Hon. Loran L. Lewis
I
the young democracy of the United States most of the strongest characters
have been hammered out on the anvil of adverse circumstances. They
are the wrought-iron of our people rather than the plastic iron
cast in the easy mold of good fortune and old family. The youth
of Loran Lodowick Lewis was marked by something of the heroism and
pathos that characterized the early career of Lincoln and of Garfield.
Born at Auburn, N. Y., in 1825, without any fostering advantages,
he received his early education at the public schools, and for about
two years at a private school in Auburn. It was always necessary
for him to earn his own living, and at first he earned it in a way
common to poor American youth—teaching country schools while keeping
up his own studies. At the age of 21, and while pursuing his law
studies, he set himself up in what would be a rather singular business
for a young man at this time, the peddling of law books about the
country, obtaining his wares on credit. In this course he so prospered
that eventually he was able to own a horse and wagon, and extend
his route over nearly every county in the State. After a while he
became able to enter on the regular study of the law, and he pursued
his reading in the office of William H. Seward, at Auburn. Admitted
to the bar on the 4th of July, 1848, in the fall of that year he
hung out his “shingle” in Buffalo, on a building occupied by Millard
Fillmore, and for many years and now owned and occupied by Mr. Lewis.
Acting on the commendable belief shared by most American youth,
that every poor young man has an inalienable right to a poor young
woman to share his lot, he married in 1852. He steadily and rapidly
made his way at the bar, and very early acquired a good reputation
as a lawyer fully competent to try causes in court. In a very few
years he rose to the front rank of his profession in this regard,
and hardly an important cause was tried at Buffalo or in its vicinity
in which he was not engaged. Soon he became supreme as an advocate
at the Buffalo bar, and it is not too much to say that at the time
of his retirement he was the most distinguished and successful jury
lawyer ever known at Buffalo, and one of the most eminent and influential
in all Western New York. An intuitive reader of the hearts and minds
of men, gifted with an unerring tact, master of the art of cross-examination,
possessor of a sound common sense and judgment, with a simple and
unpretentious style of speaking, and the rare capacity of apparent
candor such as made him a thirteenth juror, he got nearly all the
verdicts without ever raising his voice so it could be heard outside
the court-room. In a word, he treated the jury as if they were men
of sense, above flattery or the vociferous arts of the orator and
the stealthy persuasion of the demagogue.
Mr. Lewis devoted his energies to
his profession, and although always an ardent Republican, he did
not go much into politics. A due recognition of his fitness for
the business of legislation was, however, made by his election to
the office of State senator for two successive terms, from 1870
to 1874. In this post he achieved honorable distinction and occupied
the responsible position of chairman of the committee on canals.
Meantime there was a growing feeling
among the public that Mr. Lewis was of the stuff of which good judges
are made, and at the bar his business had grown so large and his
success so monotonous that his brethren, without distinction of
party, felt that he ought to be a judge at once. Mr. Lewis was not
unwilling, for he had acquired a fair competency, and his health
was somewhat impaired by the tremendous anxieties of his pre-eminent
position. The result was that in 1883, the year of the political
tidal wave, which swept Mr. Cleveland into the office of governor
by about 200,000 majority, Mr. Lewis was nominated for judge of
the Supreme Court, and was the only man elected on the Republican
ticket in Erie county [sic], receiving about 3,000 majority. He
presided at the circuit until 1890, when he was designated by the
governor a member of the General Term, and there remained until
the age of 70, in January, 1896. Under the provision of the present
Constitution he has held terms of court at Buffalo by appointment
of the governor since that time.
It is given to few men to be both
learned and [55][56] wise; it is better
that a judge should be wise rather than learned; and Judge Lewis
was a wise rather than a learned judge. His learning was quite sufficient,
but not cumbersome. He has not added too much to the wearisome burden
of print under which our profession groan and labor like Sinbad
the Sailor under the Old Man of the Sea. A book was not necessary
to enable him to conjure up the essential form of right. He was
never the narrow slave of precedent, but always preferred to work
out results upon the basic principles of justice. His judicial career
was eminently useful to the public and honorable to himself, marked
by the mental calmness, clear comprehension, industrious research,
earnest reflection, and unswerving impartiality which are the indispensable
ingredients of good magistracy. Mr. Lewis was an exception to the
general judgment that good advocates make poor judges. In him the
love of justice proved superior to the pride of opinion and the
habit of taking sides in controversies. He was one of the best circuit
judges of late years, possessing the determination to dispatch business
with a due regard to the value of the public time, having a just
indifference to the common hallucination of every lawyer that his
cause is the most important on the calendar, and yet exhibiting
an impartiality that commanded respect. I think it may warrantably
be said, in a word, that his judicial career sensibly promoted rather
than hindered or obscured justice.
Now at the age of 73, Judge Lewis
is living in the same town where he started on his distinguished
career half a century ago, and occupying the same office building;
comfortable in health, serene in temper, enjoying the well-earned
and ample fruits of a life of hard toil; secure in the respect of
the community, surrounded by his entire family—the wife of his youth,
four children and thirteen grandchildren—retired from practice,
but advising his two lawyer-sons in a friendly way, and conferring
on the Buffalo Law School, without pecuniary reward, the results
of his vast experience and knowledge in lectures on the conduct
of causes, unique in style, and invaluable as those of Ira Harris
(under which I sat in my youth at Albany); loving ardently the principles
of equality and justice which have always animated his spirit, and
bearing simply, modestly and quietly the honors which have come
to him as the fitting return for a long life of industry, integrity,
dignity, religious devotion without bigotry, and an immaculate purity
of personal carriage. His life is a striking object-lesson to the
young men whom he teaches of the value of a steady and right character,
and that the highest rewards of their chosen profession are not
the gift of luck or chance or favoritism, but are wrested from society
only by such steadfast struggle as Ja ob [sic] sustained when he
wrestled all night with the angel.
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