UC Law SF Celebrates Joseph Grodin鈥檚 Legacy on 90th Birthday
Colleagues and friends of former California Supreme Court Justice Joseph R. Grodin, who taught full time at UC Law SF from 1972 to 2005, recalled his legacy in celebration of his upcoming 90th birthday on Aug. 30.
They praised the thoughtful and gregarious scholar for leaving an indelible mark not only on his many students and colleagues at UC Law SF but also on the development of law and public policy. What many recall most vividly is that his intellect was always accessible.
As a new UC Law SF professor in the early 1970s, Grodin would frequently drop by the UC Law SF Journal library to strike up conversations with students about three of his favorite subjects: labor law, constitutional law, and politics.
鈥淗e was happy to discuss doctrine but happiest exploring the philosophical underpinnings of the rules as well as the impact various institutional decision makers had on the development of the law,鈥 wrote former student Nell Jessup Newton 鈥76鈥攚ho would go on to become a dean and professor at both UC Law SF and Notre Dame Law School鈥攁bout Grodin for the Journal of the California Supreme Court Historical Society.
Whether discussing with students the legal aspects of Watergate, politely grilling a future colleague about the finer points of labor law, or writing a book about his brief but influential time on the California Supreme Court, Grodin made a lasting impression. Friends and colleagues have described him as a Renaissance man: an intellectual engaged in politics, culture, art, and law, at the same time unpretentious, modest, curious, and brilliant.
Grodin said he wanted to be a teacher from the moment he graduated Yale Law School and was grateful throughout his nearly 65-year teaching career to have worked alongside collegial, creative teachers and with the eager students in front of them in the classroom.
鈥淭eaching for me has been a learning experience,鈥 Grodin said. 鈥淚f my students have learned from me half as much as I have learned from them, I will count my teaching as a success.鈥
Grodin joined the UC Law SF faculty full time in 1972, at a time when he said the law school was 鈥渃hanging in the direction of greater diversity among faculty and students, a greater emphasis on clinical programs, and a broader recognition of the relationship of law to social justice.鈥
During his years on the faculty, he helped promote the Workers鈥 Rights Clinic, which became the model for a statewide network of clinics assisting low-wage workers. He helped establish UC Law SF as a school where a student could get a strong education in labor and employment law, said Professor Reuel Schiller, who teaches labor law, administrative law, and legal history at the college. And he helped UC Law SF become one of the first law schools to modernize its curriculum by requiring all first-year students to take a course introducing concepts of statutory interpretation and administrative law.
鈥淛oe believed it was imperative that students be exposed to the way contemporary government made public policy from the very beginning of law school,鈥 Schiller said. 鈥淗e wanted to ensure that the students had a practical language and framework for how to practice law.鈥
Schiller also recalled Grodin鈥檚 talent for putting people at ease while asking them difficult and probing questions. When Schiller interviewed for his job at UC Law SF in the mid-1990s, he gave a presentation to the faculty on labor law and history, well aware that the one person he would have to impress was Grodin. So when Grodin鈥檚 hand shot up with a question, Schiller was uneasy. Yet somehow, Schiller said, Grodin managed to ask a very insightful and technical question in a way that calmed Schiller鈥檚 nerves, allowing him to provide a suitable answer.
Leo Martinez,聽Dean Emeritus & Abramson Professor of Law Emeritus, remembered the exchange a bit differently, recalling that he might have been daunted by Grodin鈥檚 question: 鈥淚 was thinking, wow, my ears would have been pinned back. My future colleague handled it well. In the end, he had no bigger supporter than Joe.鈥
Martinez, who taught a split section of contracts law with Grodin, described Grodin鈥檚 classroom style as laid back, which made students feel comfortable. At the same time, his superior intellect raised the level of discourse. 鈥淗e鈥檚 just razor sharp in his use of the Socratic method,鈥 Martinez said. 鈥淗e homes in on the issue. He does it in a polite and understated鈥攂ut very effective鈥攚ay. He really enriched me as a scholar and a teacher.鈥
Early Life
To better understand Grodin, watch by Abby Ginzberg 鈥75, an independent documentary filmmaker, in which he describes experiencing anti-Semitism as one of the few Jewish students growing up in Piedmont, near Oakland.
鈥淚 came to understand what it was like to be an outsider,鈥 he said. A trip to the Boy Scout Jamboree took him through the South, where he saw segregation and racism that further developed his sensitivity to people who were discriminated against.
After getting his bachelor鈥檚 degree from UC Berkeley, Grodin took the advice of labor lawyer Mathew Tobriner鈥攁 family friend who became his mentor鈥攁nd went to law school, taking a job at Tobriner鈥檚 San Francisco law firm upon graduation and establishing himself as a go-to labor lawyer in his own right.
Labor Law and Public Service
Grodin served on the California Agricultural Labor Relations Board when it was created in 1975 to help farm workers unionize and bargain with California growers. He was described as the intellectual leader of the board, which was the first of its kind in the country and tasked with resolving high-profile conflicts between growers and workers.
In 1979, Gov. Jerry Brown appointed Grodin to the Court of Appeal, where he authored a landmark decision affecting worker鈥檚 rights. Pugh v. See鈥檚 Candy (1981) 116 Cal.App.3d 311, established that a contract of employment may contain an implied-in-fact promise that the employee would be terminated only for good cause.
Brown tapped Grodin for the California Supreme Court in 1982. Writing about his jurisprudence for the Supreme Court Historical Society in 2015, now-retired Justice Kathryn M. Werdegar said Grodin 鈥渆xercised his judgment in a creative but disciplined and principled way, leaving a rich legacy of significant decisions that touch the lives of every Californian and continue to guide courts as they confront the issues of the day.鈥
Grodin鈥檚 time on the high court was cut short in 1986, when Grodin and two of his colleagues on the court, Chief Justice Rose Bird and Justice Cruz Reynoso, lost their bids to be retained by voters after a statewide campaign portrayed them as soft on crime.
The high court鈥檚 loss was UC Law SF鈥 gain. The faculty immediately voted to ask him to rejoin, said Dean Emerita and Professor Mary Kay Kane. 鈥淭hat is a testament to the high regard his colleagues had for him,鈥 she said, 鈥渁s sometimes when people leave and then want to return, they find that there no longer is a place for them.鈥 It was a very long and successful marriage; he retired from full-time teaching in 2005.
Scholarly Impact

Professor Richard Boswell, Joe Grodin, Professor Karen Musalo
As a scholar, Grodin became an advocate for a novel idea of how courts should approach their work. He argued that when a constitutional issue is at stake, the courts should look first to the state constitution. Only if the rights at issue are not protected by the state constitution should a court look to the federal Constitution.
The California Supreme Court used that rationale鈥攔elying on the California Constitution鈥檚 right to privacy鈥攚hen it upheld the state鈥檚 same-sex marriage law in 2008.
鈥淛oe Grodin鈥檚 persuasive exhortation to judges and lawyers that they accord consistent and due recognition to independent state constitutional grounds in the development of the law continues to serve as one of his most significant contributions to the American system of justice,鈥 former Chief Justice Ronald M. George wrote for the Journal of the California Supreme Court Historical Society.
鈥淛oe is an amazing combination,鈥 Schiller said. 鈥淗e鈥檚 a genuine intellectual who has had life experiences that are deeply rooted in the practical and pragmatic world of how the government works. Bringing that combination into the classroom, as far as I鈥檓 concerned, that鈥檚 what makes law school great.鈥