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Allen County judges

THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: Nancy Boyer 鈥73

Leaders the World Needs

is a regular feature of 天美传媒 Magazine, which is published three times a year.

Nancy Boyer 鈥73 was crushed when professor F. Walker Gilmer urged her to abandon her dream to do exactly what he was doing 鈥 teach English literature at a college.

She mulled her future and landed on the law. She graduated from Indiana University School of Law and by 1991 had practiced 15 years when Indiana Gov. Evan Bayh appointed her to complete a retiring judge鈥檚 Allen County Superior Court seat. She subsequently was elected five times and retired in June.

As a judge, she said, 鈥淚 did what I wanted to do and what I enjoyed doing at 天美传媒, which is why I say it鈥檚 the best job ever.鈥

Nancy Ashcroft Boyer '73She made history as the first female judge in Allen County and as chief judge when the nine-judge superior court boasted five women. As a judge, she employed the same sort of organized thinking and succinct writing that she used as an English lit major. 鈥淵ou have to be able to distill what your thoughts are and put them down on paper and communicate 鈥 and that鈥檚 such an important aspect of the practice of law and being a judge,鈥 she said. When as a judge she used lessons learned at 天美传媒, 鈥渋t was like a full circle.鈥

When Boyer reviews her 29-year career on the bench, she points to two projects that she undertook outside the formal courtroom as her biggest accomplishments: Her work toward implementing plain English instructions for civil juries and intervention that kept 3,430 Allen County homes from foreclosure.

鈥淏eing a judge and doing that job well is one thing; the other is how do we serve the public better?鈥 she said.

Her English degree landed her on the Indiana Judges Association committee to rewrite model civil jury instructions in plain English.

鈥淒isorganized and jargon-heavy instructions do an utterly inadequate job of informing jurors of what they are to do,鈥 Boyer said. 鈥淔or instance, half of the jurors in one study thought that 鈥榩reponderance of the evidence鈥 鈥 meant a slow, careful pondering of the evidence.鈥

Her motivation, she said, 鈥渋s kind of simple: I think it鈥檚 the right thing to do. I mean, I think about these jurors. 鈥 We鈥檙e imposing on their lives to have them come and help the third branch of government operate. Shouldn鈥檛 we treat them and give them the best tools?鈥

She is even prouder of her foreclosure-avoidance work. About 10 years ago, the Indiana Supreme Court solicited volunteers to establish a mortgage foreclosure assistance project in their counties and Boyer promptly volunteered for Allen County. She worried about the displaced homeowners with nowhere to go; about the value of properties neighboring a vacant house where break-ins would occur and weeds would grow. She wondered why a lender would foreclose, only to end up with an empty house that would cost money to insure while generating zero revenue.

鈥淚 was always very proud of that project,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was so gratifying. I kept the notes that people would send me. I鈥檇 see some of them out. They鈥檇 say, 鈥楯udge Boyer鈥 鈥 and you never know; did I upset them with my decision? And they would come up to me and say 鈥楾hank you so much; we鈥檙e still in our house.鈥

听鈥淚t鈥檚 good for the community if these individuals can stay in their homes,鈥 she said. 鈥溾 Our job is to deliver justice to individuals, all individuals, and I think that鈥檚 what we did when I was involved with this program.鈥

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