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Justice Sarah

Alabama Supreme Court


Sarah Hicks Stewart, a long-time resident of Mobile, was elected in  November 2018 to serve as an Associate Justice on the Alabama Supreme  Court.  She is the daughter of Reginald and Suzanne Hicks.  Her only  brother, Charlie Hicks, was an attorney in Mobile until his untimely  death in 2014.  Justice Stewart and her family lived all over the world  for the majority of her childhood while her father worked as a petroleum  geologist.  In 1981, Justice Stewart graduated from Union High  School in Tulsa, Oklahoma; she earned a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of  Arts in Communication at the University of Arkansas in 1985 and 1986.   While in college, she was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta, Mortar Board,  Omicron Delta Kappa, and Order of Omega and served as president of the  Student Government Association her senior year.  In 1992, Justice  Stewart earned her J.D. from Vanderbilt Law School where she was vice  president of the Law Student Association.  After graduating from  Vanderbilt, Justice Stewart practiced law with Hand Arendall LLC, Ezell  & Sharbrough LLC, and finally with her brother, Charlie.  As a  lawyer, Justice Stewart was the first female president of the Mobile  Young Lawyers and served on many local and state bar committees.   Justice Stewart was appointed a circuit judge in the 13th Judicial  Circuit by Governor Riley in 2006 and ran for the position three times  unopposed.  As a circuit judge, Justice Stewart handled thousands of  civil and criminal cases, ranging from simple car wrecks to  multi-million dollar business disputes and from possession of marijuana  to capital murder.  During her 13 years as a circuit judge, Justice  Stewart served as the co-chair on Professionalism in the Bench and Bar,  on the Supreme Court’s standing committee on the Alabama Rules of  Evidence, and on many other Alabama State Bar and judicial committees.   Justice Stewart was active in the leadership of the Circuit Judges  Association, serving as Education Chair for eight years and was elected  by her fellow judges in July 2018 as the first female president of the  Circuit Judges Association.