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May,
2008 Case of the Month: In
re Hall, 50 Conn. 131 (1882)
126 years ago this May, the
Connecticut Supreme Court became the first court in the country to
hold that a woman was qualified to be admitted to the bar when it
held that Mary Hall qualified as a “person” under the statute
governing the admission of lawyers to practice in this State.
Writing for the court, Chief Justice Park eloquently expressed the
foundation upon which much civil rights jurisprudence later would be
based:
We are not to forget that
all statutes are to be construed, as far as possible, in favor of
equality of rights. All restrictions upon human liberty, all claims
for special privileges, are to be regarded as having the presumption
of law against them, and as standing upon their defense, and can be
sustained, if at all by valid legislation, only by the clear
expression or clear implication of the law.
In re Hall, 50 Conn. at 137. |