JUDICIAL
OFFICERS
Judges
Commissioners
Judges
President
Judge James T. Vaughn Jr.
The Honorable James T. Vaughn Jr. was appointed Resident
Judge in Kent County of the Superior Court of Delaware on October 28,
1998; elevated to President Judge of the Superior Court on October 12,
2004.
President Judge Vaughn received his B.A. from Duke University in 1971
and his J.D. from Georgetown
University Law Center in 1976. Following admission to the Delaware
Bar in 1976, he returned to Dover to practice general civil and criminal
law in the firm of Vaughn and Vaughn. In 1988 he became a member of the
firm of Schmittinger and Rodriguez in Dover.
While in private law practice, he served as an associate member of the
Board on Professional Responsibility of the Supreme Court of Delaware,
president of the Kent County Bar Association, and vice-president of the
Delaware State Bar Association.
President Judge Vaughn is a member of the Kent County Bar Association,
Terry-Carey American Inn of Court and National Conference of State Trial
Judges. He served as a judicial member of the Joint Bar/Bench Committee
on Civility and as a member of the Judicial Ethics Advisory Committee.
President Judge Vaughn's present term ends October 11, 2016.
Judge
John E. Babiarz Jr.
The Honorable John E. Babiarz Jr. became a Judge of the Superior Court
of Delaware on October 24, 1985 and was re-appointed in 1997.
Judge Babiarz received his B.A. from the University of Delaware in 1963,
where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He received his J.D. from Harvard
Law School in 1966. He was admitted to the Delaware Bar in 1966.
From 1966 to 1967 he was a Superior Court Law Clerk for President Judge
Albert J. Stiftel. From 1967 until 1971 he practiced law with the Law
Office of O. Francis Biondi. From 1971 until 1979 he was a partner in
the firm of Biondi and Babiarz. From 1979 until his appointment to the
Bench, he was a partner in the firm of Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnel
in Wilmington.
He has served as the president of the Delaware Trial Lawyers Association.
Judge Babiarz retired on January 24, 2010 but continues to serve part-time by appointment of the Chief Justice.
Judge
Jerome O. Herlihy
The Honorable Jerome O. Herlihy became an
Associate Judge of the Superior Court of Delaware on February 22, 1989.
Judge Herlihy received his A.B. from Dartmouth College in 1963 and his
L.L.B. from the University
of Pennsylvania Law School in 1966. Prior to serving on the bench,
Judge Herlihy served as a Deputy Attorney General for the State of Delaware,
December 1966 to May 1969; Counsel to the Governor of Delaware, from June
1969 to December 1970; and as Chief Deputy Attorney General of State of
Delaware from January 1971 to September 1974. From 1974 until 1989 he
was in private practice with his brother in the firm of Herlihy and Harker.
Judge Herlihy also served on the board of directors of Riverside Hospital
in the 80s and early 90s, the last several years as chairman.
He headed the successful Superior Court effort to standardize its sentencing
language and to automate the sentencing process. He chaired the Court's
committee that designed the system for individual assignment of civil
cases. He was the New Castle County Criminal Administrative Judge from
February 2003 until December 2005. He became a member of the Sentencing
Accountability Commission (SENTAC) in 2003. In 1999, Delaware Supreme
Court Chief Justice E. Norman Veasey recognized Judge Herlihy for Outstanding
Judicial Service.
Judge Herlihy's present term ends April 19, 2013.
Resident
Judge T. Henley Graves
The Honorable T. Henley Graves became a Judge of the Superior Court of
Delaware on June 1, 1989. He became Resident Judge on January 19, 2000.
Resident Judge Graves received his B.A. in Economics from the University
of Delaware in 1970. He received his J.D. with honors from the University
of Maryland in 1973. He served as a prosecutor in the State's Attorneys'
Office in Baltimore, Maryland and in the Department of Justice in Georgetown,
Delaware. Prior to joining the Superior Court, he was a partner with the
law firm of Fuqua and Graves in Georgetown, Delaware.
Resident Judge Graves' present term ends January 19, 2012.
Judge
Charles H. Toliver IV
The Honorable Charles H. Toliver IV became a Judge of the Superior
Court of Delaware on February 9, 1990.
Judge Toliver received his B.A. from Hampton Institute in Hampton, Virginia
in 1972 and his J.D. from the University
of Virginia School of Law in 1975. He was admitted to the Delaware
Bar in 1975.
From 1975 to 1978 he served as Assistant City Solicitor for the City of
Wilmington. From 1978 until 1983 he practiced law with Leonard L. Williams
and Associates in Wilmington. From 1984 until his appointment to the Superior
Court he practiced law with Biggs & Battaglia also in Wilmington. Before
his appointment to the bench, Judge Toliver was chairman of the Wilmington
Housing Authority and a member of the Delaware Public Employment Relations
Board, the Delaware Violent Crimes Compensation Board, the Wilmington
Pension Arbitration Board, the Board of Directors of the Wilmington Economic
Development Corporation, the St. Anthony's Community Center, and the Greater
Wilmington Convention and Visitors Bureau.
Judge Toliver's present term ends April 3, 2014.
Judge
Carl Goldstein
The Honorable Carl Goldstein was appointed a Judge of the Superior
Court of Delaware on December 1, 1990 by Governor Michael Castle.
Prior to his appointment to the Superior Court, Judge Goldstein was Judge
of the Municipal Court for the City of Wilmington from 1970-1990. Judge
Goldstein received his B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1960.
He received a Bachelor of Law degree from the University
of Pennsylvania in 1963. From 1965 to 1970, Judge Goldstein was an
associate and partner at the law firm of Keil and Keil. From 1967 to 1970,
he was an Assistant City Solicitor for the City of Wilmington prosecuting
cases in the Municipal Court and representing the Port of Wilmington among
other duties.
Judge Goldstein has been active since 1972 in the preservation and presentation
of traditional American folk music through festival organization, article
and liner note writing and a long-standing radio program at the University
of Delaware public radio station WVUD. He is a founder of the nonprofit
Brandywine Friends of Old Time Music and was recently nominated as a director
of the International Bluegrass Music Association.
Judge Goldstein assisted in drafting the American Bar Association Standards
on Police Conduct and served on the Delaware Courts Planning Commission.
In 1994 Judge Goldstein participated in the planning and implementation
of Delaware's Drug Court. Judge Goldstein has attended and participated
internationally in Drug Court conferences, and is a member of the National
Association of Drug Court Professionals. Judge Goldstein is married and
has a son and daughter.
Judge Goldstein formally retired at the end of his term January 28, 2003.
However, pursuant to a special part-time judicial appointment, he continues his work with the Superior Court Drug Court.
Resident
Judge Richard R. Cooch
The Honorable Richard R. Cooch became a Judge of the Superior Court of Delaware on August 31, 1992 upon appointment of Governor Michael N. Castle. Prior to that time, Judge Cooch had been a practicing lawyer with the Wilmington, Delaware law firm of Cooch and Taylor for 15 years. He was its Managing Director from 1988 to 1992.
He was then appointed Resident Judge for New Castle County by Governor Thomas R. Carper and assumed that office on May 11, 2000.
Resident Judge Cooch graduated from Wilmington Friends School in 1966, received his B.A. from Williams College in 1970, and was awarded his J.D. from the University of North Carolina School of Law in 1973. He was admitted to the Delaware Bar in 1973. He served as Deputy Attorney General in the Criminal Division of the State of Delaware Department of Justice from 1974-1981.
Resident Judge Cooch was Assistant Treasurer of the Delaware State Bar Association (1985-1987) and Treasurer (1987-1989). He has served on various committees of the Delaware State Bar Association including its Executive Committee. He has served as a member and chair of the Supreme Court Advisory Committee on Litigation Ethical Problems, has served as a member and chair of the Judicial Ethics Advisory Committee and was a former chair of the Superior Court Advisory Committee on Criminal Jury Instructions. He is a former Judicial member of the Commission on Continuing Legal Education. He is a member of the Richard S. Rodney Inn of Court. He is a former member of the Board of Directors of the American Judicature Society, and now serves on its National Advisory Committee and on the Advisory Committee to the American Judicature Society Center for Judicial Ethics.
Resident Resident Judge Cooch's present term expires May 11, 2012.
Judge
Fred S. Silverman
The Honorable Fred S. Silverman became a Judge of the Superior Court
of Delaware in October 1993.
Judge Silverman received his B.A. from New College, and a J.D. from Boston
University School of Law in 1975.
From 1987 to 1993, Judge Silverman was Delaware's Chief Deputy Attorney
General. From 1983 to 1987 Judge Silverman was Delaware's State Solicitor.
From 1978 until 1983 Judge Silverman served as a prosecutor. Before entering
state service, Judge Silverman was an Associate at Biggs & Battaglia.
Judge Silverman's present term ends November 29, 2017.
Judge
William C. Carpenter Jr.
The Honorable William C. Carpenter Jr. was appointed to the Superior Court of Delaware in 1993 by Governor Thomas R. Carper and reappointed to that position in 2005 by Governor Ruth Ann Minner.
Judge Carpenter is a 1976 graduate of the Widener University School of Law and received his undergraduate degree in economics from the University of Delaware. After a short time in private practice, he joined the U.S. Attorney’s Office as an Assistant United States Attorney, a position held for over eight years. In 1985, Judge Carpenter was appointed the United States Attorney for the District of Delaware by President Reagan, and he continued in that capacity during the terms of Presidents Bush and Clinton.
During his tenure as United States Attorney he served on the United States Attorney’s Advisory Committee for Attorneys General Meese, Thornburgh and Reno. As United States Attorney, his office was known for its successful public corruption investigations, its aggressive prosecution of organized crime figures involved in drug trafficking and its conviction of four individuals involved in an international extortion attempt of the duPont Company of over ten million dollars
Judge Carpenter presently serves on the Executive Committee of the National Conference of State Trial Judges as its secretary and is the Membership Chair of the Judicial Division of the American Bar Association. He is a member of the American Bar Association, the Delaware Bar Association, American Judicature Society, the American Inns of Court, and serves on the Board of Directors of the Blood Bank of Delaware, YMCA of Delaware, the American Red Cross and the DuPont Country Club. He previously served on the Board of Directors of Ursuline Academy and the University of Delaware Alumni Association.
Judge Carpenter's present term ends
November 29, 2017.
Resident
Judge William L. Witham Jr.
The Honorable William L. Witham Jr. became an Associate Judge of
the Superior Court of Delaware on February 18, 1999; he was
appointed Kent County Resident Judge on January 19, 2005.
He received his B.A. from the University of Delaware in 1970, and his
J.D. from the University
of Maryland in 1973. He was admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar in
1975 and the Delaware Bar in 1976. Resident Judge Witham graduated from
the United States Army War College in 1998. Prior to joining the Superior
Court, he was a partner with Prickett, Jones, Elliott & Kristol in Dover,
Delaware.
During his career, Resident Judge Witham has served as a member of the
Board of Bar Examiners, the United States Third Circuit Merit Selection
Screening Committee, the Governor's Magistrate Screening Committee,
as a trustee of Delaware Technical and Community College, as president
of the Central Delaware Committee on Alcohol and Drug Abuse, Inc., as
a director of the Board of Managers of the Central Delaware YMCA, and
as president of the Dover Kiwanis Club. He served as president of the
Kent County Bar Association and as the vice-president of the Delaware
State Bar Association. He is also a retired Delaware Army National Guard
Colonel.
Resident Judge Witham is currently a member of the Delaware State and
American Bar Associations, Terry-Carey Inn of Court, and the National
Association of Drug Court Professionals. He also is an adjunct professor
at Wilmington University.
Resident Judge Witham's present term ends January 19, 2017.
Judge
Richard F. Stokes
The Honorable Richard F. Stokes became a Judge of the Superior Court
of Delaware on March 23, 1999.
Judge Stokes graduated with honors from Colgate University in 1967 and
received his J.D. from Duke
University in 1970 receiving an American Jurisprudence Award
in criminal law.
He was a Superior Court law clerk for President Judge Albert J. Stiftel
(1970-1971). He was admitted to the Delaware Bar in 1970. He served
as legal advisor with rank of Captain in the United States Air Force
from 1971 to 1975 where he was awarded the United States Air Force Commendation
Medal, and in 1975, received recognition for professional trial representation
from Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force and the Judge Advocate
General.
Judge Stokes practiced law in Delaware since 1975 and was the managing
partner of Tunnell and Raysor, P.A. He was a member of the Delaware
Board of Professional Responsibility, Board of Bar Examiners, and Delaware
Insurance Authority. Among other activities, he was chairman, Board
of Trustees of Delaware Technical and Community College. He is a charter
member of the Terry-Carey American Inn of Court. Judge Stokes also served
as Resident Judge of the Court of Common Pleas in Georgetown, Delaware
from 1996 until 1999.
Judge Stokes' present term ends March 23, 2011.
Judge
E. Scott Bradley
The Honorable E. Scott Bradley became a Judge of the Superior Court
of Delaware on April 7, 2000.
Judge Bradley received his B.S. magna cum laude in Accounting
from the University of Delaware in 1980 and his J.D. magna cum laude
from the Widener
University School of Law in 1987.
From 1980 until 1984 he was an Accounting Analyst with DuPont. He was
admitted to the Delaware Bar in 1987 and until his appointment to Superior
Court was a partner with the law firm of Young Conaway Stargatt and
Taylor, LLP in Georgetown, Delaware. He is a member of the American
Bar Association, the Delaware State Bar Association, the Sussex County
Bar Association, and the Terry-Carey American Inn of Court.
Judge Bradley's present term ends April 7, 2012.
Judge
Peggy L. Ableman
The Honorable Peggy L. Ableman became a Judge of the Superior Court
of Delaware on October 30, 2000.
Judge Ableman is an honors graduate of Simmons College, Boston, Massachusetts,
she received her J.D. from Emory
University School of Law, where she was Notes and Comments Editor
of the Emory Law Journal.
From 1979 until 1983, Judge Ableman was an Assistant United States Attorney
for the District of Delaware. From 1983 until her appointment to the
Superior Court, she was an Associate Judge of the Family Court of the
State of Delaware. In 1995, she was the first recipient of the Chief
Justice's Award for Outstanding Judicial Service.
Judge Ableman's present term ends October 30, 2012.
Judge
Joseph R. Slights III
The Honorable Joseph R. Slights, III, was appointed to the Superior
Court of Delaware by Governor Thomas R. Carper on November 2, 2000.
Judge Slights received his B.S. cum laude in Political Science
from James Madison University in 1985, and his J.D. degree from Washington
and Lee University School of Law in 1988. He was admitted to the
Delaware Bar in 1988.
Prior to joining the Superior Court, Judge Slights was an associate
in private practice with the firm Richards, Layton & Finger from
1988 to 1990 where his practice focused on corporate litigation. From
1990 to 1992, he was an associate with the Law Offices of Sidney Balick
where he practiced in the areas of personal injury, commercial litigation
and white collar criminal defense. From 1992 to 2000, he was a partner
with the law firm Morris, James, Hitchens & Williams, where he practiced
in the areas of health law, white collar criminal defense and corporate
and commercial litigation. He was Vice Chairman of the Health Law practice
group and Chairman of the firm's recruiting committee.
Judge Slights is a member of the American
Bar Association and the Delaware State Bar Association. He is a past
chairman of the Health Law section of the Delaware State Bar Association. He currently serves as the Criminal Administrative Judge for New Castle County and has been specially assigned to preside over the Court's Seroquel© litigation docket.
Judge Slights' current term ends November 2, 2012.
Judge
Jan R. Jurden
The Honorable Jan R. Jurden, a Delaware native, was appointed to the
Superior Court of Delaware in May 2001.
After serving three years in the United States Army overseas, Judge
Jurden received her B.A. summa cum laude from Muhlenberg College
in 1985 and her J.D. from the Dickinson
School of Law (now the Dickinson School of Law of the Pennsylvania
State University) in 1988 where she was an Articles Editor of the Law
Review and a member of the Woolsack Honor Society.
She practiced law as an Associate with the law firm of Young, Conaway,
Stargatt & Taylor from 1988 to 1995 concentrating on corporate and
personal injury litigation, and became a Partner in 1996. She continued
her law practice at Young, Conaway until May 2001. During her 13 years
at Young, Conaway, Judge Jurden handled many pro bono matters
in Family Court, Superior Court, Chancery Court, and the U.S. District
Court.
Since 2008, Judge Jurden has overseen Superior Court’s Mental Health Court. She oversaw the Conflict Attorney Program providing representation for indigent defendants from 2006 to 2008.
Judge Jurden is a member of the American Bar and the Delaware State
Bar Associations and the National Association of Women Judges. She is
a member of the Advisory Committee on the Delaware Rules of Evidence
and the Advisory Committee on Professionalism. She is a member of the
Richard S. Rodney Inn of Court.
She was the 2009 recipient of Sylvia H. Rambo Award presented by the Women’s Law Caucus of the Pennsylvania State University Dickinson School of Law “honoring a woman in the legal profession who has had a distinguished career and who, by example, has made the professional success of other women more likely.” Judge Jurden coauthored "The Assault on Judicial Independence and the Uniquely Delaware Response," Penn State Law Review, Vol. 14, No.1, 2009.
She was the 1997 recipient of the Caleb R. Layton III
Service Award awarded to one who "personifies the qualities
of a federal practitioner, legal acumen, professional decorum and public
service." She was also the 1996 recipient of the New Lawyers Distinguished
Service Award, awarded to one who, "by exemplary leadership
and service dedicated to the cause of good citizenship in civic and
humanitarian service over a period of less than ten years has maintained
the integrity and honored recognition of the legal profession in community
affairs and who, as an outstanding Delawarean, has unceasingly advanced
the ideals of citizen participation and community accomplishment, thus
reflecting high honor on both country and profession."
Judge Jurden's present term ends May 29, 2013.
Judge Calvin L. Scott Jr.
The Honorable Calvin L. Scott Jr. was appointed to the Superior Court
of Delaware by Governor Ruth Ann Minner on February 19, 2003.
Judge Scott received his B.S. degree from Carnegie Mellon University
and his J.D. and L.L.M. in Corporate Law and Finance from Widener
University School of Law.
Prior to joining the Superior Court, he was a Deputy Attorney General
in the Delaware Department of Justice, Civil Division. He supervised
the group that provides counsel to the state's departments and agencies
and performs administrative prosecutions.
Judge Scott is the vice-president-at-large of the Delaware State Bar
Association. He served on the board of the Delaware Bar Foundation,
the Family Court's Committee on Self Represented Litigants Before the
Court, and as chair of the Pro Se Litigation Assistance Committee. He
also serves on the Board of Trustees of the Independence School, and
on the Board of the Diamond Gymnastics Athletic Association. Judge Scott
served on the Delaware Supreme Court's Board of Professional Responsibility,
the Permanent Advisory Committee on the Delaware Lawyers' Rules of Professional
Conduct and the Committee on Professionalism.
Judge Scott's present term ends February 19, 2015.
Judge
Mary Miller Johnston
The Honorable Mary Miller Johnston was appointed to the Superior Court
of Delaware on September 25, 2003.
Judge Johnston received her J.D. cum laude from Washington
& Lee University School of Law where she served as Lead Article's
Editor of the Law Review. She also has a B.A. magna cum laude
in music from Wittenberg University, and an M.A. in music from Northwestern
University.
Before coming to the bench, Judge Johnston served as Chief Counsel of
the Delaware Supreme Court's Office of Disciplinary Counsel, prosecuting
attorney discipline cases and unauthorized practice of law matters.
She formerly was a partner with Morris James, LLP
practicing primarily in the areas of corporate and commercial litigation.
Judge Johnston is past chair of the Delaware State Bar Association's
Women and the Law Section; a recipient of the Bar Association's Womens
Leadership Award; and was a member of the Pro Se Litigation Assistance
Committee. She is a member of the Delaware Supreme Court's Permanent
Advisory Committee on the Delaware Lawyers' Rules of Professional Conduct, the Professionalism Committee, and the Court's Commission on Continuing Legal Education. Judge Johnston serves as
a member of the Washington & Lee School of Law Council. She is past
president of the Board of Children & Families First.
Judge Johnston's present term ends September 25, 2015.
Judge
Robert B. Young
The Honorable Robert B. Young was appointed to
the Superior Court of Delaware on February 17, 2005.
Judge Young received his B.A. from Denison University in 1965, and his
J.D. from the Ohio State
School of Law in 1969. After practice in Dayton, Ohio from 1969
to 1974, he was admitted to practice in Delaware in 1975.
Prior to his appointment to the Superior Court bench he was in partnership
with his son at Young & Young in Dover, Delaware.
Judge Young is the past president of the Delaware State Bar Association
and the Delaware Chapter of the American Board of Trial Advocates. He
was a past counselor of the Terry-Carey Inn of Court, and was the recipient
of its Professionalism Award. In 2005, he received the Shofar
Judicial Award for Outstanding Service.
He serves on state boards
of the Delaware Senior Olympics and the Blue-Gold All-Star Basketball
Games. He is the author of The Trial of Elinor Ruttee, a musical celebrating 300 years of Court on The Green in Dover; and Macbeth—A Family Musical, A Tale of Two Cities—The Rock Opera, and Moby Dick—A Maritime Musicale performed by the Delaware State Bar Association for the Combined Campaign for Justice.
Judge Young's present term ends February 17, 2017.
Judge
M. Jane Brady
The Honorable M. Jane Brady was appointed to the Superior Court in 2005.
Judge Brady served as Attorney General from 1995-2005, the first
woman to serve as Attorney General of the State of Delaware. She graduated
from Christiana High School, the University of Delaware and Villanova
University School of Law. From 1977 until 1990, she served as a
Deputy Attorney General in the Delaware Department of Justice, culminating
with three years of service as Chief Prosecutor in Sussex County. Judge
Brady entered private practice in 1990, where she remained until her
election as Attorney General.
Judge Brady has served on the American Bar Association's Criminal Justice
Section Council, the American Bar Association's Standards Task Force
on Biological Evidence and the Advisory Committee of the American Bar
Association's National Symposium on the American Jury System. She is
a member of the Terry-Carey American Inn of Court.
She is also the founder of KINfolk, a nonprofit agency that provides
free computers and Internet accounts to children facing long hospital
stays, enabling them to keep in touch with family, friends and schoolwork.
Judge Brady's present term ends December 7, 2017.
Judge
John A. Parkins Jr.
The Honorable John A. Parkins Jr. was appointed to the Superior
Court by Governor Ruth Ann Minner and began service on August 21, 2008.