Hon. Paul Yesawich, a former New York State Supreme Court Justice who played pro basketball for the Syracuse Nationals in the NBL, died last December.
Biography
Obituary
YESAWICH--Paul J., Jr., 94, a resident of New Smyrna Beach, Florida, passed away in peace on
December 13, 2017. He was born November 27, 1923, in Queens, NY, the
only child of Paul and Mary Sidabra Yesawich. He was predeceased by his
wife, Betty, and is survived by three children: Paul (Susan) of
Charlottesville, Virginia; Peter (Paris) of Boca Raton, Florida; and
Christopher, of Brightwood, Oregon; four grandchildren; and five great-
grandchildren. He was an accomplished athlete, lawyer, judge and legal
scholar. A standout high school basketball player at Brooklyn Technical
High School in Brooklyn, NY, he accepted a full athletic scholarship to
play basketball at Niagara University where he was eventually elected to
the Niagara University Hall of Fame. His time at Niagara was
interrupted by World War II, during which he served as an officer in the U.S. Navy.
He was fond of telling his children and grandchildren that during the
war he was a member of the All Navy basketball team - until his All Navy
team lost to the All Coast Guard team; after which he was promptly
redeployed to serve on the USS Cepheus, an attack cargo ship that
participated in the assault on Okinawa in 1945. It was the largest
amphibious assault of the war, and he was one of the men who brought
supplies to the beach to aid in the initial attack. During the assault
the Cepheus came under heavy fire by Japanese aircraft, and aided in
downing three of them. Although he rarely discussed it, during the war
he was also a member of the Navy Scouts and Raiders, which became
today's Navy Seals - yet he was always self-effacing about his service
and quick to point out that his training and activities were nothing
like those of modern day Navy Seals. He graduated from Niagara
University with a BA in 1948, and an MA in 1950. He went on to play
professional basketball for the Syracuse Nationals in the National
Basketball Association before electing to attend Cornell Law School,
from which he graduated in 1951, the same year he was admitted to the
New York bar. Following law school, he joined the New York City law firm
of Davis, Polk and Wardwell. He later served as Assistant Counsel to
the subcommittee of the Ways and Means Committee of the U.S. House of
Representatives investigating the administration of Internal Revenue
laws. In 1955 he and his family moved to Cortland, NY, where he became a
partner in the law firm of Folmer, Ryan, Fenstermacher & Yesawich.
During this time, he also served as a Commissioner of the New York State
Law Revision Commission. He was appointed to the New York State Supreme
Court by Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller in 1971; that same year he was
elected to serve a full 14-year term on that court. He was later
designated to serve on the Appellate Division, First Department, in
Manhattan, in 1974, remaining there for seven years, simultaneously
serving as a trial judge in the Sixth Judicial Department. During this
time, he also served as a member of the Advisory Panel on the Proposed
Code of Evidence for the State of New York. He was subsequently
appointed to the Appellate Division, Third Department, where he served
until his retirement in 1999. He also served temporarily as an Associate
Justice of the Court of Appeals, the highest court in the State of New
York, in 1992. He had a deep respect for the law, and for the many
attorneys who appeared before him over the years. His exemplary personal
and professional comportment made him a wonderful role model for his
children and grandchildren, and a committed mentor to other lawyers.
Those who knew him will remember him as a rigorous thinker and gifted
writer who possessed a profound sense of fairness. His family wishes to
thank Adrienne Tomaka and Norma Ward for their months of tireless,
quiet, competent devotion to caring for "the Judge," and for the
innumerable kindnesses they extended to him in his later years. They
were, and are, truly angels. A private memorial service will be held at
the convenience of the family.
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