The Supreme Court of Alabama was organized under the
governorship of
William Wyatt Bibb, and had its beginnings with the
Alabama Constitution of 1819, which stated that until the General Assembly deemed otherwise, the functions of the Supreme Court would be handled by the judges of the Alabama
circuit courts. The circuit judges were elected by a joint vote of both houses of the
Alabama Legislature. These judges met in May 1820 in the capital city of
Cahaba for the first term of the Supreme Court.
Clement Comer Clay was appointed by the other judges as the first
chief justice of the court. Following his resignation in 1823, he was succeeded by
Abner Smith Lipscomb. The court was then reorganized in 1832. It then became a separate court with three justices elected to six-year terms. Abner Lipscomb remained as chief justice. In 1851 the number of justices was increased to five. In 1853 the membership of the court was reduced to three again. No changes to the court occurred during the years of the
Civil War. Legislative Act Number 602, 1969 Alabama Acts was passed during Regular Session of 1969. It increased the number of associate justices to eight, bringing the number of court justices to the configuration that remains today. Former Justice
Janie L. Shores was the first of six women to serve on the court. She was elected to the court in 1974. The first of three black justices to serve on the court was former Justice
Oscar W. Adams Jr., who in 1980 was initially appointed by then Governor
Fob James to serve the remainder of an unexpired term. Justice Adams became the first black justice elected to the court when he was elected two years later to serve a full six-year term. ==Jurisdiction==