Emery Harold Hallows (April 20, 1904 – September 11, 1974) was an American attorney and jurist who served as the 20th Chief Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, from January 1968 until his resignation in August 1974.
Hallows authored the Court's opinion in the influential case Breunig v. American Family Insurance Company,[4][5] which established the rule that a sudden mental incapacity, of which the defendant had no foreknowledge, was an adequate defense to tort liability. This rule is often known as the Breunig exception.[6]
Personal life and family
Hallows met his wife, Mary Vivian Hurley, while they were both students at Marquette University. They married February 15, 1930, at St. Catherine's Church in Milwaukee.[7] They had at least two children together. Mary died in April 1973 after a long illness, stemming from a series of strokes.[8] Judge Hallows announced a short time later that he was being treated for leukemia. He died on September 11, 1974, just a month after retiring from the Court.[9]