James D. Elliott Biography This file contains the biography of James D. Elliott from "Who's Who in South Dakota" by O. W. Coursey (1913) Scanning by John Rigdon , final editing by Joy Fisher from a book in the possession of Joy Fisher. This file may be freely copied for non-profit purposes; all other rights, including the right to publish this file in any format is reserved. REALIZED HIS AMBITIONS One beautiful evening in the spring of 1912, which all nature had exerted itself to create ideal, when the red-fingered tapers of twilight arching gently from the west, cast lingering shadows across the Big Sioux Valley, a quiet, dignified jurist with a kindly face and pleasing mannerisms, stepped out of a cab at the Great Northern depot in Sioux Falls, stole almost unnoticed across the platform in the semi-darkness, and boarded a passenger train on that line, headed for Yankton. Arriving at the latter place late in the evening, this dignified, courteous gentleman stepped off the train quite as unnoticed as he had entered, walked hurriedly across the depot platform to a hackman and said, "Drive me at once to the home of Senator Gamble." Upon reaching the senator's home, he lost no time in alight- ing from the cab and entering the house. Senator Gamble, throw- ing open the door in response to a sharp ring of the bell, said: "Come in, my dear Judge, I'm so glad to see you," bowing the meanwhile in polite recognition of the caller's presence, and ex- tending to him a most cordial hand-clasp. "Remove your coat," he continued, "while I call Mrs. Gamble who will be equally pleased to see you." During the felicitations which followed, Mrs. Gamble de- tected beneath the accustomed smile on the jurist's face a pecul- iar expression of anxiety which bespoke to her in silent but im- pressive language that something unordinary was either happening or else about to take place. Therefore, without lingering in the room beyond twenty scant minutes, she excused herself and re- tired for the night. It was in the midst of Senator Gamble's campaign for re- nomination to the United States senate. The room was beauti- fully lighted. The Senator, himself, was clad in a salt-and-pepper frock suit; and when his friend arrived, he was sitting at a table pondering meditatingly over a chart of South Dakota election statistics. Once by themselves the Judge hastily disclosed his errand. He said: "Senator, I have come over voluntarily to see you with regard to your renomination. Would you mind if I should speak very plainly to you about the situation, as I see it?" "Not at all," responded the Senator, "I shall be greatly pleased to have you do so." "Well," said the learned judge and wise political prognos- ticator, as he drew his chair much closer to that of Senator Gam- ble's and placed his hand affectionately upon the latter's knee, "the present campaign is going to hinge itself on the Lorimer scandal. It is no doubt true that the election of many other sen- ators is tainted with fraud but that doesn't make any difference; in my judgment he is going to be made the 'goat' of the senate and be driven to the mountains for refuge. The public is excited and are demanding his removal. I am sure it will be done, and if you continue to support him, you are as sure to go down to de- feat as day follows night, but if you will oppose him you can sweep the state, and in all probability go back to the senate as often as you desire. Personally, I have not had time to review the evidence in the case, so of course my suggestions are not based upon the merits of it. You will, of course, pardon this outspoken declaration from me. Now, what is your opinion?" "Judge." said the senator slowly and with a look of deep concern upon his face, "what you say may be true, but in sup- porting Mr. Lorimer, I am simply doing my duty as I see it. From boyhood it was my ambition to occupy the position of a United States senator. It is the highest legislative body on earth. I have not only taken my oath as a member of that body but I have also taken a solemn oath as a member of the special com- mittee appointed to investigate the scandalous charges concerning Mr. Lorimer's election. I am sitting there as a juror or a judge. I am sworn to determine the matter on the evidence. Look at it! There isn't enough real evidence to convict a dog. It was mostly given by bar-room criminals and leeches of the under-world, Look at the testimony that has been given by substantial citizens to offset it." Then, rising from his chair, that sturdy senator, Robert J. Gamble, with tears trickling down his manly face, said in a trembling voice but with an approving conscience: "A senator's salary is comparatively small. I haven't saved a dollar out of mine. No senator can save money unless he is dishonest. I have never accepted a dishonest dollar in my life. On the other hand my law business is gone; I know less law than I did twelve years ago when I entered the senate. Under the circumstances I should like very much to remain at least another term in the senate. But, Judge, in determining this Lorimer matter. I am going to do my sworn duty as I it, and as God, Himself, gives me light to see it, with absolutely no thought of my own political welfare; and then if I go down to defeat, you'll never hear me whimper." To whom was the senator speaking? Who was this night messenger that had called at his home? Who was the judge? the jurist? the counsellor? who had come to see him as his benefac- tor? Ah! read slowly - don't miss a word - while I disclose to you that it was his life-long friend, his former office boy, his campaign adviser in days gone by, the most astute politician South Dakota has ever produced, Judge James D. Elliott, of Sioux Falls. But Judge Elliott is no longer in politics. He was not in politics, directly, when he made his night call upon Senator Gamble. He had sim- ply gone there as a former neighbor and friend to get the Senator to change his view- point on the Lorimer matter. Nevertheless when he was ac- tive in politics, he was never known to err in judgment or in prophecy. He was identified with the old wing of the Re- publican Party until 1906, and until that time they never tasted total defeat. His judg- ment in politics was infallible. [photo - JUDGE ELLIOTT] But when the practices of the old organization became in- tolerable to him, he promptly left them and became one of the leaders in the reform movement. Momentarily a new chapter was written in our political history. PERSONAL Born At Mt. Sterling, Illinois, October 7, 1859, of Scotch par- entage, he was, nevertheless, while yet a mere babe, taken by his parents to Ringgold county, Iowa, where he spent his early child- hood. His father served two enlistments in the Civil War. Although but a mere child at the time, Judge Elliott remembers seeing his father bid the family farewell, mount his horse and ride away to the service of his country. He also remembers the assassination of Lincoln. After the war, the family removed to Guthrie county, Iowa. Here young Elliott attended a district school and later took up work in an academy. He would have graduated from the latter institution in June, 1872, had not his parents, in April of that year, moved to Clay county, South Dakota. This brought a new chapter into his life. Here was a boy who had entered school at four years of age and who had prac- tically completed an academic course at thirteen. Once in Da- kota, conditions changed. He lingered along at the old home on the Missouri bottom, for several years, getting such help in his studies as he could from intelligent settlers here and there. Finally, when the Vermillion city schools were organized he went there and took a four-year course in two years; that is, he took the two-year high school course which was established and a special two-year course beyond it, in half time. Yet this achievement was not accomplished without one of the most severe struggles in the history of a man. His parents were exceedingly poor. James hadn't a dollar. He slept in the rear of a vacated building, with no fire. Night after night he shivered himself to sleep. For food be hadn't a bite except that sent to him now and then in a rough wooden box by his loyal mother. He piled sticks in the alley, set them on fire, thawed out his food, ate it and underwent hardships that would make even Dr. Cook blush in his quest for the north pole. The second year was easier, he got janitor work to do to pay for his board. STUDIED LAW Upon the completion of his school work at Vermillion, he taught school-one year in Clay county, one in Yankton county, and one term in Nebraska. During this time, he saved his money and invested it in cattle which he turned into his father's herd, and which he hoped to sell later to raise money with which to put himself through the law school at Ann Arbor, Michigan. But the great flood of 1881 swept away his father's property, drowned all their cattle and destroyed everything they had, leaving the family penniless, and young Elliott to lay the foundation for his destiny all over again. Accordingly the next year he entered the law offices of Gamble brothers-John E. and Robert J.-at Yank- ton and began to read law for himself, while for a livelihood he slept in the office and kept books at night, dividing his surplus earnings with his parents and five sisters. In this connection it WHO'S WHO IN SOUTH DAKOTA may be well to state that no boy ever had a better opportunity to read law, for, without casting any reflection upon any other man, it is safe to state that John R. Gamble, who at one time was our congressman, was the brainiest and most brilliant attorney that had ever graced either of the Dakotas. It was a rare privilege for a young man of Elliott's temperament to have known him and to have studied under him. So thorough and so broad was his instruction and that of his brother Robert's to their devoted law student that today their young protege occupies the leading bench of the state, with no other legal preparation, save that secured under their tutelage. AN HONEST ATTORNEY Young Elliott was admitted to the bar in 1884, and he at once settled at Tyndall, where for twenty-seven years, he was on one side or the other of practically every case that was tried in court, or else associated with the lawyer who did try it. His -learning was so broad, his conception of duty so high, that more than a hundred times during his Tyndall practice, aggrieved parties came into his office together, constituted him judge and jury, stated their grievances, took his verdict, abided by it and went home without going into court at all. This confidence arose from his noble manhood, from his exemplary life, and from the fact that he was never known to stoop to low scheming in order to win a case. Forgetful of self, be never urged litigation, but invariably sought to keep his clients out of court. POLITICS AND IDEALS In politics he is a complete master of the game. During those long years at Tyndall, he handled the politics of Bon Homme county in a masterly way, yet nobody fought his leader- ship; in fact they all sought it. He was made chairman of the republican state central committee in 1896. A number of his friends begged him to run for governor or for congress, and on one occasion the leaders of the state legislature urged him to leave Pierre and return to Tyndall, so that they might on the morrow elect him to the United States senate. But James Elliott emphatically refused. Unlike most politicians who always have "an axe to grind," Judge Elliott was in polities only for the good he might do his party and his personal friends. He never sought preferment for himself; rather, he incessantly refused it. Now, there was a reason for this. When young Elliott was reading law in the Gamble brother's offices at Yankton, the only court in those days was the federal court which convened in JUDGE ELLIOTT 259 Yankton which was the territorial capital. Here the lad saw federal court conducted, and saw the United States district at- torney in action. It appealed to him and it gave birth within him to some day become our United States district attorney and later on to sit on the bench as federal judge. With these two ideals before him, he never swerved from his realization of them. The percentage of men who realize their ambitions in life is so small that it perhaps does not exceed one in every ten thousand. Elliott is one of them. REALIZED FIRST AMBITION For the good work which he did in 1896 as chairman of the republican state central committee, in stemming the tide of pop- ulism that was sweeping the state, President McKinley, almost immediately after his inauguration in the spring of 1897, ap- pointed Mr. Elliott United States district attorney for South Da- kota. His first ambition was realized. This position he held for ten years. Then he became general attorney for the Milwaukee railroad company in the two Dakotas. Elliott named his own salary; the company accepted it. There was but one stipulation-he refused to do their political work. They exempted him from it. This new legal department out in the west for a great corporation needed organization; Elliott undertook it. So well did he succeed that the company raised his salary several thousand dollars before the end of the first year. REALIZED SECOND AMBITION But, what about that second ambition-the federal judgeship? Strangely enough, in the winter of 1910-11, a vacancy was created on the federal bench at Sioux Falls, by reason of Judge Carland's promotion to a position on the new Commerce Court created by special act of Congress. A scramble took place at once among politicians for this federal judgeship. One dignified lawyer looked calmly on and awaited the verdict, while his friends remained busy in his behalf. And in June, 1911, President Taft appointed to the vacancy that poverty-stricken lad from the Missouri bot- toms, the early teacher in the Dakotas, the lawyer who had mas- tered law outside of a law school, the Honorable James D. Elliott -now Judge Elliott, of you please. At last his cherished ambitions were realized. They had been harbored in his soul for twenty-nine years. Perseverance wins. In order to accept the honor he took a reduction in salary of $5,000 per year. But he could do this. Those early days in Dakota had taught him the art of saving. At present he owns sixteen farms in Bon Homme county, containing six sets of mag- nificent buildings. His income is sufficient for life without his judge's salary. If it had not been, he could not have accepted it, for the salary of the position is not commensurate with the financial obligations which it entails. NO ENTANGLEMENTS Immediately upon his appointment, Judge Elliott sold off every dollar of his bank stock and as far as possible liberated himself from all corporate influences. He also withdrew from politics and has isolated himself from all entangling matters, so as to make a great judge -one whom the people might love and revere as they did the young Tyndall attorney in days gone by. Thus far he has already adjudged some of the most important cases in the history of the state, yet not a single newspaper or in- dividual has found fault with his verdicts. In the one large case from Pierre which was carried to circuit court of appeals, he was sustained on every point, even though some new law had been written into it. Said he to a friend not long since: "When I was sworn in as federal judge, I also registered a secret oath with my God that I would never knowingly misjudge or wrongly sentence any man, and that every person, rich or poor, black or white; accused of crime, would have to stand before me and have his guilt or inno- cence weighed in the same scales of justice, and I shall never break that oath." He never will! Let us all unite in congratulating him on the achievement of his ambitions, and in hoping that the boys of the rising genera- tion may emulate his noble example!