Sporting his customary colorful bow tie and occasionally tapping a tablet computer, Justice Alan Page was passing his final few seconds on the bench of the Minnesota Supreme Court when the attorney wrapping up arguments asked if the seven black-robed judges had any last questions.
"I guess I have one," Page said quietly that June morning, almost murmuring. The question was simple, easily answered, and it seemed to bring to a characteristically humble close the 22-year judicial career of a man whose remarkable life arc has carried him from working-class childhood in Ohio, to four Super Bowls with the Minnesota Vikings and the Pro Football Hall of Fame, to the top of the legal profession in his adopted state.
Reserved to a fault and largely indifferent to accolades, Page — who will reach the court's mandatory retirement age of 70 on Aug. 7 — nearly escaped the courtroom that day without having to sit through public acknowledgment of his pending departure. Then Chief Justice Lorie Skjerven Gildea spoke up.
"Before we recess, I just want to note for the record that it's Justice Page's last day on the bench," said Gildea, prompting a smile and nod from Page. "It has been an honor to serve the people of Minnesota in the courtroom with you. We are adjourned."
Brief and unsentimental, Gildea's send-off was in keeping with the formality and dignity of the state's highest court. For Page, it was still a bit much.
"I told her later that, had I known it was coming, I would have been out of there before she had the opportunity," he told the Star Tribune a few days later. "When you're 15 or 16, all that recognition is nice. Fifty years later, enough is enough."
Supreme Court justice. Gridiron legend. Longtime benefactor to students of color. Children's book author. Serious collector of art and artifacts of the African-American experience. Dedicated runner. Maple syrup maker. Automobile lover. Snazzy dresser. Sousaphone player. Husband, father and grandfather. As the sun sets on Page's active career in the law, Minnesota will see one of its most unique public figures retreat firmly into private life.
The Supreme Court itself will lose an important source of institutional memory. Page is the seventh-longest serving justice in the court's 157-year history, and currently the most senior by more than a decade. Going quiet is a legal voice that scholars and former colleagues alike said has grown increasingly bold in dissent in recent years, at a time when the court's majority rulings have more frequently hewed to the kind of constitutional "originalism" that Page views as naive to the real-world implications of judicial decisions.