Samuel Mandelbaum
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Samuel Mandelbaum (September 20, 1884 - November 20, 1946) was a New York lawyer and politician who served for ten years as a federal district judge.
Mandelbaum was born in Russia; his family immigrated to the United States several years later. Mandelbaum grew up in the Lower East Side neighborhood of Manhattan, where he became interested in law and politics. He attended the New York University School of Law, obtaining an LL.B. degree in 1912 and an LL.M. in 1913.
Mandelbaum worked as a lawyer in private practice from 1912 to 1922, practicing primarily in local courts, where he handled personal-injury and criminal cases. In 1922, he was elected as a Democrat to the New York State Assembly. After serving in the Assembly from 1923 to 1932, he was elected to the New York State Senate, serving there until 1936. During much of this time, Franklin D. Roosevelt was Governor of New York and Mandelbaum was one of his advisors as a member of the so-called "turkey cabinet."
In 1936, Roosevelt, then President, nominated Mandelbaum as a judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. Mandelbaum's appointment was controversial and he was opposed by several bar associations on the ground that he had no experience of any kind in federal court. In fact, according to sources such as long-time New York lawyer Milton Gould and Professor Irving Younger, when Mandelbaum requested (possibly through Eleanor Roosevelt) that Roosevelt appoint him to a judgeship, he expected to be named to a local Magistrate's Court and was surprised to learn that Roosevelt, no longer being Governor or active in New York State politics, could not appoint local judges and was instead nominating him for the federal bench.
Despite the controversy, Mandelbaum was quickly confirmed and took the bench in June 1936. He was reportedly a judge who did his best to rule on the side of the underdog and was known for his leniency in criminal cases.
Mandelbaum today is best remembered as the trial judge in the case of Erie Railroad v. Tompkins, in which the Supreme Court overruled its venable precedent of Swift v. Tyson and held that federal courts must apply the state law of the forum state in diversity cases. In the proceedings before Mandelbaum, Erie was a routine personal injury case and there was little intimation that the case would have a historic future. In the United States Reports volume containing the Supreme Court's Erie decision, found in his chambers after his death, Mandelbaum had written, "Because the Swift Tyson case although before this case I never knew of its existence to be truthful and for the confusion this decision brought about, it might have been better to leave it alone and stand by good old Swifty."
Mandelbaum died in New York in 1946.
[edit] References
- Gould, Milton S, The Witness Who Spoke with God and Other Tales from the Courthouse (Viking Press 1979).
- Younger, Irving, "What Happened in Erie," 56 Texas L. Rev. 1011 (1978).
- Official FJC biography