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Judge's Lawsuit Alleges Age Bias

Oklahoma state justice, 83, says his colleagues wrongly denied him the chief's post.

The Nation

January 06, 2005|Scott Gold, Times Staff Writer

HOUSTON — Marian P. Opala, a bright and irascible man who lives in Warr Acres, Okla., near Oklahoma City, was recently passed over for a top management position. He thinks he knows why -- he's 83 years old. As a result, he has filed a lawsuit alleging age discrimination.

At that point, his legal action takes an unusual turn that distinguishes it from legions of others filed each year. For 26 years, Opala has served as a justice on the Oklahoma Supreme Court, and the suit was filed against the other eight justices, who declined to name Opala the court's chief justice.


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Opala, who filed the suit last week in U.S. District Court in Oklahoma City, acknowledged Wednesday that his move presented the court with an awkward scenario. Legal experts, noting that judges in many states are required to retire after a certain age, question whether he has a legitimate claim.

But Opala said he was compelled by the "majesty of the law," and because he believed the back rooms of courthouses were among the last lawless places in the nation.

"The perception of judges," he said, "is that they need not obey the norms of federal, constitutional law when making their management decisions."

Joseph M. Watt, 57, the chief justice of the state Supreme Court, said he could not comment on the lawsuit "because it is pending litigation." Other justices either declined to comment or could not be reached.

Seven of the eight accused justices have asked Oklahoma Atty. Gen. W.A. Drew Edmondson for legal assistance. The attorney general typically defends state officials or employees when they are sued in the course of doing their jobs, said spokesman Charlie Price. He declined to comment further.

Opala was born in Lodz, Poland, in 1921. Growing up, as he put it, "between the two great wars, between Stalin and Hitler," he became a "dedicated political centrist," a position that drew him to the balance of the law.

"I developed an early dislike of the extreme left and the extreme right," he said. "I consider both to be evil political theories."

After World War II, by then living in England, he emigrated to the United States, becoming a citizen in 1953. His visa was sponsored by an Oklahoma family. He attended law school and worked as a prosecutor. In 1978 he was appointed to the Supreme Court, where he is known more for his intellect than his collegiality.

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