Marcus Cauffman ("Max" or "Dick") Sloss (February 28, 1869 – May 17, 1958) was an American lawyer who served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of California from December 19, 1906, to March 1, 1919.
Early life and education
Sloss was born in New York, New York, to Sarah Greenebaum and Louis Sloss, while they were traveling from their home in San Francisco.[1][2] His father was born in 1823 in Bavaria, Germany, and in 1848 emigrated to the United States.[3] The next year Sarah and Louis crossed the plains on a wagon train to Sacramento, California.[4] In 1861, the family moved to San Francisco.[1] He founded Louis Sloss & Company, later named the Alaska Commercial Company, and sold supplies to the gold prospectors.[1] He served as a Regent of the University of California from 1885 until his death in 1902.[5]
After graduation, Sloss return to San Francisco and joined the firm of Chickering, Thomas & Gregory, where he became a partner.[9] In November 1900, Sloss was elected judge of the San Francisco Superior Court for a term commencing January 1, 1901.[7] In 1906, Governor George Pardee appointed Sloss to the California Supreme Court when he was 37 years old.[10] He was re-elected twice to the high court: in November 1906, and again in 1910.[11][7][12] In 1919, he resigned to return to private practice with Sloss, Ackerman & Bradley,[13] and later with his two sons and John G. Eliot, under the firm name of Sloss & Eliot.
Sloss' notable cases include Western Indemnity Co. v. Pillsbury (1913).[14] In that case, Sloss wrote the opinion upholding the constitutionality of the State's Workers' Compensation Act when other state courts had struck down the progressive scheme.[15] In private practice, his prominent cases include Tulare Dist. v. Lindsay-Strathmore Dist. (1935),[16] a complex water law matter, and Meridian, Ltd. v. San Francisco (1939),[17] concerning the city's role in the Hetch Hetchy aqueduct.
In June 1899 he married Hattie L. Hecht of Boston, Massachusetts.[25][26] They had a daughter, Margaret Sloss Kuhns, and two sons, Richard L. and Frank H., who both graduated from Harvard Law School and joined their father's firm.[3][27]
^ ab"In Memoriam: M. C. Sloss"(PDF). Cal. RPTS. 2d. 50: 867–869. September 11, 1958. Retrieved June 27, 2017. Comments of Eustace Cullinan.
^ abcO'Neill, F. Gordon (1949). Ernest Reuben Lilienthal and His Family(PDF). Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. pp. 164–165, 176, 362. Taken from Address of M.C. Sloss on October 15, 1931, at the Society of California Pioneers, honoring Louis Sloss
^Sloss, Frank H. (1958). "M. C. Sloss and the California Supreme Court". California Law Review. 46 (5): 715–738. doi:10.2307/3478622. JSTOR3478622. Retrieved June 27, 2017. In November, 1906, he was elected for the unexpired balance of Van Dyke's term, and in November, 1910, he was re-elected for the ensuing full twelve-year term.
^"Judge M. C. Sloss". The Daily Palo Alto. No. 49. November 2, 1910. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
^"First Sloss Lecture Opens". The Stanford Daily. No. 33. April 10, 1964. p. 2. Retrieved June 28, 2017. Marcus' brother, Leon Sloss, Sr., was "one of Stanford's first trustees, serving from 1891 to 1920."