Lawrence judge to join high court

? Gov. Bill Graves on Wednesday appointed Robert L. Gernon of Lawrence to the Kansas Supreme Court.

Currently a judge on the Kansas Court of Appeals, Gernon will replace Justice Tyler Lockett, who is retiring.

âÂÂI would describe myself as a judge who looks at every case one at a time, tries to master the facts involved, look up what the law is and apply the law to that set of facts, and come up with a result that makes sense,â Gernon said at a Capitol news conference with Graves.

The judge said he tried to write opinions plainly, noting that he had an English teacher at Kansas University who said, âÂÂYou should write not so much to be understood as to not be misunderstood.âÂÂ

Graves said of Gernon: âÂÂHe just has always struck me as a person who always had the right temperament, the right personality, the right background and skills to make an excellent member of the Supreme Court.âÂÂ

Gernon, 59, grew up in Brown County, received his undergraduate degree from Kansas University and law degree from Washburn University. He is president of the Friends of the KU Law Library.

Before being named to the state appeals court in 1998 by Gov. Mike Hayden, Gernon worked as a private attorney, assistant district attorney and district judge.

He said moving from the appeals court to the state Supreme Court was like changing rafts.

âÂÂItâÂÂs a little bit scary, but itâÂÂs the right thing to do,â he said.

With the selection, Graves finishes filling three recent vacancies on the state high court before he leaves office Jan. 13.

Graves said GernonâÂÂs experience on the appeals court helped provide a mix of legal backgrounds to the three new appointees.

In August, the governor appointed Lawton Nuss, a Salina attorney, to the court, and he named Marla Luckert, a Shawnee County district judge, to the court in November. Luckert is the replacement for Justice Fred Six of Lawrence, who is retiring. Luckert and Gernon will be sworn in Jan. 13.

Finding a replacement for Gernon on the appeals court will be Gov.-elect Kathleen Sebeliusâ job.