THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, January 4, 1985 15 Michigan's court rules, the law firm and the GOP will now see less of Jason Honigman .0 0 just finished serving four army years. So, it was decided that Louis Hon- igman, the tailor, would leave Russia that night. He fled on foot with a neighbor. The Russians shot at them, and Honigman's friend was killed. When Louis looked down at his own long overcoat the next morning, there was a bullet hole in it. Louis came to New York, like so many other Russian immigrants, to begin a new life. In 1911, Sarah and their four children joined Louis in New York. Jason Honigman was seven years old and the eldest child. The Honigman family moved to Detroit in 1916, when Louis Honigman had the opportunity to make $16 a week as -a tailor, instead of $12. Jason grew up near Westminister Ave. in Detroit and attended Alger Elementary and Northern High School. He was always an excellent student. .Public speaking and oratorical contests interested him at an early age. In high school, he was on the de- bate team. "I figured at an early age, that's how a lawyer operates," says Honigman. In 1926, he graduated first in his law class at the University of Michi- gan, just 15 years -after arriving in this country. As a senior law student, Hon- • igman was a law clerk for Abe Sempliner and he continued to work there after graduation. He was at- tracted to the firm of Groesbeck, Sethpliner, Kelly and Baillie because Sempliner was Jewish, intelligent, and had good political contacts. (At that time, Groesbeck was Governor of Michigan.) In 1929, Sempliner left the firm due to some disagreements with Kelly. Groesbeck and Sempliner vied for Honigman, but Honigman went with Sempliner out of loyalty. He was then associated with the firm Sempliner, Dewey, Stanton and Bushnell. In 1932, Bushnell became a Su- preme Court Justice. The name of the firm was changed to Sempliner, Dew- ey, Stanton and Honigman. This was never a true partnership: all four men cultivated their own legal practices. • 1 Gradually, Honigman began building a strong clientele, and he hired Miller in 1936. By then, Sempliner's two sons were graduating from law school. In 1948, Jason Hon- igman started his own practice with Jack Miller. They added Alan E. Schwartz in 1952 and Irwin and Avern Cohn a few years later. Honigman, Miller, Schwartz & Cohn is now the fourth largest firm in Michigan and as of this summer will employ 130 attor- neys. "I was responsible for starting the firm, but I'm not alone in the buildng of the firm. All the men who are my partners over the years had substan- tial roles and that included Milton J. Miller, Alan E. Schwartz and Avern Cohn," says Honigman. Cohn left the firm five years ago to accept an ap- pointment as United States District Judge. Irwin Cohn died in November. Honigman downplays his own role in contributing to the success of the firm. He believes his philosophy of hiring the top scholastic law students produced quality and excellent legal • service. "As a measure of the quality of our - legal performance, we gained recogni- tion for high quality work and in turn brought in new business," says Hon- igman. But, it is Jason L. Honigman who is the legal legend in Detroit. Long before the firm of Honigman and Mil- ler existed, he was shaping history. In 1938, Honigman argued and prevailed in the "Deep Rock" case before the U.S. Supreme Court, which established a new interpretation of the federal Bankruptcy Act. Honigman was the sole counsel for the petitioners, a group of minority stockholders of the Deep Rock Oil Co., who alleged they were victims in a re- organization plan of the parent com- pany, Standard Gas & Electric Co. There were nine attorneys on the other side representing Deep Rock, Standard Gas, and the reorganization committee. Honigman's text appears in every judge and trial lawyer's office in Michigan. In 1950 he wrote the Michi- gan Court Rules Annotated, which is over 1,000 pages. Annually, he wrote supplements updating the rules. He co-authored the six-volume revision in 1963. Although he did not work on the 1984 supplement, his name- appears. And Honigman has served on numerous judicial and procedural committees. For many years, he served as chairman of the Civil Proce- dure Committee of the State Bar of Michigan, chairman of the Civil Pro- cedure Committee of the Judicial Con- ference of Michigan, chairman of the Michigan Law Revision Commission, and the Judicial Tenure Commission. The list of his committee work goes on and on. - Some of the laws he helped- legis- late include: the state's no-fault di- vorce law, the statute abolishing gar- nishment before judgment — a per- son's money cannot be tied up during a lawsuit — and an amendment to in- vestigate and discipline misconduct of judges. The Honigman personal drive that Onerated success in his law prac- tice filtered down to his committee work. "I did not know you could belong on committees and not work," says Honigman. He has been active in the Republi- can Party throughout his career. In fact, he produced the Republican Party's major fundraiser — Max Fisher. It was Honigman who intro- duced Fisher to an aspiring politician named George Romney. Fisher then became the finance chairman for Romney's gubernatorial campaign. In 1958, Honigman ran for attor- ney general on the Republican ticket. He was the first Jew to run for statewide office as a Republican. Continued on next page