Anthony B. Quinn is a Utah Third Judicial District court judge for Salt Lake County, Utah. He was appointed to this position in September 1996 by Gov. Michael O. Leavitt.
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Quinn was born in Virginia and lived for some time in Greenwich, Connecticut. Sometime while in high school, his father retired, moving the family back to his family's roots, settling in Bountiful, Utah.[1] He received his Bachelor degree in history from Brigham Young University in 1976 and served as Note and Comment editor of the Law Review.[2] He then graduated from J. Reuben Clark Law School at BYU in 1980, where he graduated in the top 5% of his class.
After graduating from law school at BYU, Quinn went to work as a law clerk for Utah federal district court judge David K. Winder.[3] He worked there for a year before joining the Salt Lake City, Utah law firm of Ray, Quinney and Nebeker. He worked there from January 1982 to January 1992. He then founded a new law firm called Wood, Quinn and Crapo. He worked there for five years before becoming a professor at Westminster College in Salt Lake City. He taught for two years at Westminster before becoming a judge for Utah's Third Judicial District.[4] As well as practicing law and being a professor, Quinn has served on the Supreme Court Advisory Committee on the Rules of Civil Procedure, the Executive Committee of the Salt Lake Area Safe at Home Coalition.[5]
In September 1997, Quinn was appointed by the Governor Michael O. Leavitt to the position of judge on Utah's Third Judicial District.[6] He currently serves Salt Lake, Summit and Tooele Counties. Judge Quinn has served on the Board of District Court Judges.[7]
Judge Quinn presided over a lawsuit filed against the Governor of the State of Utah and others in 2010 by a member of the Utah State Board of Education who was ousted from the Board in the nomination and selection process.[8] Judge Quinn rejected the constitutional challenge to the selection process, but did rule the process was conducted in violation of the Utah Open and Public Meetings Act. However, Judge Quinn ruled that the violations could not be rectified by voiding the actions taken against the plaintiff.[9]
Quinn is married and has three children. All of his children are married and have associations with law, whether it be them or their spouse.[10] Although Quinn was born and raised for the first eight years of his life on the east coast, he now considers Utah his home. In his free time, something you could find Quinn doing is cycling, something he has enjoyed for the last two decades. He logs about 10,000 miles per year and has gotten some of his children to ride with him.[11] When asked what he likes most about his job, Judge Quinn explains that he "enjoys engaging in discussion with good lawyers," and he "loves the variety of cases."[12]