Peter Lyons (Virginia judge)

Peter Lyons (c. 1734 – July 30, 1809) was a Virginia lawyer and judge. He was elected as one of the first justices to serve on the Virginia Court of Appeals (which later became known as the Supreme Court of Virginia), and he later became the second President and chief justice of the Court.

Peter Lyons
2nd Chief Justice of Virginia
In office
October 26, 1803 – July 30, 1809
Preceded byEdmund Pendleton
Succeeded byWilliam Fleming
Justice of the Virginia Supreme Court
In office
December 24, 1788 – July 30, 1809
Personal details
Born1734
Ireland
DiedJuly 30, 1809
Hanover County, Virginia
Alma materTrinity College Dublin.
ProfessionLawyer, judge

Biography

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Lyons was born in Ireland about 1734. He graduated from Trinity College Dublin. Following this, he came to King William County, Virginia, and studied law under his uncle, James Power. He was admitted to the bar on February 5, 1756, and started to practice law in the county courts.

On October 20, 1779, Lyons was elected to the general court, which made him an ex officio member of the Court of Appeals. In 1788, the Court of Appeals was reorganized and the judges, reduced to five in number, were to be elected by a joint ballot of both Houses of Assembly. The first five, elected on December 24, 1788, were Edmund Pendleton, John Blair Jr., Peter Lyons, Paul Carrington and William Fleming. Peter Lyons was elected from Hanover County. In 1789, John Blair left the Virginia Court to become a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. This left Peter Lyons the second ranking member of the Virginia Court of Appeals, which he presided over in the absence of Pendleton. When Pendleton died in 1803, Lyons succeeded him as president, running a court with just three of the original five justices.[1] Lyons maintained the position of president and chief justice until his death six years later in Hanover County on July 30, 1809.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Crosskey, William Winslow (1953). Politics and the Constitution in the history of the United States (4. ed.). Chicago: Univ. of Chicago P. p. 801. ISBN 978-0226121345.
  2. ^ "Judges of the Supreme Court of Virginia". Virginia Foundation for the Humanities. Retrieved 4 June 2014.
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