Merrie Hoover Abbott - (birth-death dates?):
Merrie Hoover Abbott was elected as prosecuting attorney of Ogemaw County, Michigan in 1898. Abbott was a lawyer in practice with her husband. After her election Attorney-General Horace M. Oren brought proceedings to test Abbott’s right to the office. The Michigan State Supreme Court found that only electors were eligible to hold elected office. Merrie Abbott left office in 1899 after the Supreme Court decision.
Party Affiliation:
Democrat
Photographs:
Resources:
History of Woman Suffrage, vol. 4: 1883-1900 (Privately published, Rochester, NY, 1902) 1144 p
THE BOOK OF DETROITERS:A Biographical Dictionary of Leading Living Men of the City of Detroit, Edited by Albert Nelson Marquis, Chicago: A. N. Marquis & Company, 1908 http://www.usgennet.org/usa/mi/county/tuscola/det/detabb-ale.htm
Mrs. Merrie B. Abbott: "Mrs. Abbott is a brilliant young lawyer of the town of West Branch [ Michigan]. She is the business partner of her husband, the name of the firm being Abbott & Abbott."
CLN, 11/19/1898, at 107, col. 4. ( Chicago Legal News)
From this opinion Justice Joseph B. Moore dissented, making an able argument. In closing he said:
The statutes of this State confer upon woman the right to practice law. She may represent her client in the most important litigation in all the courts, and no one can dispute her right. She may defend a person charged with murder. Can she not prosecute one charged with the larceny of a whip? To say she can not seems illogical. . . . . Individuals may employ her and the courts must recognize her employment. If the people see fit, by electing her to an office the duties of which pertain almost wholly to the practice of the law, to employ her to represent them in their litigation, [pp. 771] why should not the courts recognize the employment? . . . . Where the constitution and the statutes are silent as to the qualification for a given office, the people may elect whom they will, if the person so elected is competent to discharge the duties of the office. . . . . None of the duties of prosecuting attorney are of such a character as to preclude one from their performance simply because of sex.
Charles S. Abbott, Allen S. Morse and T. A. E. Weadock were the advocates for Mrs. Abbott, and she also made a strong oral argument in her own behalf. Unfortunately the case was not one which permitted an appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court.