Jeff Truly
Jeff Truly was an American jurist and Democratic politician. He was a justice of the Supreme Court of Mississippi from 1903 to 1906, and a member of the Mississippi [House of Representatives] in 1886.
Early life
Jeff Truly was born on July 21, 1861, in Fayette, Mississippi, the son of Confederate Army veteran Richard Harrison Truly and his wife, Mary Truly. His siblings included a brother named Numa V. and a sister named Eva who later married Joseph Withers Power, the Secretary of State of Mississippi from 1901 to 1926. Truly attended Lusher's Private Academy in New Orleans, Louisiana, before attending A. D. Campbell's school in Natchez, Mississippi, in 1875. He then read law, first in the office of J. J. Whitney in 1877 and 1878, and then in the office of Steele & Garrett in 1879. Continuing his legal education, he took a law course at Tulane University in 1880.Career
Truly began practicing law in Jefferson County, Mississippi, in November 1883. As a member of the Democratic Party, he represented Jefferson County as in the Mississippi House of Representatives in the 1886 session. In December 1898, Governor Anselm J, McLaurin appointed Truly to the office of Circuit Judge of Mississippi's Sixth Judicial District. Governor McLaurin re-appointed him to this office in February 1902.Supreme Court of Mississippi
Associate Justice J. H. Price resigned in August 1903. On August 15, 1903, Mississippi Governor Andrew H. Longino appointed Truly to finish the term. Truly holds the distinction of having delivered the first judicial opinion in the new Mississippi State Capitol. While on the Court, Truly handed down decisions on cases including Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. Wells; J. J. Harper v. State; Revenue Agent v. Kuykendall; and New Orleans and Northeastern R. R. v. A. H. George & Co.Truly's term would expire on August 10, 1906. At the end of Truly's term, Robert Burns Mayes was appointed to replace him.