Dorothy Comstock Riley
Dorothy Comstock Riley (
December 6,
1924–
October 23,
2004) was a
lawyer and
judge from the
U.S. state of
Michigan, serving on the
Michigan Supreme Court and the first woman to serve on the state's Court of Appeals. She was the first hispanic woman to be elected to the Supreme Court of any state.
Riley was born in
Detroit, where she attended public schools, graduating from Northwestern High School. She attended
Wayne State University, where she earned a
B.A. in
1946 and an
LL.B. in
1949. Female lawyers were not common at the time and reportedly, when she inteviewed at several law firms after graduation, the qualification they were most interested in was her typing ability. Instead of working at such firms, she began her own practice in the Detroit area.
In
1972, Riley became a
Wayne County Circuit Judge and in
1976, she became the first woman to serve on the Michigan Court of Appeals. She ran for the Supreme Court in 1982 and lost. On
December 9,
1982,
Republican Governor
William Milliken nonetheless appointed Riley to the Court to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Justice
Blair Moody on
November 26. This appointment became the subject of a bitter partisan controversy. Not only had Riley been rejected by the voters, Milliken was leaving office in less than a month and newly-elected
Democratic Governor
James Blanchard argued he should be allowed to make the appointment to replace Moody rather than Milliken. In February
1983, the other Supreme Court Justices voted 4-2 to remove Riley from the court. Blanchard replaced her with
U.S. District Court Judge
Patricia Boyle. However, Riley won election to the Supreme Court in
1984 and was re-elected in
1992. She served as Chief Justice from
1987 to
1991. She retired from the Court on
September 1,
1997, due to the onset of
Parkinson's Disease.
Riley had been a partner in the law firm of Riley and Roumell and was also the founder and Honorary Chair of the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society. In
1991 she was inducted into the
Michigan Women's Hall of Fame, and the State Bar of
Michigan presented Riley with its
Distinguished Public Servant Award in
2000.
Riley married
Wallace D. Riley, a former President of the
American Bar Association in
1967. They had one son, Peter Comstock Riley. She died in
Grosse Pointe Farms at the age of 79.