Robert Gardner, noted jurist, dies at 93
Robert Gardner, a Corona del Mar resident and former judge with the
Orange County Superior Court and the Court of Appeal, died Saturday
afternoon at age 93.
His daughter, Nancy Gardner of Newport Beach, was with him at the
time and said he passed away peacefully in his sleep. She said her
father’s health had been steadily declining since he broke his hip
about two years ago. “Newport Beach has lost one of its legends,”
said Nancy Nelson of Newport Beach, who worked with Judge Gardner for
many years when she was a probation officer. She said working with
him was one of the nicest things about her job and her life.
“He could tell a story better than anyone else,” Nelson said of
Gardner, who proved that for years as a columnist for the Daily
Pilot. She said he was always able to inject some of his sharp wit
into his court opinions, for which he was well known in the legal
profession.
Judge Gardner began his career as an attorney. When he was
appointed as a Superior Court judge, he was the youngest such judge
in the state. By the time he retired, he was also the longest-serving
Superior Court judge, Nancy Gardner said.
She said her father also served in World War II. After he retired
from the Court of Appeal, he spent three years as a judge in American
Samoa.
Attorney Cliff Roberts of Corona del Mar said he worked with Judge
Gardner on many cases over the years.
“The first million-dollar verdict I ever got in the Orange County
Superior Court, he was my judge,” Roberts said. “He was a wonderful,
brilliant judge who would take no nonsense -- not even from me.”
Roberts said Judge Gardner had an enormous number of friends from
all walks of life, and that he was a courageous man with a wonderful
sense of humor.
Judge Gardner also wrote two books -- one, “Bawdy Balboa,” was a
history of Balboa Island; the other was a book about body surfing,
one of his favorite pastimes.
“He taught me to surf,” said Nancy Gardner, who founded the
Newport Beach chapter of the Surfrider Foundation. She said she and
her father were very close, spending a lot of time together at the
beach.
She added that her father went to the beach almost every day until
he began to get sick. He didn’t believe in sunscreen and visited the
doctor monthly to have skin cancers removed.
“We used to joke that he had put two of his dermatologist’s kids
through college,” Nancy Gardner said.
She added that one of her main concerns is finding a home for her
father’s long-haired dachshund, Rusty. She said she can’t take Rusty
because he doesn’t get along with her own dog.
Nancy Gardner said her father did not wish to have a funeral. She
plans at some point to have a party for his friends to get together
and celebrate his life.
“I consider it extreme good fortune to have known him all these
years,” Nelson said. “He was really an amazing person.”
Judge Robert Gardner is survived by his daughter, Nancy Gardner,
two granddaughters and six great-grandchildren.
* LINDSAY SANDHAM is the news assistant. She can be reached at
(714) 966-4625 or lindsay.sandham
@latimes.com.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.