Brogan was born in
County Meath,
Ireland, educated at the
College of Saint Francis Xavier and took his law degree from
Fordham. Admitted to the bar in 1912, he rose to the position of
Jersey City city counsel under powerful Democratic boss Mayor
Frank Hague, and served there for eleven years. Brogan also appeared as Mayor Hague's personal attorney before the New Jersey Senate Case Committee. Democratic Governor
A. Harry Moore appointed Brogan as an associate justice of the Supreme Court in 1932, and promoted him to replace Chief Justice
William Stryker Gummere less than a year later. In at least two instances of alleged voting fraud in the 1930s
(Ferguson v. Brogan, 112 N.J.L. 471; Clee v. Moore, 119 N.J.L. 215; In re Clee, 119 N.J.L. 310), Brogan's court issued extraordinary rulings in favor of the Democratic machine, in one case asserting that the district superintendent of elections had no authority to open ballot boxes, and in another case ruling that the boxes could be opened, but no one had the right to look inside. Chief Justice Brogan resigned in 1946, which made him the final Chief Justice before the reforming
1947 New Jersey Constitution. He is interred at
Holy Name Cemetery, Jersey City. == References ==