Levin College of Law

Overton Lecture Series

The Overton Lecture Series at the University of Florida’s Levin College of Law, established in 2013, honors the legacy of Justice Ben F. Overton by bringing Florida Supreme Court Justices to campus. This prestigious series, supported by the Florida Constitutional Law Endowment created by Judge Karen Miller, provide a unique opportunity for students to engage with sitting justices, enhancing their understanding of the judicial system and constitutional law.

Six JusticesJustice Overton, a UF alumnus and the first merit-appointed Florida Supreme Court Justice, was known for his dedication to legal education and his efforts to bridge academic learning with practical experience. The series honors Justice Overton’s legacy of bridging academic learning with practical legal experience.

Recent Overton Lectures have featured distinguished speakers such as Justices Jorge Labarga, Charles Canady, and John D. Couriel. Previous speakers have included Justices Alan Lawson, Barbara Pariente, and James Perry.

These lectures provide valuable insights into Florida constitutional law and the workings of the state’s highest court.

Justice Overton

Justice Ben OvertonJustice Overton, who earned his B.S. in 1951 and his J.D. in 1952 from the University of Florida, was the first merit appointment to the Florida Supreme Court. Throughout his career, he was active in legal education and served as an Adjunct Professor at the Levin College of Law. Although he resided at Oak Hammock at the University of Florida, a continuing care retirement community developed in cooperation with UF, he also considered the Florida Supreme Court “home.” Among the high points of his later years was hosting Justices of the Florida Supreme Court in Gainesville and taking his class to Tallahassee to hear oral arguments at the Florida Supreme Court.

Justice Overton sat on the Constitution Revision Commission of 1980 that enshrined a right to privacy in the Florida Constitution. The privacy provision prevailed by greater than 60%. He then wrote a concurrence in a critical reproductive rights case in 1989 affirming that the privacy provision of the Florida Constitution included the right to obtain an abortion.

That decision was overruled in Planned Parenthood of SW and Central Florida v. Florida.
Read about the role of Justice Overton, Jon Mills, and the history of the 1989 case here.

An interview for the Florida Historical Society by Professor Emeritus Mary Adkins, with Justice Overton is available here.
A transcript of an interview with Justice Overton, for the Samuel Proctor Oral History Project, is available here.

Judge Miller

Judge Karen MillerJudge Miller, who earned her B.S. cum laude from New York University in 1974 and her J.D. from New York Law School in 1977, served as Chief Administrative Law Judge of the New York City Department of Consumer Affairs before she retired to Oak Hammock at the University of Florida. Having accompanied Justice Overton on his excursions to Tallahassee and joined him in welcoming guests to Oak Hammock at the University of Florida, she created the endowment in memory of Justice Overton in order to continue and enhance the interaction between students and the Florida Supreme Court.

Judge Miller remembered the event that motivated the endowment:

“Prior to a dinner at the home of Dean Robert Jerry and Lisa Jerry shortly after Justice Overton’s death, Justice Barbara Pariente and I were discussing a suitable memorial. Justice Pariente, who had been Justice Overton’s colleague on the Florida Supreme Court and who understood the importance to him of the interaction between his students and the Court, suggested the outline of what has become the Overton lectures. Dean Jerry, who has since retired, as has Dean Emeritus Jon Mills, who assumed responsibility for implementing the Overton lectures, were very supportive from the beginning. Since Dean Mills’ retirement, Professor Timothy McClendon, who assisted both Justice Overton and Dean Mills teaching Florida Constitutional Law has continued the Overton lectures with the support of Interim Dean Merritt McAlister and CGR director, Professor Danaya Wright.”

CGR and the students of the College of Law extend our deepest gratitude to Judge Miller for making the Overton Lectures possible in perpetuity.