Currey came to California in 1849, eventually settling down in Benicia, Solano County, California, where he established a successful law practice. Among his clients was Juan Manuel Vaca, owner of a large tract of land, a Mexican land grant near the present-day city that bears his name: Vacaville, California.
In 1850 and 1852, Millard Fillmore nominated him to be a district court judge in California, but both nominations were unsuccessful; the United States Senate voted to reject the first nomination and took no action on the second.[6][7]
In 1859 the Anti-Lecompton Democratic Party selected Currey as their candidate for Governor of California. The rival faction, Lecompton Democrats, chose Milton Latham as their candidate. The Republican Party ran its first California gubernatorial candidate in 1859, businessman and railroad tycoon, and later Governor Leland Stanford. Despite the Democratic party split in California in the 1850s and the surge of the new Republican Party's candidate in the campaign, Latham won the election, garnering sixty percent of the vote.
After defeat in his run for governor, Currey would find other promising opportunities for office. In 1863, several vacancies on the Supreme Court occurred. The departed justices included the sixth Chief Justice Stephen Johnson Field, who was appointed by President Abraham Lincoln to the U.S. Supreme Court, becoming the first Californian to serve on the high court.
In 1863, a constitutional amendment meant all of the seats of the Supreme Court of California were open for election.[8] Running as a "union" party candidate at the height of the American Civil War, Currey was elected to the Supreme Court of California, taking his seat in January 1864.[9] His term ended January 1, 1868.[10] After serving as associate justice, Currey became Chief Justice on January 1, 1866, when Silas Sanderson resigned, on the rule that the member of the court with the shortest remaining term serves.[11] (He was defeated in his re-election bid, for the newly established ten-year term, by associate justice Augustus Rhodes and was therefore succeeded as Chief Justice by Lorenzo Sawyer).
Having served four years on the court, including two as chief justice, Currey lost the 1867 election to Royal Sprague and retired to his home in San Francisco.[12][13] When the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire left him homeless he moved to his estate north of Dixon in Solano County, in the Sacramento Valley. With his sons, Montgomery Scott Currey and Robert John Currey, he lived out his last years there.[14]
Personal life
In 1845, Currey married Cornelia Elizabeth Scott, who died April 20, 1877.[15]
^"One of the 'Lucky' Candidates". Los Angeles Star. No. 10. California Digital Newspaper Collection. July 11, 1863. p. 1. Retrieved July 8, 2017. Detailing the several public offices Currey ran for and lost.
^"The Supreme Court". San Francisco Call. Library of Congress, Chronicling America. June 22, 1895. p. 5. Retrieved July 18, 2017. Under the constitutional provision, on October 21, 1863, Oscar L. Shafter, Lorenzo Sawyer, Silas W. Sanderson, John Curry and A. L. Rhodes were elected Supreme Court Justices. The new court organized January 2, 1864, and in accordance with law, the Judges drew lots to determine the tenure of their official terms, with the following result: Shafter drew for ten years, Rhodes for eight. Sawyer for six, Curry for four and Sanderson for two.
^"State Government, Judicial Department, Supreme Court Members". Sacramento Daily Union. Vol. 30, no. 4611. California Digital Newspaper Collection. January 1, 1866. p. 1. Retrieved July 8, 2017. Showing John Currey with a term ending January 1, 1868, the shortest remaining, and thus Currey is Chief Justice.
^"The Fall Elections". New York Herald. August 30, 1869. p. 4. Retrieved May 15, 2023 – via Newspapers.com. The last election for judges of the Supreme Court of California occurred in 1867, when Royal T. Sprague, democrat, was elected over John Currey, republican, by a majority of 2,269.
^"Judge Currey's Funeral". San Francisco Call. Vol. 113, no. 21. California Digital Newspaper Collection. December 21, 1912. p. 10. Retrieved July 8, 2017.