Gov. Mark Dayton is preparing to make his second appointment to the Minnesota Supreme Court.
Supreme Court Justice Paul Anderson, first appointed in 1994 by Republican Gov. Arne Carlson, is set to retire this spring when he reaches the court's mandatory retirement age of 70 in May.
During Anderson's time on the bench, the court has handled two statewide recounts, a series of constitutional cases, civil cases that are cited nationally. Anderson, whose opinions are marked with historic and literary references, also helped set up the court's redistricting process, which has largely been accepted as fair.
Over the years, Anderson said the court's jurisprudence has become more conservative.
"That puts me more on the center left than where I would have been to begin with," Anderson said.
Anderson, despite the authority of the black robe, has also been approachable on the bench and off it. He said when he was first invested at the state Appeals Court , he decided he would not retreat onto the bench.
"I decided good, bad or indifferent I would reach out," Anderson said. He has traveled the state, the country and the world to discuss judicial and civic issues.
Dayton, a Democrat, made his first mark on the court in September by appointing Appeals Court Judge Wilhelmina M. Wright to the court to replace Justice Helen Meyer.