Legislative Wrap-up

JurisdictionAlabama,United States
CitationVol. 73 No. 1 Pg. 0076
Pages0076
Publication year2012
LEGISLATIVE WRAP-UP

Vol. 73 No. 1 Pg. 76

The Alabama Lawyer

JANUARY, 2012

Robert L. McCurley, Jr.

Othni J. Lathram

For more information about the
Institute, visit www.ali.state.al.us.

Goodbye and Hello

After serving as director of the Alabama Law Institute for the past 37 years, I retired December 31, but will continue to assist the Constitutional Revision Commission during their four-year, article-by-article study of the 1901 Constitution. Othni Lathram was selected as the new director and began earlier this month. Elected were the following officers and members of the Executive Committee:

Officers
President: Senator Cam Ward
Vice President: Representative Marcel Black

Executive Committee
LaVeeda Battle
David Boyd
Senator Ben Brooks
James M. Campbell
William N. Clark
Representative Paul DeMarco

Peck Fox
Representative Demetrius C. Newton
Senator Arthur Orr
Representative Bill Poole
Senator Rodger Smitherman

Emeritus Members
Senator Roger Bedford
Fred Gray
Oakley W. Melton, Jr.
Yetta Samford

Constitutional Revision

In 1974, when I was being recruited to be director of the Alabama Law Institute, I was told that the two biggest items the Institute would be working on were the newly-drafted revision of the 1901 Alabama Constitution and a new criminal code for Alabama. Thirty-seven years later, we are working on a new revision to the 1901 Constitution and a review of the now 32-year old Criminal Code.

Alabama has had six constitutions: 1819-statehood; 1861-succession; 1865-reorganization after the Civil War; 1868-reconstruction or radical constitution; 1875-conservatives abandoned the objectives of the radical constitution; and the current 1901 Constitution.

For more than 40 years, constitutional reform as been a "hot" item.

In the 2011 regular session, the legislature again made it a priority item. Senate Pro Tem Del Marsh introduced and passed a Senate Joint Resolution (SJR-82) calling for a commission to revise the constitution article by article. The resolution also requested the Alabama Law Institute to staff the commission and prepare proposed revisions.

In 1969, with Albert Brewer as governor, the "Alabama Constitutional Commission" was created by Act No. 753 of the legislature. This commission was continued by Act No. 95 in 1971. Conrad Fowler, then probate judge of Shelby County, chaired the committee. Dean Leigh Harrison, with the University of Alabama School of Law, was the research director.

This commission produced a proposed...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT