Brooklyn, NY - A day after his passing, a long time Brooklyn Supreme Court judge is being remembered as the first sitting justice to take the bench wearing a yarmulke and a beard.

Justice David I. Schmidt of Borough Park passed away on Friday at the age of 66.  His niece, Judge Rachel Freier, said that he had been ill for the past two years.

A graduate of Brooklyn College, Schmidt had served in the Kings County Supreme Court system since 1995.  Known for his passion for settling cases, Schmidt is credited for arranging more than 15,000 settlements during his legal career and, after his retirement in 2015, he continued privately as an arbitrator and a mediator.

Freier described Schmidt as her mentor, saying she was inspired by him throughout her climb up the legal ladder, often expressing her own judicial aspirations. 

When Schmidt announced his retirement, clearing the way for Judge Noach Dear to take over his Supreme Court position, he encouraged Freier to launch her own campaign to win Dear’s civil court spot.

“A lot of people take credit for my winning but he was the one who made it happen,” Freier told VIN News.  “Everything was hard work, fair and square and I didn’t get a pass because I was his niece.  I still remember his election and his campaign; he had a slogan ‘a heimishe mentsh on the bench.’”

Once he became a judge, Schmidt was known for his preference for working in shirtsleeves at a table set up near the attorneys, foregoing his formal spot on the bench as well as his judicial robes.

“His courtroom was always busy and he would be sitting there conferencing the cases, always working much harder than he had to,” said Freier.  “His ethics for work were 110 percent and he was meticulous about following the law. He would always tell me even if your decisions aren’t popular, you have to follow the law.  Even if it goes against public opinion, you have to do what is right.”

The son of a Holocaust survivor, Schmidt kept his father’s concentration camp uniform in a glass case in his chambers.

“It reminded him of who he was and where he came from,” said Freier.

The father of four and a grandfather, Schmid’s highest priority was his family, recalled Freier.

“He was always doing carpool for his grandkids and babysitting,” said Freier. “Every Sunday for years, he would take his children and grandchildren to Mendelsohn’s pizza shop. He was just an incredible family man.”

Schmidt’s funeral will take place Sunday morning at 10 AM at Shomrei Hachomos in Borough Park.