Vincent L. McKusick

Vincent Lee McKusick (born October 21, 1921) is an attorney and former Chief Justice of Maine.[1][2] He is currently serving in the role of Of Counsel at the firm Pierce Atwood in Portland, Maine.

McKusick began practicing law with Pierce Atwood in 1952. For twenty-five years-until he was appointed by Governor Longley as Maine’s Chief Justice-Vincent engaged in general practice with the firm.

Prior to joining Pierce Atwood in 1952, Vincent served successively as law clerk to Chief Judge Learned Hand of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and to Justice Felix Frankfurter of the United States Supreme Court. During 1943-46, he served in the U.S. Army, in part in Los Alamos, New Mexico -- participating in the Manhattan Project.

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Education

McKusick received his A.B. degree from Bates College (1943), his S.B. and S.M. from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1947), and his LL.B. from Harvard Law School (1950), where he served as President of the Harvard Law Review. He holds honorary degrees from: Colby College (LL.D., 1976); Nasson College (LL.D., 1978); University of Southern Maine (L.H.D., 1978); Bates College (LL.D., 1979); Bowdoin College (LL.D., 1979); Thomas College (L.H.D., 1981); and Suffolk University (LL.D., 1983).

Chief Justice

In 1977, Governor Longley appointed McKusick Chief Justice of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, the first such appointment directly from the bar since the appointment of Chief Justice Prentiss Mellon in 1820. Chief Justice McKusick had responsibility for managing Maine’s entire court system as well as for presiding over its highest appellate court. Over the years, he had been deeply involved in modernizing the rules of procedure for the Maine courts, serving on rules committees appointed by the Supreme Judicial Court and co-authoring two editions of the classic work on Maine Civil Practice.

McKusick's fourteen and a half years as Chief Justice were marked by significant improvements in the structure and operation of all courts. Many of those improvements came about through the involvement of volunteer efforts from within the community, such as Maine’s pioneering Mediation Program and its Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) Program.

For his public service in the courts, McKusick received the American Judicature Society’s Herbert Harley Award in 1982 and the Neal W. Allen Award for Community Leadership of the Greater Portland Chamber of Commerce in 1988. In 1991, Cumberland County named its newly expanded courthouse for the Chief Justice. Vincent was the 1999 recipient of the National Center for State Court’s Paul C. Reardon Award given to those who have made outstanding contributions to the administration of justice nationally and to the work of the National Center.

For over thirty-five years, McKusick was involved in legal pursuits at the national and international levels. He has served on the governing boards of both the American Bar Association Journal and the American Bar Foundation, as well as in the ABA House of Delegates. He has led groups of state and federal judges on “People to People” visits to both China and the former Soviet Union.

During 1990-91, his fellow chief justices elected McKusick President of the National Conference of Chief Justices and Chairman of the Board of Directors of the National Center for State Courts. He has served and continues to serve on the council of the American Law Institute, and also has served on the governing boards of the American Philosophical Society, the American Arbitration Association, and the U.S. Supreme Court Historical Society.

Since his voluntary retirement from the Court on February 28, 1992, Judge McKusick has served “of counsel” to Pierce Atwood. In July 1992, he served on a pro bono basis as the neutral arbitrator for the determination of the terms under which Long Island would separate from the City of Portland.

Since his retirement Vincent McKusick has also served the United States Supreme Court as Special Master in three original jurisdiction cases between States: Connecticut et al. v. New Hampshire, 1992–93; Louisiana v. Mississippi, 1995; and Kansas v. Nebraska, et al., 1999-2003.

By appointment of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, Vincent served in 1995-96 as Master in the liquidation of American Mutual Liability Insurance Co. and an affiliate. Among numerous arbitrations conducted by him since retirement from the Court, he served in 1996 as the neutral arbitrator in San Francisco in a substantial contract dispute between a major public utility and an independent power marketer. In recent years he has successfully mediated a dispute over the disposition of the proceeds from the sale of two not-for-profit hospitals in Massachusetts, as well as a legal malpractice claim of a government agency against a large international law firm. Currently he is engaged in further substantial commercial arbitrations for the American Arbitration Association.

Late in 1992 McKusick led a small State Department delegation to the Republic of Georgia to advise on court reform, and by President George H. W. Bush's appointment he served from 1993 to 2001 as one of the five members of the Committee to Administer the Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise.

Professional activities

Honors

In 1993, the University of Maine awarded him and his identical twin brother, medical geneticist Victor A. McKusick, its inaugural Maine Prize for their “nationally recognized contributions to the quality of life.”

McKusick practices in Maine.

Cases in which he served as Special Master

References

  1. ^ "Ilissa A. Kimball To Wed in April". The New York Times. January 19, 1986. http://www.nytimes.com/1986/01/19/style/ilissa-a-kimball-to-wed-in-april.html. Retrieved 2010-01-18. "He served as law clerk to Chief Justice Vincent L. McKusick of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court in Portland." 
  2. ^ LINDA GREENHOUSE (November 1, 1995). "Supreme Court Awards Island to Mississippi". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/1995/11/01/us/supreme-court-awards-island-to-mississippi.html. Retrieved 2010-01-18. "Justice McKusick concluded in a 33-page opinion last October that the entire area belonged to Mississippi under the Court's principles for tracking wandering islands in shifting riverbeds."