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Retired Kansas Supreme Court Justice Fred Six dies at age 95

Courtesy of Judge Fred Six, photo
Courtesy of Judge Fred Six, photo

BY: TIM CARPENTER, Kansas Reflector

TOPEKA – Retired Kansas Supreme Court Justice Fred Six, appointed by Gov. Mike Hayden to the state’s highest appeals court, has died, the court said in a statement Tuesday.

Chief Justice Marla Luckert, who replaced Six when he retired in 2003, said he was a “dedicated public servant of the highest order.” He served on the Supreme Court from September 1988 to January 2003 and served a year on the Kansas Court of Appeals before being selected by Hayden to the Supreme Court.

“As a judge, he will be remembered for his brilliant legal mind, his principled decision-making, his clear writing and his courtesy, respect and fairness to all,” Luckert said. “As a person he was kind, insatiably curious, genuinely caring and famous for his bow ties.”

She said Six was “held in the highest professional and personal esteem by his colleagues and friends. Our hearts are with his family who lost him and his beloved wife within the space of ten days.”

Six, 95, of Lawrence died April 27. He was preceded in death by his 62-year-old wife, Lilian Six, on April 17. He was survived by a daughter, Catherine Six-Sallerson of East Hampton, New York, and a son. , Stephen Six of Lawrence, who served as Kansas attorney general from 2008 to 2011.

Six served in the U.S. Marine Corps during the Korean War and received law degrees from the University of Kansas in 1956. He worked in private practice and as an assistant attorney general in Kansas. After retiring from the Supreme Court, Six volunteered on campaigns for President Barack Obama and Governor Laura Kelly.