Thomas F. West


Thomas Franklin West was an American attorney and politician from the state of Florida. West served as a justice on the Florida Supreme Court.

Early life and education

West was born on November 23, 1874 in Milton, Florida. He attended Washington and Lee College in Virginia, graduating with a law degree in 1899. The following year, West was admitted into the Florida Bar, and began a private practice in Milton.

Political career

Florida Legislature

West, a Democrat, was elected to the Florida House of Representatives in 1902, representing Santa Rosa County. In 1903, Governor William Sherman Jennings appointed him to the commission tasked with revising the state's statutes.
He served until 1904, when he was elected to the Florida Senate for the same county. In 1905, he introduced the original plans for the drainage of the Everglades, aided by Governor Napoleon B. Broward.
While in the state senate, West also worked with the Governor Albert W. Gilchrist, a progressive Democrat, to propose an amendment to the Florida Constitution which called for the adoption of two popular Progressive Era reforms, the initiative and referendum. The proposition, designated as House Joint Resolution 222, easily passed both chambers of the Florida Legislature, despite the protest of the conservative minority. In 1912, however, anti-progressives were able to legally prevent the amendment from appearing on the ballot that year.

Florida Attorney General

West served in the Florida Senate for two terms until he was elected Florida Attorney General in 1912. During his tenure, West most notably oversaw two tax-related cases: one brought by the Pullman Company arguing against the taxation of sleeping car companies, and the other, Rast v. Van Demis and Lewis Company, arguing against licensing taxes. Both cases were ruled in favor of the taxes. In 1915, West did not accept an appointment to Florida's First Circuit Court opting to run for reelection in 1916 instead.
West additionally served as the President of the Florida Bar from 1915 until 1916.
In the 1916 Florida gubernatorial election, West refused to endorse the Democratic candidate, former Florida Treasurer William V. Knott, claiming he is dishonest and has no regard for the law. West instead endorsed the Prohibition candidate, pastor Sidney Johnson Catts, who had initially run for the Democratic nomination, losing to Knott in the primary. Catts defeated Knott by over 9,000 votes, becoming one of two elected Prohibition candidates, alongside Charles Hiram Randall, a U.S. Representative from California. West was reelected in the same election cycle.

Later career

As thanks for his endorsement, Catts appointed West to the Florida Supreme Court on September 1, 1917, after the resignation of Justice Thomas M. Shackleford. West was selected as Chief Justice by the court on February 28, 1923, and served in that position until December 3, 1925, when he was appointed by Governor John W. Martin to Florida's First Judicial Circuit Court, the same position he refused a decade prior.

Personal life and death

West was married to fellow Floridian Alma Chaffin. They had two daughters, Josephine and Alma.
West worked as a judge until the day of his death, dying from influenza in Pensacola, Florida on February 23, 1931. He is buried in the cemetery of the Coldwater Church, a Mormon church in Milton.