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Henry Putzel

 
US Supreme Court: Putzel, Henry, Jr.

(b. Denver, Colo., 8 Oct. 1913), reporter of decisions, 1964–1979. Putzel graduated from Yale College (1935) and Yale Law School (1938). After practicing law in St. Louis from 1938 to 1941, he held a succession of federal positions in Washington, D.C. These were attorney for the Office of Price Administration (1942–1945); for the Foreign Agents Registration Section of the Justice Department (1945–1948); and for the Civil Rights Section of the Justice Department's Criminal Division (1948–1957). Within the Civil Rights Section, Putzel's activities included school desegregation cases and prosecutions against persons who had denied civil rights under color of law.

In 1957 the Justice Department created a separate Civil Rights Division, and Putzel became chief of its Voting and Elections Section. There he was concerned with matters such as racially discriminatory voting practices, and later, with federal election frauds. On 17 February 1964 he was sworn in as the Supreme Court's thirteenth reporter of decisions. Putzel edited or coedited volumes 376 through 440 of the United States Reports. An important change in reporting procedure occurred during his term: the Court ordered headnotes prepared before announcement of an opinion, rather than after announcement, as had been the custom.

Putzel once described three characteristics necessary for a reporter of decisions: being a lawyer, a “word nut,” and a “double revolving peripatetic nit‐picker.” When Putzel retired on 24 February 1979, Chief Justice Warren Burger said that he had “performed the exacting duties of that important office with great distinction and in keeping with the tradition of the twelve men who preceded him in that position.”

— Francis Helminski

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US Supreme Court. The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States. Copyright © 1992, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more