I. Daniel Stewart
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Isaac Daniel Stewart Jr. (November 21, 1932 – June 23, 2005) was a judge of the Utah Supreme Court from 1979 to 2000. Stewart served a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Germany. While there, in about 1956, he contracted polio which left him reliant on a wheelchair for the rest of his life. Stewart earned a law degree from the University of Utah in 196

He worked for the US government fighting trusts for a time and then became a law professor at the University of Utah. Stewart was the lone dissenter from the 1993 Utah Supreme Court ruling that allowed prayers before government meetings as long as there was no religious restriction on who could give the prayer. In addition, in the case Bagford v. Ephraim City, 904 P.2d 1095, he wrote the Court's opinion which concluded that creating a city-owned waste disposal company financed via municipal taxes was not a taking of private property even though it put the pre-existing waste-disposal company out of business.


Sources


''Deseret News'', May 10, 2000''Deseret News'', 25 June 2005, obituary for Stewart
{{DEFAULTSORT:Stewart, I. Daniel 1932 births 2005 deaths Latter Day Saints from Utah American Mormon missionaries in Germany Utah state court judges Justices of the Utah Supreme Court University of Utah alumni University of Utah faculty 20th-century Mormon missionaries 20th-century American judges American lawyers with disabilities