Judges and Judiciary,
California Supreme Court
Feb. 17, 2026
Gov. Newsom will probably go to the appellate bench for the next SCOCA justice
Governor Gavin Newsom is almost certain to fill the California Supreme Court vacancy with a safe, experienced Court of Appeal justice--one who works quietly, avoids controversy and won't disrupt his political future.
David A. Carrillo
Executive Director
California Constitution Center at Berkeley Law.
Email: carrillo@law.berkeley.edu
Stephen M. Duvernay
Phone: (916) 447-4900
Email: steve@benbrooklawgroup.com
Notre Dame Law School; Notre Dame IN
As the clock ticks away days with an empty California
Supreme Court seat, all eyes turn to Gov. Gavin Newsom. Who will he appoint?
How long will it take? Will it be me? On those questions we offer some
perspective, and one clear answer. Considering history and the widely reported
indications of the governor's future aspirations, the most likely choice is a
centrist Court of Appeal justice who will bang out lots of opinions and
generate zero headlines, doing no harm to any future political campaigns. Aside
from being the right political move, that path would be consistent with past
practice for this and many other modern governors. Given that, we can say with
100% confidence that none of us will get the call.
Past governors have used a wide variety of selection
considerations. For his lone appointment to the state high court Gov. Gray
Davis tapped federal district court judge Carlos Moreno to replace Stanley
Mosk. According to Chief Justice Phil Gibson, Gov. Goodwin Knight had only
politics and money in mind when he made his one appointment (Marshall McComb)
to the court. Gov. Jerry Brown stands out with his intentional efforts in the
1970s to shake up the court with academics in particular and
generally people from outside the traditional track. And Gov. George
Deukmejian's mission in his eight appointments was to undo all that Gov. Brown
had done.
Yet the court's modern justices
have on the whole been appointed from the Court of Appeal, and many of the court's quiet
success stories have been people who embody the mold of a typical Court of
Appeal justice as an artisan, not an artist. There are obvious exceptions:
Roger Traynor was an academic with no prior judicial service before becoming
arguably the court's greatest justice, and Phil Gibson had about two months of
government service before his 25 years as one of the great chief justices. But
these exceptions prove the rule of prior appellate service among modern
justices, and of course there are equally obvious examples of less-great past
justices who had no prior judicial service. Most of the court's justices, and
so many of its successful justices, come from the Court of Appeal, for good
reason: it is a quality-assurance filter for aspirants for the state high
court.
Judicial selection in California
is generally a ziggurat: good lawyers become Superior Court judges, very good
judges become Court of Appeal justices, and the best of those might reach the
California Supreme Court. Each step gathers wide-ranging community input based
on personal experience. When 201,704 active lawyers get filtered down to 1,781
trial court judges, a few jerks and fools might slip through. But those
qualities quickly manifest on the bench, and even fewer judges become one of
the 106 Court of Appeal justices. That makes the appellate bench the most
rigorously vetted group of candidates; anyone who makes it there is very likely
a good judge and a decent person.
Looked at in the reverse, all that
explains why so many modern state high court justices served on the Court of
Appeal, and why most folks who get appointed to those seats have trial court
experience. Consider Newsom's Court of Appeal appointments as the most recent
example: of his 40 or so justices, nearly all came from the trial courts. And
the six who did not all have gold-star backgrounds: a judicial chambers
attorney, the Solicitor General, the governor's legal office, the San Francisco
City Attorney, and one had decades of experience as an appellate expert. Those
records are good evidence of a reasonable person who knows the law and should
be a good appellate justice. The Court of Appeal filtering process is even
better evidence of that for potential California Supreme Court justices. For a
governor it's a ready-made roster of good choices who have already been
thoroughly vetted at least once.
Newsom's three previous state high court appointments
(four if you count elevating the chief justice) show the same thought process.
Justices Jenkins and Evans came from the governor's legal office, so he knew
them well, and Chief Justice Guerrero came from the Fourth District Court of
Appeal. All told, this track record of how governors past and present viewed
this decision allows us to hazard some predictions for likely parameters here.
A critical lens here (as ever) is politics: do no harm to
the governor's political future. That counsels in favor of the safe choice of a
hardworking and uncontroversial Court of Appeal justice, someone with enough
experience to inspire confidence that they show no tendency to controversy.
That's consistent with Newsom's appellate appointments, as nearly all were
Superior Court judges. And it's consistent with his three previous state high
court appointments -- all were known quantities.
There are two somewhat less important but still
significant considerations. The north-south balance could be a factor: the
chief justice and Justice Groban are from the south; justices Liu, Kruger,
Evans and Corrigan are all Bay Area residents. A justice from outside the Bay
Area would balance geographic representation. And timing might matter: whether to send someone to the Commission on
Judicial Appointments before or after the November general election deadline
bears some thought.
But several evergreen questions should be unimportant
here. Given how diverse the court already is, and the governor's appointments
have already been, it's unlikely that an interest group can make a strong case
for representation. For example, it's difficult to lobby for a
gender-representation choice when the court is already majority female.
Nominating from the federal bench is probably not an option because that would
open a seat for a Republican. And avoiding a maverick in the mold of 1970s
Jerry Brown is a priority, so that rules out academics and true believers of
any flavor -- an intentional disruptor is the least likely result here.
Our prediction is that a Court of Appeal justice, with
unquestioned bona fides and wide respect, probably male, maybe Hispanic,
perhaps not from the Bay Area, goes to the Commission on Judicial Appointments
by summer. And you can bet that person will not be named Carrillo, Duvernay or
Stracener.
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