Louise Ann Fisch.
All Rise: Reynaldo G. Garza, the First Mexican American Federal Judge.
Centennial Series of the Association of Former Students of Texas A & M
University. College Station: Texas A & M University Press, 1996. xiii +
224 pp. Photographs, notes, bibliography, and index. $32.95 (cloth), ISBN
0-89096-713-X .
Reviewed by:
Michael Widener, University of Texas at Austin.
Published by:
H-Law
(May, 1997)
Mexican
American Judges Make Their Biographical Debut
As the first Mexican American to become a federal judge,
Reynaldo G. Garza appropriately is also the first Hispanic federal judge
to be the subject of a full-length biography, in Louise Ann Fisch's All
Rise: Reynaldo G. Garza, The First Mexican American Federal Judge.[1]
Following
his 1961 appointment to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District
of Texas, Garza also became the first Mexican American chief judge of a
federal court. In 1979, he was the first Mexican American appointed to the
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, and he still serves today as a senior judge
on the Fifth Circuit.
All Rise
is not a judicial biography in the sense that legal historians define the
genre, but rather a biography of a leading Mexican American who happens to
be a judge. According to the preface, Fisch's primary goal is "[c]apturing
Garza's life story and consequently giving voice to his cultural
struggles," and secondarily "to encourage research into the lives of other
barrier-breaking Mexican Americans" (p. x). A theme that runs throughout
All Rise is Garza's ability to succeed within the predominantly
Anglo power elites at regional and national levels while maintaining his
ethnic roots. Written in an admiring tone, All Rise also emphasizes
Garza's importance as a role model to both his contemporaries and to the
generations of Mexican Americans who followed him. Fisch thus throws her
lot not with judicial biographers but rather with historians who have
studied the rise of Mexican Americans to political power in the Southwest,
such as David Montejano, Richard A. Garcia, and Arnoldo de Leon. Her
approach is also revealed in the sources she cites, which include a large
number of contemporary news accounts, oral history interviews,
presidential library archives, regional histories, and studies of Mexican
American political elites. Citations to legal sources, particularly
Garza's published or unpublished opinions, are conspicuous by their
scarcity.
As a native of the Texas-Mexico border region, Fisch
demonstrates a good understanding of its unique cultural and social
makeup, where social class has long counted for more than race in terms of
social standing. Her treatment of Garza's early life is both thorough and
enlightening, and makes good use of numerous oral history interviews with
Garza, his family, and friends, supplemented by contemporary newspaper
accounts. Reynaldo Garza was born in Brownsville, Texas in 1915, to
middle-class Mexican immigrants who placed great importance on education
and family life. In contrast with most of
Texas
at that time, overt discrimination against Mexican Americans was largely
absent in border towns like Brownsville where they accounted for most of
the population (p. 11). Mexican culture played a prominent role in civic
life, although Anglos still dominated elected offices. Garza and other
middle-class Mexican American children attended the same public schools as
Anglos, and he was encouraged to excel by both his family and teachers. He
was also a devout Catholic. Fisch argues that Garza's upbringing was the
crucial factor in his ability to develop and maintain a bicultural
identity.
Garza became interested in the law at an early age, and his
father would take him to the courthouse to observe trials. He did well in
school and worked his way through the
University of Texas, where
he was one of only a dozen Mexican American graduates from the School of
Law before World War II. It was at the University that Garza formed the
alliances that later propelled him into politics and judicial
appointments. He helped Lyndon Johnson win his first congressional
election by campaigning in Austin's Mexican American community, and helped
the future governor of Texas,
John Connally, win a race for student body president. Garza also became
active in efforts to promote civil rights for Mexican Americans.
With law degree in hand, Garza returned to Brownsville,
began a law practice, got married, and became the first Mexican American
elected to the Brownsville school board. After serving in the Army during
World War II, he returned to Brownsville where he built up a thriving law
practice and won election to the city commission. He was active in civic
and Catholic organizations and worked through the League of United Latin
American Citizens (LULAC) to improve civil rights for Mexican Americans in
Texas. He actively campaigned for Lyndon Johnson and several other Texas
Democrats, was appointed to several state commissions, and was one of the
very few Mexican Americans to become accepted within the state's political
elites. After Garza stumped for the Kennedy-Johnson ticket in South Texas,
LBJ repaid the favor by recommending Garza as President Kennedy's first
judicial appointment, to fill a vacancy in the Southern District of Texas.
The chapter on Garza's 1961 appointment and confirmation is
one of the strongest in the book. It stands out in part because it conveys
a sense of drama and struggle that is often absent elsewhere in the book,
particularly in the later chapters. It is also the most thoroughly
documented, using correspondence from the Kennedy and Johnson presidential
libraries in addition to oral histories and newspaper accounts. Garza's
supporters for the nomination had to overcome the competing candidacy of
another Mexican American from South Texas. In addition, Senator Ralph
Yarborough of Texas was at first reluctant to support Garza's nomination
because Garza had once supported the senator's arch-rival, Governor Allan
Shivers. In this chapter, unlike many others, Garza's opponents have names
and voices.
In the following chapters on Garza the jurist, Fisch quite
rightly pays the greatest attention to his record in civil rights cases,
given his place as the first Mexican American on the federal bench. She
reveals a strong conservative streak in Garza, a reluctance to be a
judicial activist despite his genuine concern for the rights of the little
folks and his record as a private citizen of advocating for the civil
rights of Mexican Americans. Regarding civil rights litigation in the
1960s-70s, "Garza was not totally comfortable with his extended judicial
powers," says Fisch (p. 119). In a 1971 case, for instance, Garza ruled
that the racially segregated locals of the International Longshoremen's
Association violated the Civil Rights Act, but instead of ordering a
merger of the locals, he urged an appeal to finally settle the case. When
a Mexican American defendant challenged the grand jury system in Texas (Partida
v. Castaneda, 1974), Garza ruled that the state's evidence rebutted a
prima facie case of discrimination against Mexican Americans in grand jury
selection (his decision was overturned by the Fifth Circuit and the U.S.
Supreme Court): "Although Garza was concerned about discrimination, in
this case, he balanced his allegiance to his Mexican roots with his
loyalty to American law, with the latter winning out" (p. 138).
Even in his most celebrated civil rights decision (Medrano
v. Allee, 1972, striking down laws used by Texas Rangers to break up
United Farm Workers strikes), Fisch argues that the ideology behind
Garza's decision was basically conservative:
Garza took pride in the impact of the Medrano case. Since
his law school years ... Garza had voiced his concerns for the plight of
Mexican Americans. The Medrano case allowed his rhetoric to turn into what
he perceived as the best possible action, a legal mandate for change. Thus
Garza...believed that the conditions of Mexican Americans could improve
not only through educational advancements but through legal victories.
Ironically, this conservative ideology was in stark contrast to the
liberal teachings of organized labor from which the Medrano case evolved.
(p. 132, citing an interview with Garza)
Fisch explains Judge Garza's conservative bent as a product
of his class consciousness. "Shielded from discrimination" in his
upbringing, "he acclimated to a dual cultural society whose members came
from the upper social and economic strata of the community. He became
acutely aware of these defined divisions in his city and eventually
developed a world view that sought to maintain this economic status quo"
(p. 11). He firmly believed that education, hard work, and legal victories
were the keys to remedying discrimination: "He preferred no minority
representation at all unless the individual was of superior qualifications
and performance," says Fisch; "Thus, he abhorred tokenism" (pp. 117-18).
He is typical of the generation of fervently patriotic, civic-minded,
hard-working Mexican Americans of South Texas who became the first of
their ethnic group to attain prominence in Texas politics.
Fisch's account of Garza's judicial career is not confined
to his civil rights record. Illegal immigration and drug trafficking kept
his district court docket full, and he made several innovations to lighten
the load, such as selecting multiple juries from a single pool, and "jail
delivery days" where he would try hundreds of illegal immigrants en masse
to clear dockets and relieve jail overcrowding. And then there was the
curious case of Turner v. American Bar Association (1974), in which
a tax evasion group sued the
ABA
and every federal judge in the country (alleging judicial conspiracy)
except Garza. The group sought the right to be represented by an
unlicensed lay attorney, and Garza ruled against them. Unfortunately,
there is no explanation as to why Garza was chosen in this particularly
blatant example of forum shopping.
Following Garza's elevation to the Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals by President Carter in 1979, civil rights cases seem to have made
up even less of his case load, judging from the handful of cases that
Fisch mentions. She summarizes, "In most areas, Garza wrote moderate to
liberal opinions. He invariably sided with employees in labor cases and
against business in antitrust cases ... On issues such as religion, he
worked to fashion a responsible yet conservative position" (p. 167).
As an archivist at an academic law library, I have dwelt,
in this review, on Garza's judicial work because it is what most interests
me and the researchers I usually serve. However, this is not an accurate
reflection of the scope of All Rise. Although Garza's judicial
career spans close to half of the book, there is not much in-depth
discussion of Garza's judicial opinions or his influence on the law, other
than a few paragraphs on the cases mentioned above and a few others. Even
courtroom anecdotes, of which we are told there were many (p. 121), are
few and far between.
In fairness to Louise Fisch, she did not set out to write a
"judicial biography." However, I cannot help feeling that the lack of
analysis of Judge Garza's actions on the bench is a drawback. After taking
a seat on the federal bench, a judge's public activities become quite
circumscribed by the canons of judicial ethics, which keep most judges
from the political stump and from speaking out on many public policy
issues outside the narrow field of judicial administration. The bench
itself is a federal judge's primary bully pulpit. Without a thorough study
of Garza's contributions and statements as a judge, we are left with only
an account of his social life, family matters, civic activities, and
current events that coincided with his tenure. This gap looms particularly
large in Garza's case, in light of his thirty-seven years' service as a
federal judge, the capstone of his career and the very achievement which
makes him famous. Likewise, his service on state commissions receives only
passing mention, and the reader learns little of Garza's contributions to
their work.
Perhaps another reason Fisch avoided a lengthy discussion
of Garza's judicial work is her apparent inexperience with the complex
world of the federal courts, which is revealed in a few missteps in the
text. At one point she refers to U.S. Magistrates as "expediting appellate
procedure" (p. 130). Institutional loyalty obliges me to point out a
couple of minor errors on page 29: the University of Texas School of Law
was not on the northwest corner of campus when Garza attended in the late
1930s, but rather on the south side; and the Law School adopted a
three-year curriculum in 1903, well before Garza arrived.
Nevertheless, Fisch succeeds admirably in her efforts to
present a broad view of Garza's life and culture, and to document his
development as a leader and his success in maintaining an unself-conscious
ethnic identity while breaking down barriers for Mexican Americans. All
Rise is valuable as a case study of how one Mexican American rose to
regional and national leadership in a time of widespread discrimination.
It will provide rich source material and a point of departure for others
who wish to dig deeper into Garza's judicial career and the apparent
paradoxes it presents, as Richard Delgado has already done in his review
of All Rise.[2]
Notes
[1]. this claim does not
count Harold R. Medina, appointed in 1947 as judge of the Southern
District of New York, who was the son of a Mexican father and an English
mother. Medina, however, was brought up in isolation from Mexican culture
and was not commonly perceived as a Mexican American.
[2]. Richard
Delgado, "Rodrigo's Fifteenth Chronicle: Racial Mixture, Latino-Critical
Scholarship, and the Black-White Binary,"
Texas Law Review
75:5 (Apr. 1997), 1181-1201.
Library of Congress
Call Number: KF373 .G35 F57 1996
Subjects:
* Garza, Reynaldo G
* Mexican American judges -- Texas -- Biography
Citation: Michael Widener . "Review of Louise Ann Fisch,
All Rise: Reynaldo G. Garza, the First Mexican American Federal Judge,"
H-Law, H-Net Reviews, May, 1997. URL:
http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=11197879275433.
“Fisch…makes an important
contribution to Texas and Mexican American history with her sensitive
tribute to Judge Garza. Her work especially stands out as a concise and
often captivating story of one of the most successful and dominant figures
originating in the Mexican-origin community of South Texas.”
Emilio Zamora, review of
All Rise: Reynaldo G. Garza, the First Mexican American Federal Judge,
by Louise Ann Fisch, The Journal of Southern History 64 (May
1998): 396-397.