 1955. His brother Hal Lockett was a prominent Wichita attorney.[1] Sue Lockett, the former justice’s wife, was the executive director of the Court Appointed Special Advocate in Shawnee County, Kansas for more than a decade.[2]
Lockett graduated from Wichita North High School in 1951.[3] From there, he attended Washburn law school receiving an AB degree and an LLB. While at Washburn, Lockett was a member of the Kansas Beta Chapter of Phi Delta Theta.[4] He married Sue Warburton in 1961, and they had two sons.[5]
As a Naval aviator, Locket spent four years on active duty in the West Pacific. He continued to fly in the Naval Reserve in the late 1960s. In 1967 he was reported to be serving as a co-pilot on a Navy Neptune patrol plane stationed at the Naval Air Station in Olathe, Kansas.[6]
Legal career and later life
After being admitted to the bar in 1962, Lockett practiced law with the firm of Ratner, Maddox, and Ratner. From 1964 to 1966, he served as a Deputy County Attorney for Sedgwick County, Kansas. He engaged in private practice until Governor Robert Docking appointed him as a common pleas judge in 1971. In 1977, he was elected as a judge of the Sedgwick County District Court. In 1983, Governor John W. Carlin, a fellow Democrat, appointed him to the Kansas Supreme Court. Lockett served on the high court until his retirement in 2003.[5] He continued to hear cases in retirement through 2007.[7]
He died on November 28, 2020 from COVID-19 in Topeka, Kansas.[5]
References
- ^ Another brother, Coleman, was arrested for cocaine distribution along with two professional football players, Mark and Mike Bell, in 1985. See story at https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1320&dat=19851121&id=CewTAAAAIBAJ&sjid=dAYEAAAAIBAJ&pg=2840,1798939
- ^ See story at http://cjonline.com/stories/073102/com_casa.shtml
- ^ See http://www.north.usd259.org/notable%20north%20high%20grads.html
- ^ See the history of Phi Delta Theta at Washburn at http://phidelt.wikispaces.com/kansas+beta
- ^ a b c "Honorable Tyler C. Lockett". Topeka Capital-Journal. 2020-12-02.
- ^ "Items about Brothers with the Colors," The Scroll, March 1967, page 283.
- ^ State v. Thomas