2008 Senior Lawyers Division presents Leonard L. Loeb Award
to
Jack R. DeWitt
Madison
April 1, 2009 - The Senior Lawyers Division (SLD)
Leonard L. Loeb Award recognizes a lawyer who has improved the
legal system and shown leadership in advancing the quality of justice
for all.
Jack R. DeWitt, a senior civil litigator and a founder of the former
DeWitt Porter law firm which merged with Ross & Stevens in 1994 to
become DeWitt Ross & Stevens.
In his letter of nomination, retired Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice
William G. Callow, said, “There are many excellent attorneys in
Wisconsin but there are very few great attorneys. Jack DeWitt is not
only a great attorney, he is a great citizen.
“Jack’s community service cannot be matched by many
Wisconsin citizens,” says Callow. “The reorganization of the
Wisconsin court system was drafted by the supreme court while I was a
member, and I know first-hand the importance of Jack’s leadership
in accomplishing that milestone in that branch of the
government.”
“I have had the privilege of knowing and working with Jack
since I was a law clerk at the University of Wisconsin in 1990,”
said DeWitt Ross & Stevens Managing Partner Stephen A. DiTullio.
“Despite my ‘lowly’ status as a first-year law clerk,
Jack took time out of his schedule during my first week at DeWitt Ross
& Stevens to personally mentor me. Jack sets an outstanding example
for younger attorneys starting out their careers.
“Jack has always been committed to helping and serving the
legal community,” says DiTullio. “His work with the State
Bar has resulted in improvement in our legal system. From his highly
decorated military service to his involvement in community organizations
and politics, our community, state, and nation, are the better for
Jack’s contributions.”
Another long-time friend and colleague, Jon P. Axelrod, said,
“Jack became my mentor and imparted to me the values of our
profession which I cherish. Throughout his legal career, Jack has set
the standard as an outstanding civil litigator and legal scholar and
extraordinary legal ethicist.”
In his nomination letter, the Hon. Gerald Nichol noted that as a
senior partner DeWitt always reached out to help young lawyers. He also
noted that more than 20 years ago DeWitt was one of the founders of the
Dane County Bar Mediation program, “the first of its type in our
state and for that matter in the country. We trained lawyers in
mediation techniques and on a pro bono basis, they volunteered to help
mediate cases. This was cutting edge in the civil practice at this time
and it took patience and diplomacy to sell the bar and the bench to use
this service. Looking back, what an impact the program has made, and
Jack played a key role. Jack has sown much more than he has reaped and
we are all richer because of his commitment and dedication to the
profession.”
“From private practice to serving as Dane County District
Attorney, to teaching with the University of Wisconsin Law School and
Business School, Jack DeWitt has distinguished himself as one of the
most respected leaders in our profession,” says Dane County Bar
President Teresa Kobelt, “He has donated countless hours to the
furtherance of the legal profession in the Madison area and throughout
the state with his various community activities and volunteer
work.”
A prominent civil litigator, DeWitt authored the interpretive
commentaries in West’s Wisconsin Statutes Annotated and
co-authored West’s Wisconsin Practice Methods. During his
decades in practice, he has served as president and chair of the State
Bar Board of Governors, president of the Dane County Bar Association;
and trustee of the National conference of Bar Foundations. He is the
recipient of the Charles L. Goldberg Award of the Wisconsin Law
Foundation and the U.W. Law School Alumni Association Distinguished
Service Award.
Early years. DeWitt has served as acting district
attorney for Dane County, Chair of the Advisory Committee of the State
Department of Veterans Affairs, member of the Dane County Veterans
Commission, and chair of the City of Madison Municipal Development
Committee.
A WWII infantry officer who won the Distinguished Service Cross,
British Military Cross, Silver Star and Purple Heart, DeWitt retired as
Brigadier General. He received his LLB in 1942 and B.A. in 1940 from the
University of Wisconsin where he was a full-time member of the law
faculty for four years.